Thursday, September 11, 2008

"A Little Bit Crazy" Week

My dad, who is 81, had surgery on Monday of this week. He had an aortic aneurysm repaired, and today I went to the city to bring him and my mother back home. It's great to see how well he is doing today. I am so thankful that his doctors found this problem early, and were able to repair it with a less-invasive surgery.

I've been waiting for an excuse to post this photo of him and Katie. It's one of my favorites, and it shows how they felt about each other.

It's been a bit of a crazy week. On Monday, Dad had his surgery, and while he was having that done, I was trying to figure out whether our cat, Liger, might have rabies. He had started drooling a LOT over the weekend, and we were concerned about it by Monday. I Googled "drooling cat," and what do you think popped up? RABIES. Yes, isn't that nice? Not inflamed or infected gums, not dental problem, not irritation due to hunting rodents, but rabies. Just that.

So here is what happened...I remembered that I had kissed Liger on the paw on Friday, and it was wet with his drool. Of course we kiss our cats; of course we do (you all kiss your pets, too; admit it!) , but not on the lips. However, Liger was drooling so much this weekend that I got some of his saliva on my mouth when I kissed his paw. UGH! (Do you remember Lucy Van Pelt in the Peanuts cartoon, after Snoopy the beagle kisses her while bobbing for apples? "My lips touched dog lips! Auugh! I've been kissed by a dog! I have dog germs! Get some hot water! Get some disinfectant! Get some iodine!") I didn't do that on Friday; I wiped my mouth, and forgot about it.


Well, on Monday, a couple of days after the incident, something got to me, because I snapped. After reading about cat drooling and rabies, I was suddenly pretty sure that Liger had rabies; that I had it, too, and had given it to Gregg...and we didn't know about David. I called and talked to people who had years of pet-experience, including pet-illness; I also retrieved the cats' health records, called my clinic, and finally called a veterinarian.

DUH.

He's had his shots; he's protected. Therefore, we are protected. I needlessly alarmed myself and others, wasted energy and time over an IMAGINARY illness. How silly, and how unlike me...before. Nowadays, when fear arises, it can feel as if a flashing red light goes on in my head, as if the police are already on their way, with fire truck and ambulance in hot pursuit...all of this inside of my head and heart. It's terrifying, and it's unpleasant to be so brittle, so not resilient.


I've thought about this over the past few days. I wonder if any of this was a trauma/flashback. Katie was sick for three weeks before she had the scan that revealed her tumor. She saw the doctor several times, had different medical tests, labs drawn, spent nearly all of those days at home, resting and getting more tired, instead of improving, and still the diagnosis wasn't made until after we had been admitted to the hospital.

It may also have had something to do with the fact that at that moment, my dad was on the operating table, having his aorta repaired, but I knew what was going on with him. While there is always risk with any surgery, especially in a person over 80, I felt confident that Dad was in good hands, and that his surgery was exactly what his doctors prescribed. It was also what he wanted to have done; he was in great health otherwise, and prepared for it.

I used to be one of the most positive people. I rarely imagined "the worst" actually happening. I was a "glass-half-full" kind of gal, most of the time. My fears were pretty consistent, and sort of ordinary (airplane crash, cancer, going broke). All of these fears had some rationale behind them. And one of them has come true: Katie got cancer, and she died.

I classify what happened to Katie as "the worst thing ever." Now that "the worst thing ever" has happened, I have clearly not made peace with it, not yet placed it in perspective or a framework that allows me to function as rationally as I used to do, putting fears into their "proper" place, according to "reasonable probability." I think God is going to have to help me with this!

The idea that a family member might have an undiagnosed, fatal illness is not acceptable to me. It never has been, and that thought still has the power to unsettle me, even if it's a cat. And what do you think happened to Liger? He stopped drooling, THAT SAME DAY. Yes, he is fine.

On Tuesday, after my dad was stable - and moving out of the CCU to a regular hospital room - Mom and I attended a luncheon at the Seattle Children's Hospital Research Institute, a few blocks away from Dad's hospital. Katie's oncologist, Dr. Julie Park, was one of the speakers, along with two other eminent doctors. One was a researcher and expert on bone-marrow failure, and the other on umbilical-cord-blood stem cells. All of the talks were fascinating, and we learned many encouraging things about the work underway to save children from cancer. Dr. Park thanked The Katie Gerstenberger Endowment for supporting cancer research; that made my day. Mom and I then made a quick trip to take 11 quilts to Children's Hospital for the Hem-Onc ward, and a special one for our ChildLife friend Julie, who is due to deliver her baby soon.

Trivia: I have "flunked" growing my hair. I have tried for 2 months to let it grow, but had it cut short yesterday. I found that I can't stand having to blow it dry. It's too time-consuming and boring, and the benefits of longer hair just aren't apparent to me. So I'm back to care-free and sporty, and am already thrilled with the freedom. After being shorn, I ran errands and caught up on other work.

Tomorrow morning, I leave for a "girls' weekend"...to see Father Richard Rohr! That is, he's giving a conference in Portland, and several of us are taking a road trip to go and hear him speak. YAHOO! I have been reading his new book, Things Hidden - Scripture as Spirituality, and I love it. It's one of the only things that makes sense right now.

Gregg and David are going to hold down the fort here, and David will play his first tennis match of the season, tomorrow afternoon. GO VIKINGS! And, I hope, goodbye to the "crazy" part of week.

7 comments:

Busy Bee Suz said...

Karen, I love the pic of Katie and your Dad. Yes, there is a bond there for sure.
I am so happy he is going to be well again soon. Good Dr’s are a blessing.
Cat drool? That would alarm me too.
I never kiss my pets. Ok, the Dog, and all the time. The lizards? No. The snake? No.
The cats. No. Mine are not nice, if they were, they would get lots of kisses from me. 
I am glad that liger is fine. He may have gotten a “bad” lizard.
Your ability to “over react” to a situation sounds normal to me. I really would not consider this to be overreacting anyway. If so, then I am in the same boat with you.
Your girl’s weekend away sounds so good. I hope you enjoy yourself immensely.
The hair cut? I am starting to actually like mine. I, of course had to do some “clean up” and btw cutting the back of your own hair is not easy. 
You look great with short hair too and you are right, longer hair is so much work. Who has time for that????
Take care friend.

PS. can't wait to hear how the tennis match went. ;)

Dreamer girl said...

Handsome dad. Enjoy your weekend.
Have lots of peace after a hectic week. P.S. Thanks for the nice letter to my students. They are excited.

Pam said...

Love the pic! Your Katie is just delightful and radiant! So beautiful together. I'm glad you shared it!

As far as kissing the cat.. I kiss my cat too.. but stuff like the top of her head and her jawline.. it's super soft there. Nothing wet though. LOL Glad it seems to be over now.

As far as 'over-reacting' and such... I notice that too... I just see things differently now than I did 'before' and I can't help that. And it affects how I respond to situations around me too. Almost like a little bit of innocence or carefree nature is gone or hampered. I know going through what we did totally changed me in many ways.

I am soo with you on the hair. I actually posted about that once myself.. how I hate blow drying and fussing with my hair. Mine is short too.. after a failed attempt at growing it out. The girl who cuts my hair told me that if I ever get any crazy ideas about growing it out again, she won't let me! LOL But I totally agree. It's just so much easier and for me in the south.. COOLER. I think short hair looks great on you.

Hope you have a good weekend. Praying for you.

pysanki.blogspot.com said...

I'm glad to hear that your dad is doing well again and that you and your mom were able to go to the luncheon at Children's. It's wonderful that you were there to hear that "Thank you" I really think that is one of the best words to hear. :)

Regarding the rabies... when I was in nursing school we'd all start exhibiting the symptoms of whatever disease we were studying at the time...it was pretty funny.

Here is a link to a friend's site. I think you'd enjoy what she had to share today. http://graceandgravity.blogspot.com/2008/09/nighttime-what-ifs.html

The Engine of the Family said...

You have had a crazy week! I'm glad your dad is doing well. The picture of your dad and Katie is so beautiful.

HWHL said...

WOW! There's so much to respond to in this post!

First of all, I'm GLAD your Dad is doing well! And that is a great picture of him and Katie - they are both adorable! :-)

Second, I love the name Liger - too cute! :-)

Third, of COURSE I kiss my pets! Without reservation OR shame! (Unlike Suz, I don't have reptiles... just mammals...)
:-)

Fourth, I don't think you are being unduly alarmist lately .... you have been through THE most stressful thing a human being can go through. I certainly would be "uber-analytical" over health issues as well. My advice: follow your gut and if your gut tells you to look into it, then look into it.

Last, your girls weekend away sounds DIVINE (pun intended). I must say, I had never heard of Richard Rohr until I started reading your blog and now am I VERY interested in him. I keep a small notebook by my computer and every now and again something (and it has to be something VERY special) makes it into the notebook... which means I need to get a book by this person, or really research this person. Richard Rohr is now in that notebook so THANK YOU. :-)

Have a wonderful weekend - can't wait to hear the report when you get back!

Blessings & Peace! :-)

Your Pal,
Tracey (hey - now you know my "real name" - you're in the Inner Circle!) :-)

Amy said...

What a story...I'm glad to hear that your father will be alright and recover quickly!

I can't help to think that I would feel the same as you...I do daily and wonder if something 'bad' will happen...and then remember to keep looking at each day that I have been given as a gift...

I know that you cherished your time with your daughter and you've experienced a great sadness...you have reason to validate those feelings. It sounds normal to me...

Keep writing your thoughts...you have a way of sharing them beautifully!