Dear Mom,
This is your
journal. You’ve asked for a record of
every nice thing people have done for you since March 13, 2015, the day you
experienced an ischemic stroke. The first person to thank is you. If you had not spent at least the last
thirty-five years taking care of yourself—eating right, walking or exercising,
getting regular check-ups -- you wouldn’t be here reading this letter. Your body had such a fight on its hands. Your heart that you always counted on shook
rather than beat and sent a blood clot up to your brain. The way the nurse explained it to me, your
strong parts of your brain had to take over and surround the parts that got
hurt. Your brain is still doing that for
you now, surrounding the hurt parts and finding new ways for you to get strong
again. That is why your body is asking
for you to rest. You are like a child
with growing pains. Every rest gives
your body the chance to replenish and renew yourself. Life won’t be the same or as easy as it was
before (was it ever really easy), but it will be different and each time life
gets different it gives us a chance to learn.
So look at it this way. You are
learning now. Learning how to rest. Learning how to replenish. Learning how to stay positive even on bad
days. Learning not to fret. Learning no matter what, you are going to be
okay. No one is going to let you go. We have you now.
So that gets me to the
second person (you were the first) that helped you: your daughter, Julie. That morning you got up to rest in the
recliner, when your body was finding new ways around the stroke, you were not
alone. It did not take Julie long to see
that something was happening. She helped
you walk back to your bedroom to get dressed for the day and she noticed you
were having trouble walking in the right direction. As she explained it, you were trying to walk
into a wall. That was probably because
the stroke had affected part of your vision.
Like you always are, you
told Julie not to worry and to go to work.
Thankfully, she didn’t listen.
She called Molly and Sue Brander and they both came to your side. That’s always their way, isn’t it? For over forty years, they’ve become a family
you can count on just like family.
It didn’t take Molly
long to figure out your body was fighting a major battle. You didn’t want to go to the hospital, but
she asked you to, and you let it happen.
I’m imagining that from that moment, you did not feel like your life was
your own. With 911 called, the rescuers
descended. The paramedics who got your
safely out of your home, the first E.R. doctors at Resurrection, who Joycie
reminds me are very handsome. In
addition to woman, daughter, sister, wife, mother, and grandmother, you became
patient. Instead of you seeing to
everyone’s else’s care – does Walter have breakfast, volunteering at Norwood
Park Crossing, bring Mrs. Buikema her communion -- everyone else was seeing to
yours.
I don’t know a lot about
those first few hours, but I know that shortly after Julie met you at the
hospital, Joyce got there too, that is, after calling each of your children in
descending order. That’s the thing about
Joyce. She wants nothing to be a
surprise for anyone. So that was Teresa,
Joan, Tim, Carole, and Maureen. Oh, and
lot’s not forget Russ. While the doctors
were diagnosing what had happened to you and the nurses were asking you those
same questions over, and over again, Russ was already finding room for you at
one of the best hospitals in Illinois and the nation for stroke recovery.
That’s the thing about
stroke recovery. It begins the moment that insipid blood clot finishes its
business and lets fresh and powerful blood flow to the brain again. With each heartbeat, the blood left your
heart and traveled upward to your brain for what you needed for recovery. Adrenalin to keep your body fighting. Dopamine to take away any pain you might be
suffering. Even shock to keep you from
knowing all the answers, but to prepare you breath by breath for what lay
ahead. So there your beating heart was,
along with Joyce, along with Julie, along with all the well wishes from every
one who loves you, willing you forward for whatever your new forward would be.
Remember the questions,
every hour on the hour. What is your
name? What month is it? Where are you? Do you know why you are here? When is your birthday? At first, you had no trouble answering those
questions, other than for being annoyed by them. Mary Nockels.
March 2015. Resurrection. I had a
stroke. August 6th. But then they got harder. Not because you didn’t know the answers. You know those answers. But because, a new struggle came to light. Now that the stroke was over, the doctors and
nurses had to find the cause of it.
It would be nothing any
of us expected. It was your heart,
Mom. Can you imagine that? The woman
with the biggest heart ever. The woman
who took care of everyone else. The
woman who laughed big laughs and cooked a largely very good meal (okay, you
know what I mean here), had a heart that had physical, never spiritual,
struggles. To this day, we don’t know
what for sure came first. The troubled
heart or the stroke, but we are guessing it was your heart. It had trouble keeping its rhythm. It wanted to race and then go slow. Race and then go slow. Race….
If anything made you
tired that first night and into the next day, it was your heart trying to
figure out what to do. And while it did
that, your people rallied. Loyola
Medical Center was full. It wasn’t
supposed to have a bed for you for three days, but then Russ made a call, and
moments later, came the call to Joyce.
The inn had room for one very special woman. The ambulance arrived. You left Resurrection Hospital so late that
first night. You have said the ambulance
over was not the least at all comfortable.
But you made it. Julie went to
rest. Joyce followed you. She called us all when you were safe. In the new place that you would call a lot of
names, but mostly the place that made you better, the Loyola Medical Center
Neuro ICU. A lot of care was coming your
way, Mom. Where other hospitals might
fail you, this one would not.
“What is your
name?” “Mary Nockels”
“What is the month and
year?” “March 2015”
“When is your birthday?”
“August 6th, 1932”
“Where are you?” “Loyola Medical Center”
“Do you know why you are
here” “I had a stroke.”
You had a stroke,
Mom. Your heart, Mom, it had trouble
regulating. This Part One will end with
you safely in good doctors and good nurses hands. But let me add this. On June 9th, almost three months
from your stroke, you tell me you are afraid.
“It’s been a month since I walked,” you said. You wondered if you might walk again. This is what I know. You will walk when you are ready. You will walk when the rest your body craves
is finally quenched. You will walk when
that nutrition you are eating finds it has served your heart and brain well and
now has extra energy for your legs. You
will walk, Mom. But, if you close your
eyes. If you imagine your loving God
standing beside side and holding your hand, you are already walking. For now, walk there. In your dreams. In your beliefs. In your faith. Because one thing is for sure. A woman like you, loved by so many, embraced
by her loving God, has never and will never walk alone.
Love you, Mom. Stay tuned for Part 2.