Friday morning was the calm before the storm. I had a perfectly beautiful morning with a
perfectly beautiful friend. Then in the
afternoon the winds started picking up.
My 11 year old was going to attend his first scouting campout. Thankfully, his oldest brother went along too,
so I felt like he had some eyes on him and all would be well. This particular Scout Troop is well versed in
type 1 Diabetes. J has blazed a trail.
Everything was fine.
J was headed out to a birthday party. Pizza, a corn maze and then sundaes at the
birthday boy’s house. Not uncharted
territory for our family.
Everything was fine.
L was left with my sister law and me. We took him to a fun Mexican restaurant and indulged
his desire to order off the “adult” menu.
When the waitress asked him if he’d like to keep the coloring page he
waved it away and said, “No thank you.
You know…I’m almost 10 years old.”
Other than my baby growing up too fast…everything was fine.
At 10:00pm L and I picked up J from the party. As we walked down the driveway to my car J
says, “Oops. I forgot to bolus for that
sundae.”
This is where the black cat crossed our path. Well, I didn’t actually see it…but I felt
it. I shuddered a knowing shudder. I’m a big advocate for going to bed with no
IOB. So as I checked my watch I realized
it would be 1am before I would be sleeping soundly. Still…it doesn’t happen often with this one,
so I accepted the reality without prejudice.
I’m super good at pretending everything is fine.
As soon as I walked in the door at 10:17pm, the text came
from my oldest son.
“B is 84 with 2.4 units of insulin on board. What do?”
I replied that a Dex4 was in order, and that B should be
checked 20 minutes later, and then again at Midnight.
At 11:00pm I hadn’t heard word. So I called my oldest.
I called him 17 times.
He didn’t answer.
My quandary was this: Did he do the check he promised, and
just not update me? Probably. Maybe?
But here’s the kicker. If he’s
not answering the phone, and he’s asleep…and his alarm IS his phone. How is he going to wake up to said alarm at midnight?
And again did the first check take place as promised?
Suddenly. Things were
not looking so ok. Or rather, pretending
that everything was ok, wasn’t as easy as before.
But the winds for whatever reason decided to go all
hurricane force on me when my little guy walks in and says, “I’m high. You’re not going to like it. It starts with a four.”
“Kid. It’s ok. Just tell me.”
“I’m 407.”
“Did you bolus?”
“No. My pump won’t
let me. The buttons don’t work. That’s been happening a lot. But don’t worry…they start working
eventually. I’ll just lay in my bed
until it does and then I’ll give myself insulin.”
“Okay.” I said knowing full well it’s all hit the fan but holding
on to my plan of pretending like everything is fine.
So I kissed his cheek goodnight and then continued calling
the oldest, over and over until I realized I’m probably draining his battery
and he’ll have no juice to call me tomorrow.
So at 11:51pm I send a private message on Facebook to the Scoutmasters
son and ask him if his dad has a cell phone…and if he does could he call him
and have him kick my eldest in the arse and have him check B.
Condensed version: He
calls. No answer. The dad calls back. The dad says he’ll search the sea of tents to
find my boys and make sure all is well.
I wait 20 minutes. I get
restless. I call, and finally the
prodigal son returns. He was DEAD asleep
and the scoutmaster had just woken him, finding him only because he could hear
me attempting to call over and over again.
B is checked. A temp
basal was issued for ultimate security.
Done.
But as much as I want everything to be fine…everything is
not fine.
Remember. L went to
“lay down” to wait for his pump to work.
I found him asleep, and I found his pump still refusing to believe I was
pushing buttons. Nothing I did would
make those buttons respond. Another BG
check showed him to be 518.
In a perfect world I would have been able to call Medtronic
and ask for a replacement. Alas. His pump is out of warranty. Only because I wanted to wait it out and see
if the NEW Medtronic pump would be Okayed for kids under 16. Apparently, that’s not in the cards for us…and
did I mention it was Friday night? Our
Endo isn’t readily available on the weekends to put in the new orders for new
pumps.
At this point, nothing is okay. I let the tears flow freely down my face as I
calmly searched the cupboards for an old pump, a list of L’s basal rates, and
the elusive AAA batteries. Once found, I
reprogrammed the pump to L’s settings, although this old pump didn’t have the
smaller dosing increments the new one does.
But close enough…and surely better than going back on shots. Especially since I don’t have one bottle of
Lantus in the house.
I’m rambling.
I set up the pump, gave my littlest the sweet serum of life,
checked J’s blood sugar and gave him an extra bit of insulin, and then sat down
to write this.
Everything is ok.
Again.
For a while anyway.
Now it’s almost 2am. And I’m
wide-awake.
There is a blog post circling around the diabetes online
community about the worst-case scenario happening to a family with a T1 child. It turns out the story might not be
authentic. As I look around my living
room at the aftermath of my day…strips, pumps, batteries, printouts from Doctors offices, ketone
strips…I clearly see my reality. In
fact, I see it all in 3D.
I’m not going to sugar coat it. It’s hard.
And as I type this with real tears streaming down my face, with
real heartache in my bosom, with real children whose lives are on the line each
and every day, I’m compelled to scream to the world…
It’s REAL!
It’s REAL!
But who will believe?
Has the cynicism of society been deemed appropriate, or even necessary, because of a few bad
seeds? Will eventually the Internet lose
all validity resulting in valuable connections ceasing to lock into place?
Will we be left alone to worry if our neighbors are who they
say they are? If a person is commenting
only to uphold a certain persona? If statuses
are crafted rather than simply written?
Is "real" something slipping through our fingers?
I don’t know the future of the Internet, but I have been
sentenced to know some cold hard truths about this world…
And thankfully, some of those truths are:
1) There are more good people than bad people.
2) There are more real people than fake people.
3) There are more good nights than bad nights.
So if you’ll excuse me, I’m going to find my pillow and lay
this swelly brain down and dream of fixed pancreases and a reincarnated
husband.
Reality can bite sometimes, but my reality is always
brighter in the morning.
That’s a truth. And that's a wrap to my no good, terrible, very bad day.
Goodnight.
Oh Sweetie- Big hugs for you. I'm in tears too. Mine are never far from the surface lately since Debbie passed away! I pray you have sweet dreams! I've prayed for a few dreams of Debbie to help me through the most intense grief. I haven't had any yet. I am a real person. Debbie used to say "That's so sweet or you are so sweet" a lot. I just comes naturally to me. I wish I could be there to offer you my support. I have some good support here, but I wish we could offer each other real (not just cyber) support!! <3 Meri!!! Hope the rest of your weekend goes OK!!
ReplyDeleteI guess <3 doesn't make a heart here!!
DeleteI love reading your posts. IT SLAPS ME back to reality. When D-daughter got up crying at 10:00 she was 251. But it hadn't been 2 hours since she had a snack before bed (we are still MDI) so I waited to correct. At 11:15 she woke crying and a bit dazed and confused. 420??? What the heck. AND.... I am leaving for 3 days for the first time since dx. Dad "knows" what to do,,,but it is normally me doing it. As if I wasn't already stressed and worried to "LEAVE ME LIFE" for a few days. Hugs to ya!! I think of you so often when I think I can't handle this anymore. You rock girl!!
ReplyDeleteHugs to you..met you this summer at FFL and you are such a strong woman. Thank you for keeping it real and being such a great voice for all of "us"
ReplyDeleteOhhh Meri. I feel every bit of exhaustion/frustration in your words. :( ((HUGS))
ReplyDeleteHUGS Meri... I'm so sorry. I don't know how you're still standing.
ReplyDeleteAnd I read that person's blog as well. I was in tears, but as I read more I got a bad feeling about it. Glad he/she was outed. People like that are just sick.
I think we should move to Australia! :P
ReplyDelete(Remember in the book that everything gets better. That was a non-fiction story, right?)
Chin up, Meri! We all know it's hard, no one knows it better than you, but we are all there! We support you, keep you and ALL your sons in our thoughts.
ReplyDeleteI love that so many of these comments are around 2 or 3 am. We are up with you Meri. All if our stories might be a bit different but know we are all here together.
ReplyDeleteIm sooo sorry Type One is so terribly hard right now. I for you, I feel for your kids. Highs have been a terrible reality of this past month. Whether it is college stress, or just T1 "destructive mode", I've been struggling with this distorted disease. I love and pray for you guys often! I hope everything levels out, and you can get a chance to "catch your breath"!
ReplyDeleteLove and Prayers,
The Type One Trio :)
Oh, Meri...what a rough end of the night early morning. I had just heard about the not real stuff going on the internet and choose to ignore as I hadn't heard/read about it before it was exposed. But it still gets me that somebody would want to fake this, why?! I am glad your boys are fine. And that despite it all you ended up writing this post with good humor at the end, you are such an incredible inspiration to me. With Isaac's diagnosis of celiac I felt very depressed recently and know that I have thought of you, your strength, love and humor through everything. You make me want to be a better mom and wife, not a perfect one, but one that is able to keep going through it all. Even the points when my swell brain wants to shut down. Now here's to a fantastic less exciting week :)
ReplyDeleteWas anyone wearing railroad train pajamas?
ReplyDeleteHope things got easier in a jiffy.
And I hope the recent d-blog faker will soon discover that she's a completely worthwhile person without her gang of make-believe ill children.
(((Meri))) You are such a great mom. I'm so sorry for your rough night and that "it" all hit the fan at once. *hugs*
ReplyDelete-Laura, from a1conceive
Thank you for giving us a glimpse of your reality. Heart-rending, and all the more so that you are doing this without your husband.
ReplyDelete