From Little Things... Big Things Grow

From Little Things... Big Things Grow

Sunday, February 5, 2012

Hope.






Again, there has been a big lapse in time between posts. Things have not been the best. There have been the usual ups and downs of Nico's sleep/ daytime unsettledness continue and the passing of my mother in law, much loved Nana Shona relatively unexpectedly.

I made the trip to Auckland alone with the children, my husband having left for Christchurch the day prior. Just getting tickets organised at such short notice, just before Christmas was a very time-taxing (and expensive) exercise in itself, let alone figuring out the logistics of negotiiating an international airport with a 3 year old, 2 year old in a wheelchair, booster seat for on the plane and luggage. I dropped the kids of in Auckland with my parents and flew to be by my husbands side 10 hours later.

Throwing my family into the maze of looking after a PEG fed, immobile and non-verbal 2 year old was not something that could be avoided but thankfully they came out the other side fairly unscathed with a small insight into our lives they hadn't really seen on visits.

Apart from that there had been no major events until last week when we had our visit to Royal Childrens Hospital to meet with a paediatrician in the developmental medicine department. We stumbled upon this unit when I called Cerebral Palsy Support Network to find out if there were any paeds who specialised in CP or at leaast had a bit of interest in it. His previous doctor had done next to nothing in a year; all I got for my $100 appointments was "How are things? What is happening? Ok, come back in 2-3 months and we will see how it's going"  >> Fast forward 2-3 months >> "How are things? Oh still the same? Ok, come back in 2-3 months and we will see how it's going"  etc etc. Some how it took me about 16 months to pull the plug on him. I was over Nico and myself being put in the too hard basket, and/or being labelled "the neuro baby and his neurotic mother" and needed action.


Foyer of RCH (from rondo.com)
So FINALLY Feb 3 rolled around and I packed our little miracle into the car at 9am for the hour trek to RCH. It only just opened at the new site in December and it was A-MAZING. It is ultra modern and welcoming. There is little hospital-like in there, it has more of a theme-park meets modern office meets spaceship. Of course the aesthetics of a hospital is superfluous  like that orange swirl of liquid top chefs decorate your plate with before placing food. It gives a good first impression but if the chef couldn't cook, it wouldn't be much use. The paed we met with, who used to be head of the Developmental Medicine team, was beyond a Master-Chef.

I repeated all of Nico's vast history (which fills 5 x oversized medical folders at Monash Medical Centre) and my own feelings of frustration and being left to fend for ourselves. She spoke to him, observed him, felt his excruciatingly tight muscles and told me what I already knew: He is a bright boy trapped inside himself. It is not going to be a case of finding one piece of a puzzle to have it all fixed. It was going to a long process and a combination of things causing his unsettledness. But she cared. And she got balls rolling. She made a list of things she wanted done. Medication change to relieve his aching muscles. A multitude of blod tests including but not limited to: full blood count, vitamin and mineral levels, tests for kidney and liver function and an abdominal ultrasound. She believes that these will all come back normal (except maybe iron and vitamin d deficiencies)

When we got down to how we coped, I had a meltdown... nothing new... happens every time i come within 10 metres of a medical professional (and parking security attendants at hospitals i found out later in the day, but that is a different bolg post. One I will write entitled "Most embarrasing/inappropriate/uncomfortable moments I have had a meltdown") I explained in a high pitched, staccato manner befitting of a 3 year old who has lost their prized possession, that we had no practical support, no family within a 4 hour plane trip and how we stumbled through daily life feeling like we weren't really living.

She got on the phone and made a call to Very Special Kids. It is defined as a childrens hospice on its website but its a place where parents can leave their children with medical professionals on a semi regular planned basis to take a break from the 24 hour demands of a child with high medical needs. It is what we have been screaming for for over a year. A break that lasts more than 4 hours, a break where we can pretend to have something resembling a normal life that does not include tubes and meds and trying to ease muscular contractions of epic proportions that make your heart break into a million pieces. A break from being woken at random 1-4 hourly intervals. They will put Nico's case to their meeting next Friday and we will know what kind of support they are willing to offer. I am hoping for a weekend a month, I will be ecstatic with a weekend every 2 months and I will be grateful for anything at all.

I left RCH on a high, feeling a change in the air that could not come too soon. Relief that it had not been a waste of time, relief that we have someone on our side and hope that Nico may be able to start being happy for more than the occasional day here and there.

And to close: A few of my pics as to assure you that as miserable of a picture I have painted about our life pre-RCH, we do have good days, and we do have moments of normality:

Enjoying summer




He sleeps!!






1 comment:

  1. I'm so glad you finally found that little ray of sunshine and hope you deserve. Here is to some more sleep tonight....

    ReplyDelete