Surgery - Union,NJ

Updated on January 22, 2011
I.M. asks from Union, NJ
7 answers

Okay, here is my dilema. I've been diagnosed with Chiari Malformation since 2004. Due to too many reasons I have postponed this surgery for ever. I've been in constant pain since before the diagnosis and decided to go forth with surgery now on February 1st. My husband has been off from work for years now, and works on and off. Last time he worked about 3 wks straight was in November early December last year 2010. He's been off since again. So my finances at this point are very limited. I have three children ages 12, 10 (almost 11), and 9. I've been preparing them for surgery, letting them know that I will be in the hospital for about a week and then home; but that I will not be able to do much with them as before. I have contacted their schools, principals and teachers (they all go to a different school) explaining them what is taking place and to please allow them to see the school councelor if they see them worried, sad or not being themselves.
I've explained to them that they may not be able to see me in the hospital because they are too young but they can call me at any time. I also explained that I will be in the ICU while there because I need constant care, not because I am dying or anything has gone wrong.
I have asked my sisters (3) and cousins to please come by my house while I am in the hospital and help them (if needed) with their homework and to please try to keep them calm for me.
Now this is my biggest problem, my mother lives with me and takes care of my children, but she is super dramatic and worries about every thing! Last December (2009) I had a procedure done to measure the preassure of the brain and see if a different procedure (other than this surgery I'm having now) would help me, and she went balistic! she had my children in such stage of frustration, and worried all the time that they would call me at the hospital crying, and were not eating. I don't want this to happen again, so I told them that they will need to look after grandma and not to let her upset them like before. That I will be calling them too and checking up on them; and that I was going to try to see if I could see them somehow.

I would like to do something special with them before I have surgery but I don't know what I could do that would be inexpensive. Mortage is due and a whole bunch of other bills. I thought maybe bying the pizza dough and making a homemade pizza for each. We do a lot of baking so I know they might like the pizza idea, and maybe get a movie and chill with them over the weekend. I wish I could have a one on one day with each of them, but I can't.
Do you have any ideas, do you think I missed anything? I will be contacting my church and letting them know as well. The Pioneer Girls workers know what's going on, because I am a teacher and told them not to count with me for about 4 months or so. There are parents there that are willing to help me by taking my daughter with their child in case my husband can't do it.
My children are too closed to me, they are all mama's kids; and I don't want them to feel any more preasure than needed. Please let me know your opinion and ideas, it is all well received.
Thanks

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So What Happened?

Hi ladies,
So it's been over a year after surgery and I've been so busy that I haven't had time to get in here. But I just wanted to thank you all for your advise. Surgery was not bad, I was able to go home 4 days later! they were shocked how well and quickly I was up and about! I wasn't able to have the children come see me, but since I was back home quick it was much easier for them. My oldest sister stayed at my house and was able to reassure my blessings that I was okay, she even took pictures of me and showed them. Everyone around us was such great help, I get tears thinking about it.
I am back to work, and I even started school again, trying to get my BA :)
At the rate I'm going I will graduate College together with my daughter :) lol, she is in 5th grade. I am just doing one class a semester since this is my first semester back after more than 20 years!!!
But I just wanted to say thank you to you ladies for your advise and prayers!
Blessings!

More Answers

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P.K.

answers from New York on

I think you have prepared them well. However, being children they will
worry, you can't change that. You have a great relationship with your
kids, so be confident they will be fine in the end. I too am
having surgery on the 1st (kidney out). I would definitely talk to your Mom
about the drama she creates for them. You certainly have enough
people to watch over the kids to counteract your Mom. Good luck and I
will keep you in my prayers.

2 moms found this helpful
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S.H.

answers from St. Louis on

write each of them a special note & leave all of them in a basket waiting for them when they wake up without you on that first day. They will appreciate your thoughts & efforts. A few simple words, a few simple thoughts, & make them pretty!

Another idea would be: make a poster board showing when you leave & when you think you will return. Base the design on Candyland, make special note of each benchmark for you (the day of surgery, when you are released from ICU, etc), & make it fun for the kids - almost like a game piece that they can glue onto the poster! Attach a ziploc bag with stickers & markers to the side of the poster .....to allow the kids to mark off the days & to make comments on the poster, too. That way they are being given a productive & creative way to fill their time before they can see you again.

As for your Mom!!.....I like your idea about the kids helping take care of Grandma! Kudos to you for recognizing her fears & anxiety over her "baby" having surgery! & kudos to her for stepping in & helping with your children. Excellent family dynamics, & a joy to read about. & if she's a little over the top with her drama.....hmmm, I'm at a loss on how to calm her down!

Please know that you will be in all of our thoughts & prayers. I wish you a speedy recovery.

2 moms found this helpful
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J.P.

answers from New York on

Make your mother the person to spend time with you in the hospital when the kids are home from school so she doesn't send them round the bend. If she is driving the kids crazy, that's not helping anyone.

Instead of pizza dough, how about making a batch cookies or brownies with them? Then while you are in the hospital, they can eat the treats that you made together!

2 moms found this helpful

S.H.

answers from Spokane on

I loved Sue H.'s idea about writing them each a special note and leaving it for them!
I think you have done an amazing job at preparing them. Props to you.
My hubby had surgery for a brain tumor (2x in the last 2 years) and it is very scary and I can see why your Mom gets a little hysterical - she is your Mom. Talk with her. Reassure her. And remind her of how hard it was on your kiddos last time when she got them all worked up.
You are in my prayers that all goes well and for a quick recovery!
Blessings to you!

1 mom found this helpful
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S.T.

answers from New York on

Your kids aren't tiny babies - at 9, 11 & 12 they're old enough to understand the stuff you tell them. Pray with them in the days coming up on the surgery - your prayers will give them confidence that our God is bigger than any of the stuff we're going through - and to place their hope and trust on His unchanging nature. I love the idea of wirintg each a note to open the day of your surgery. Maybe you can even help them write a prayer that they can use while you're healing.

I also would consider that they're old enough to come see you in the hospital - at least for the older ones. As long as they're prepared and they know what to expect - obviously not the first couple of days - but it you're going to be there for a week I'd think the last few days would be do-able.

As for your mom - I think it's mom-nature to get hysterical about their children - even the grown up ones. I know my mom who is super calm about her own problems, tends to worry way more about her kids - and she's a devout trusting Christian who ca easily lean on the Lord at other times. Pray with her too - direct her efforts towards prayer and not towards your kids. Does she have any friends she can vent to so as not to vent to the children? Make sure your sisters know to "talk her off the ledge" when she begins to get nuts. Could the kids not spend the evenings at their aunt's houses at least some of the time?

Urge friends and family to help keep your kids' routines as normal as possible to avoid grandma's craziness.

As for ways to make the weekend special - have an indoor campout. Let them all campout on the living room floor or in one of the bedrooms. Be with them in the the beginning part of the evening - play camping games or board games, eat the homemade pizza on the floor with a table cloth spread out. Then when it's bed time let them be together without you. They can begin their week of depending on eachother this way - remind them to lean on eachother through the week as they navigate homework and schedules. The older kdis can help the yougner and the younger can be the comic relief (or whatever your youngest's personality allows for). This will be a time in their life that they will recall with a certain amount of fondness becuase they had eachother. When I was their age my mother needed spinal surgery - back then it required 5 weeks in the hospital. My grandmother and older sisters were the "parents". There were five of us and the older ones helped the younger ones. Now, more than 35 years later we have a closeness and interdependence with eachother that others comment about.

This is a chapter in the history book of your family - the kids will rise to the challenge and it will create bonds and stories, and memories that will last into their old age.

Overall it sounds like you've planned well. Just keep leaning on His promises.

1 mom found this helpful
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D.P.

answers from Pittsburgh on

Awwwwww....just get out some movies and all hang out together for a whole day, watching movies and having popcorn! Bets of luck with your procedure!

1 mom found this helpful
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B.B.

answers from Detroit on

I had to be hospitalized (while pregnant) and then later have surgery (dang gallstones) this last summer and even though the kids (9,6,3) were not allow to come up on the floor I was on I was able to be taken down to the front waiting area and was able to see the kiddos... Will you be able to be wheeled down? I had to make sure the kids wern't hitting the button for the pain pump when they were hugging me... That would have been a boring visit for them while I slept. lol
At 12, 10, and 9 your kids are old enough to understand and worry... :-) I would just keep talking about it and all the benefits of geting it done. As for your mom being a worrier... Arn't all moms when it comes to their kids, no matter what their ages. lol Some do go over board (like my MIL) but if you, hubby, and all the other adults present a calm face, the kids will have that reassurance.

I would also talk to your mom and tell her that you know she's worried, but for the sake of the kids PLEASE try not to talk about all the negative that could possibly happen in extremem circumstances.

It is awesome that you have reached out to get more support than just those in your house. :-) Perhaps arranging with some of their friends for an over night (at the friends house)or play dates (at the friends house) while you are in the hospital will help get their minds off of it and also allow them to be around other optimistic reassuring people during a time of worry.
Maybe even for the day of your surgery... So that they are not sitting at home watching your mom pace. :-) Just reassure them that they will get an All's good phone call...

1 mom found this helpful
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