Showing posts with label hospital. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hospital. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 2, 2016

2009 March 9-12 Meadow Sick

Monday, March 9, 2009
Meadow has been sick since Monday morning (5:30AM). She has been vomiting & had a fever. Since she is "Cortisol deficient,” this can be a real issue. She had an emergency shot of Solu-Cortef on Monday. We had to alternate Tylenol suppositories & Motrin to get the temp down. She was prescribed Phenergan suppositories for the vomiting. The Phenergan made her very sleepy. She slept most of Monday.
Tuesday, March 10, 2009 
Tuesday morning (2:30AM), Meadow woke up continuing to vomit. She heaved so much that she broke blood vessels in her face and had tiny red dots all over her face, neck, and even her ear lobes. We paged the nurse at her doctor’s office and her endocrine doctor. They suggested we take her to the Children's Hospital. We also had to give her another shot of Solu-Cortef before we left.
I rode with Lora to take her to Children's Hospital in Birmingham we arrived at the ER at 7AM. Meadow had a series of lab work a CT scan, chest & stomach x-rays. She got an IV and they started fluids immediately. She also had to have IV seizure medicine because of the continual seizures she was having. 
She had a seizure on the way to the hospital & in the lobby. They took her straight back. Then she had two more on the stretcher. Then they rushed her to a room with more equipment to monitor her. She had not held down any seizure medicine since Sunday night. Also, her blood pressure kept dropping to 80/30, so she had to have another dose of Solu-Cortef IV. She had to have her blood sugar  & blood pressure checked frequently.
She was admitted to the Special Care Unit once she was released from ER. 

Wednesday, March 11, 2009
We walked over to the RMH to see if we could get a room for the night.
The first night we spent sleeping in chairs in the fourth-floor lobby.
At the RMH house, we had our own room where we could shower and rest. There was always a hot meal at dinnertime. There was usually snack, cereal in the pantry. So we would eat what we could find. 
You could also bring your own food and were given a bend with a number to use for your food that was put in the refrigerator.

Once the IV fluids kicked in Meadow started having a wet diaper.
She actually felt like sitting up in bed.

Meadow in Special Care
Meadow in Special Care
She sat up & played with a musical toy. I hoped that once she starts holding some fluids &/or food on her tummy she will start feeling better. 
Her little eyes look dark around them and glossy.

Meadow in Special Care
Meadow in Special Care
Meadow in Special Care
 Childrens Hospital 
Childrens Hospital
Demolition
Demolition
Thursday, March 12,2009
We ate a salad, barbecue sandwich, and brownie at the RMH for lunch. We walked back to Children's Hospital and Meadow was doing so much better that she was released at 2:30PM.
Ronald McDonald House
Children's Hospital 
We were home by 5:30PM.

Thursday, January 7, 2016

2006 May 12, Friday, Electroencephalogram (EEG) at Childrens Hospital in Birmingham

Today Meadow will see Dr Tony McGrath and she will have an EEG.
This is the third one within the past month.


Mother and daughter fun time
Meadow resting 
Preparing Meadow for the EEG 
Meadow having the EEG 
It showed seizure activity and Dr McGrath increased her dose of Topamax

Electroencephalogram (EEG)
An electroencephalogram (EEG) is a test that measures and records the electrical activity of your brain. Special sensors (electrodes camera.gif) are attached to your head and hooked by wires to a computer. The computer records your brain's electrical activity on the screen or on paper as wavy lines. Certain conditions, such as seizures, can be seen by the changes in the normal pattern of the brain's electrical activity.


Why It Is Done

An electroencephalogram (EEG) may be done to:
  • Diagnose epilepsy and see what type of seizures are occurring. EEG is the most useful and important test in confirming a diagnosis of epilepsy.
  • Check for problems with loss of consciousness or dementia.
  • Help find out a person's chance of recovery after a change in consciousness.
  • Find out if a person who is in a coma is brain dead.
  • Study sleep disorders, such as narcolepsy.
  • Watch brain activity while a person is receiving general anesthesia during brain surgery.
  • Help find out if a person has a physical problem (problems in the brain, spinal cord, or nervous system) or a mental health problem.

How To Prepare

Before the day of the electroencephalogram (EEG) test, tell your doctor if you are taking any medicines. Your doctor may ask you to stop taking certain medicines (such as sedatives and tranquilizers, muscle relaxants, sleeping aids, or medicines used to treat seizures) before the test. These medicines can affect your brain's usual electrical activity and cause abnormal test results.
Do not eat or drink foods that have caffeine (such as coffee, tea, cola, and chocolate) for 12 hours before the test.

Saturday, March 28, 2015

2009, Tuesday, June 2, Caught in an electrical storm on the Singing River Bridge


I had a dentist appointment at 9:00 A.M.
After the dentist, we rode so I went to Kohl’s where I bought a pair of shorts and a top.  
Next, we went to Sam Club where we bought two lawn chairs to use at music in Wilson Park on Wednesdays. 
We stopped at Ruby Tuesday where each of us ordered a rib plate we had a buy one get one free coupon.
We went to Lowe’s where we bought a thermal for our swimming pool and two screwdrivers.

I had loaded my bicycle into our Vue and was planning to ride it across Patton Island Bridge later that day.

Hubby's iPhone had issued a weather alert, it said a storm was brewing in Mississippi.
I felt like the storm would not reach Florence until after I had finished riding my bicycle across the bridge and back.

Hubby unloaded my bike while I went to the park's restroom to change into the shorts and top that I had bought. 

It was very hot and clear when I started across the bridge, but before I reached the end it had started to sprinkle.
Don’t know what I was thinking because I did not have my cell phone with me, or I would have called hubby to come pick me up, but  I had forgotten it.
So I turned my bicycle around and started back across the bridge.
I was almost all the way back when the rain started to pour down and lightning was dancing all around me.
I remember looking towards the locks of the dam and thinking to myself, I sure could use some windshield wipers to clear my sunglasses that were covered with rainwater.
All I could remember was trying to get safely across the bridge away from the storm but it was too late, I was caught inside the cage on the bridge in an electrical storm, and had lost my short-term memory. 
I was lucky that was the only thing that happened to me with lighting dancing all around me. 

It took me about 20 minutes to ride my bike about four miles that are two miles across and two miles back. 
The storm hit at 12:53, I must have started about 12:33 P.M.  and I was at the hospital by 2:30 P.M. 

It was reported later that day,  that it had been a terrible storm over the Tennessee River.

I was dripping wet when I arrived back at the park. 
The storm had frightened hubby, he drove the VUE across the bridge to look for me, and he saw me coming off the bridge.
I did not remember riding across the bridge or changing out of my wet clothes at the restroom at the park. 

Hubby said I kept repeating myself all the way home, where did all those wet clothes come from?

When we got home I ate a snack bar and drank a can of soda, I remembered nothing.
Hubby thought I had a stroke, and he said that I needed to go to the hospital, but I kept saying nothing was wrong with me.

Hubby called my daughter, he handed me the telephone, my daughter asked me some questions, and all I could say was give me a minute to think.
My daughter asked me if I remember riding my bicycle on the bridge and I said what bridge? I could not remember anything. 

I had been inside an electric field caused by the lighting.
The lighting had hit the cage that was attached to the bridge, where I was riding my bicycle.
Somehow, my daughter and hubby persuaded me to go to the hospital, and I was seen by doctor Robert Coble. 
They drew blood, took a brain scan, and checked my urine, the doctor was puzzled by the results. 
He said that the enzymes in my heart were going crazy and I would have to stay until they stabilized. 
My family stayed while I recovered.
It took several hours but my short-term memory started to come back and I was released at 7:30 P.M. 
All I wanted to do was go home and go to sleep. 

The next day I felt a little better but the right side of my head still felt a little numb.

Information on Lighting:
Lightning injuries are usually the result of five different mechanisms: 
Direct strike, — direct strike injuries occur when lightning strikes a person directly
Contact injury, Contact injuries occur when a person touches an object that is part of the lightning current pathway
Side flash (splash), Side flash or splash injuries occur when lightning arcs from the object struck to a nearby object.
Ground current (step voltage), Ground current or step voltage injuries occur when the lightning current spreads peripherally through the ground from the site of the strike
Blunt trauma, blunt injuries occur in two fashions. 
In the first, the victim's musculature contracts diffusely, causing the victim to be thrown a distance from the lightning strike. 
The second mechanism is the consequence of large fluctuations in temperature associated with a lightning strike. 
Lightning causes instantaneous superheating and expansion of the air, which is followed immediately by an implosion as the air is rapidly cooled. 

The duration of heat is so brief that thermal injuries seldom occur. However, the explosion and implosion of air can lead to blunt trauma of major organ systems such as the brain, liver, and spleen.
Because the duration of a lightning strike is extremely short, little of the massive energy is transferred internally to the victim. Rather, the majority of the energy flows externally over the victim's body (a "flashover"). 

However, enough energy passes through the body to disrupt and short-circuit electrical systems within the body, especially the heart, vasculature, respiratory center of the brain, reticular activating system, and autonomic nervous system. 
The major cause of death in lightning injuries is cardiopulmonary arrest due to asystole. 
However, asystole can be readily converted to a coordinated cardiac rhythm with timely and aggressive cardiopulmonary resuscitation.

Why were the enzymes in my heart elevated after being caught in ground current lighting?


Weather observations for June 2, 2009, Muscle Shoals, North West Alabama Regional Airport 

SCT055 means scatter clouds at 5,500 AGL scattered means 3 to 4 eights cloud coverage.
BKN090 were broken clouds at 9000’ covering 5 to 7 octas of the sky. 




Tuesday, March 3, 2015

Fun time after all the surgeries

January 19-25, 2008 

https://www.facebook.com/RMHStanford?ref=br_rs 

Day 19: Saturday 19, 2008 
Last night Meadow slept on the same side as her surgery, which caused her left eye to swell, so we stayed close to the RMH just to be on the safe side.


Meadow at the RMH
I was awake at 8:30 A.M. I took a shower, shaved my legs, and cut my bangs.
I  went downstairs for breakfast, where I ate a waffle, and some Mandarin oranges, and drank a diet coke.
I talked with Brianna Hall, who is expecting a baby; her daughter Rachel just had her third surgery on her heart and she is in PICU. 
I also talked with Robert’s grandfather they are a Spanish-speaking family, from Arizona,
Roberts's grandfather is retired and a member of the Shiners.
Meadow and Lora were still in bed at 11:45 A.M.

That night for supper everyone pitched in and we made homemade spaghetti, a fresh salad, and toasted garlic bread. 
I was given the task of cutting up to three whole garlic, which I had never done before, and was told I was doing it wrong.
One of the women said, that you take a knife turn it on the flat side, and crush the garlic, and the peelings will fall off. 

Lora, Meadow, and I walked across the street to the Stanford Mall. 
http://www.simon.com/mall/stanford-shopping-center/stores
We walked through stores, and we stopped at Andronicus Market where we bought a lemon cheesecake and a couple of fruit custard tarts.  
At the Fruit market, we bought 5 pounds of oranges for 99 cents. 
We walked across the street and down Sand Hill Road to the park, where Lora played with Meadow.
We walked back to the RMH, where we ate supper and veered out for the rest of the day.

Day 20: Sunday, January 20, 2008 
On our trip to the San Francisco Zoo, we rode up from the South Bay area driving 280 north to the Westlake district, exited at Daly City, and turned left at John Daly Boulevard to Skyline Boulevard (Hwy 35) at the junction we turned left onto the Great Highway and turned right into the moon entrance.

On our way to the zoo, we stopped at the Pacifica Oceans in the town of Pacifica, where we saw a pier that extended for what seemed like miles into the ocean, with people on either side fishing.
http://www.cityofpacifica.org
It was a blustery bad, the sky was loaded with thousands of white puffy clouds filled with drops of rain. 
The wind whistled, as the ocean rolled wave after wave onto the sandy beach.
With the eye of my camera, I captured this awesome view.
We could not stay long along the ocean’s edge because Meadow could not tolerate the strong wind.
Town of Pacifica 
We stopped again at Thornton State Beach in Daily, where we walked on a sidewalk to the Pacific Ocean's edge.
 I took out my camera and took several pictures of the ocean and a sign that read:
“ IF IT IS SUMMER BRING A SWEATER. DAILY CITY SUMMERS ARE VIRTUALLY RAIN BUT DON’T EXPECT ANY SUNNY SKIES.”
Another sign in the same area said:
“THE GROUND BENEATH YOUR FEET HERE AT THOMAS BEACH IS NOT SOLID, AS IT SEEMS. THE GOUND ITSELF IS MADE UP OF SEMI-CONSOLIDATED SEDIMENTARY ROCK FROM HERE TO MUSSEL ROCK- IT DOESN'T HOLD TOGETHER WELL, WHICH MAKES THE COASTLINE VERY UNSTABLE.”
http://www.parks.ca.gov/?page_id=530

We drove about a mile up the coast to Funston National Park where I used a porta-potty, that was mounted on a slab of concrete.

The wind was blowing strong, around 35 miles per hour, as I approached the porta-potty, it was unlocked and I went inside. 
Many thoughts raced through my mind as I prepared to use the pot. 
I could just imagine myself being blown off the clifftop into the ocean, floating upside down inside the porta-potty in the middle of the Pacific Ocean.
I also thought about the time a man was eaten by a T-REX while using the porta-potty in the Jurassic Park Movie.

We walked along a sandy path into the park where people were walking their dogs, riding bicycles, and hanging gliding.
Funston National Park 
I walked as near as I could to the cliff edge, to get some close-up shots of the rolling waves, the greenish-blue Pacific Ocean, and the white puffy clouds.
The wind was blinding us with sand, as we walked backward, along with the sandy path back to our car.
We ate a late lunch at Burger King and arrived at the San Francisco Zoo around 2:30 P.M.

Disabled children get in free at the San Francisco Zoo, and the family gets to park free.
The cost for Lora and me was twenty-two dollars.
We entered the park used the restroom, changed Meadow’s diaper, and went to the gift shop where Lora bought a scarf to put around her neck, to protect her neck and ears from the bitter wind.

We walked to the African Region where we saw the long-necked, brown, and white Reticulated Griffins, Grant’s White Zebras with black stripes, and the black furry, Western Lowland Gorilla.
In the Primate Discovery Center, we saw several different types of monkeys including Baboons and a pair of chimpanzees.
At Koala Crossing we saw 100s of long-legged pink flamingos, and several varieties of birds, and the Kola cage was empty. 
Near the Cat Kingdom, we saw the North American River Otters, the California Sea Lions, and a Nile Hippopotamus, and Penguin Island was covered with miniature-wearing black and white tuxedos.

The Cat Kingdom that housed the big cats was closed because a tiger had gotten out and killed a man and injured two others. 

Lora and Meadow rode on a brown & white cat, with a fish in his mouth, on the historic 1921, Dentzel Carousel, which was located near the Fisher Family Children’s Zoo.


Riding the Carousel at San Francisco Zoo
Several of the exhibits were closed because it was getting too close to five o’clock when the zoo closed.
The ocean was just a few blocks from the zoo, so when we left the zoo we found a nice spot to park along the Pacific Ocean to watch the sunset. 
The clouds were now a hint of blue with streaks of yellow, orange, and red as the sun slowly disappeared into the ocean.
Watching sunset
The setting of the sun did not stop some idiot from swimming in the cold pounding ocean.

We arrived at the RMH around 6 P.M., where we ate supper, and spent the remainder of the evening enjoying talking with other families that were staying at the RMH.

I took Meadow upstairs where I put her in the shower with me, I put on our clothes and we walked downstairs to the computer room so I could upload my pictures onto a CD.

Lucy a volunteer at the RMH, said she was leaving the RMH and she would not be back until February 3.
We thanked her for all the great work she had done and we told her we would be leaving on January 25.
We all went upstairs to our room, I called hubby, I downloaded the pictures from my little camera to Lora’s computer and then we all went to bed.

Day 21: Monday, January 21, 2008 
We all get up, put on clean clothes, and walk downstairs for breakfast.
For breakfast Meadow drinks a glass of milk and she nibbles on a waffle. 

For breakfast, I ate two waffles, and mandarin oranges, and drank a bottle of water. 
We walked back upstairs to collect our dirty laundry and take it to the laundry to wash it.
I take Meadow to the family room while our clothes are washing, where Meadow watches Curious George, Barney, and Clifford the Big Red Dog. 

It was a nasty day, it rained all day, it was a good day for staying inside, and Lora slept until after 11 A.M.
Lora finally got up and got ready we rode to the Stanford Mall and ate lunch at Italian Babbo’s Ristorante, where I ordered a delicious bowl of hot soup with some fresh bread. 
We had great service, the food was great, and we had enough food leftover to take home,  Meadow even brought a plate of bread to eat. 

We walked to Victoria’s Secret, and they were having an end-of-year sale, Lora spent over$100.00 and I spent $27.00.

We rode to Target where Lora purchased her a set of luggage for $89.00. 

Then we rode around the Stanford University Campus, stopping to take pictures of students walking to and from classes carrying an umbrella to protect them from the rain.
Stanford University 
We were greeted by rows of Palm trees and a lush green lawn decorated with shrubs, and flowers, with sidewalks on either side, and drove through the entrance to the Stanford University Campus. 

We also saw a couple of statues above the horseshoe-ached, buff sandstone buildings, with red slate roofs that dot the campus.
In the main quad, we see the Memorial Church with a  Celtic cross atop a remarkable mosaic facade that portrays a moment just before the ascension of Christ.
To the left of the Memorial Church, we saw the 285-foot Hoover Tower a building dedicated to alumni and our thirty-third president Herbert Hoover.

We stopped outside the Cantor Art Museum, which is part of Stanford University, to take pictures of the sculpture garden of some of Rodin sculptures https://images.search.yahoo.com/search/images;_ylt=AwrBT.LUvJhXkTcAeaBXNyoA;_ylu=X3oDMTEyZ3Z1b2hvBGNvbG8DYmYxBHBvcwMxBHZ0aWQDVUkyQzNfMQRzZWMDc2M-?p=Rodin+Sculptures+at+Stanford&fr=aaplwwhich included the Gate of Hell.
We would have gone inside but the museum had already closed for the day.
https://www.facebook.com/CantorArtsCenter/


Gates of Hell at Cantor Art Museum 
We rode back to the Stanford Mall where Lora and I shared a meal with salsa and chips at Playa Grill.
We ordered chicken nuggets from McDonald's for Meadow.

We rode back to the RMH where Lora updated Meadows's website, while I played with Meadow.

Day 22: Tuesday, January 22, 2008 
Meadow woke us up clapping her hands. 
I got up and put Meadow in the shower with me after Lora fed her some Pedi-Sure. 
I put Meadow back into her crib and walked downstairs for breakfast.

For breakfast, I ate a bowl of soup, with bread, and a sweet roll. 
Lora and I went back to Stanford Mall to Victoria's Secret where I purchased eight pairs of panties and a pair of Victoria's sweatpants.

I walked upstairs to our room collected the dirty clothes and went to the laundry room.
While my clothes were washing, I went back to the dining room, where I talked with a woman named Helen, the great-grandmother from Montana. 

Helen said, her husband was a cowboy, and when he passed away, they had a cowboy funeral and she rode a horse in the procession.
She said, hubby suffered for five years with cancer, and after he died I moved to Witcha, Falls to live with my daughter.
Helen said that she has five grandchildren, and two great-grandsons, Henry and Gavin, whom she is here with, he has a heart condition.
She also said, that when Gavin’s father learned that he had a heart condition he ran away.

Next, I talked to a couple from Guam, Andrew, and Savannah, and their son Elisha Peter.
They said, their son Elisha had a heart condition that he was given aspirin to take. 
Elisha Peter fell hitting his head, the aspirins he was taking caused his head to clod, and now he is waiting for surgery on his head. 

He said back in Guam he knew a man whose 17-year-old son had fallen hitting his head, causing a clod, surgery was done, and he went into a coma and died.
Andrew said the doctors in Guam did not know what they were doing.
The doctors there said Elisha could not fly because it was not stable enough but Elisha’s Pediatrician told Andrew that he had gotten the family a flight to the Philippians. 

Elisha’s Pediatrician said the operation Elisha needed was minor and it would relieve the pressure.
Andrew said, I will have to go back to Guam until I can get transferred to San Francisco to work as a prison guard but in the meantime, my family is staying here and my family will never live in Guam.
I went back upstairs to finish my laundry.

I went to the computer room to write in my journal and to download the pictures from the little camera to the computer.
Mary Jo Blazek is a volunteer who is working in the computer room at RMH.

Lora and Brianna rode to McDonald's at Stanford Mall, to get some free chicken nuggets for Meadow and Kayla.

Day 23: Wednesday, January 23, 2008 
We took Meadow to her appointment with Doctor Stenberg at 11:30 A.M. but Doctor Steinberg was in surgery so we saw his nurse Teresa.
Teresa said, Meadow was doing great and she will be forwarding a copy of Meadow’s medical records to all of her doctors back home.
She said, Meadow, will have to return in six months for a check-up, which will be sometime in July 2008.
Teresa said, that we should start seeing a difference in Meadow, in the next six months. 

We left the doctor's office and rode to Santa Clara, we stopped at Mexicali Grill a Tex-Mex restaurant located in the Mercado Mall to eat lunch, where we each ordered a soft taco with a salad.

Lora drove us to the Yahoo building located at 701 First Avenue Sunnyvale, California, and walked inside and asked if we could tour the building but they were not giving tours.
Yahoo had just laid off 700 employees. 

We rode to the PHP, Parents Helping Parents located at Sobrato Center for Nonprofits -San Jose 1400 Parkmoor Avenue, Suite 100 San Jose, Ca. where we were given a grand tour of the facility.

Our next stop was the Winchester House and Museum in San Jose, where we did the garden walkthrough because the house was not wheelchair accessible. 
https://images.search.yahoo.com/search/images;_ylt=A0LEVzwVvZhXUfEAzmpXNyoA;_ylu=X3oDMTEyZ3Z1b2hvBGNvbG8DYmYxBHBvcwMxBHZ0aWQDVUkyQzNfMQRzZWMDc2M-?p=Winchester+House+and+Museum&fr=aaplw

We saw the Egret, & the serpent fountains, we saw the garage, the car wash, and an Indian statue
wearing a cloak, a headdress, and a longbow in his left hand.
We saw two orange trees full of ripe oranges, an English Yew tree near the garage, and many other trees & shrubs in various sizes and shapes throughout the property. 

There were roses, lilies, and many other flowers throughout the gardens.
The house took on an eerie look as the sun went behind the clouds and darkness fell on the house and grounds. 


Winchester House as night is falling.
We could still see the purple roof, blue lights were beaming from the top floor, and a yellow front porch light lit the way for guests. 
Yellow and white lights beamed from several of the lower level rooms while total darkness came from many of the other rooms, and shadows danced on the ground as we stopped to take pictures. 
The Winchester House was a beauty by day and a sinister, eerie, creepy place to be after dark.
We walked back to the Museum where Lora purchased a rainbow sucker for Meadow.
Meadow had a sticky all over her face.  
In the museum, we saw Zelda’s Fortune Cabinet inside was a gypsy, with her fortune cards and her crystal ball.
The lower half of Zelda’s Fortune cabinet was a coin slot, and right below the coin slot was the face of the devil, he had green eyes, a red mouth, and a black beard, his face was golden, and on his head were black horns and the image of a fork on his forehead.
If you insert seventy-five cents she will tell you the future but forget playing poker with her.
We also saw a player piano built by Link Piano Company, Binghamton, NY.

We rode back to the RMH for supper, they had prepared beef stew, potato soup, bread, and a large salad. 
After supper, many of the families sat around talking.

The family we met from Montana had moved to a hotel and they will be going home on Friday.
We will also be leaving on Friday.
The twins that were conjoined are leaving tomorrow.

Brianna Cain is very upset about her daughter,  she and Lora are talking.
I am talking to Vanessa Preston about her son Brandon, who has a heart condition, and he still in the hospital. 
I walked upstairs to finish my laundry and write in my journal it is now 12:30 P.M.
Meadow and Lora have been asleep for a while.

Day 24: Thursday, January 24, 2008 
After I dressed Meadow and was ready we went to the dining area for breakfast.
I fed Meadow a can of Pedi-sure and I ate a waffle. 
In the dining area, I talked to the parents and grandparents of Robert, a family from Louisiana, and Vanessa Person. 
Lora came downstairs where she ate breakfast and joined in talking.
We spent the morning taking pictures of our friends.
The news media came by to take pictures of the conjoined twins Yurelia and Fiorella Rocha-Arias, who had been successfully separated.

Meadow was given a Winnie Pooh by Matthew’s family. 
Doctor Steinberg had also performed moya surgery on Matthew.
We finished our packing and went to Meadows's appointment at 2:30 P.M. with her therapist Wan Chen Kang.
While we were at the hospital we went to visit Brandon Person who was in PICU and his mom Vanessa was there with him.

Lora and I split a BLT, a taco, and a slice of Carrot Cake for lunch in the Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital Cafeteria.
We went back to the Cantor Art Museum at Stanford University and Vanessa Person went with us.
At the museum, we saw pictures, pottery, statues, a mummy, an American Indian dancer in full dress, totem poles, and headdresses from many different countries, Africa, India, China, and North and South America. 
We have a beautiful wall hanging of the California Mountains, Yosemite Mountains, gorges, cowboys, and several portraits of the Stanford family. 
We saw many pieces from Leland, and Jane Stanford’s, jewelry collection. 
We saw many pieces of collections from the ancient Mediterranean era, collections from Europe, and American 1500-1900 collections of modern and contemporary. 
We saw many pieces of art from Asia, Africa, Oceania, Native America, and ancient America. 
We saw Rodin’s collection of bronzes, the largest in the world outside of Paris. Twenty bronzes include the “Gates of Hell” It took Rodin twenty years to complete the others, the Thinker, the Kiss, the Age of Bronze, and many others. 
We saw pieces of jade from the Orient. We saw a piece where a monkey was riding a horse with his manly parts exposed.


Cantor Art Museum monkey riding horse
We saw many African pieces, headdresses, statues, and pottery, and many of these pieces were made out of some sort of wood. 
The oriental pieces were made out of stones like jade.
We were allowed to take pictures downstairs. 
The museum was wheelchair accessible, the elevator was quaint, and it was like a dumb waiter very small. 
Lora, Vanessa, and Meadow left using the wheelchair at the exit and I used the front door. 

We took Vanessa back to the hospital, she is nursing her son, so she needs to pump him some milk.
We returned to the RMH where we ate some snacks and visited with some of our friends.
When Vanessa returned to the RMH, she rode to Target with us where I bought some cookies, 
Vanessa spent $70.00 on clothes for Brandon.

We returned to RMH where we cleaned our room, finished washing our clothes, and started packing and Lora went to get a cart for tomorrow, to put our luggage on, so we could carry everything down at once. 

Day 25: Friday, January 25, 2008
It was hot in our room last night so I turned on the air conditioner.  Lora and I both woke up coughing because we had got too hot.
Lora and I were up at 4:30 A.M. We both took a shower, ate breakfast, and drove to the San Francisco California airport. 

Lora traveled down Highway 101, the traffic was heavy, and it was raining and foggy.  
When we arrived at the airport, we had to return the rental car, Lora dropped Meadow and me off at the ticket counter. 
We both had to use the restroom, before going through security.
We checked our luggage in got our tickets and walked through security without any problems.
We were told that our 10:45 A.M. flight would be delayed until 1:00 P.M but we could take an earlier flight it would be leaving at 8:30 A.M.

We are flying with Frontier Airline, our plane has an otter on the wings and tail. 
The flight to San Francisco had a sea lion named Sherman. 
The frontier hub is in Denver, Colorado and its logo is animals.

We sat in the front of the plane in seats, A, B, and C,  I sat next to the window, Meadow was in the middle seat and Lora was in the aisle seat. 
Lora changes Meadow’s diaper once we are in the air after that Meadow and Lora fall asleep.
I am writing in my journal about our many adventures and trying to listen to “Deathly Hollows” on my Pod. 
My sinus was draining so I could not sleep.
We flew from San Francisco to Denver, Colorado in two hours, after we landed we ate a nice in the airport at Jimmy’s Beefstrof.
Lora and I split a steak sandwich, a salad, and some fries, and we each ordered tea. 
We saw two flight attendants from our airplane ordering at Jimmy’s Beefstrof and they said that the food was good and it was!

After we finished eating we went to our waiting area, where I noticed a man wandering around as if he was lost. 
He fell to the ground hitting his head, he was having a grandma seizure, and no one knew what to do.  
The ticket collectors called for help and the man was taken away on a stretcher. 

In the lobby Lora, Meadow, and I were sitting next to a serviceman who was born and raised in  Wyoming, he was traveling to Lexington, KY, and he said he had two children ages one and four. We started talking about Meadow’s surgeries performed by Doctor Steinberg and our stay at the RMH. 

He told us he was born with a cleft or club foot and that he was fortunate enough to get it fixed at a young age with the help of the shiners in Wyoming. 
His flight was boarding the about the same time as ours so we said goodbye.

I called hubby and said we were leaving Colorado, he said Frontier Airline had sent him an email saying our flight had been delayed. 
I told him we had taken an early flight. 

We were the first to board, Lora had taken Meadow out of her wheelchair and was carrying her and I was left behind to push the overloaded wheelchair.
As I started through the shoot the overloaded wheelchair turned over spilling luggage everywhere.  
The door to the shoot was closed, Lora handed me, Meadow, as she and the woman at the counter began to gather up our belongings and load them onto the plane.

We were safely seated in the middle of the plane in row 15 seats  A, B, and C and everyone else loaded onto the plane.
During our flight were served a drink and pretzels.
We laughed at Meadow when she spits out the pretzel she has been sucking on, and it splashes down nearly hitting Lora’s coke that she was drinking.
When we arrived in Nashville at 6:25 P.M. the pilot came over the intercom and said, we had a smooth fight, and everyone clapped.

Hubby was waiting for me and so was Lora’s husband. We still had a two-hour ride home.
On the ride home I ate Milk Chocolate Hershey Bar and drank a can of Mountain Dew. 

We stopped at Chick-fil-A in Athens where we ordered a chicken sandwich and some waffle fries.  

Lora said that her family was going to Nashville to eat at Rainforest Café at the Opry Mills Mall. 
We are HOME!

Summary:
We had many adventures in January the scary port-a-potty along the cliffs above the Pacific Ocean.
A  man having grandma seizures in the Denver airport on our flight home.

Meadow’s two major surgeries, three MRIs, a SPEC Scan,  an Angiogram, and many ohewees. 

Our trips to the Golden Gate Bridge, Muir Woods, Pier 39, to San Francisco Zoo, walking the grounds of the Winchester House, The Stanford University and Cantor Art Museum, Stanford Mall, to Santa Cruz Boardwalk and Happy Hallow Zoo and Park. 

The weather was good, which helped give us a safe flight home, the temperature in Denver, CO was in the mid-50s, and all the snow near and around the airport was gone, except for a patch here and there.

Meadow is on her way to healing from her surgeries, her hair is beginning to back, and she is full of energy,  playful, and a happy little girl.

Doctor Steinberg’s nurse said, that we should start seeing results from Meadows in the next six months as the grafts fuse into the surgery areas.
I am thankful everything went well with all the tests, and surgery, and how well Meadow is recovering.

We met many families that were staying at the RMH in Palo Alto, I hope their children get to go home and our prayers are with each and every family that we met at the RMH.



In February, I will be going to Disney World with a group of Varsity Cheerleaders from Rogers High School. This will be a totally different adventure than the one I just went through with my granddaughter Meadow.

2024 Christmas Journal Activies

 Merry Christmas and Happy New Year  To all my friends and family Hope this year brought you lots of health and happiness.  Just a recap ...