Chasing the Pain

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“Even in times of trauma, we try to maintain a sense of normality until we no longer can. That, my friends, is called surviving. Not healing. We never become whole again … we are survivors. If you are here today… you are a survivor. But those of us who have made it through hell and are still standing? We bare a different name: warriors.” — Lori Goodwin

There is an expiration date on struggle after trauma. I am sure ours passed months ago. How long are we allowed to be affected by something of this magnitude? I do not have the answer to that question, but if I did, I suppose I would say, as long as you need to be. It has been hard to accept the cards we have been dealt and so many times, I have wanted to scream into the wind. I feel like I should not be allowed to complain though. He is still with us. So many others have not been so lucky. Our lives have changed so dramatically thought and it is hard to always be positive. We had so many plans. We knew where we were going. Now our plans are tentative, and our future uncertain. But, he is here. That really is what matters. The rest. Just details.


Late in the morning some family finally arrived. His mother. I have children, and I cannot imagine seeing one of them in that much pain. Their bodies that broken. We waited as they prepared to move Chris from the ER to the Observation Room in the Neurological Unit. How did we find ourselves here, I wanted to ask her. I didn’t. It wasn’t the right time.

We waited in the small waiting room across the hall from the OR, as they once again attached him to the machines. The machines that would tell us how his body was handling the immense stress it was under. It was struggling. It must have been attempting to figure out what had happened and how to best react. How to heal. It must have been as confused as we were. The nurses worked to create as much comfort for him as possible. Pain management was of utmost importance. They did not want his pain level to get away from them. “Chasing the pain.” This was something they did not want to do. They had to keep ahead of it. I did not know pain management was such an art. A new catchphrase had been added to my vocabulary.

The Observation Room is a special room. I do not know how many rooms there are like this in the hospital. Perhaps this is the only one. Maybe it is the Neurological Unit’s ICU? It felt like that. A temperature controlled room; a room that is set to a specific temperature for certain injuries. In the room, there are beds for only four patients. For these four patients, there are always two nurses on duty. Twenty four hours a day. There is one nurse in the room at all times. This is precious space. These are precious beds. Another indicator of how serious his injuries were.

In the late afternoon, the hard plastic neck collar that had been torturing him, was finally replaced with a softer one, giving me some relief. The hiccups still plagued him. He was still thirsty. I stood beside his bed, as they switched collars. I held his head in my hands. “Keep your head still. Do not move. Focus on me. Focus on me.” We did not want to cause anymore injuries. It was a tense moment. It scared me. Throughout the rest of the day, as we waited for his surgery, the nurses looked after his needs. I could tell they were remarkable nurses. They took such good care of him. They took such good care of every patient in that room. They monitored him. They watched over him. They made me feel he was safe in their capable hands. Morphine kept some of the pain at bay. I was thankful to be in that room. It was a sad room though. It was a room full of pain and uncertainty.

The patient beside Chris had a head injury. A very bad one. I knew, but for the grace of God, it could have been Chris. This other patient was somebody’s person. I could see from the pictures beside him, he was a father. He had been there for a while. You can feel the familiarity from the nurses. They used his name often. Beside him, lay a young man who jumped off a dock into a too shallow lake, while celebrating his sister’s upcoming nuptials. His neck was broken. The last bed, a very friendly, but confused older man who had judge had brain surgery. My heart went out to all of them. It still does. They were my husband’s roommates. Trauma had brought them there together.

In the afternoon, some visitors arrived. His boss came. I had met him the night before in the ER. He had stood beside me and offered support. He had let me know that I would be taken care of. A hotel room had been booked close by. It helped. I did not know him, but it made me feel a little bit less alone. Some of the guys he had been working with arrived as well. It gave me strength to see their concern. They held their bodies in the way that people do when they are worried. When they have been touched by trauma. While it was the same accident, they were dealing with something different than me. My husband was one of their crew. They had almost lost one of their own. Mortality had shown them its face.

Chris was happy to see them. I could see it meant the world to him they were there. He seemed surprised they had come. He seemed more lucid when they were visiting. Like he was able to focus on them and why they were there. His heart rate was already high, due to the amount of stress his body was under. His nurse watched with a protective eye. When the alarms would start to go off, she would shoot them a look and shoo them out of the room. They did not mean to stress him out, it was just that he had been through so much, and their visit brought the reality of the accident home.

2 thoughts on “Chasing the Pain

  1. Without time to read thoroughly and investigate all the problems spoken of in this blog post. My solution may not sound as if it addresses it but it DOES, the answer I speak of is Peace. Not just any peace either but True Peace can only be found in the Prince of Peace, Jesus Christ. I just said a prayer for your husband, if he does not have the peace that only the Prince of can provide, MAKE SURE it is offered him. Trust me it was far longer than short but I am standing after living through a collision between the car I was driving and a cedar tree. Since I was not wearing my seat belt, thinking myself to be far smarter than not. Cedar being far harder than soft wood, when it came into the passenger side of my vehicle it collided with my head directly. At some speed well over 65 mph and BLESSED me with this Severe Traumatic Brain Injury. You may be wondering, “Why does he refer to an injury of that severity as a blessing, not a curse?” To which I would respond, I do not exactly know why bad things happen. Besides this is a fallen world in need of Peace, not as the world gives, which can ONLY be found in Jesus Christ The Prince of Peace. But I be warned so I warn you and anyone reading this, He is called the Stumbling Block for a reason.
    Peace,
    JMC a.k.a. THEJessTER

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    1. Thank you for your comment. It sounds like you have been on a long road to recovery. I am happy that you have found some peace with what happened along the way. Thank you for your prayers. I wish you all the best on your journey.

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