But I’m realizing that we can know that in
our heads, but it’s hard to convince our hearts of that fact. It will always
hurt, and it should. The more you love someone, the more it hurts to lose them,
even if you know that loss is temporary.
Moving on from all of that, we have decided
to post about this sensitive time for several reasons. This blog exists to
bring glory to God, and we believe that He uses all things—good and bad—to
bring more glory to Himself. This blog shares the daily life of our family, and
this loss has been a big part of our daily lives as of late. We hope that He
will use this blog about our daily lives as a Christian family to show others
the hope we have found in Him. Although death is a difficult and sad topic, we
grieve with hope unlike so much of the world—and we praise God for that!
So now to catch you up on what’s been going
on in our family for the past few weeks . .
Those of you who have been reading our blog
for awhile know how much time we spend visiting our Grandparents in Pennsylvania
(my Dad’s parents.) As they have aged, they were unable to do many things. Over
time we slowly did more and more for them when we visited. Back in April of
2012, my Grandma went into a nursing home due to complications from her
emphysema and Parkinson’s. Her health has been on a bit of a rollercoaster. She
has her good spells and bad spells. But after battling with emphysema for 16
years, Parkinson’s for 6 or 7, and living in the skilled nursing section of a
nursing home for 8 months, we were preparing ourselves to lose her in the
foreseeable future.
What we never expected was losing my
Grandfather first, who has been relatively healthy up until the past few years.
After visiting LOTS of doctors and ending up in the hospital, he was diagnosed
with a rare neuromuscular disease/autoimmune disorder called myasthenia
gravis. Over time, MG destroys the muscles in the
body. In my Grandpa, his breathing continued to deteriorate as the MG weakened
his lungs. He had been on oxygen for a little over a year. (Ultimately we
believe his cause of death would fall under the myasthenic
crisis umbrella.)
At Christmas we began to notice that he had
really deteriorated and we began to discuss his need for nursing care. His
breathing had deteriorated so much that he was having difficulty eating. My
6’2” Grandpa only weighed about 130 pounds at the time of his death. He could
barely walk across a small room without becoming winded and needing 3 to 5
minutes to regain his breath enough to talk.
My Grandma had a breathing “episode” the week
prior to his death and spent 3 days in ICU at the hospital. Due to the bad
weather, a friend from church drove my Grandpa to the hospital to visit her one
day. That was when the phone calls started. . .
This friend, as well as the Care Pastor from
their church, felt that Grandpa needed a lot more help. Dad and his sister from
Florida hired a Christian lady and her daughter to come out to his house to do
laundry, cook for him, do grocery shopping, take him to Doctor’s appointments,
etc. They were supposed to start on Tuesday the 15th.
~Monday,
January 14~
Today a neighbor and church friend came over
to check on Grandpa and bring him dinner. She found him unable to talk, and
having extreme difficulty breathing. She called Aunt Debbie and asked if it was
ok to call an ambulance. She then put my Grandpa on the phone to talk with Aunt
Debbie. When she asked if he wanted to go to the hospital, he cried out as loud
as he could “YES!”
He was immediately rushed to the hospital
where he was diagnosed with a collapsed lung. Later that evening as we drove
home from Life Group, Dad talked with Aunt Debbie over the phone. She had
decided to fly up the next day to be with Grandpa and assess the situation
more.
~Tuesday,
January 15~
We receive updates from Aunt Debbie
throughout the day, but the really big update comes later that evening when Dad
comes home from work. The nurse from the Critical Care wing had called him
personally that afternoon. It was difficult for him to share with us what the
nurse had said. They had been trying to re-inflate Grandpa’s lungs, but they
weren’t staying inflated and he had asked in his will for no intubation nor
iron lung. He had a small vacuum in his side that was keeping the air away from
the lung so that he could breathe more comfortably. But whenever they tried to
pull the vacuum away, the lung would start to collapse again.
There was a small chance that he would
rebound from this, but we really didn’t know for sure. The nurse said it could
be a few days before he passed, or a couple of weeks. He may not even make it
through the night. Grandpa had asked for Dad several times, so Dad spent the
rest of the evening booking a 5:30 a.m. flight out of Dallas. He didn’t get to
bed that night until about 12:30 a.m., and then got up at 1:45 a.m. to start
his trek to Dallas.
All of us went to bed troubled that night. I’m
sure I wasn’t the only one crying and praying fervently that Dad would make it
in time to say goodbye.
~Wednesday,
January 16~
Dad arrived in Pennsylvania around 11:00 a.m.
their time. He and Aunt Debbie spent the day with Grandpa and also went to
visit Grandma in the nursing home. Once Dad saw Grandpa, he didn’t think he was
going to make it through the weekend. They make arrangements for Grandma to
come and visit him on Thursday morning. He tells us to buy plane tickets to
Pennsylvania as soon as we can. I start working on a slideshow with pictures of
Grandpa. I scour every photo file on our computer and pick out some music.
Mom and I stay up until midnight booking our
flights and making a hotel reservation in Dallas for Thursday night. We also
send out an emergency email to our Life Group at church, asking for someone who
would be willing to drive us to Dallas the next night.
~Thursday,
January 17th~
Dad calls around 8:30 a.m. the next morning.
They had just dropped off a coat over at the nursing home for Grandma for her
visit to the hospital later that day. I talk with him for awhile, and then he
abruptly says he has to go and hangs up.
At 9:00 a.m. he calls with the news we knew
was coming but no one wanted to hear; Grandpa had passed away just 5 minutes
before they had arrived at the hospital. The news didn’t shock us, yet it took
awhile for it to begin to sink in. Our minds were spinning with so many details
and trying to leave for Dallas on time.
My mind instantly filled with a flood of thoughts.
Why hadn’t Grandma been able to say goodbye? Why couldn’t Dad and Aunt Debbie
have been there when he passed? Although we think of those as regrets in human
terms, I still have full confidence that God has known the day, hour, minute,
and second Grandpa would die since the beginning of time. He knew what He was
doing, and we have to trust that His timing was perfect.
That morning we make some frantic phone calls
to find someone to take care of the pets, make arrangements to kennel the dog,
and get a ride to Dallas. God is so good in His provision! A neighbor watched
our cats, Mom took the dog out to the kennel and ran a few last minute errands,
another neighbor agreed to drive us to Dallas, and the rest of us frantically
packed.
Around 5:30 p.m. after lots of rushing around
and dealing with defective suitcases, we make it out the door. Our neighbor
packs up our things in her 15-passenger van, and we start driving.
On the way we stop at Arby’s for dinner. None
of us really knows where the hotel is located, and after a few turn-arounds we
make it to the hotel around 8:30 p.m. All 6 of us rotate through the single
shower and crash in bed. I was the last one in the bathroom, and I didn’t make
it to bed until 11:00 p.m. Between thinking about all that was happening and
dealing with a protesting back, I think I got about 2 hours of sleep between
11:00 p.m. and 2:30 a.m. when the alarm went off.
To
be continued . . .
6 comments:
I am sharing your tears.
Jesus has broken the power of death, but it's still horrible to go through.
I continue to pray for you all. I imagine that you are experiencing the same roller coaster of emotions. God and His words have been a huge comfort, but I have to admit to having weak moments and tears.
Missing your hugs,
Aunt Debbie
Sorry to hear your news!
Thank you for your comment and your tears, Amy. What you said is so very true.
~Bianca
Thanks, Aunt Debbie. Yes, I'm sure we're on the same rollercoaster of emotions. Saying that reminds me of the time Grandpa went on the rollercoaster with us at the amusement park. It shocked us that he wanted to since it was the big one that goes over the road, but he loved it!
We all have our moments, but as you said, God will bring us His comfort and peace. It just takes time.
~Bianca
Thank you, Technoprairie.
~Bianca
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