On being home

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And just like that, we’re home. We haven’t  been home since before Christmas. Sam put away the tree on one visit earlier in the year,  but we still have all these unopened gifts sitting in the lounge.

It felt weird to leave the hospice, we said our gbyes quickly, and when we were finally out of the building, we packed up the car so quick! As it’s as if we were afraid we were going to be called back.

Being at home… it feels so good and so odd. We don’t have a routine at home yet, and all the added pressures of things like cooking and shopping and remembering to take the rubbish down have me a bit off balance.

Still, I’ll take it – sleeping in a proper bed again is so so amazing. Wearing pjs all day and not worrying about what your hair looks like. The sense of privacy, no nurses sticking their heads in to see how we are! All the things we have! I’d forgotten how much stuff we just have. How much stuff Kai has (he’s outgrown almost all the clothes we have for him!)

It’s amazing how much we take for granted, but I’m truly grateful that after a month in hospital, a week in intensive care and another month in hospice on end of life care, Kai basically said fuck it and got well enough to come home. I love him.

 

Dear Kai – Month 5

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Dear Kai,

Another month – I can’t believe how much you’ve grown! Those cheeks! They’re so big, one of your nurses insisted we weigh you to see if you’d jumped a percentile. You haven’t, you’re growing just as you should be, but apparently it’s all in your scrumptious cheeks.

This month we got to take you home. Can we just pause for a moment and celebrate, we went into hospice on end of life care, and we were able to take you HOME! Being home as been wonderful and crazy. So wonderful, so crazy. So much chaos. I’m loving this time with you though, I love spending my days with you, though they seem to pass in a flash with your schedule.

Your schedule is crazy hey. With the meds, and feeds and all the therapy. It’s been the month of a meeting kajillion new therapists. Physio and dieticians and nurses early support and portage. The list is never ending. We’re getting into the rhythm, we have so many people through, easily someone every day. I very quickly started reserving Mondays ‘just for fun’ else we’d be overrun. You’re best in the morning, and enjoy physio and play therapy with portage. You easily charm everyone, your hospice carers, our health visitor, the slew of nurses and dieticians. Our people often say they’re not meant to have favourites,  but they do so enjoy spending time with you! I’m so grateful they come to us, because schelping you about with all your kit requires a plan executed with military precision.

We do manage to get out, though. It took a week or two – for the longest time we weren’t able to settle in, just us three. We were always at the hospital, or hospice. So for the first few weeks at home we hunkered down – loving on you, trying to get into a routine and come to terms with your insane schedule of meds and feeds (we’re still waiting for it to break in a little, for it to feel more like second nature rather than like we’re always behind the ball).

Once I got over the babies-without-rare-disorders fear, we went to all the (very local) places. We tried Baby Bach (not your thing) and we’re doing pretty good at walks around the river. Hanging out with our NCT friends has been pretty fun too.

It’s hard not to compare developmental milestones, so we try extra hard to celebrate what you can do. Your suck returned, and with it your love for the dummy. We also do a bit of a bottle feed before each meal, if you’re awake. Your first tooth came through (!!) and we discovered that if we roll you onto your side, with some determined kicking you can roll yourself onto your back. Every day we manage a little bit of physio, and a little bit of portage homework. You’re not a fan of tummy time. Not even close. Your head is still wobbly, but sometimes you’ll give it a go, holding it up unsupported for a microsecond here or there. You’re much more active, and talking to us. You’ve found good use for your voice! It’s such a delight to hear your happy gurgles.

We’re not much into a routine outside therapy, meds and feeds (your medical needs make it difficult) but when we can you enjoy baths with Daddy and afternoon walks. You’ve outgrown the carrycot, so now you sleep in the big crib at night, and ride about in the pram proper. We’ve had a right old time with the weather shield (and we now know for certain that you hate wind). It’s better now that I’ve figure out how to put it on correctly.

You’re getting pretty good at pulling out your NG (though I’m a bit better at stopping you). You almost always end up in our bed in the mornings (one, cause it’s easier to give meds if your next to me and two, baby snuggles). Though throughout the day you nap wherever you happen to be lying.

Your meds continue to be difficult, you struggle to keep them down, so we spend a long time dancing about to give you the best shot at not vomiting. You’ve also had your first proper cold, and with it came a slew of seizures. You were also on antibiotics preventatively, to ensure you didn’t get a chest infection you couldn’t fight off. Helpful because you weren’t able to cough up all the mucus that was sitting on your chest. We spent an awful lot of time trying chest physio!

This month really has passed in the blink of an eye. Daddy dressed you up in an England onsies for the six nations (though rest assured, you’ll be in an All Blacks onsie when they thrash England). I managed to carve out some time to crochet a hat with ears, which you’re not a huge fan off. We’ve also been socially able to meet more of our friends. It’s slow going, as we’re wary of overwhelming you (and then there’s the fear of you getting ill as people touch you with unwashed hands, or worse, if people try to kiss you). Still, I can’t get over the pride I find in you when my friends (appropriately sanitised) get to love on you a little. My bonny wee guy!

You’ve done well this month with hospital visits. We only had one trip to the A&E, which you handled like a pro. We were lucky enough that instead of being admitted, we were sent back home! Good job, little guy. We were so pleased.

Another highlight was meeting the Mayor of Wandsworth for tea in his fancy parlour. You seemed not fussed, but it was a a nice song and dance for Mummy and Daddy! We also managed some Mummy/Daddy time for Daddy’s 30th. We left you for the first time in the capable care of our hospice carer and went out to dinner for a few hours. It was both the longest and shortest few hours ever. I hate leaving you baby, but it was so refreshing and weirdly bizarre to slip back into a parody of our pre you life. I’ve never been more grateful to be home, though. I feel like every moment with you is a precious one, and I don’t want to miss a single moment.

I’m so grateful you’re home, baby. You’ve changed our lives in such a fundamental way, and I can’t imagine life without you.

Love you more than you’ll ever know,

Mama x

On Sam and Adam

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One of the worries about being home is what happens when Kai pulls out the tube. We won’t have nurses in our living room, so we can’t just pad down the hall and have someone put another back in.

They asked if I’d want to learn how to put it in, and the truth is: no. No I don’t. When I have to hold Kai’s head still, and he’s screaming and there are a kajillion hands over his face putting tubes down his face I want to cry with him. I hate it, I positively absolutely loathe that this is a necessity.

Put in perspective, it’s not the worst tube. It’s not a cannula into a vein, or a vent to help him breathe. It’s a small little one, and by far not the worst tube.

That doesn’t mean I don’t hate it, because I do. I hate that it messes up his face, and that we need to mitten his hands to keep it in. I hate that when he screams you can see it running down the back of his throat. I hate that Kai clearly doesn’t like it, and wants it gone.

So when we’re putting a new tube in, I feel all the things. And I’m crooning platitudes and trying to comfort my child as I forcibly restrain his head and just… it’s rubbish.

Once we’re home we will have community nurses available to us during daylight hours, who can come out and put a tube down if we need.

At night? At night Sam stepped up and said he’d learn. To be fair though, he stuck a tube down his own nose at the prompting of a nurse the other day, so yeah.

He’s spent some time hanging out with Adam. Adam is the creepy child mannequin where you can learn all the things (NG, trachie, g-tube button among a dozen other things. Poor creepy Adam has it rough).

Still, Sam has been signed off by two nurses, and has been given the thumbs up to put an NG tube in for Kai if need be.

Honestly, I was so blissfully unaware of what special needs parents learn to do in The Before. I guess this is just one thing of many that we’ll learn to take care of.

 

On the now

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We’re gearing up to go home. I’ve taken on the meds and bulk of the care. Kai sleeps with us now, instead of under the watchful eye of the nurses, which is nice. I feel a bit like I’m getting my baby ‘back’. The nurses pop their heads in to see if we’re fine, and if we are they leave us to it. It’s pretty refreshing, actually, to be the main carer for Kai, like I’m meant to be.

In saying that, it’s not a walk in the park and I’m grateful the nurses are close by if we need them. Kai’s horribly difficult to aspirate. Horribly horribl difficult. It’s frustrating for everyone, Kai especially. I hate it, trying to pull up something from his belly to make sure the ng is still in the right place. If he’s sleeping and we can’t get one, we reposition him or do mouth care, often waking him. He is not a fan of the NG either. He’s always trying to pull it out. The nurses say he’ll ‘get used to it’ but I suspect he’ll get used to it in the same way you would if you had a thorn in your ankle, and you didn’t know it wasn’t meant to hurt.

We have to mitten his hands to keep him from pulling the tube out if we’re not hovering over him. It’s so frustrating, and I worry we’re impeding his development, I’m pretty sure he’s meant to exploring things with his mouth, and would if he knew he could reach his mouth with his hands. He’s already showing signs of shoving his gloved fist into his mouth. 

I’m also anxious to get the referrals sorted. We’re waiting to see a gastric surgeon for a g-tube, so we won’t have put meds down his nose (instead we can put them directly into his belly). And we’re waiting to see a speech and language therapist about his suck. And a dietician. It’s taking forever to sort and is so frustrating. While I’m grateful for the NHS, it’s so slow moving.

Kai’s also having a hard time keeping meds down, especially the phenobarbitone and sodium benzoate, medication used to keep his seizures at bay and the glycine in his blood down. You know, just the important ones. We do a big song and dance around giving them. They must be diluted. They must be given on a full stomach. They must be given slowly (0.1ml/ten seconds. SB is 8.4ml, so takes a good quarter of an hour). Once in, we don’t move Kai, we don’t touch him, we love him with our voices. We make sure his nappy is fresh before we start so we don’t need to do it later. We stagger the meds too, some at the beginning, some mid feed, some at the end, just in case it s a volume issue. Sometimes it works, sometimes he vomits no matter what we do.

This whole medication tube business is rough. We do it, because there is no choice in the matter – Kai needs it. His brain needs it. So we do it, but the now is rough, and we’re not even home yet.

Still, worth it. For every single day we get with him. Worth it.

On the infected subcut site – an update

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So it’s been a few days and the antibiotics aren’t doing their thing. The abscess hasn’t burst, but it does have some fluid. It’s hard around the outside and soft in the middle. On the hospice gps advice (they come visit us, it’s the most convenient gp visit ever), anyway, on the gps advice we went back to the local hospice hospital to see about helping it along.

Two things happened.

The first is that they whacked on some cream that numbs while it breaks down the skin, making it thinner and therefore more likely for the liquid underneath to burst through. That sounds horrific, and I worry that his poor skin is going to be so irritated and raw, even after the numbing has worn off.

The second is that if it hasn’t burst, because the local hospital won’t do anything surgical on children under 5, we have to go back into London to see a surgeon about cutting it. This could mean anything. I could mean a local, it could mean a general. It could mean a bit of numbing cream. We won’t know until we get there.

This of course freaks me out, because any major stressful event may cause seizures and coma. We only just got over the last lot, that came on from two monthly immunisations and a cold.

We’ve got our fingers crossed it bursts.

 

Update:

It didn’t burst. We went into London to our regular hospital but we were lucky – the day unit wasn’t busy and the surgical resident Dr Julie was available, she was so wonderfully nice to us. We talked about the best approach, which was to lance it and let it drain. So we went into the treatment room and did it, with some numbing spray.

Oh my days. It was disgusting,  but at the same time I couldn’t look away. The pus was a horrid green/brown mustard colour and gushed out. It was foul, I can’t believe that was in my babies leg! There was so much of it too, it was the most crazy thing, it just kept coming! Poor little baby.

In the end it was dressed, and we were given a script for antibiotics. We spent more time in the pharmacy than in the ward.

Still, very very glad it’s taken care of! 

 

On faith and superstition

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In the Before, I wasn’t a superstitious person. I wasn’t a religious person, either. I can’t remember who it was that told me that largest percentage of middle class, comfortable people are atheists, mostly because their lives are so comfortable and they don’t often face hardship out of their control. If you’re not in a situation where something horrid is happening, something truly horrid, then you don’t need faith or superstition to get you through.

At hospice I’ve picked up a few superstitious habits, because there is so much with Kai that we can only face with hope and cuddles. If we don’t want something to happen, we don’t mention it for fear of jinxing it, having it come about. We talk around it. If he’s sleeping and settled, we won’t say something like ‘he’s keeping down his meds! Hopefully he’ll keep down the next lot’ because then for sure Kai will vomit.

When we do talk about things we’re hopeful about, we always always prefix or end it with ‘touch wood’. And then both Sam and I will touch the nearest bit of wood, hopefully unpainted. Some of the nurses do it too, which is where I suspect we got the habit from.

I also throw up small tiny prayers of hope when I’m faced with a junction where Kai could go either way. I’ve never prayed as much in my life as I have since Kai was been born. Honestly, there is a lot of prayer.

When you’re faced with such extreme love and against such extreme hardship and pain, with the possibility of extreme loss, I think that’s where faith and hope are the strongest.

 

On losing his suck

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One of the things that was most heartbreaking was when Kai woke up, after essentially a month in a continuous seizure coma, was that he’d lost a lot of his skills.

He can’t hold his head up anymore, he wasn’t holding on to us when we held him, he stopped tracking with his eyes and he’d lost his suck. That last one was particularly heartbreaking for me, because it meant we were no longer breastfeeding. Kai’s swallow is good, but his suck is uncoordinated at best. It’s hard, because we used to use the dummy as a soothing tool, it worked like a magic trick! Now he pushes out the dummy as if it’s the most distasteful thing ever. 

I am pumping, so he’s  getting some breastmilk, but because I’ve been so stressed and we’ve been in so many different wards and had no routine my supply dropped. Dramatically dropped. I manage maybe half of his feeds now.

I’m so torn up about so many things – with no suck, he’s unlikely to be able to eat, and we take such pleasure from food. From eating. A lot of our social life revolves around it. Thinking of quality of life, how will Kai manage? Will his life be less because he may not be able to eat? That all his feeds will be put down a tube?

And then there’s the abrupt end to our breastfeeding time. Nursing was such a joy for me, they were the easy feeds of the day – no meds, just Kai and me.  I was able to soothe him with the boob, and I’d relax into it. I loved breastfeeding him. Highlights of my day, a little segment of normal.

Now we don’t even bottle feed. We try sometimes, but mostly he toys with the teat. We aspirate what we can from his stomach contents to check the tube is still in his belly, and then we hook him up to the feeding pump, hit a few buttons and away it whirls, beeping when finished. It couldn’t be a more different feeding scenario.

Even worse is the (completely unnecessary, totally irrational) guilt about having to supplement with formula. I know it’s best for him, that I’d never deprive my baby of food if he was hungry, but for me, I have a baby with a rubbish immune system. We know this. We know a cold can put him in intensive care. Feeding him breastmilk means he’s getting in part, whatever small immunity I’ve picked up.

This is a tiny tiny edge, but I’m clinging to it as long as possible, and the guilt that I’m depriving my baby of a possible advantage because my body isn’t cooperating is overwhelming.

I get on with it, because we’re in hospice and we need to. But that doesn’t mean I’m not sad, and guilty and trying desperately to increase my supply.

Instead, I’m doing my very best to appreciate what Kai can do. That he refound his voice, and has a very loud strong cry (healthy baby cry, sick babies are silent). That he so clearly enjoys physio and baby massage. That he found his smile for the first time (break my heart into a million pieces, I’m so happy he smiles), and he still responds to my terrible singing.

Small things get us through. Swings and roundabouts. Faith and fortitude.

 

On visiting our fifth hospital in four months (and the infected subcut)

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Kai’s subcut site got infected. It’s a thing that can happen when you have a needle under your skin for a week, and now it’s all purple and inflammed and sore to the touch.

We’ve tried two different antibiotics (adding a few more meds to the kajillion he’s already on, even worse: these ones always cause him to vomit), and we’ve waited. I took photos every few days and we drew black lines around it in biro to see if it was growing or not.

When it was clear it wasn’t getting any better and was proper bulging into not quite an abscess but maybe an abscess, we went down the road from our hospice and visited our fifth hospital.

We packed loads, fully anticipating a long stay, so imagine our surprise when we were in and out in a few hours. Lucky for us.

We’re trying a new antibiotic and a salt dressing, and we wait another few days. If it doesn’t look like it’s healing, we’ll be sent back to our London hospital to have it cut open and removed. We’d like to avoid the knife if we can.

Fingers crossed.

 

On doing the normal things, even at hospice

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The hospice is a few minutes walk from a canal, and one afternoon, between feeds and meds, when the weather was mild and the sun out, we took Kai for his first walk in a month. Leaving the hospice together, just us, was heavenly, and I felt (just for a moment) a bit normal.

It was lovely. There were people walking their dogs and children in gummies and just, the perfect way to spend an afternoon. We weren’t on our way to a hospital, or a medical appointment. It was just us three. Bliss. 

We don’t often get the chance to do things like this, so I appreciate it so so much when we do.

 

On tentative going home whispers

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So. Going home has tentatively been raised. At first I wasn’t sure, he’s on four hourly feeds (that require two hourly attentions, for turning the pump on and off, setting up and cleaning down), meds ten times a day (more if we stagger them so can tolerate them a bit better), and I’m meant to be pumping every three hours.

I’m not sure how it’s going to work at home without the army of help we have here. Add in all the medical appointments and hooha and how am I going to fit time in for life? For showers, and grocery shopping and eating? With the two hourly feeding pump drama, how is sleeping going to work? How do I do the stuff that helps? Physio and tummy time and research?

The enormity of what life looks like outside the hospice freaks me out. But then, I think I’m getting a little too comfortable at hospice. A little too reliant on the nurses (they’re all enablers for three am sleep for me when it means baby cuddles for them). 

Even logistics aside, we’re in a nice cosy bubble. Here, an NG tube is the least out of place thing – all non verbal, non ambulatory kids are welcome here, and loved and are the norm. What happens outside the hospice, outside the nice safe bubble, where my kid goes from being the norm, to not?

I think now is the time we knuckle down. Now, in the tricky time when we have to reestablish a crazy routine is when we figure out what kind of parents we are.

Just, fuck. I am so ready to be home, but I literally can’t see how it’s going to work and I worry about all the unknowns. I guess we plow on ahead and do our best?

I want to face it in a determined ‘I totally am the best at life and will win at insane routines’ kind of way.

We’re not sure when yet, but now I’m totally ready to take my baby home. Fuck you NKH. I want more time with my baby.