Thankful for a major blessing
MICHELE MARR
I remember when I was a child hearing adults speak of “blessings in
disguise,” and thanking God “for all small favors.”
Most of God’s so-called small favors -- safe travel or a lost
wallet found for instance -- seemed huge to me, though. And I
couldn’t fathom at the time what kind of disguise a blessing might
choose to wear.
The older I grow the larger still the smallest of God’s favors
appears to me but I’ve come to grasp just how well disguised a
blessing can be.
For the past eight days, with Thanksgiving approaching, I have
spent nearly every waking hour in Hoag Hospital where my mother is
recovering from what her surgeon called “coronary artery bypass
surgery times six.”
While bypass surgery is one of the most common surgeries done
these days, it’s still scary -- for the patient and her loved ones. A
surgeon opens the patient’s chest and cuts through her breastbone to
expose her heart where he grafts veins taken from another part of her
body onto arteries that supply blood to her heart or lungs in order
to bypass one or more deadly arterial occlusions. In my mother’s
case, six.
The surgery went well -- very well -- taking scarcely five hours.
But her recuperation has been slowed by day after day of severe
post-operative nausea and vomiting that has eluded management and
treatment.
Movement as subtle as opening her eyes or sitting up in bed starts
my mother heaving. Forget walking, which is the ideal goal a mere 24
hours after surgery. Five days after surgery she still had not been
able to eat.
So as my sister and I have attended her comfort and care as best
we could, putting cold compresses on her forehead, rinsing pails and
spittoons and bedpans, I have had occasion I otherwise might not have
had to contemplate the things, immense and minor, for which I am
grateful.
At the top of the list is the fact that my mother is still with us
because of a sequence of God’s small favors that all added up to a
blessing in disguise.
A couple of months ago my mother was facing back surgery, a spinal
fusion to repair damage from arthritis and osteoporosis, which have
for the second time in three years disintegrated one of her
vertebrae. She’s in chronic pain, walking with a cane, lame in her
left foot and leg.
But before she could have the surgery that would stop her pain and
restore her gait her body had to pass the usual pre-operative tests:
an EKG, blood lab work and a chest x-ray.
Her blood tests were on par but her EKG was something short of
normal. So her primary care physician sent her for an echocardiogram,
which showed she was good to go. Until a chest x-ray revealed a
troubling spot on her left lung.
A CAT, ordered to determine just what the spot on her lung might
be, showed nothing at all, at least nothing on her lung. Instead, it
showed signs of calcification in a coronary artery, the artery of a
woman who had never once complained of a single symptom of coronary
artery disease.
But a Cardiolite stress test and an angiogram later, there it was.
Her left main coronary artery was 100% blocked; her right coronary
artery was 90% blocked; two others were more than 70% blocked. A
scope during surgery, prior to the grafts to bypass those four
blockages, revealed two more.
Bad news with a painful fix, but a fix that promises to extend her
life; a fix that will, we hope, in a few months, make a spinal fusion
survivable.
A nonlife-threatening infirmity led my mother to the tests that
uncovered a disease that could have easily taken her life.
My mother, her family and her friends are the grateful benefactors
of this blessing in disguise, a blessing rendered through what some
might call small favors from God, favors directed and bestowed by
human angels -- doctors, nurses, nurses’ assistants, respiratory and
physical therapists too numerous to name.
Today we are thanking God for each one of them.
* MICHELE MARR is a freelance writer from Huntington Beach. She
can be reached at michele@ soulfoodfiles.com.
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