My husband and I thought it would be interesting for people
to hear his side of the story. He is the
one that was the closest to all this and is actually the only one that remembers
everything..haha! (Please excuse some of the cursing that goes on in here). I am approaching my 1 year “second chance”
anniversary next week. It is still overwhelming
for me knowing what I survived and where I am today…especially when I read what
my husband wrote. I truly commend Chris on how he has handled this entire
situation. He has been right there by my
side rooting for me and cheering me on.
I didn’t think I could love him any more than I already did!
His side of the story Part IOver the next few months, I will be guest blogging on Patty’s site and providing all of you the story from my seat on what happened from February 20th, 2014 till now…… I used Facebook as my “voice” throughout this ordeal but here is where I am able to brain dump my side of the story and not sugar coat anything. There is definitely a lot of information I have never made public….I hope you can follow me over the next few months and hear my side around this nightmare that my family was dealt with and the miracle that has happened.
Day 1 and 2 “Incident and Reality”
February 20th, 2014 was a cold and pretty normal
day in February and this day will be remembered for the rest of our lives. I was in a career change to something I
didn’t think I would ever do or become…..Account Manager at CDI. The past 4 months at CDI was a whirlwind by
way of transitioning out of my Director of Operations position and becoming an
Account Executive with a concentration in Public Sector. February 1st was technically my
first day as a full time rep so I spent most of my days building the existing relationships,
building new relationships and trying to gain as much training as I could to
get educated on the Pre-Sales side of the business. February 20th was one of those
typical days as I was down at Cisco at a training and then meeting with an
Account Manager to do some account mapping.
Around 1pm I headed back up to the Teterboro office to attend a
Professional Services training that Frank was holding for the New Jersey Sales
Team. The training was technically
supposed to be till 5 pm and around 345 I threw a txt to Patty to see if she
wanted to meet me at the Wellness Center to do a run and workout. I was pleasantly surprised that she had
agreed because unless it was the morning, we rarely went to the gym at
night. I was able to leave the office
around 5:05 and I headed to the Wellness Center to meet up with her.
We arrived around 5:30pm and went right on the treadmill and
we started with a walk and then started to run.
I had my head phones on and was in the zone. I hadn’t agreed to do the Paramus Tri as of
yet but had the vision to do it but Patty had agreed mentally that she was
definitely going to do the race. Shortly
after we had started running, Patty tapped me on the shoulder (I had my Beats
on and somebody was killing a set on Sound Cloud and I wish I could remember
who) and she said she wasn’t feeling the run and was going to work out. I continued my run and saw her in a distance
with weights in her hand…she looked good and focused working out.
Few minutes have passed and I see out of the corner of my
eyes that Wellness workers were racing to the workout area to attend to
someone, as I removed my headphones; I heard the siren and announcement. Not thinking of anything or even thought that
it was Patty being attended too, I threw my headphones back on and finished my
run. As I finished the run and grabbed
something to wipe down the treadmill, I turn around and see a couple from
Bogota that I hadn’t seen in maybe 15 years.
I caught up with them for about 5 minutes and even asked them who is the
person was and they said it looked like some guy who had a seizure. As I headed over to the area, I see a group
of people looking to see what has happened with the person and I see Keith (Former
Manager of the Wellness Center and a friend) looking down at the person in some
serious concern. As I got closer, I
noticed the persons hand on the ground and noticed the Fit bit on their hand
and the closer I got, I realized it was Patty.
*Deep Breath here* I sprinted over and I had to have knocked
into a few on the way and I leaped over the people attending her like OJ in
that Hertz commercial. As I arrived,
they started telling me what was going on, a lot of noise and truly don’t
remember what they were saying outside that her blood pressure had sky
rocketed. Patty was laying there completely
passed out and I honestly thought the bozo just didn’t eat and fainted….wish I
was right. The police and paramedics
arrived and started asking me questions about Patty but the interesting part of
this was many years ago, P made me put the
name of her BP medicine and amount under her profile in my phone so one
day, GOD FORBID, if I needed,
I can recover the information. So
I was able to tell them that she was on a low dose of Bystolic 5mg and after a
few minutes Patty started to wake up and here is where my thought of not eating
was coming to truth. She sat up and had no
recollection what had happened except her remembering a terrible headache and
sat on the bench to catch her breath. As
she was talking and drinking some water she turned around and saw the stretcher
and freaked out. She has spent most of her life watching her mother going in
and out of the hospitals and this “ I have to go on a stretcher” thing was
flying out of her mouth with a few curse words thrown in there. After screaming at her, yes Dyfus style, that
she needed to go on that thing and head to the hospital to get checked out, she
agreed. As she was getting wheeled out,
the apologies were flowing from her mouth to everyone she passed or saw. Got outside and the paramedics recommended
that I take my truck to the hospital and not ride in the ambulance. As I rode to the hospital, I called our friend
Krista but forgot she was in Mexico, a few work calls to tell them I am
probably not making my Friday appointments and called Shay’s Dad to make sure
that he can pick Shay up from Volleyball.
As I arrived at HUMC valet around 615-620pm, I basically
tossed my keys to the attendants and truly didn’t care what they did with my
truck. I walked into the ER and was
passed around like a hot potato with asking me questions and stalling me for
some reason. Didn’t really think too
much of it until they brought me in a room and started with the questionnaire
bullshit and insurance information, here is where Chris’ temper and short
patience took over and I looked at the chick and I swear I was nice and I quote
“You can keep the fucking insurance card, I can order a new one, I just want to
see my wife”. As they started walking me
to the ER area, I had a sense of concern on what the hell is going on but I was
more scared for Patty because she was all alone. They sat me in a chair and told me it’s
going to be another 5 minutes, I must have given the nurse a death look cause
within seconds, they walked me in. The
ER is setup with all of the rooms around the parameter and the island is where
the nurses’ station was…when they walked me over I could see in the room. The curtain was closed and as I looked down,
I saw at least 12-16 feet in the room working on Patty and I was like, this is
definitely not good. The nurse came over
and told me that when Patty arrived she had thrown up and passed out. Later I was told that equals head
trauma. The ER doctor came out and said
that they are unsure what is going on and that Patty is heading up to a CAT
scan to get a better look at her head.
As she is wheeled by, there had to be 12 tubes connected to her and she
is unconscious, the emotional roller coaster had started and being an only
child in life, I can do whatever by
myself and I truly love my alone time..BUT at this moment, being alone was truly the worst feeling
someone could have. The next few minutes
are foggy on what happened, I know I called my parents, my sister in law
Theresa and I think I threw out a shitload of group txts. We had arrived at around 6:30 and time stamp
right now is about 6:55-7:00. As Patty
is wheeled back down to the room and hooked back up, ER doctor asked if we can
discuss the CAT scan and he took me down two hallways and sat me in a random
chair…leaned down to talk to me. Now, I
was a HUGE fan of the show ER so I knew exactly the scene I was in and this was
DEF not good. He goes to me, “who you texting
with”? I said my friend George. He goes...“where does he live?” I tell him
and he says “we are calling him and he needs to come here now cause I can’t
have you here alone”. I called George
and I just go...”come here now”. The
doctor proceeds to tell me that Patty is very sick and she had a stage 4 Aneurysm
and she had a stroke that they were able to contain. He said the Aneurysm leaked…not burst…and basically
told me that the blood has leaked to the back right side of her head…the size
of his hand.
In 1993 on April 17th, Steve Kinsglow who was my
AAU basketball coach for the Jersey Jayhawks,
woke up in the middle of the night and died at the age of 27 from a
Brain Aneurysm. For 21 years, that day
has run through my mind and I always wondered why there isn’t a warning or more
awareness, and now here I am sitting in the ER being told my wife had one. He goes on to tell me that I need to call all
of our family and friends to the hospital because my wife is very sick and
living off a ventilator. My response
back to him…”Doc, is my wife going to die?... his response, “she isn’t
breathing on her own and is very sick”.
My response…”I will take that as a yes”.
Getting off that chair was something I will never forget. I basically left my soul in that chair that
night and walked down the hallway. Tears
started flowing with so many emotions running through me. As I was walking down the hallway, Shay’s
father calls me and tells me that he and his wife were in the waiting room (Remember
I had called him about picking up Shay…so if you forgot and found this weird,
there is your reminder). As I was
explaining what the hell was going on, they were the first to see me in the
state I was in. We had to discuss what we were going to do with telling Shay
and getting her to the hospital. He
decided that he was going to get her and bring her back, it was totally the right move even though if
Patty had to vote, the answer would have been NO. George arrived, I will be thankful for the
rest of my life for the support he provided me that night and the next
morning. George and Amanda were just
married that Saturday before and I am even more thankful that their honeymoon
was delayed a few months. As I was
sitting at the desk…my lifeless wife laying 20 feet away from me.. I started
placing more calls to people to let them know.
People started arriving including my Uncle Dick which was the best
surprise of them all. I am lucky to
have that man in my life because he was the support group I needed right at
that moment and like George, thankful for the rest of my life for that.
At around 7:30-745pm, Shay arrived with her father and this
was the moment I think I found the toughest to deal with. After a brief conversation with her I grabbed
her hand as tight as I could, and walked her over to the room, you could feel
with each step, the grip got tighter and tighter by both of us. I was walking Shay in to see the person she
loved more than anyone, laying there
lifeless and living off a machine, not
sure if there could have been a more depressing moment cause I was standing
there watching this and this is the last thing Patty would have ever wanted. As we walked out of the room, the group had
grown with friends (Dave, Fran L, Fran G, and Kim) and family (My parents, Theresa,
Uncle Dick, Kris, Amy and Kyle) and we needed every single one of them. At around 830pm, the doctor came up to
George, myself and Theresa and I quote “Patty is the sickest patient I have
ever seen in this ER in my 13 years here” Patty had been wheeled up a few times
for tests and still the same results, no
improvement.
At around 945pm, the
ER doctor came up to me at the desk that I had completely taken over with the
amount of supporters Patty had at the hospital and asked to speak to me. I
remember looking at him, reminder that I really liked this doctor and his
keeping me updated was on point but everything has been bad news, and I stated
“ Doc, I can’t hear any more bad news so
I truly don’t want to talk to you” He
promised he didn’t have any bad news. I
go on to tell him that I don’t have the people (My parents and Poppy Puzo)
there to help me make any of those serious decisions that I might have had to
make. He calls me over and grabs my
elbow and walks me over to the room and made me stand at the end of the bed and
tells me to watch. Within minutes I see
Patty’s toes start to move and I look over to him and he assures
me this is good. He states “This is
really good and now neurology will now take the case”. The joke around her feet moving was my
busting on Patty for always teasing her on how busted her feet and toes
were. IRONIC! Within minutes, the neurology team came down
and they pulled me aside and basically described what has happened and what is
going to happen. I get introduced to
the Resident Doctor from neurology and my first thought was “man he is young”
and I went on to call him my Doogie Howser.
The entire group of family and friends have now moved over to surround
the room for support and to see what the hell is next. Doogie comes over to me and explains that
they need to put a tube in her head to start draining the blood from her brain
and they will have to shave her head. In
my sarcastic and typical Chris way I told him that I cannot approve this action
and that her hair dresser will have to sign off, Kim, who was there is her hair dresser. The doctor looked at me with my 9 heads and
then died laughing and realized I was kidding but I think he was baffled that I
still had my sense of humor, even in this situation.
People started leaving now and my parents and George left
around 1130 and by the next morning Patty was scheduled to have the Aneurysm
coiled. So from the moment the ER doctor
told me that my wife was going to die, to the moment her toes wiggled was about
2 hours and 50 minutes. The thought
that my wife was dead for that long is still surreal but something had happened
and I will talk about that later in the story.
Please continue to follow this Blog as I will go through the
next few days in the blog next month….
TO BE CONTINUED…
Having Chris share his side of the story is extremely powerful. I'm so inspired by you both! Your love and support for each other is incredible!!!
ReplyDeleteWe are definitely eachothers "rocks"!! xo
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