The Golden Ticket.
I was carried to bed after my last post by a flock of tender bluebirds and fell asleep thinking of my daughter’s ears. At 4:30 am I got up for my nightly One Man Band routine, in which I double pump, eat two saltines, drink a glass of milk, check my email, and call the NICU for an update—all at the same time. But the news was not good. Simone was sliding precipitously downhill, and had maxed out the settings on the conventional ventilator (which does not actually mean that there are no higher settings, just that there are no higher settings that will not carry an unacceptable risk of lung damage) and had been placed on another machine, called THE OSCILLATOR. THE OSCILLATOR is the size of a sturdily-built sixth grader and sounds like a propeller plane trapped inside a four-foot metal cashbox. It is simultaneously more powerful and gentler, working by vibrating oxygen in and carbon dioxide out with hundreds of tiny, scarcely-inflating breaths. Traditional ventilators exert more pressure on the lungs by fully inflating them, and while Simone’s blood gases indicated she was not breathing well enough to maintain the appropriate balance of oxygen and CO2, her latest x-ray showed that her chest was expanding and her diaphragm dropping, and it was feared that any more pressure would cause her lungs to develop tiny tears, resulting in permanent injury. Arriving at the hospital that morning, we found nearly all of our daughter’s private room taken up by THE OSCILLATOR, and her body vibrating like a particularly violent Brookstone neck massager. At the time it was terrifying, but sadly it would prove the high point of the next two days.
Simone began to retain fluid, and her blood pressure dropped dangerously low. On Saturday morning her immature white-count was up, and she had the second septic workup of her short life. She swelled to over two and a half pounds, and by yesterday evening looked alarmingly like Lou Dobbs, her chin and cheeks bloated and unrecognizable. Her eyes were still shut and prizefighter-fat, and the formerly wrinkled skin of her legs was stretched to capacity. She barely moved. She had something akin to a baby version of OHSS, and was weeping fluid out of her cell walls and blood vessels, raising her heart rate and lowering her blood pressure while waterlogging the sponges of her lungs until they were too heavy to hold open.
All this from the shock of surgery. When Simone’s kidneys yawned their way out of their post-operative haze, they startled and said “Good heavens! Our body has been cut open! Probably we will be losing a lot of blood, and should hold on to all the fluid we have!” This was an error in judgment on their part. The key to Simone’s respiratory problems and fluid retention was simple: urine. Lots and lots of urine. But her kidneys refused to comply.
And so my daughter received her six millionth blood transfusion, along with platelets, Lasix, Dobutamine, Dopamine, Morphine, and Hydrocortisone—not to mention her usual Ativan, caffeine, TPN, lipids, and whatever else they shot into her PICC line and peripheral IV after I lost track, too busy tending to my own Ativan dosage and staring at the monitor, willing the numbers upwards.
Each time I changed Simone my heart pounded as I set the diaper on the scale to measure her output. It was never enough, and by 2:00 yesterday afternoon she had stopped wetting her diapers altogether.
“She just needs to pee,” the nurse practitioner repeated grimly that evening.
“Has anyone thought of putting her hand in a bowl of warm water?” I asked the assembled neonatologist, nurses, respiratory therapist, and my mortified husband. I tried to smile while I said it, but it came out sounding desperate, revealing that I wasn’t really joking at all. Honestly—had anybody tried that? I was out of ideas, and Simone’s latest x-ray showed her lungs almost completely collapsed.
At two o’clock this morning I jolted awake and called the NICU. Simone was now on 100% oxygen on THE OSCILLATOR and still dropping her sats. But she had peed a small amount, and I tried to leverage that fact into some reassurance.
“That’s something, right? This will start to resolve, eventually?”
They hoped so. Maybe. But they were worried. Concerned. She was very sick, my little girl, much sicker than they had expected her to be after surgery. She couldn’t sustain this course for more than another day or two. The gist being: My baby might die.
I sat in bed after that holding the phone and decided that if Simone didn’t make it, I wouldn’t either. I imagined sneaking her out of the NICU under my coat and running away, just the two of us, to a cave somewhere, where I would nurse her back to health with cool compresses and tisanes made from bark and toadstools. And if she died, I would stay in that cave holding her until I died too.
It’s best not to think too much in the middle of the night, because that is the sort of thing you come up with. So I took a tranquilizer and curled up in bed with one of Simone’s dirty blankets, my face pressed into it like an animal.
This morning I got to the NICU at 7:00. Simone’s blood pressure was back up thanks to a stress dosage of Hydrocortisone and her heart rate was down. She was still on 85% oxygen on THE OSCILLATOR, but had soaked her last diaper with 50 milliliters of the sweetest baby urine ever to stain a polyacrylate absorbent. At 8:00 she did it again; I grinned pulling the swollen Pamper from under her bottom. Her x-ray was like that of “a different baby” (presumably a much healthier one), and her blood gases were beautiful. Her cultures were negative at 24 hours. My daughter’s limbs resumed their furious waving.
The biggest change, though, came when she was reintubated. The breathing tube they removed was covered with sticky green lung secretions, and almost as soon as the new tube was in, her sats shot up and her oxygen could be turned down. The old tube was passed during rounds, garnering exclamations of wonder and disgust. And that slender piece of plastic tubing reduced me to the terrified—and finally, relieved—tears I had been holding since Friday morning.
As of now, Simone is down to 33% oxygen on THE OSCILLATOR and well on her way to moving back to the conventional vent. I cupped her in my hands this afternoon while her sats stayed steady and she pressed a foot against my palm. I meant to tell her how we almost lost her and that she was never, ever to frighten us so again, but I couldn’t say anything except what a good, brave baby she was and is. We aren’t out of the woods just yet, but the trees are thinning, and I am starting to see signs of civilization.





170 Comments
thank god for the good news. Wept my way through this and am so glad there is a break for you. I hope you and your hubby are doing ok as well as your precious Simone. Lots of love from WA. xxx
If I hadn’t read the title of your post, I would have been in a panic. But I knew it was going to get better. Thanks for giving us that… I know you didn’t have that luxury when you were going through it.
This little girl’s going to be a NICU darling when you bring her back there for her first birthday, you know. She’ll be legendary!
Hang in there. I’ll be thinking of you guys.
I check your blog numerous times a day, like an addict, hoping for news… and now am reduced to tears to get that update. Your precious baby girl, she is so strong… as are you.
Oh my God, you had me so afraid. I am so relieved she is doing better. I have faith that Simone is going to pull through and live a happy normal healthy life. She has not made it this far for nothing. She is a fighter.
Holy crap. Lady, there wouldn’t have been enough Ativan for me to keep my nerves from audibly vibrating. I am in awe that you are making it through this. And Simone is a baby of steel. She is clearly here for a reason.
I seriously can’t even imagine. She is a fighter, no doubt, and I am so proud of her and you. Lots of love to you…
i have no words, just tears. Glad she is improving and fighting!!
Ohmygod.Ohmygod.Ohmygod.Ohmygod.
Halfway through reading I realized that I was beginning to cry, and I considered stopping where I was before it got any worse. But I’m glad I got to the end, and I am so sorry for what you and Scott and Simone have gone through in the past few days. My continued prayers and thoughts are with you all.
Thank you so much for the update. I am so, so, so exceedingly glad that Simone is doing better. Like TEEJ said, I only got through this post because I knew that it had to get better at the end. Please know that I will continue to pray for health and less frightening days ahead. And Alexa, I am amazed and impressed by your strength through all of this.
I am constantly amazed at how strong you both are. Many good thoughts coming your way from another loyal reader.
Each post makes me weep. So scared for you all and so very relieved that Simone is such a strong little girl. Many cyberhugs to you.
SO glad you got some good news… Continuing to pray for you all and strength for sweet Simone…Thanks for keeping us updated….
What a good, brave baby she is and what a good, brave Mom Simone has. All my prayers and positive thoughts are still being sent to you and yours.
Oh Alexa, I’m so glad to hear that things are back on the upswing. The oscillator SUCKS! I can honestly say that was our worst. It was only for a couple of days, but the thought of our little one needing to wear ear protection like the guys who land planes to protect her from that God awful noise was my lowest memory. When we got that horrible call, (seriously why does that shit always happen when it’s dark out?) noone warned me that her chest would be vibrating up and down like that. I remember the nurse found me sobbing on the couch later that day.
But way to go Simone! You are such a strong little one. Keep up the amazing job. It won’t always be this hard.
Cripes – whoever said that the NICU is a rollercoaster was spot on. I wish we could all take turns worrying for you so that you could take a nice, long bubble bath with nary a troubled thought. You have one tough girl, there.
You don’t even know me and yet I anxiously check my blog reader multiple times a day hoping for an update from you.
I had to scroll to the end of this post just to make sure, before I could read it from the beginning.
Again, my thoughts are with you, Scott and Simone. No mother should have to go through this…
Alexa
You continue to be in my thoughts. You are treading in water that we were spared! While our little girl had her issues in the NICU, never did we have the worries that you and Scott are facing. Continue to be strong and let me know if you need me to stop by the hospital for a short visit. I can bring chocolate….I survived on m&m’s during our 5 week stay. And all the pumping kept the pounds coming off despite the pounds of chocolate consumed. My husband made me confirm with nurses that the chocolate was not harmful to the milk I was making and they gave me the green light (within reason!).
Shannon
My God – what you have been through this last month. You have continued to be brave and courageous while at the same time tell a damn exciting story. I don’t know how you have done it but I too hope this is the light at the end of the long dark tunnel.
And I hope it helps just a little bit to send huge cyber-hugs.
I was holding my breath as I read your post. It brought me back to our days in the NICU.
I am so happy that Simone turned around and started to improve. And as for the oscillator, both my boys were on it in the beginning. One was on it for an incredibly long time in my book–two weeks. That machine carried the emotions of both the strongest fear I had experienced up to that point and the most intense hope as well. All I can say is that they know what they are doing, and I pray that Simone will continue to improve steadily until she is at last able to join you at home, where she belongs.
Oh sweetie..long time lurker but I just had to post while my preemie was near as early as Simone (34 weeks) she also had to be on that god awful oscillator due to breathing problems for about a week and I agree it is god awful. I’m so so glad to hear that Simone is doing better I have kept her in my prayers nightly and think about you all often. Cyber hugs to you…keep loving on those blankets of hers and sending more to her so she will smell her mommy…
Hang in there – you for her and her for you. Lots of love from the bottom of the world xoxo
Ummm, wow. Jeez. I am sort of embarassed to admit this. I have not read this entire entry yet. I read the first two paragraphs and then skipped to the end with my heart pounding, feeling like if I read that something awful had happened, I was going to have a stroke.
I can’t imagine how good those thinning trees must look right now.
Love to you both, from strangers on the East coast.
Wow. I can not tell you how glad I am to hear that things are good. My heart dropped when I started reading. But your positive vibe gave the ending away. Hang in there, just a few more weeks and you really will be out of the woods.
My heart pounded through this whole post. I’m sending up prayers for even better news tomorrow. And the next day, and the next.
Thank you for continually sharing her with us.
Oh my gosh. I was so on edge through this post that I was practically panting. I really hope things continue to go well for you and that the worst is over. What a tough little cookie.
Oh Alexa, did someone cup your face in their hands and utter again and again how strong, brave and amazing you are?
Blessings on you each.
Like Molly, I had to read this in chunks. I couldn’t get through the whole thing from start to finish. I cannot imagine living it, Alexa.
And I cannot tell you enough how brave, strong and incredible you are. And Simone is clearly just like you. What a lucky girl.
Ohmygod. The braveness of your wee family overwhelms. Please make it, dear sweet Simone.
I can’t possibly imagine the strength you must have, Alexa. I am hoping for you with all of my heart.
Thank you for the update. Am constantly thinking of you…
Oh God, Alexa, I can still feel my heart beating triple-time, and like the others I had to skip to the end before I could go back and read the middle.
I can’t begin to imagine what you and Scott are going through. I don’t know if the tears and good wishes of complete strangers are worth anything when your baby is fighting for her life, but you are constantly in my thoughts.
Thank you, in the midst of all this, for posting an update. I can’t wait to hear that Simone is off the ventilator, that she’s eating, that she’s growing fat, and that she is home with you, where you can whisper in her little elf ears all day long. I’m going to cry when I read that post, too.
Oh darling, what an absolutely awful time. I was in tears reading this post! What an amazingly strong little girl. Keep on fighting, Simone!
One of the commentors recommended choclate, but I would not indulge too much if I were you. My (full-term) baby had awful cramps if his mother ate any!
You all remain in my thoughts and prayers.
One day you’ll get to focus on her ears, and her soft wee baby thighs, and the shape of her lips, and on and on. You will make it to that point, you just have to get through hell first.
Simone is in my prayers. Have faith that this little champ will win the fight. Bless you all.
Alexa, I haven’t commented on your blog for the longest time … but I am here, willing you on, always reading and praying for you and your own.
My prayer today, is that in roughly 15 years, a teenage Simone will be reading of the last few weeks, smacking her gum in your ear; amazed that she was ever so small.
Keep going. You are doing WONDERFULLY. xoxoxoxoxo
My oh my Alexa. You type with such restraint and strength. I’d be gibbering in terror, still.
Hoping for Simone,
J
Sending energy to Simone and her mom and dad!! SUPER STRENGH FAMILY!
I have been checking you blog twice a day to see if there is an update, and so frightened to read about her crisis and then relieved to hear about the positive turn. I am visualizing locking my pinky into Simone’s brave little hand to give her a boost of goodwill, energy and love from all of us out here praying for the two of you.
Oh sweetie, I don’t think I breathed until I had read that she was healing.
Still thinking of you and sending nice strong healing/growing thoughts to Simone.
I read the post from then end backwards – I had to know how she is.
Your dear little girl. Thinking of all of you.
I agree with the PP; I had to skip to the bottom of the post and read upwards. Well done, Simone, you little fighter, you!
I am a complete stranger, but I hope you will accept my heartfelt good wishes for you and your little family. Just had to delurk to pass on some good advice once given to me by a friend; “If you’re going through hell – keep going”.
Holding my breath for all of you. This rollercoaster – it’s horrible. But you’re a warrior. I know it doesn’t feel like it, but you are.
oh my, that was a shock for me to read, unimaginable how it must have been for you, her mother. Keep going, Simone!
this post had me clutching my hands and holding back tears. what a brave little fighter your baby girl is. my thoughts and prayers are with you all, for health, strength and continued faith.
I am saying prayers for you and your beautiful Simone. Hang in there and take care of yourself.
When they say it’s a roller coaster, apparently they aren’t kidding. You’re doing a great job for her.
You’re little girl is such a fighter. I’m wishing you both such wonderful thoughts. Stay strong Simone and Alexa.
I am so sorry that you had to suffer through such a scare and so sorry that little Simone had to get so sick. I’m very happy and relieved that you both are doing better! She is such a strong and brave little girl!
God. I am so sorry for all you and Simone are going through. I don’t think I took a breath until the last paragraph. I’m happy things are looking up. Please take care.
What a terrible, tumultuous ride. I am holding you all fiercely in my heart and prayers.
Oh my god, Alexa, I got about half way through the first paragraph and had to immediately scroll down to the end of the post to make sure the news would be good. Reading the post after that made my heart ache for you even more knowing that as you went through everything I read, you hadn’t been able to scroll down, as it were, to know that no matter how bad it got in the middle, the end of this particular story would be good. I’m so sorry you, Scott, and Simone had to go through that, but I’m so relieved that she is being so strong and pulling through this.
I cried my way through this post and can still barely see the keyboard. I am so, so glad that Simone is doing better. Both of you were on my mind all day yesterday…I think I kow why now. I was praying for you all day. What a horrible, sick-making ride.
Please keep peeing, Simone. We all love you so much, even though we’ve never met you! Alexa, I am sending you the fiercest hug that ever was. There just aren’t any words.
xo
My sats were dropping as I read your post. I decided that if I held my breath while reading every single word slowly it would have a happy ending. And it worked! I’m deliriously happy that Simone is improving. My son spent some time in the NICU and I remember–all too clearly–how my heart was in my throat the whole time.
Keeping the three of you in my thoughts.
Glorious news Simone you beautiful brave fighter! We are cheering for you, Alexa and Scott!!!
Oh, god, Alexa. I can’t even imagine this kind of terror. Your little girl is so strong, and it’s obvious where she gets it. My thoughts are with you, Simone, and Scott as you soldier through your time in the NICU.
I had to go to the end of the post because I couldn’t take the stress just reading this, never mind living it. Ugh, you poor girl. Poor Simone. Poor Scott. What an ordeal this all is. I am so sorry you’ve had to go through all this.
Thank you for the positive title, otherwise the tears I shed while reading this would have been more like full on blubbering. I am so glad that she is on the upswing and soon to be done with the 6th grader. I’m hoping for lots more wet diapers and no more scares even close to the one you had this weekend. Grow lungs, grow!!
Oh Alexa. I couldn’t breathe while reading this post and now I am weeping in my cubicle. I can only imagine how terrifying it must have been for you. Strength and bravery and toughness must be in the Flotsam genes. Keep fighting, Simone, and stay strong mama!
Oh. My. Mymymymy. I am so relieved for you, and have to say that while that post had a ridiculous amount of alarming information, it was incredibly written, and I can’t believe what a strong, amazing woman you are. And how strong and amazing Simone is – like mama like daughter. Keeping you all in my thoughts and prayers, fiercely!
I was a nervous wreck just reading this post. I cannot imagine how you are living through it. Thinking of you constantly, sending strength.
What a little fighter she is! I cannot imagine the all-consuming terror that you’ve gone through. You, Scott, and Simone remain in my prayers.
Keeping your beautiful strong daughter and her beautiful strong parents in my prayers daily.
Keep fighting Simone, you have one hell of a story to tell all your friends on the playground!
Sending thoughts of strength, love, hope, peace and wellness. Grow, little one, grow!!!!!
Another stranger from across the country, just having to say, what a “good, brave” mommy you are. My youngest was in NICU for only 72 hours, not even close to being in the kind of danger your tiny baby has been in, and I thought I would break into a million pieces for the excruciating pain it put in every cell of my body. You’re doing wonderfully, whatever state you are in at whatever point. If you’re still breathing, and not hiding literally in that cave, you’re doing wonderfully. Even with the cave though, what mother wouldn’t understand. Blessings. Prayers. Good thoughts. Happy Zen. Whatever helps, it’s being thought of for you, Scott and tiny, strong and brave Simone. And, Ames.
Shitty crappy shit. That must have aged you a hundred years. So sorry that you had that terror of thinking you would lose your precious girly-pants.
I hope she pees like a little horse and breaths all on her own soon.
Praying for your poppet.
I am so proud of your daughter!! She is a fighter. Your family is receiving lots of prayers from mine!
Dealing with the highs and lows of having any loved one so sick is so difficult. I can’t imagine what it is like when that loved one is your daughter. Hang in there, Alexa and Simone.
Oh Alexa! How awful this must be. I kept saying, “She has to be okay, she has to be okay, she has to be okay” the whole way through. Thank God she was. What hell you are living through!! The part about going to the cave…I’m totally understand that! I would want to do the same thing! I’ll be praying for all of you!
Yes, yes, yes! Grow Simone grow! Keeping you family of fighters in prayer,
Jeanette
Hi Alexa, I had to de-lurk too to let you know that I too am praying for you & your family. I pray that you and Scott will receive the strength you need to get thru each day, that sweet Simone will continue to improve and grow and astound the doctors, and for blessings on the doctors and nurses caring for Simone.
Thank you for the beautifully written update. And remember that prayers and good thoughts are being sent your way from NW Washington.
WOW. You are amazing. And so is Simone.
Pee Simone PEEEE!
I did like everyone else and scrolled to the bottom first… but that didn’t keep me from crying.
There is nothing this baby can’t handle. She is the strongest and bravest little mite in the world. And her parents are pretty phenomenal too.
That bit about taking her away to the cave, just the two of you? I totally get that – down to my marrow. I think it’s motherhood. But it’s such a primal feeling.
I hope you never have to feel that way again. Good wishes for Simone, you and Scott.
I’m practically crying with relief for you that Simone got past that very frightening reaction to the surgery. I didn’t skip to the end and wish I had because I was a nervous wreck until I found out the outcome. All best wishes to you all, I’m so glad she’s doing better now!
Thank the gods.
You know, I couldn’t read your whole post – it was too terrifying. I had to skip to the good part. I can’t imagine what it took to make it through that evening, since you couldn’t fast forward to the happy ending.
Hope you and hubby aren’t too strung out from the stress. Hang in there!
I am so glad you guys are all right! Hope you get to have some low-stress weeks where everything goes perfectly; you deserve them.
My heart was pounding all the way through reading this. I can’t imagine how you deal with stuff like this, and I can’t help but think that you will — have to be — rewarded for it by taking home a sweet, healthy, chubby baby in the end. You and Simone are, in the absolute cheesiest and best sense, troopers.
Oh, god. Like Audrey I had to scroll down to read the last paragraph first. I am glad she is doing better. My best thoughts to all of you.
Whew! What a scary post. So happy to read things are more stable. I know that the NICU can be a roller coaster but what a scare.
Hang in there and healing vibes to your daughter.
As a former NICU mom, I must say that reading your posts dredges up the whole gamut of emotions. Our experience was a cakewalk compared to yours, so I won’t even begin to compare. But I want you to know that I can relate to the feelings of helplessness that you must be having. You feel like you should just be able to pick up your baby and hold them close and make everything ok, but you can’t, yet. People think it’s hard to let a toddler (or a teenager) go off and do things on their own, but it’s a different story when it’s your tiny baby that you have to entrust to their own strengths.
I’m praying for continued superhuman strength for Simone, and you and Scott. Holding you in my thoughts…
Words are hard to find after reading a mother’s account of one day in the life her very sick baby. Sending warm wishes of peace and health and speedy recovery. May pee-soaked diapers continue to flow in the NICU!
I’m praying and praying and praying. May she continue to wet her diapers with ferocity.
She’s a fighter, that one. And I love her for it.
I had to take a Xanax just reading that. I can’t imagine what you must be feeling but I know you are scared and exhausted. I’m just glad Simone’s okay now and I’m checking back all the time. We’re all here with you even though I bet you feel alone.
I have no idea what to say, but wanted to at least let you know that I’m thinking of you. Roller coaster, indeed; I broke out in a cold sweat just reading about this experience, but found myself cheering in the end! You go, Simone!
OMG, I was so afraid to read this whole post. I am thrilled beyond words that Simone has made it past that hurdle. Keep being there and being strong for her. You are doing amazing. I continue to pray for you and your family. Blessed thoughts to you all
My god, how absolutely terrifying. Simone is good and brave, and so are you and Scott.
I’m hoping, hoping that it’s all uphill from here.
I don’t know what to say other than hold on and stay strong, which you are clearly already doing.
You and Scott and Simone are in my thoughts.
Dear Alexa, my heart clutched when I read your post. What you are going through is too much for words, though your words are doing a truly amazing job. I can’t tell you how happy and relieved I am that Simone turned the corner like that. Please, little one, don’t ever scare your parents like that again. Be well, and thrive, and grow! (And pee!)
How absolutely terrifying. I am so happy she made it through. Stay strong,Simone!
the trees are thinning. that’s fantastic!! :)
What a terrifying ordeal you’ve had to endure. I’m sending all of my best wishes for continued strength and healing for Simone.
Your description of finally being able to release the tears you had been holding really resonated with me. Last year my newly-turned-two-year-old daughter caught some unknown respiratory virus that quickly became catastrophic. She crashed in the ER, requiring immediate intubation and life support. We endured much of a week in the PICU not knowing if she would come off the vent and meds sustaining her blood pressure, to come home with us. On the day they extubated her, I cried as I trudged off to take a shower in the Soviet-style hospital baths. On the way there I ran into two of the doctors who had worked her up in the ER. They were coming to check on her in the unit, and their happy smiles disappeared momentarily when they saw my wet face. “They just extubated her,” I blubbered. “Now I can finally cry.”
And I’m doing so again as I type this, for your girl and mine and the terror we sometimes have to face as parents. All the best to your family.
Thank goodness. She sounds like such a fighter. I am so very relieved for you all.
I’m crying right now after reading this. I asked God, no implored of Him – why are you doing this to this family, can’t you see they’ve been through enough? I have heard of having to change tubings and that after a change, the patient does much better. I’m happy that all the gunk from her lungs is beginning to clear with that tube change.
I am so sorry you all have to go through this. I will continue to pray.
She sounds like an amazing fighter. Sending love to your entire family.
Simone is an amazing baby. She is strong. She is a fighter. You are all in my prayers.
Here via A Little Pregnant to wish you strength and healing, both for yourself and for your little girl.
This is my first visit (via A Little Pregnant). Simone sounds like a strong little person, and you must be as well. I am so sorry you both have to go through this. My heart just aches for you. Good thoughts, good vibes, good health to you all.
This is my first visit too, and you’ve already got me in tears. Wow. What a crazystrong family you’ve got. I’ll be thinking of you guys.
Thank God!
Brave, strong little Simone.
Thank G-d she is OK. I will continue to keep all of you in my thoughts and prayers–I hope that the posts from this point on are about how she is amazing everyone in the NICU with her wonderful progress.
Just found you via Julie… best, best wishes. I remember the NICU so, so well (my 25w3d preemie is now 3). You will get through it, one way or another.
Alexa, this post is so incredibly touching and brave. I want so badly for this roller coaster to end for you guys. Fiercely rooting for little Simone and hoping that things settle down to routine from here to the end of your stay. Much love!
pulling for simone. what a little champ you’ve got…
I think I held my breath for 5 straight minutes while I read this. So scary, Alexa, but I’m glad Simone pulled through, is peeing up a storm, and doing better all around. I think she has just earned a bye for next Christmas when the Schmutzli stories pop up. Right? She can get out of those now as long as she keeps producing wet diapers on command and doesn’t give you any more heart attacks.
Dearest Alexa,
I am a new reader (today), sent here by Swistle, and you are now foremost in my thoughts.
Be brave and stay strong. (Weak words, but all I have to offer.)
I have a friend who had to deliver her son at 25 weeks because of emergent issues.
He went through many of the same things your warrior Simone is going through: the Oscillator for one. His surgery was on his eyes, not his heart, but he too had complications after they predicted none.
I spent plenty of hours in the NICU with her (she, a single parent), holding her hand, stroking her son and wishing life were easier for someone so young and innocent.
My friend’s son barely survived his first few months on earth, that should have been, like your dear Simone and Ames’s, spent curled still in the womb. Simone is a fighter. She must be to have endured what she has so far. So are you. Remember that. It will keep you sane. My friend’s son will turn 4 this June. He remains a wonder to behold.
Sorry, I’m a moron. (I have so many cyber-friends.) I was NOT sent here by Swistle, but by “a little pregnant.” Just had to point that out.
Part of me still wants you to title this post “The Golden Shower” but that is just my crass way of avoiding the holy f’ing crapola praying to whomever that Simone will one day be a pain in the ass three year old. Take care of yourself, please. I worry.
Holding tight, tight, tight to good thoughts for you and Simone. All the Internets are thinking about you.
I came here from Julie at a little pregnant. I cried through this post and have been catching up on your story on older posts.
What a beautiful, strong little girl you have. What a beautiful, strong mama you are.
I’m praying for you all.
Well wishes from another stranger here….Sending you all of the good wishes and strength for ALL of you during this difficult time.
Also here from A little pregnant. Please know that you and your family, especially your beautiful daughter, are in my thoughts and prayers. Stay strong.
I know that you may not have the chance to read this, ever, but maybe you will. Maybe you’ll need to know that down the road, further than tomorrow, things might not look so bad. As I read your post today, directed here from A Little Pregnant, I’ve been stunned at how exactly the same it is to when our first was born. Your Simone is a bit smaller than he was (a strapping 2lb10oz) but the respiratory problems and the sepsis and the PDA at 1wk. We were there. I know, first hand, all the drugs your daughter is on, all the procedures she’s going through. It’s eerie, and not a bit emotional for me, to see you doing just what we did.
I’ll try not to take up too much more of your time but to say that a woman out there went through exactly what you’re going through with her son. It was the longest road she walked but she made it and so did her son. Despite the overwhelming odds against him, my son is normal and healthy. My family is healed and stronger for having been *there*. If you need something more tangible to see of a happy ending, I’ve got blog posts up (he was born Aug 4th’04) and loads of NICU pictures in Ethan’s gallery (linked from the About the Nutz tab on my blog). If you have any time.
Oh, and one of the hardest but best things we were told by the NICU staff was to take a day off a week. Oh god it hurt to do, especially in the beginning, but it helped us to keep our stress levels down, somewhat and stay strong.
I wish you, your husband, and Simone recovery and speedy health.
Wow. Really I don’t have words to express the feelings I had as I read this post. I am glad to hear Simone fought so hard and did what her little body needed to do…..until the next post, I wish you all healthy, strong days and nights!
Keep fighting Simone! Your mom and dad love you, and they are so proud of you!
Sent by Julie from A Little Pregnant. What a brave and good little baby, indeed. She’s spectacular and so are you. Wishing you all a little bit of a rest, you really deserve it.
Simone you are one bad-ass mo-fo!
One cant help but wonder what kind of wonderfulness is awaiting a little girl who can fight this hard to stay hanging out with her mum and dad.
xxx
You never thought you’d be so glad for dirty diapers, did you? :) Go Simone Go!
Also directed here by Julie. I’m near the cities too…I wonder if we were in the same NICU. It’s so hard to watch your baby in an isolette. I, too, wanted to grab him and rush out the door. It is a rollercoaster. I was there 8 months ago, and now I’m home, with a baby. You’ll get there too, Simone sounds like a very strong soul. I wish I could fast-forward time for you, show you what it will be like. Please take care, and the previous commentor who talked about taking a day off was right. It does save your sanity. Even if it’s just for an afternoon, try to get out of the hospital. Hang in there!
Hi,
I have never read your blog before (was directly over here by Julie) but something in it made me want to comment (well all of it but one thing in particular.) I had quads 14 weeks early, had 6 mos of NICU time and every possible thing happen (e-coli,NEC, ROP, vents for months, tubes, broken bones, etc.) But one of the biggest was the “not peeing” My beautiful daughter Emma, who was born at 13.5 oz, ran into this horrible thing 3 times.
This may sound stranger or weird but just remember it, just in case. The first time of Emma not peeing we were given the warning that if she didn’t go in the next 24 hours she probably wouldn’t make it (we heard that phrase many many times.) There was a resident there trying to figure out anything to do. Emma received hundreds of transfusions also and they were to do another one when she suggested giving FFP (fresh frozen plasma) Her theory was that it didn’t leak out of the veins and that helped carry it to the other organs needing it so badly.
She gave Emma FFP and by the next morning she peed. The next week the same thing happened, this resident wasn’t on duty, so I told the NICU doc to give it to her. They said there was no correlation but they gave it to her to make me feel better. She peed. The next week the same thing. Same discussion. Same outcome.
All I’m asking is that if this happens again, please ask about FFP.
Jane
http://www.snanimals.com(my store dedicated to Emma)
Hey. Just found your blog, was sent here by Julie. Our son was a 29 weeker and I remember all too well those nights in the NICU. We were lucky that Jeffrey made it through it all with relatively few problems.Just remember that it’s a roller coaster ride and evetually you’ll get more ups than downs.
So glad to hear she peed! Who knew we’d e so excited by these sorts of things?
Also, I often remember my night time alarms to wake up and pump. They’re mingled in my mind as relaxing and horrible. On one hand I was doing something to help my baby but on the other? Uhh. being a cow sucks. That being said we were able to make it for almost a year before my milk finally gave out. I feel that it lasted that long only by sheer force of will.
Good luck, god bless and we’ll be hoping for you.
I’m also here via Julie. Your post brought back so many memories; I can even smell the NICU, even though it has been nearly two years since we were there.
It is my dearest hope that this point represents the bend in the road, the deliniation between Before and After that marks the time when Simone began improving and you began to let yourself think about her coming home. I hope that in two years you are like me, with a healthy, beautiful daughter.
also here via http://www.alittlepregnant.com.
I am afraid I don’t have the wit and way with words that some of these very lovely and brave posters have so I will just have to say “what she (NICU mom) said.” Except Jack is 18 months…not 2.
Go baby Simone!
Wow. I am also here for the first time from the link at A Little Pregnant. What an amazing journey. I hope and pray that your little girl keeps on peeing (and getting rid of her liquids via all the appropriate “exit strategies.”)
I hope you and your husband are taking care of yourselves. You are, in effect running a marathon, so how you feed and take care of your bodies will make you best able to perseverse through all the ups and downs.
As a fellow Minnesotan (now in DC), I’m hoping that your little Simone will enjoy her first tater tot hot dish with mom and dad before you know it. Blessings and Blissings. -Monica
Much love to you and your family through this journey in the NICU.
Denise
ps. found you through a little pregnant
Fight on!
I exhaled, as everyone else, with the good news.
A little fighter for sure — she must get it from her parents.
My best,
Pam
Sending waves of hopeful thoughts your way. Take care of yourself and thank you for sharing your amazing story and your amazing little girl with us.
One day at a time.
Not just a cheesy comedy with a scary looking Schneider.
It’s one day at a time, and each one hopefully brings you that much closer to being with Simone in your home, with all of this behind you.
I just found you via Julie. Oh my, what a story. In tears for all the ups and downs.
Sarah
So glad she pulled through that crisis. I hope very hard there are no more such crises, even though I’m sure there will be other more minor ones. Thinking of you.
I’m another one conduited by Julie, all the way from Stratford-upon-Avon, England. Tears & thoughts & prayers for brave baby & magnificent Mum are all in abundance in our house tonight.
Earlier today I was pathetically sorry for myself because my 6 month old son spent the night howling his rage & indignation at his involuntary cold turkey from being boobed happily into sleep. Reading your blog has re-evoked the bowel-shattering fear of the NICU and my perpective has been regained: tonight I shall just feel thankful he is lying within my reach, plaguing us with his wonderful wailing.
I’m praying & hoping that Simone is soon to make your nights bleary & weary with her insistent & voluble demands for Mummy-milk NOW! Everything that can feasibly be crossed here is tightly crossed. Hang in there.
Hi Alexa having some tears here for you and so glad to hear that Simone is doing better.
Thanks for the updates – thinking of you and praying for Simone!
Hi –
Wow, newish reader here, but let me say you just gave me enough of a fright to pop a couple new gray hairs out of my head. I am thrilled Simone is on the mend and will send prayers up for her.
And, prayers for you too Momma, for you to stay strong and find peace.
Here via A Little Pregnant, and couldn’t help but add another comment of support. I will be thinking positive thoughts for you and wishing you a lot of urine!!
What a good, brave little baby, indeed. And what a good, brave mama she has. You are both in my prayers.
thinking of you – and hoping for only good things.
grow strong little one….
karen
I just wanted to encourage you to hang in there. I had to pause reading part way through your post because I was crying. What a bond a mothers love is, and I pray your love will carry her through.
wishing you all the best
My prayers are with you at this stressful time.
I sincerly pray that your daughter pulls through.
She sounds like a fighter.
I have never hoped for pee for so much in my life as I did reading that! Here’s a toast with a liter of water to Simone and her many saggy, baggy diapers to come.
The NICU – a place are so incredibly glad exists but the one place you just can’t wait to leave.
We are walking in the March of Dimes this year for all the preemies in our life and we are adding Simone to our “pilgrimage” because she will be yet another success story. I know reading the comments on your blog helps when you are going through this and feel so alone, but I also know we all wish there was something more we could do to help you and Scott through each day and cup an extra hand of strength around Simone. Talk about your troopers. Maybe Simone needs a US Marine Corps onesie as a symbol of her warrior spirit!
Hang on, hang in and stay strong – when you can’t stay strong, for god sakes, don’t stay sober. We are all there behind you guys.
How horribly frightening. I am thinking of you, and hoping that things continue to improve.
Nothing to say but sending you a big hug.
I just found your blog(thanks to Julie) and just want to send many, many hugs your way. 4 of my 5 children were premature, though nowhere near as early as your little girl(32 wks, 30 wks, 35 wks and 32.4). I know the NICU hell all too well myself, but not to the extent you do thus far.
My thoughts are with you and your little girl. I am so very sorry to hear about your son.. that is one hardship I cannot relate to.
I will be following along with your journey.. and Julie is right. Simone will, thankfully, never remember any of this. And, after some birthdays and .. well.. time.. your heart will be able to let some of the NICU hell hurt go. My oldest two were born at 32 weeks and 30 weeks and are 9.5 and 8 now.. and you would never know, to look at them, what a rough start they had. Rollercoaster is a way to describe the NICU, but no one ever really knows how HARD it is, until you’re there. I wish nothing but the best for you and your little girl, and I hope that you don’t have any more “lows” from here on out(high hopes, yes, as I know how it goes). Hugs to you, your husband, and that sweet, tiny little baby of yours.
I am so glad to hear that your daughter is doing well after such a scary experience. I am so sorry for your loss of Ames. Words are so insufficient at times like these, but it feels wrong to read your story and not leave a note to say I was here and that I am thinking about your family. I hope you will continue to have the strength you need during this both tragic and wonderful time.
Another reader from A Little Pregnant that is rooting for little Simone and your family. I had preemie boy/girl twins as well but we also lost our little boy after at just 2 days old due to severe hydrocephalous (a congenital condition – not due to prematurity). We had a few scary moments with our surviving girl in the NICU, but she is now a thriving 3-year-old that knows of the experience only via the pictures she sees (so similar to the ones you posted of precious Simone).
Please hang in there and know that you are doing everything possible for your little girl. And my sincere condolences on the loss of your little boy.
I just found you through Julie. I just want you to know I’m also pulling for Simone. Did you say you’re in the Twin Cities? I spent many weeks in the ante-partum ward (and a couple of weeks in the NICU) at FV – Riv. – just thought perhaps you were there as well. We received very good care there. Our scariest moments were while I was still pregnant. I’m sorry for the loss of your boy, and hope that the rest of Simone’s time in the NICU is progressively less bumpy. You are clearly a great and devoted mother, and hopefully there will soon be a time when all the damned wires and machines and fluorescent lights go away, and it is just the two of you, rocking in the dark, needing only each other.
Hi. I came to your blog through A Little Pregnant. Just wanted to drop a note and say you write so beautifully, and having never “met” you before today, I still am rooting for little Simone (what a lovely name) and hurting for your loss of Ames. I am a physician as well, and your use of medical terms is spot on – you are clearly doing your homework. I wish you only the best, truly.
I’ve been following your story for quite a while now. I continue to hold you and your sweet, strong, brave little girl in my thoughts and prayers. I wish I could offer words of advice, or something useful, but just know that you have many many friends reading and thinking and praying for all of you.
Another NICU parent here to join the other voices. It sounds like Simone is a real fighter, and I hope the best for all of your family.
But unlike some other parents, I actually have fond memories of the Oscillator! It was the conventional vent that was our arch-enemy during my daughter’s stay, and she always did much better on high frequency ventilation. :)
Yay for you, Simone – not many babies can say that their pee saved the day. Keep up the good work!
Hi honey, friend of Julie’s here. Sending love and peace to your little boy, and love and strength to you and your little girl. I’m an Auntie to a nephew who survived PPHN (Persistent Pulmonary Hypertension in the Newborn) and a harrowing NICU stay, and is now a big sassy five-year-old boy. May the NICU work its miracles for Simone, just like they did for my boy Rowan. I am grateful every day of my life. We are all praying on your behalf.
Another from Julie’s site. I’ve been checking for updates and choosing to assume that the lack of them means you’re busy pumping and cupping her head and butt and gazing in wonderment at your rapidly improving daughter.
I am so sorry about Ames.
JESUS CHRIST my friggin’ heart was in my throat. god that was horrifying. poor little simone all swollen up like lou dobbs. you sure have a way with words there lady. christ thank god for that fantastic peeing she’s been doing. fingers crossed for you and your family.
I, too, am eagerly awaiting an update and hoping that all is well.
Hi Alexa. You may not remember me as I have not been around in blogland for a long while but I’ve been reading your site forever. I delivered my preemie twins at 27 weeks and both boys were on the oscillator several times during our 96-day stay in the NICU.
They both had surgeries (PDA ligation-one and NEC the other) and ups and downs and every possible complication in the preemie book. They are wonderful two-year old toddlers with only very minor health issues.
Words just fail me right now as I go back to those NICU days (and nights) but I want to give you all the strenght you, your husband and Simone need at this time.
Try to take care of yourself (I know it sounds impossible to even think about it when you are glued to her isolette – but TRY, little things like a nice home-made meal or a long bath, whatever)As one commenter said, it may be good for you not to be there one day a week, if you could. I did not do it and I wish someone had told me that… Anyway, all this to say that I KNOW what you are going through and I am praying for Simone and thinking of you constantly. Love from Argentina.
Adding to the chorus of positive thoughts and strength.
Heartbreaking. Thinking of you often.
I can’t imagine ever being strong enough to go through all of this.
When you suggested putting her hand in a bowl of warm water, I was right there with you! My 1st thought was… thats perfect, it works everytime… followed by how impressed I was that you thought of it. So it really wasnt that far out there!
Hooray for sweet baby urine!
Another preemie mom who would like you to know that you and precious Simone are in my thoughts and prayers daily. The roller coaster highs are fabulous and the lows are lower than you thought you could ever handle. You’ll look back on the experience and be amazed at your strength and the love you have for your family.
I’ve been there and all I can do is offer my virtual hugs. I still don’t know how we got through it all but it has been 2 years since we took our babies home from the NICU and I still have nightmares. Good luck and I’m pulling for you all.
Another former NICU parent here, keeping you in my thoughts and prayers…
Sending you warm thoughts and hugs, today.
I hope everything continues to be going well. I continue to pray for your family. May our loving God (even though we don’t think so sometimes) hold Scott, Alexa and Simone (and Ames) in the palms of His hands.
How clearly that moment came back to me when you described imagining sneaking Simone out of the NICU under your coat. Thiry two years ago my three month old went into congestive heart failure. I thought I must be the only person who ever had that crazy compulsion to snatch her away. Somehow my brain needed to make the danger something I could carry her away from to safety. My imaginings twisted it to seem as if escaping the NICU would take us back to two days before when everything was fine. But then I couldn’t bear even imagining losing her so it distracted me as well. She is fine and has a four year old today. But for a moment I was right back there again.
I suppose “The Golden Ticket” is too long for a middle name?
Oh, Alexa. I just don’t even know what to say. My heart is in my throat for you and Simone. I’m so glad that your brave little baby pulled through.
My goodness, this is hard!
I’m so glad she’s improving.
I read this entire post without hardly breathing myself and let out about the most cathartic sigh ever upon reaching the fabulous news at the end. I’m impressed with your eloquence (hell, your coherence) during such trying times. Wishing you the best.