Melissa wanted to go, I had to do that for her. Knowing this didn't make it better/easier.
Created: 2023-03-23
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- Stop the suffering The day of her death, I had a purpose; end her suffering. We all die, she couldn't take any more, there was no good path out, so (with the Hospitals help), I could help her die in her sleep (on happy drugs), with her Mom and me by her side (crying our eyes out), telling her how much we (and everyone) loved her. It took 7 hours, but at 11:52 they called it. The last words I got to say to her while she was conscious, was "You know I Love You more than anything in the world, right babe?" She looked at me, blinked once. and squeezed out a tear. She knew she was dying, and that I loved her.
- It didn't happen the way I thought it would (or the way the movies show) with everything just going flat. Earlier, she was stopping breathing for 30 seconds or a minute, her SpO2 (Oxygen in blood) would start crashing, then she'd gasp up to the 90s again. I thought she'd go by just forgetting to breath until her heart stopped. But after an hour her breathing was regular and was having none of that easy exit. Many hours later her heart stopped beating, but the ECG line kept sending signals. Then blood pressure crashed from 44/22 or so, to 8/8, and she kept breathing the whole time. Then that stopped, and I watched the color in her face drain to white. Then 30 seconds or a minute later, she breathed once. (After death). Then a minute, and one more gasp. She wanted to go, but didn't want to give up her life.
- Life is for the living
- The nurse listened for her heart. Called in the doctor, who called it.
- The love of my life had just passed, turned white while I watched, and was gone.
- But life goes on for the rest of us. Now what?
- I had the supreme indignity of living. I had to put all her things that no longer mattered on a cart, and push them out to my car.
- While walking out with Mary, I said, "She broke the deal, Husbands are supposed to die before wives". Mary replied, "Mothers are supposed to die before their daughters". I cried. She wins.
- The best marriages end with one person heartbroken... I'm glad she isn't feeling what I'm feeling. But sad that she's not the one alive. I prayed to take me instead, don't take her light from the world. Not that I don't love life. I just have this undertone of I've had a good life, and she's touched and brightened more lives than I will. I'm a good person... but she was a better one.
- While walking out, I told Mary that "in some ways, I'd wished Melissa had just passed while running. This was a long harder path for her. But she got to see her friends, and feel how many loved her and doted on her, and see what a little fighter and spirit she was (even in a broken body). Mary got to mother her again for 3 1/2 weeks." I'm not sure I wanted Melissa to have to pay that price for that reward, but I'm not exactly sad about it either. Melissa lived her life, and exited it, scrappy, stubborn, and she did it her way.
The boy who knew too much?
I knew too much medically about what was happening (I think).
- Her heart rate was 46, but in tachycardia and doing 200 plus BPM. Her heart was running the fucking marathon of her life. Her low BP was causing her body to gasp and try to oxygenate. Whether her soul wanted to go, her body was fighting so fucking hard.
- As your BP drops, your heart rate goes up to compensate -- since her rate is low, her heart just flutters -- but her flutters in rhythm, and still manages to work. (It freaked her doctors out). It looks like it's beating at 46, but it's doing 4 or 5 flips per beat, and for some reason, it works for her. She could run a 1/2 marathon with it being at 200.
- Her body lasted 7+ hours. Even the nurse came in and said, "her heart is so strong"... and so big. Literally and figuratively. (She had an enlarged heart, in both ways).
- The Hospital, had forgot about her pacemaker/defib, and I had to ask them to shut them off (that took hours to get the tech to do, because the "magnet" didn't deactivate it, like they thought). If they hadn't of shut it off, she probably would have lasted much longer.
- I asked them to take out the vent for partly the same reason -- but mostly because she hated the vent and could breath on her own. I couldn't let even her last subconscious thoughts being, "please get this fucking vent out".
- I was killing my baby... but she had begged me for it, she was going to die anyways. Once that's innevitable, I was going to do it as mercifully as I could. I asked for pain/relaxation meds as often as they would let me. If they left me the morphine around, I would have helped her day-drink herself to peace.
I knew too much medically about what was happening (I think).
- Her heart rate was 46, but in tachycardia and doing 200 plus BPM. Her heart was running the fucking marathon of her life. Her low BP was causing her body to gasp and try to oxygenate. Whether her soul wanted to go, her body was fighting so fucking hard.
- As your BP drops, your heart rate goes up to compensate -- since her rate is low, her heart just flutters -- but her flutters in rhythm, and still manages to work. (It freaked her doctors out). It looks like it's beating at 46, but it's doing 4 or 5 flips per beat, and for some reason, it works for her. She could run a 1/2 marathon with it being at 200.
- Her body lasted 7+ hours. Even the nurse came in and said, "her heart is so strong"... and so big. Literally and figuratively. (She had an enlarged heart, in both ways).
- The Hospital, had forgot about her pacemaker/defib, and I had to ask them to shut them off (that took hours to get the tech to do, because the "magnet" didn't deactivate it, like they thought). If they hadn't of shut it off, she probably would have lasted much longer.
- I asked them to take out the vent for partly the same reason -- but mostly because she hated the vent and could breath on her own. I couldn't let even her last subconscious thoughts being, "please get this fucking vent out".
- I was killing my baby... but she had begged me for it, she was going to die anyways. Once that's innevitable, I was going to do it as mercifully as I could. I asked for pain/relaxation meds as often as they would let me. If they left me the morphine around, I would have helped her day-drink herself to peace.
There's an even darker alternative. Engineers think through ALL possibilities. It's kinda how our brains work. So I'd modelled the worst case scenario the first night they told me she might be brain dead.
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Tags: Grief