Three weeks ago, on January 9, our bags were packed. We were
ready to go to Florida for a two month getaway, starting with a family wedding
in Orlando. I woke up at seven o’clock, got out of bed, went downstairs to
shower, and immediately the room began to spin. I could not stand up. I could
not even sit up.
Surely this would pass, I thought. It did not. I yelled for
my wife Jude. She rushed down and asked what she should do. Should she call an
ambulance? I replied, “Definitely.” The forty minute ride in the ambulance was
exciting. Being nauseous and riding backwards in a van is not fun. In the ER they
feared a stroke. They did a CT scan. There was something unusual on it. Perhaps
an aneurysm, the doctor said.
He said they better do an MRI. Forty-five minutes of torture
later, nauseous, dizzy, and strapped into a mask and what felt like a strait
jacket, I emerged. No aneurysm. No stroke. Just a small meningioma, benign
growth in the front of my brain. An abnormality but harmless. Nothing to worry
about. (I always suspected my brain was a bit abnormal.)
A wheelchair ride over to the ENT doctor confirmed a
diagnosis of acute vertigo caused by labyrinthitis, an inflammation of the
inner ear, likely caused by a virus. “No
problem,” the doc said. “It should clear up in 4-6 weeks. But if there is
permanent nerve damage then full recovery could take 2-8 months.” “Thanks for
the good news,” I replied.
For two days I lay in bed. I could not move without
vomiting. I could not stand at all. I could barely open my eyes. I could not
read or watch television. All I could do was listen to an audiobook and pray.
They talked about sending me to a rehab hospital.
On the third day I arose. (The Biblical parallel was not
lost on me.) I walked with the aid of a walker all the way to the door of my
hospital room. Hooray! By my sixth day in the hospital, I could walk with a
walker all the way down the hall. That meant I could go home instead of rehab. In
the last two weeks I have graduated to a cane.
This Sunday I even made it to church to worship. It was my
first outing in three weeks, besides a follow-up visit to the ENT. I was never
so glad to be in church. To be welcomed and greeted and prayed for. To sing
hymns. The previous Sunday we had to stay home and listen to a podcast of the
church service on the computer. It just wasn’t the same.
Jude has been my savior, nurse and shower attendant. (Not as
much fun as it sounds.) Prayer and meditation have been my constants in the
midst of vertigo. While the world was spinning around me I reached out to the
One who is the Center of the storm, calling out to the Lord who calmed the
waves and wind on the Sea of Galilee. God is the Solid Rock that does not move,
though the earth shift under my feet.
Today I am on the mend. I am still unstable on my feet. The walls
and floor of our house still tilt as I walk. I still use a cane. I often catch
myself by leaning against a wall. It has been a humbling experience.
While in the hospital the physical therapist asked me, “Do
you normally get around without a walker at home?” I gawked at her, “Of course.
Do you think I am an old man or something?” The look on her face confirmed her
thoughts. I guess my bald head and grey beard don’t help.
I suddenly knew what it was like to feel like – and be
treated like - an elderly person. Upon reflection I realized I am twice the age
of the hospitalist and every nurse and aide who was treating me. Oh my! When
did I become the oldest person in the room?
I thought of the way I have viewed the elderly throughout my
ministry. That is how people are viewing me. It filled me with renewed respect,
compassion and appreciation for older people, a club which apparently I had
unknowingly joined.
Hopefully in a few weeks (rather than a few months) I will be
back to normal. I am still hoping to make it to Florida sometime, but not until
the spring at the earliest. In the meantime I will contemplate the joys of being
officially older and hopefully a little wiser.
So glad to hear you are stumbling back to us. Brain sounds fine. Body to follow. Best wishes to you Marshall. Spring and recovery one th
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On the mend! That has a very pleasant ring to it. I know what you mean about those helpful inquiries about our abilities. Bagging groceries (my own) at Hannafords, the young lady asked me "Do you need help with that?" I did not comprehend...I asked for an explanation. "Getting them out to your car..." she replied. Disbelief...why should she even think about it? Oh, the tyranny of low expectations has arrived...Marshall, we have high expectations for you...
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