days."
The ripples and waves circled and twisted in agreement, the pale glow of morning
light reflecting the world we share. The creek and I. Flowing, ebbing, receding.
It is life, I think, to watch the water. A man can learn so many things.
It happened as I sat in the chair, just as the sun first peeked over the horizon.
My hand, I noticed, started to tingle, something it had never done before. I started
to lift it, but I was forced to stop when my head pounded again, this time hard,
almost as if I had been hit in the head with a hammer. I closed my eyes, then
squeezed my lids tight. My hand stopped tingling and began to go numb, quickly, as
if my nerves were suddenly severed somewhere on my lower arm. My wrist locked
as a shooting pain rocked my head and seemed to flow down my neck and into
every cell of my body, like a tidal wave, crushing and wasting everything in its path.
I lost my sight, and I heard what sounded like a train roaring inches from my head,
and I knew that I was having a stroke. The pain coursed through my body like a
lightning bolt, and in my last remaining moments of consciousness, I pictured Allie,
lying in her bed, waiting for the story I would never read, lost and confused,
completely and totally unable to help herself. Just like me.
And as my eyes closed for the final time, I thought to myself, Oh God, what have
I done?
! was unconscious on and off for days, and in those moments when I was awake, I
found myself hooked to machines, tubes up my nose and down my throat and two
bags of fluid hanging near the bed. I could hear the faint hum of machines, droning
on and off, sometimes making sounds I could not recognize. One machine, beeping
with my heart rate, was strangely soothing, and I found myself lulled to never‐land
time and time again.
The doctors were worried. I could see the concern in their faces through squinted
eyes as they scanned the charts and adjusted the machines. They whispered their
thoughts,thinking I couldn't hear. "Strokes could be serious," they'd say, "especially
for someone his age, and the consequences could be severe." Grim faces would
prelude their predictions‐‐"loss of speech, loss of movement, paralysis." Another
chart notation, another beep of a strange machine, and they'd leave, never knowing
I heard every word. I tried not to think of these things afterward but instead
concentrated on Allie, bringing a picture of her to my mind whenever I could. I did
my best to bring her life into mine, to make us one again. ! tried to feel her touch,
hear her voice, see her face, and when I did tears would fill my eyes because I didn't
know if I would be able to hold her again, to whisper to her, to spend the day with
her talking and reading and walking.
This was not how I'd imagined, or hoped, it would end. I'd always assumed I would
go last. This wasn't how it was supposed to be. I drifted in and out of consciousness
for days until another foggy morning when my promise to Allie spurred my body
once again. I opened my eyes and saw a room full of flowers, and their scent
motivated me further. I looked for the buzzer, struggled to press it, and a nurse
arrived thirty seconds later, followed closely by Dr. Barnwell,
who smiled almost immediately.
"I'm thirsty," I said with a raspy voice, and Dr. Barnwell smiled broadly.
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