Wednesday, May 29, 2013
Saturday, May 25, 2013
Welcome to Mount Carmel
So, we've now finished just a little over a week here in the rehab hospital. It's not the clean and sterile environment we were used to at DePaul, but it feels a little less tense and a little more "homey". The staff here is very nice and things are progressing extremely well. When Mom got here, she was just off the hospital stay and could barely move herself. Now she can sit up in bed almost effortlessly and is just a few physical therapy sessions away from being able to stand on her own.
She still requires help to get up and do most basic things, but it's simply a matter of strength and not a matter of will. She has some combination of physical, occupational, and speech therapy almost every day. She is about to graduate out of the speech therapy as the only thing that has not returned to complete normal is the pitch of her speech. It's higher than it used to be, but the tone, inflections, and rhythm of her speech are as they were.
Here is the room...more like a hotel than a hospital. Flowers, Grandpas and all...
Here is the physical rehab area on the bottom floor. While we were there, she walked (with the walker) farther (over 100 feet in three separate sessions) than she ever had before. I think she said the previous record was 33 feet. Today she did a 44 and a 55 foot excursion, plus the last one, which I think went unmeasured.
This is the first walk she did...she came from around the corner on the left near where that man is standing..
A brief video of the last walk she did (it may or may not actually load):
Here's the bike-like apparatus that works both arm and leg strength. You should also know that the woman riding next to Mom was a 97-year old woman named Helen, who was just as full of piss and vinegar as you might expect. I overheard Helen talking to her nurse about the various cancers she has had, including breast cancer and a brain tumor. "I've got the hole in my head to prove it," she said. It is worth noting that after explaining the host of complications Mom has had in the past several weeks, even Helen was impressed with her progress.
So, after just over a week, she has made what one therapist called "remarkable progress". She's got several more weeks to go, but Grandpa and I both agree that the recovery from this point will be swift and complete. Don't be afraid to give her a call during the day if you want to check in and say hello!
She still requires help to get up and do most basic things, but it's simply a matter of strength and not a matter of will. She has some combination of physical, occupational, and speech therapy almost every day. She is about to graduate out of the speech therapy as the only thing that has not returned to complete normal is the pitch of her speech. It's higher than it used to be, but the tone, inflections, and rhythm of her speech are as they were.
Here is the room...more like a hotel than a hospital. Flowers, Grandpas and all...
Here is the physical rehab area on the bottom floor. While we were there, she walked (with the walker) farther (over 100 feet in three separate sessions) than she ever had before. I think she said the previous record was 33 feet. Today she did a 44 and a 55 foot excursion, plus the last one, which I think went unmeasured.
This is the first walk she did...she came from around the corner on the left near where that man is standing..
A brief video of the last walk she did (it may or may not actually load):
Here's the bike-like apparatus that works both arm and leg strength. You should also know that the woman riding next to Mom was a 97-year old woman named Helen, who was just as full of piss and vinegar as you might expect. I overheard Helen talking to her nurse about the various cancers she has had, including breast cancer and a brain tumor. "I've got the hole in my head to prove it," she said. It is worth noting that after explaining the host of complications Mom has had in the past several weeks, even Helen was impressed with her progress.
So, after just over a week, she has made what one therapist called "remarkable progress". She's got several more weeks to go, but Grandpa and I both agree that the recovery from this point will be swift and complete. Don't be afraid to give her a call during the day if you want to check in and say hello!
Sunday, May 12, 2013
Mother's Day at De Paul
Here she is going on week five or something. We are getting more and more frustrated with the waiting game. Mom thinks that they're going to come in tomorrow and tell her she's pregnant. My money's on lupus. It's just one thing after another. Nothing terribly serious, but they all seem like reasons to "wait and see". Now she apparently has shingles, so there's that. At any rate, we think she could get sprung sometime this week. She's headed to Mount Carmel on First Capitol Drive.
Here are some pics from today...
The Mother's Day flowers.

Mom on the phone making deals.


Here are some pics from today...
The Mother's Day flowers.
Mom on the phone making deals.
Sunday, May 5, 2013
More Progress
Now that she has transitioned to a regular hospital room, Mom is working on getting her strength and appetite back so they can send her to a physical rehab - hopefully someplace closer to home. She is getting frustrated and annoyed with the holding pattern she is in, and I told her today that it was refreshing to hear her getting pissed about not moving forward. It will be happening soon.
She also wanted to thank the boys again for the beautiful "flowies". She had me bring them home and put them on the table so they would be here when she returns.
She also wanted to thank the boys again for the beautiful "flowies". She had me bring them home and put them on the table so they would be here when she returns.
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