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PERSONAL PERSPECTIVE: IF MOM SWORE, SOMETHING WAS TERRIBLY WRONG.


Byline: Kathleen Vallee Stein

I called the hospital and was put through to the intensive care waiting room. My dad picked up. I knew immediately something was terribly wrong. He said mom had a heart attack during surgery. He didn't know where she was. No one was telling him anything. What was going on?

My parents said the surgery wasn't terribly serious and I believed them. After all, my sister would be there and I planned to arrive the next day. Now it looked like I would be too late. My sister, I found out later, also took them at their word and attended a class that morning.

When I arrived the next day, the doctors told us they were worried. They never say that. When a doctor worries, family members panic. My mom was surrounded by ``spaghetti,'' with enough tubes and wires to power a small city. None of us knew if she would make it.

I stood by her side, leaning on the bed rail and talked and talked. She was unconscious but it didn't matter, the nurses said it would help. The next day things got worse. She was reduced to a mass of hourly readings; heart rate, respiration, blood pressure. And then it got worse.

The doctor said she needed a sigmoidoscopy sigmoidoscopy /sig·moid·os·co·py/ (sig?moi-dos´kah-pe) direct examination of the interior of the sigmoid colon.. He thought some of her tissue might have died during the heart attack, due to lack of oxygen. He wanted to go in and take pictures. Knowing what she was in for, I asked that I be allowed to stay with her during the painful procedure.

I searched for the right words to comfort her. With her mouth taped shut, tubes sprouting from both wrists, forearms and even her abdomen, and now a nasty tube going into her guts, I asked her if she would like me to swear for her. Her lids lifted and our eyes locked. She nodded, yes. I began to swear like a sailor in loud and confident tones.

To this day, I do not know why I offered to cuss for her at that moment. I can count on the fingers of one hand the times I heard my mother swear. When I was growing up, we kids knew that if mom swore, something was terribly wrong.

I knew something was terribly wrong in the cardiac intensive care unit as the physician performed a painful procedure on my mother after she had endured 48 hours on life support following seven grueling hours of surgery.

We fought together, the two of us. I voiced her frustration in loud, vibrant tones. We weren't complaining, we weren't even praying. We were fighting for survival in the best way we knew how; not by cowing and crying, but by crowing and proclaiming, in colorful language, the indignation my mother felt but was unable to express.

She made it through the procedure, through the night and yet another agonizing day on life support. On the morning of the fourth day, she opened her eyes and smiled. My father, sister and I jumped for joy, so much so that the intensive care nurse asked us to leave until we calmed down.

Six years later, my mother is going strong. She tells me often, that my swearing got her through her ordeal. Perhaps other moms would have benefited from prayers or poetic platitudes from their children, at a time when they swung between life and death. For my mom and me, getting mad and getting even with death did the trick.

The nasty words she felt like saying a thousand times, but did not in the interest of raising decent children, were expressed at a time when they helped her cope, in a place where such words could express her frustration, by a daughter who wanted with all her might, for her mom to come back.
COPYRIGHT 1999 Daily News
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1999, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:Viewpoint
Publication:Daily News (Los Angeles, CA)
Date:Aug 15, 1999
Words:640
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