Ack! We've had a bit more excitement than we might wish over the last couple of days. I'm writing this in the hospital while Henry sleeps off last night's emergency appendectomy.
He had a stomach ache and spent all day in bed on Sunday (conveniently, the very day after Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows arrived. Coincidence? Or not?). He felt much better on Monday, but I "encouraged" him to visit the doctor, citing the trauma that would be visited upon poor little Joe if Henry had to be whisked to the hospital in the middle of the night. And indeed, the doctor sent him directly to get a CT scan (which is apparently much like being drawn through a giant metal doughnut). And immediately when the scan results came through, they sent him directly to the ER. That was about 2:30 yesterday afternoon, and we sat in the ER waiting area while people with screwdrivers lodged in their skulls and dripping blood from various limbs and other traumas came and went. A short three hours later, they took Henry into a room, dressed him in one of those stylish but practical hospital gowns, and then let him relax for six or seven hours.
The surgery started at about midnight. After they doped Henry up and wheeled him away, I dashed home, let Bruce out, slipped into something more comfortable, and dashed back to the hospital. There's a special waiting area for families to sit while their loved one is in surgery; it's pretty nice, actually, very large, with comfortable seating and internet access, several televisions, lots of magazines (including, weirdly, Vogue, Opera News, and Nonprofit Quarterly). They even had special phones you could use to call back to the surgery desk to find out how things were going. I had the place entirely to myself, except for one woman who was tucked in on a little sofa, snoring.
The waiting was the worst part. Even knowing that appendectomies are a dime a dozen (health care cost issues aside), and that Henry's as healthy a patient as he could be, and that the chances of anything going wrong wae vanishingly small, it's still so disturbing to see a person you love unconscious. You don't have access to the cues you usually rely on to tell you that your darling's true self still inhabits their body. You have to take a lot more on faith than you are used to, and trust that things will be fine while you have no power at all to make them become so.
Finally, at about 2:30 am, the surgeon came out to tell me that it had all gone well (although apparently Henry's appendix was very comfortable where it was and they had to pry it out with a surgical crowbar).
I must say, every single person, and there were a lot of them, whom we encountered in this hospital adventure was helpful, informative, cheerful (but not overly so) and, well, patient. And I feel so lucky that it was something so routine, easily diagnosed and easily fixed. And covered by insurance.
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