I am writing about the last 18 months of my life to give tribute and thanks to God for being with me in a time of a terrible health crisis. I am a living, breathing, walking, talking miracle, a tribute to the power and love that God
My wife was home at the time, watching television in the bedroom while I was in the living room watching television in the recliner. She came through to check on the dinner I had been preparing and found me laying in the floor, unable to speak or move. I don’t remember Marsha coming through nor our youngest daughter coming in at all. Marsha somehow managed to get a baby aspirin down me. In the past she had worked in a nursing
Marsha told me that my stay in the hospital was adventurous to say the least. Although I don’t remember any of it she told me I was continually trying to get up and walk to the restroom, only to hit the floor. They moved me from one room in the stroke unit to another one across the hall from the nurse station so they could watch me closer. They also put a bed alarm under me that would go to dinging if I tried to get up. Marsha threatened to get some “girly” duct tape to restrain me if I would not stay put, and actually bought a roll that is pink with powder blue puppies. Although I really don’t remember that conversation, she later told me that solved the problem and I never again tried to get out of the bed,
Thankfully my speech and vision came back rather quickly, sometime during my hospital stay. I couldn’t speak very well but Marsha could understand enough of my gibberish to be able to interpret for others. The first thing I remember at the nursing home is the physical therapy team getting me out of bed into a wheelchair, about 3 weeks into my stay there. It took 3 of them and once in the chair I fell over to the left as I couldn’t yet balance myself. The first time the stood me up in the parallel bars there were 3 of them once again, one on each side and one in front keeping my left knee from buckling on me. I remember doing various things, including stepping up on a Tulsa phone book while being balanced by the 3 therapists. They were really wonderful and very patient with me as I was a total wreck for quite some time. I had an hour of physical therapy, an hour of occupational therapy, and an hour of speech therapy daily Monday through Friday. I progressed to the point where I could stand in the parallel bars by myself and then got to the point that I could walk up and down the path on my own. The therapy team worked very hard to help me improve to the point that I could use what they call a “hemi” walker, a short A-fame device that I could use on the right side to aid my balance when I walked. After a few weeks I could go down to the dining room for my meals and managed to get in and out of bed by myself, a huge improvement.
All of the people at Claremore Nursing home, nurses, aids, dietary staff, and the therapy team were absolutely wonderful to me during my 10 week stay. I go back to visit from time to time to show them my progress and to express my continued appreciation for their care during my stay. When I was first able to comprehend my situation Marsha told me what had transpired at the hospital and what the doctors had told her initially. There are hundreds of people, most of which don’t even know me, praying for my recovery and I have seen the benefit of those prayers as I have progressed to the point that I carry my cane most of the time rather than use it to walk. I still can’t use my left arm or hand, yet, but the range of motion without pain is much better, thanks to God and continued therapy at Summit Physical Therapy in Claremore. I keep saying yet because yet is the proper term for what I can’t do now. I remember when I couldn’t stand up by myself and told the therapists “I can’t, yet, but I will someday”. After 10 weeks in the nursing home I was able to walk out using a cane. I still have a lot of issues with my emotions, often becoming choked up when people say kind things to me or offer their well-wishes for my recovery. The best aspect is that with all the physical disability the stroke didn’t adversely affect my personality, something Marsha had feared. She had seen very kind people become hateful and rude from a stroke but my personality is the same as it has always been. My God-given ability to write was also unaffected other than the time it took to be able to regain my cognitive faculties.
God has brought me from the very brink of death, through a time of total disability, to the present state of limited ability, is continually showing me improvement, and will restore me to fullness when He is ready for me to be there. In the 18 months since the stroke I have grown closer to God and have never doubted that He would
I submit this in the name of the Most Holy Trinity, in faith, with the responsibility given to me by Almighty God to honor His work and not let it die from neglect.
Bob Russell
Claremore, Oklahoma
February 24, 2016
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