Tuesday, January 13, 2009

From TJ

From TJ

Thank you for your prayers. God was so good in again sparing my life. After ten days in the ICU, they removed my breathing tube, feeding tube and two arterial lines yesterday. Today I go to a step down unit for a few days while we make arrangements for the trip home when advisable.


Being awake the whole time this time provided some good spiritual lessons. I gave up asking God to take the pain away, why should I be exempt? Or, to be with me, (he was). I just ended repeatedly asking for his closeness and thought a lot about his suffering. The hardest thing was getting my breathing tube cleaned multiple times a day which triggered involuntary spasms and huge pain. Just breathing was something that took a huge effort (an hour on a vent when not in a coma is like twenty four hours). Often I felt like I was trying to breathe through mud or fluid.


My companion has been CNN news and I have done a lot of reflecting on the vast majority of our world, in Gaza and elsewhere who are caught in the political crossfire or just the ravages of disease and poverty and who have none of the health care advantages that I have had. I cannot imagine being in those circumstances having lived through the over 60 days I have been in the hospital since December 4, 2007. Most of them in the ICU.


The first day was the most difficult day that I can "remember." I know I was in more serious situations a year ago and closer to death but I had the advantage of sleeping through the worst of it. This time as I listened to them talk about severe pneumonia, septic shock, Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome and a lot of the past year came flooding back, including the question as to whether I would live through this again.


Fortunately, Steven was able to provide a lot of medical history so from the first hours they treated me with everything they could throw at the pneumonia in case MRSA had reappeared. It was interesting to have my son giving them permission to do all kinds of things, but he was in touch with Mary Ann and had been through this before. I was quickly developing sepsis so was lucid but like through a fog.


By the way, the neurologist has ruled out a seizure on the plane, although that is what it looked like to the flight attendant. I did lose consciousness and vomited and was disoriented after the cabin was pressurized and was heading for the runway. My blood pressure was dangerously low for some reason and speculation is that an infection was already brewing.


Also, unlike many of the events last year, I was awake for everything this year including the difficult and potentially dangerous procedure of putting a central line right into my neck since they were not successful in doing to in my chest. I told Mary Ann that there was merit to either a coma or heaven and she made it clear that the coma was an option but not heaven. I was also amazed once again at how quickly I was in such trouble.


I thought initially that the admittance to the hospital was a formality but I was already in septic shock and going downhill very rapidly – and I was fully aware of the danger I was in and wondered if I would survive this time. Mary Ann was not here till I had been in the hospital for three days although a number of awesome RG staff dropped everything to be here and to help.


I am sure I will be learning through this experience as I did from my prior hospital stay. I figured today that I have spent 60 days in the hospital, almost all in ICU since December 4, 2007. Thank you for your prayers and love. I am overwhelmed that others would care, but we are deeply grateful.

Blessings!


TJ

18 comments:

Anonymous said...

We love you. That is all. Praying for an uneventful next several weeks.

The Princes

Connie said...

So incredibly wonderful to see your own words and thoughts. Blessings as we continue to pray for a full recovery.
Jim and Connie Anderson

Rhonda said...

Hi TJ,
I am in Bible study with your sis-in-law Sue and have been following your story and progress--and praying, praying, praying. So has my sis-in-law in Ft. Smith, AR..just wanted to let you know we are praising God for answers and still praying for your soon-to-be-homecoming. Blessings.

Pamela and Michael said...

How wonderful to hear from you! We rejoice in the tangible, physical progress, and continue to plead for mercy that God would deliver to you full and complete healing. We want more! Keep listening for other things that God wants you to learn and ponder during this time. Celebrating His goodness poured out to you and MA, Chip and Jon - P&M, Cape Town

Anonymous said...
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Ernest Manges, Ph.D. said...
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
Unknown said...

TJ, great to read your own words on the blog and to once again see God's grace and power so dynamically at work in your life in the midst of this difficult road. You, MA, Steven and Jon all remain in our prayers and in our hearts.

Unknown said...

God bless you TJ!

Katie Addington said...

Dear [TJ],

It's really great to hear things directly from you. I strongly believe that God has spared you again for a greater purpose. Be ready for a big splash in your ministry in the near future!

Serving and praying together!

Stephen

Katie Addington said...

[TJ],

How encouraging to hear from you again! You certainly have seen the grace of God in many ways. May God grant you a smooth journey back to cold Minnesota! May He also grant refreshment and renewal to MA and your sons.

[original post by:]Ernest Manges

Anonymous said...

Thanks for the encouraging update and perspective check.
As you've been watching CNN, you know about the gas crisis. My own worry was reflected in my daughter this morning as she wakes up and wordlessly walks over to the radiator pipe and grabs it to see if we will have heat today.
Then I read your blog about breathing through mud and all of a sudden, heat seemed to be a minor thing!
Thanks for the reminder that every drop of gas to heat our homes, every bite we eat to fill our stomachs and every breath we take is a gift from God and completely under his control.
Julie L. in Ukraine

Anonymous said...

GOD IS SO GOOD! Praising Him for His grace in answereing all our prayers! You are a living word picture of "clinging to the LORD" with all your resolve.

Jim Seybert said...

Hey TJ - we should never stand amazed when God does great things, but we almost always are. This latest round just strengthens our faith in He who is in complete control. And the fact that He allowed you to be awake says something. What a tremendous story you have to tell.

Anonymous said...

PTL! God is SO good! I am still praying for TJ, MA, Chip and Jon. I am so glad to see your writing on the blog TJ! PTL!!!
Alex

Anonymous said...

Praise God for healing and encouraging you. May he now give you a level of health you have not known in years!

He is good. He is good. He is good!

You're pretty cool, too.

-Praying for you on THIS side of the world this time...

Anonymous said...

God is good, all the time!

We love you, miss you all, come home soon

Lisa O

Unknown said...

Praising God with you for His kindness to you. He has spared you once again for His purposes; what joy!

Please pray for my brother - 50 years an 'm' in Chile - his wife trajically killed in an accident when they were driving Friday. He is alive but weak.
E.

Traci said...

Dear TJ,

Thanks for your thoughts and reflections. We look forward to seeing you sometime over here in EU sooner rather than later. Keep resting and hope the flight is as confortable as possible.

-Jonathan Shoe from Lisbon