Hi. I'm here for the moment. X-post quickly just to say I'm so glad your mom's surgery went well, Matt.
I'm going to use the board as a bit of therapy and write out some of what's been going on here to try to process it a little. If hospital stuff freaks you out, I get it. I completely understand if you need to skip this one.
I hate not having another family member, especially Dad himself, to help me to make decisions right now. Because it isn't clear cut. It isn't as simple as "he's dying" or "he's getting better." It's a terrible roller coaster with no way to know what each day will bring. One symptom exacerbates another. Some doctors express true optimism that he's improving and his labs look good (the fact that no one can figure out the root cause of all of this is a big part of the problem), and others don't know if we will ever get him back. And Dad can't talk to me to tell me what he wants. There's no way to have a shared moment because — on top of his currently untreated dementia since he hasn't been able to take his pills regularly for more than a week — he's having hospital delusions (which the doc says don't resolve until someone is back home, which he can't be) and his words are still complete garbled.
I'm at the hospital from 8ish to 7:30ish every day because otherwise I miss doctors and treatments don't happen. He can't advocate for himself or even tell me what hurts or how he's feeling. In his confusion, he gets combative when they try to take his blood or — worse — change him. And he's strong. At one point, they had to put mittens on him because he was hitting nurses. He's improved since then but still gets very upset and fights when they do anything. I can calm him down, sometimes. Sometimes not.
This morning was good. He was bright eyed and trying to talk, and though he wasn't making much sense, he did say my name once and was happy to see a couple of friends who stopped by. Then I made the mistake of stepping out of the hospital for a couple of hours to finally get a massage and left local friend T. here to hang with him...and the first hour? Great. The PT came in to work with him (he can't even sit up on his own currently, but he at least got him to move on the bed a little, with support), Dad's friend R. stopped by and was tickled to see Dad so chipper, and things seemed okay. Then, when everyone else had left, T. witnessed Dad, we assume, having a seizure. She said he got lethargic and then went rigid, but it took a few minutes to get any help, and it was over by the time the nurse arrived. I really think he's been having little seizures the past couple of months. I think that's the weird head rush he's been feeling that kept leading to falls before this all happened. Anyway, freaked T. out completely, understandably, so when I turned on my phone (the first time I'd put it in DND in two weeks), there was a calm, but very concerned, text asking me to please come back right away. My back was in knots again by the time I got back to the hospital. I sent T. home and have been hanging out with him. Since then, he threw up the tiny amount of liquid he'd managed to drink earlier and almost aspirated again, so that was exciting. He's resting now. If T. hadn't been there, no one would have seen the seizure happen. I can't ask her to sit with him again. It isn't fair.
I don't know. From the outside, I know it might seem obvious, that he's gone and I should let him go. But it's not that clear cut (and please, I'm begging you, please, no one give me advice). So I am trying to take it a day at a time. My friend B. texted me one really helpful thing, though: "There’s no way to do this well or right or easily. You’ll do it how you do it and that will be right."
I'm holding on to that. Thanks for listening.