From mid-November until today, Dad has spent 42 days in the hospital. Six weeks. Six weeks over the course of two months.
Until today. After so many visits to Southdale Hospital (the drive is about twenty minutes if traffic is good), Mom and I finally had an additional passenger on our way home. Dad is finally back. He’s finally back home.
From the garage, he went straight up the stairs. Not both feet on each step; he went straight up. He sat down long enough for us to get his shoes off (he still has enough fluid in his system that he can’t reach down to put on shoes and socks by himself), then walked to a chair next to the picture window on the north side of the house.
His view in his hospital room consisted primarily of the roof of the building next to his, a crane and a nearby highway. From the picture window, you can see Orchard Lake, Orchard Lake Park, lots of trees and drifting snow and people walking their pets… a lot of stuff that’s not hospital-related.
We’re sending out a mass email to family and friends that goes out to four lists an hour apart. If we clump everyone’s email addresses into one message, Frontier thinks it’s spam and won’t send it. The lists are that long.
In it, Dad thanks everyone for their support, their prayers, their gifts, phone calls, emails and personal visits. Without it, those six weeks in the hospital would have been much more difficult to endure.
Now we can rest for a while and get used to regular life again. A life where he can sleep flat on a bed. A life that doesn’t include visits from nurses at all hours of the day and night. A life of knowing what day of the week it is. A life of stairs and haircuts and showers and looking out the window at more than just another hospital roof. Regular life at home.