
BlueWidow
Visionary
- Oct 6, 2019
- 2,179
I had just been getting over a long illness and had only started feeling like I was truly beginning to recover in September of 2012. Right on cue, in October 2012 my husband suddenly started becoming very ill. He couldn't keep food down, he was nauseous and vomiting all the time, he was rapidly losing weight, and he was having severe pain in his back. He spent the next three months going back-and-forth to the doctor at least once a week. The stupid doctor kept giving him one pill after another and trying to treat his symptoms without ever bothering to try to find the cause of the problems. At the end of three months, we had an entire counter full of pills that he was supposed to take. I remember looking at all those pills one day and thinking that there was no way that some of the pills could not be reacting with some of the other pills. This doctor was just throwing every pill at him that she could think of without thinking of how they were going to react with each other.
Then came the horrible week at the end of December when he went to bed and didn't get back up. This was very unlike my husband. He was not the type of person to lie around in bed in the morning. We both liked taking naps, but he would always be up early in the morning.
He was very sick and delirious and I didn't know what to do. I was by myself and I had no one to help me. After a week, I knew if I didn't do something he was going to end up dead. I finally decided to call his adult children even though I didn't really know either one of them. He had a son and a daughter and it was around Christmas time so I knew they were going to be together. I called his daughter and told her that when her brother arrived at her house I wanted them to call me so that I could talk to both of them at the same time. She eventually called back and I told them what was going on and I let them talk to their dad so they could hear how delirious and sick he was.
I had been trying to get my husband to go to the emergency room and he refused to go. I didn't know how to get him to go. At the time, I had run out of my thyroid medicine because my doctor would only let me get a refill if I went into his office in person and I couldn't leave my husband for that long, so I had been going without my thyroid medicine for over a month. Therefore I was not really thinking clearly or functioning very well myself.
This is why I didn't even consider calling an ambulance. However, his daughter told me to tell him that if he didn't agree to voluntarily go to the hospital that I was going to call an ambulance. We lived just five minutes down the street from the hospital and she knew that he wouldn't want to pay a giant ambulance bill when he could just get into a taxi and drive down there for a cheaper price. He agreed to go to the hospital and they eventually checked him in saying there was something wrong with his kidneys. The next morning I found out that if I hadn't gotten him to the hospital when I did, I would've woken up to find him dead the next day because his kidneys were already 2/3 of the way shut down by the time I got him to the hospital. The next step was to find out why were his kidneys shutting down. On Christmas day of 2012, they gave me the answer. His kidneys have been shutting down in a kind of self-defense move because his own white blood cells had been attacking them. The doctors told me his bone marrow was producing way too many white blood cells and he was diagnosed with multiple myeloma, which is cancer of the bone marrow. It causes problems with your blood cells and causes you to have severe back pain. This began a long and horrible road of chemo treatments, bone marrow biopsies, a bone marrow transplant, and him being placed in a nursing home so that he could work to regain his strength before he came home. They didn't want him to fall down and break a bone. I saw him get poked and prodded and stuck and tested, etc.
It was a complete nightmare and I think was hard on both of us. But he was a trooper and he allowed them to do whatever they wanted to do to him. I know he must've been in horrible pain most of the time, but he hardly ever showed it and he refused to take any serious pain medicine. After the bone marrow transplant, which is a very serious procedure, he was back to work in three months! He once told me that if he didn't have his work to go back to he probably would end up dead because that was what made him get up every morning. He knew he had to get up and go to work, and so he did. He did it many times when he should've stayed in bed. One time he had to give a 30 minute speech in front of some clients in a town 2 1/2 hours away.
The problem was that he could barely stand up because he was so sick. The chemo made him sick, the cancer maintenance drugs made him sick, and the bone marrow transplant had pretty much wiped out all of his immune system. Therefore, he caught any illness that was going around and brought it home to me and then I caught it. But even when I was at my sickest, I was at least not dealing with cancer the way he was. Anyway, he was very sick on this day, but he had to give the speech. Anyone else would've just asked someone else to give the speech, but my husband was determined to give it himself. He got a coworker of his who owned a station wagon to pick him up and he lied down in the back of that station wagon for the 2 1/2 hour ride to the place where he was going to give the speech. He then got himself together, went out and gave the speech, and then got back in the back of the station wagon and rode the 2 1/2 hours back home. His coworker said he had never seen anything like it in his life. He said the change in my husband right before he gave the speech going from looking completely sick and near death to looking like he wasn't sick at all while he gave the speech was one of the most incredible transformations he's ever seen in his life. The people he gave the speech to had no clue how sick he was. That was just one of many amazing things I saw my husband do while he was so sick he could barely hold his head up.
I now have a lot of my own health problems and most of the time I'm lucky if I can get out of bed, but there's no way in hell I could go out and do a job in the condition that I'm in. I have no clue how my husband did it. He was just the most amazing person I've ever known in my life. He was intelligent and creative. He had a masters degree in engineering and math. He was a musical prodigy. He could pick up any instrument, even if it was something he never played before in his life, and within an hour he'd be playing it like he'd been playing it his entire life. When I first met him he used to play songs that he made up for me on the piano. I wish now that I would've recorded some of them. He was always making up songs and calling me on the phone and singing them to me. I do have one recording of a song that he sang to me when he rented a karaoke machine for his grandkids while he was watching them one day. My husband was intelligent. He worked for NASA and Honeywell. He read books on quantum physics. He would try to talk to me about things and sometimes he would talk so far over my head that I had no clue what he was talking about, but I always found everything he said fascinating. He would try to talk to me about string theory. He could've been a very wealthy man, but he always seemed to give his talents away for far less money than they were worth. He was the most generous person I've ever known in my life.
Then came the horrible week at the end of December when he went to bed and didn't get back up. This was very unlike my husband. He was not the type of person to lie around in bed in the morning. We both liked taking naps, but he would always be up early in the morning.
He was very sick and delirious and I didn't know what to do. I was by myself and I had no one to help me. After a week, I knew if I didn't do something he was going to end up dead. I finally decided to call his adult children even though I didn't really know either one of them. He had a son and a daughter and it was around Christmas time so I knew they were going to be together. I called his daughter and told her that when her brother arrived at her house I wanted them to call me so that I could talk to both of them at the same time. She eventually called back and I told them what was going on and I let them talk to their dad so they could hear how delirious and sick he was.
I had been trying to get my husband to go to the emergency room and he refused to go. I didn't know how to get him to go. At the time, I had run out of my thyroid medicine because my doctor would only let me get a refill if I went into his office in person and I couldn't leave my husband for that long, so I had been going without my thyroid medicine for over a month. Therefore I was not really thinking clearly or functioning very well myself.
This is why I didn't even consider calling an ambulance. However, his daughter told me to tell him that if he didn't agree to voluntarily go to the hospital that I was going to call an ambulance. We lived just five minutes down the street from the hospital and she knew that he wouldn't want to pay a giant ambulance bill when he could just get into a taxi and drive down there for a cheaper price. He agreed to go to the hospital and they eventually checked him in saying there was something wrong with his kidneys. The next morning I found out that if I hadn't gotten him to the hospital when I did, I would've woken up to find him dead the next day because his kidneys were already 2/3 of the way shut down by the time I got him to the hospital. The next step was to find out why were his kidneys shutting down. On Christmas day of 2012, they gave me the answer. His kidneys have been shutting down in a kind of self-defense move because his own white blood cells had been attacking them. The doctors told me his bone marrow was producing way too many white blood cells and he was diagnosed with multiple myeloma, which is cancer of the bone marrow. It causes problems with your blood cells and causes you to have severe back pain. This began a long and horrible road of chemo treatments, bone marrow biopsies, a bone marrow transplant, and him being placed in a nursing home so that he could work to regain his strength before he came home. They didn't want him to fall down and break a bone. I saw him get poked and prodded and stuck and tested, etc.
It was a complete nightmare and I think was hard on both of us. But he was a trooper and he allowed them to do whatever they wanted to do to him. I know he must've been in horrible pain most of the time, but he hardly ever showed it and he refused to take any serious pain medicine. After the bone marrow transplant, which is a very serious procedure, he was back to work in three months! He once told me that if he didn't have his work to go back to he probably would end up dead because that was what made him get up every morning. He knew he had to get up and go to work, and so he did. He did it many times when he should've stayed in bed. One time he had to give a 30 minute speech in front of some clients in a town 2 1/2 hours away.
The problem was that he could barely stand up because he was so sick. The chemo made him sick, the cancer maintenance drugs made him sick, and the bone marrow transplant had pretty much wiped out all of his immune system. Therefore, he caught any illness that was going around and brought it home to me and then I caught it. But even when I was at my sickest, I was at least not dealing with cancer the way he was. Anyway, he was very sick on this day, but he had to give the speech. Anyone else would've just asked someone else to give the speech, but my husband was determined to give it himself. He got a coworker of his who owned a station wagon to pick him up and he lied down in the back of that station wagon for the 2 1/2 hour ride to the place where he was going to give the speech. He then got himself together, went out and gave the speech, and then got back in the back of the station wagon and rode the 2 1/2 hours back home. His coworker said he had never seen anything like it in his life. He said the change in my husband right before he gave the speech going from looking completely sick and near death to looking like he wasn't sick at all while he gave the speech was one of the most incredible transformations he's ever seen in his life. The people he gave the speech to had no clue how sick he was. That was just one of many amazing things I saw my husband do while he was so sick he could barely hold his head up.
I now have a lot of my own health problems and most of the time I'm lucky if I can get out of bed, but there's no way in hell I could go out and do a job in the condition that I'm in. I have no clue how my husband did it. He was just the most amazing person I've ever known in my life. He was intelligent and creative. He had a masters degree in engineering and math. He was a musical prodigy. He could pick up any instrument, even if it was something he never played before in his life, and within an hour he'd be playing it like he'd been playing it his entire life. When I first met him he used to play songs that he made up for me on the piano. I wish now that I would've recorded some of them. He was always making up songs and calling me on the phone and singing them to me. I do have one recording of a song that he sang to me when he rented a karaoke machine for his grandkids while he was watching them one day. My husband was intelligent. He worked for NASA and Honeywell. He read books on quantum physics. He would try to talk to me about things and sometimes he would talk so far over my head that I had no clue what he was talking about, but I always found everything he said fascinating. He would try to talk to me about string theory. He could've been a very wealthy man, but he always seemed to give his talents away for far less money than they were worth. He was the most generous person I've ever known in my life.