Oh, back to school time. Gotta love the chaos...
So many updates over the past few weeks that just haven't made it online. First, for the first time in over a year, Dave isn't wearing any bandages! Yes, ladies and gentlemen, the drainage that has been the thorn in our side (okay, Dave's side) for fourteen months has stopped completely! You can't even imagine what a huge relief it has been.
Second, Dave did start driving, and it has been "much easier than I expected," he says. We started with my car, the automatic, in the high school parking lot, and when everything went smoothly, returned home to get his car to try a stick shift, which also went well. From there, he drove us to dinner that night and has been in the driver's seat on short trips ever since. He even drove me to a doctor's appointment yesterday - what a switch! Even though I'm still in the car with him as his extra set of eyes most of the time (he did drive to get pizza on his own last night), I know having the keys adds a new level of independence that he hasn't experienced since his accident. And I have to say, it's pretty nice being able to relax in the passenger seat from time to time too. :-)
Third, Dave's cane is spending a lot more time in the car and a lot less time in his hand. Aside from times when we will be standing for an extended period of time or when we will be in a crowded place where he may get knocked over, he has been walking without any assistance almost everywhere we go!
Some prayers:
1. Dave is working on getting his insurance company to pay for a voice augmenter to help clarify and magnify his voice when he is out and about. The device, which runs somewhere in the range of $7,000, will be a necessity if he wants to go back to the position he had at GE before the accident, which involved a lot of time on the loud shop floor, so be praying that the augmenter is approved.
2. Speaking of going back to work, that is the next huge question in the recovery process. With the surgery completed and finally successful, for all intents and purposes, there is very little documentable medical reason why Dave can't go back to work sometime in the near future. That being said, we have no idea at what point Dave will be asked to go back to work. In some ways, he is so much more himself and so much healthier that going back to work is technically a possibility sometime soon - BUT there are still days when he can't stop coughing or doesn't have the energy to do much of anything. He also still needs a lot more sleep than most people, so getting up at 6:00 a.m. every day would be almost out of the question. We haven't heard anything from Disability at GE yet, and in some ways don't want to call and ask questions for fear that they may take that as a sign that Dave is ready to work, but we also would like to get some guidance on what to expect going forward.
3. And speaking of sleeping, Dave hasn't been very well. Although he is normally in bed for ten hours a night, the amount that he is sleeping is much less, and the sleep that he is getting is far from restful. Dr. Hardin has been playing around with different combinations of sleep meds, and we are having a new bed delivered on Friday - be praying that both changes help Dave feel more rested.
I'm sure there is more that I am forgetting from the past few weeks, but that's the major stuff. Now that we are past surgery - and the next one won't happen for at least six months - updates will be fewer and farther between. I will continue posting the big stuff, so check back from time to time, but we are finally at a point where daily or even weekly updates on Dave's condition would be much more boring than useful to you. How great is that!
Thanks, as always, for continuing to stand by us. We love you all and feel so blessed to have had so much support through this entire ordeal.
Getting Clean...
10 hours ago