Thanks to the many friends and family who have written to ask how I'm doing. We arrived home on Wednesday evening, after waiting 5+ hours at the hospital for a delivery of oxygen tanks from an outside company. As the morning dragged on, the nurse and case manager assured me that the only thing holding up my discharge was the oxygen delivery. At 11-something the driver said he would arrive around noon. Noon passed, then 1pm. A little after 1, the frustrated nurse manager brought two oxygen tanks she had rustled up. We decided that if the delivery didn't happen by 2pm (the driver assured her he was on his way and would be there by 2!), we would just leave with the oxygen on hand. Two o'clock arrived: still no oxygen. We began the discharge paperwork. Finally, Nurse Allyson wheeled me to the entrance with my oxygen tanks and I got in the car with Leland at 2:45. The case manager later told me that the delivery guy arrived 15 minutes after we left. I have no idea how these companies stay in business.
Our return to town was classic State College. We pulled into the Target parking lot so Leland could get a prescription. As I waited in the car, I saw our friend/neighbor Lara and her daughter walking toward their car, so we chatted for a while. (Their family has had scary close encounters with COVID, so it was appropriate that they were the first family we saw.) When you've lived in a town like State College for 17 years, you can't go anywhere without running into friends. I missed that while living in Hamburg.
We were greeted at home by a few friends and neighbors, cards, balloons, a bouquet and "Welcome Home, Mutti [Mommy]" care package from Lily and the kids she was babysitting, and a delicious dinner. A home health agency set me up with portable oxygen tanks (for going outside the house) and an electric portable oxygen concentrator, which extracts oxygen from the air. When plugged into the concentrator, I'm basically on a 40-foot leash. If I need to go further than that, then Leland moves the concentrator into another room.
It is wonderful to be in my own home with our kitties and to see friends whom I haven't seen in over a year. I can hang out and have conversations with no problem. The hardest part is coming to terms with my substantial physical limitations. For example, I can't walk 10 minutes to my office on campus or anywhere else, for that matter. I often feel disconsolate and overwhelmed by my situation. It's the not knowing how long recovery will take that is so difficult. I've been on supplemental oxygen nearly 24/7 since I arrived home. When I use the pulse oximeter to gauge my oxygen saturation with no supplemental oxygen, the readings are well below 90%, which means I need to get back on oxygen. I am discouraged that I still need so much oxygen because it seemed like I needed less in the hospital. My heart rate is still very high, around 25-30 bpm above normal, even when I am just sitting or resting (in the hospital it had come down to normal range--even getting to the mid-40s while I was sleeping, which is typical for me due to decades of running).
I have managed to start walking around the house and take showers. The latter feels like a workout and leaves me quite winded. I also ventured out with Leland on a couple of very short walks the past two days. He carries the oxygen and we walk two blocks or so at a glacial pace (due to global warming, glaciers might be faster). He and I are normally brisk walkers; our benchmark for slow walking was set by the women in the rural Salvadoran community where I lived in 2001. Leland says we are not walking quite that slow. Today I got out the house to do a couple of errands with the family. The short walk from the car to the store (on oxygen) felt a bit easier than the previous days.
I know there are many positive signs and that I can't expect to get better right away. Still, I could very well be looking at months of recovery and there's no guarantee that I'll regain all the lung function I had pre-COVID. A home health nurse will come see me once a week. She came yesterday for the first time. Melanie is a character--very friendly and encouraging, and also prone to over-sharing. (Did I need to know that her husband won't undress for the nurses at the hospital and that this could be a challenge for his upcoming colonoscopy? Perhaps I did.) I learned that she also cared for a PSU professor, Brian Curran, who died some years ago from ALS.
I've got an appointment with a pulmonologist in a few weeks. I'm hoping he can help with breathing exercises and such (respiratory therapy). I will meet with my new oncologist, Dr. Villaruz, on Thursday in Pittsburgh. She will also be completing FMLA paperwork so that I can take an intermittent leave (weekly workload reduction of X hours). As some of you know, the callous, rule-obsessed, incompetent way that my dean handled my situation and request for a course release added a great deal of unnecessary stress while I was in the ICU. In other colleges at PSU, faculty with a medical crisis are usually told something like "don't worry about teaching this semester" and administrators take care of it. Not in my college. I'll leave it at that.
Some friends will be organizing a meal train for us soon. Lily is trying out for volleyball this coming week; once we know her volleyball practice and game schedule we will have a better sense of which nights we will need meals. I will share information once it's available. We've really appreciated the meals folks have provided so far!
We are so glad to hear about all your progress, Esther! It might not be going as fast as you’d like, but it’s pretty amazing thus far! Thinking of you and sending good wishes from afar! -M&M&S&A
ReplyDeleteThank you. I appreciate your encouragement.
DeleteThanks for the update sis! May your hope & patience always hold out 🙏🏽🙏🏽 (Andy)
ReplyDeleteWelcome home, Esther! I'll gladly bring over dinner for your family!
ReplyDeleteContinue to focus on healing so you can regain your strength fully.
BIG HUG!!!! LOTS OF LOVE to you and your entire family!
FUERZA! Garra Charrua! -Carmen
Gracias! Pronto les avisaremos.
DeleteSo glad you’re back home! So sorry to hear about your dean. Doesn’t surprise me though. I’m glad I no longer deal with the university!
ReplyDeleteI hear you, whoever you are.
DeleteSo glad you’re home Esther — that in itself must be quite the relief!
ReplyDeleteWe'll be coming through town this week and hope to have the chance to visit you! Annyce
ReplyDeleteOK, let us know. Any day but Thursday.
DeleteYay! Welcome home!! So happy for the three of you and pets. ❤️
ReplyDeleteSo good to hear you are settling in at home Esther! That must feel good. So good to talk last week. I can’t believe you’ve been in State College 17 years. Seems impossible! (Henson)
ReplyDeleteThank you, Henson. I don't know how I missed all these comments. Let's talk again soon!
DeleteBievenida nuevamente a SC! So thankful to know you are finally home. We'd love to stop by to say hello so let us know what works best. Un fuerte abrazo until then. Claudia
ReplyDeleteGracias, Claudia! It was great to see you on Saturday. I wasn't getting comment notifications so this slipped by me.
DeleteWelcome back home!!! So good to read your update, Esther. For those of us out of state, your animated writing really helps to make us feel a bit closer despite the distance. Love to see your sense of humor coming through, despite the challenges of this time. Praying for healthy recovery, day by day.
ReplyDeleteThank you as always, Irene! I wasn't getting comment notifications so this slipped by me.
DeleteHallelujah! So happy to hear you are settling in at home. I know that’s such a relief. I knew you’d be greeted with the full welcome wagon. How beautiful! Can’t believe you’ve lived there 17 years!! That’s wonderful. I know this is all so overwhelming & surreal at times, but you have come very far and will only improve in days and weeks ahead. Keep hanging in there sister! Have a good appointment at Pulmonologist 🙏🏽🙏🏽
ReplyDeleteThank you, Alisa. You are a great cheerleader. :) I wasn't getting comment notifications so this slipped by me.
DeleteIf you've not heard of spoon theory as it relates to chronic illness, it's worth the short read. Adjusting to unknown and moving targets is rough but I'm glad to hear you're home and Lily is getting into fall sports, which will be good for her to focus on! I think of you often and glad you've got such a solid support system 💜
ReplyDeleteThanks so much, Deanna. I will have to look that up. I wasn't getting comment notifications so this slipped by me.
DeleteWelcome home! Let us know what you need. Glad to sign up for the meal train! - Heather
ReplyDeleteThanks again for the fab meal!
DeleteYay for being home with Leland, Lily, and kitties! Continuing to hold you in our prayers as you navigate all of this.
ReplyDeleteThanks so much. We thought of seeing if we could stop by your place to/from MI over T-giving, but we were on a tight schedule...and then your family got sick! I wasn't getting comment notifications so this slipped by me.
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