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Saturday, August 4, 2012

Isolation !#*?! Yet Sam is a superstar!

Yes, Sam is making the best of having to be in isolation while the entire staff deals with the C.Diff. It just adds to the stress even though there is nothing to do but make the best of it and entertain ourselves as best we can. And entertain ourselves we did!

We had an amazing day. I brought Sam's five year old sister, Yael, up with me to see Sam and spend the night at Bubbie and Zayde's house. They hung out for a bit playing with Hexbugs as Phyllis gave me the rundown on all the details of isolation and patient/personal care while isolation is in effect for the whole floor. When she told me we'd probably be in isolation for the duration of Sam's round of chemo it took everything not to run screaming from the room in frustration. Not for me, but for Sam who so far is having an incredible stay in the hospital. His spirits soaring day in and out, I'd hate to see this jeopardize that. On top of that this might be the last good week for a while as his numbers begin to plummet in response to the chemo before they start going up again.

So at lunch time everyone left us and I showed Sam all the goodies I brought up with me. He loved the new games, Marvel vs Capcom and the "above his pay grade" Batman: Arkham City. We played around with this for a while, but the most enjoyment came from making Star Wars paper airplanes all day and flying them.

Sam LOVED making the airplanes. He loved choosing which ship to make, folding them, cutting off the appropriate sections, taping them and finally flying them. The images and challenge drove him on all day. I swear we made seven or eight planes in addition to the ones he'd made with his mom earlier. It was an incredible two-person project that we both enjoyed doing together.

Sam watched some Phineas and Ferb on his much beloved iPad and requested the old Pink Panther cartoons in the late afternoon (I didn't know that Phyllis' great uncle, Abe Aaron, played the lead sax on that famous Pink Panther theme song. You learn something new everyday).

The nurses and staff were amazing. Sam was in good form all day even if he didn't feel like eating that much. He munched on Cheerios all day and that was about what I could get him to consume. He perked up for dinner when I mentioned hot cocoa and then I promptly forgot to order it. No biggie since I knew it was stocked in our floor kitchen, so I jetted out and made him a cup which he quickly told me was too hot (they call it HOT cocoa for a reason! Otherwise it would have been called chocolate milk!). I added cold milk two or three times and he seemed thrilled with his formerly hot now quite tepid cocoa. Whatever makes him happy.

When Nurse E came on for the nightshift I thought Sam was going to put on dress clothing and dab on some cologne. I mean he nearly kicked and karate-chopped her several times he was trying to be so playful and was so glad to see her. He was flippant and petulant all in his six-year-old "Oh my God, I love you and am so glad to see you, but have no words to describe love for someone other than my immediate family."

So he simply said "I'm not glad to see you." Ah... young love.

After dinner and pajamas we turned on the Olympics and watched together. When he started feeling nauseous I read to him from his new graphic novel, Path of the Assassin, until his meds arrived. Then I sang the Shema, kissed him goodnight and prayed he'd find some much needed rest.

Thank you all for all your prayers, love and gifts. They make all of this bearable and give us much needed strength and joy.

4 comments:

  1. "Flippant" and "petulant" in the same sentence - wonderful...sentence, boy, and father! Wishing sweet dreams for the Sommer family, their helpers and heros.

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  2. So glad he loved those planes! Wishing you all strength and healing! Ox

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  3. I cannot get over his wonderful smile in the face of all of it. XO!

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  4. I am following Sammy's bog from the beginning; I know what happened every day, I know Sam has been isolated and I'm sorry, but that's the hospital rules ands I see Sammy is doing well in that not so amazing situation. I could say that is the final challenge and he is supposed to start going up! According the human and whatever rules if something or someone is going down it doesn't meter for what reason, he is going to hit the bottom. After hitting the bottom everyone or everything is starting to go up. . Sammy has to start his climbing back toward the health, the real health, without hospitals, nurses, and chemo and so on. He will, because everybody is with him, close to him - his family, close friends and all his friends from the congregations and not from congregations, all over the States. It's time to start your climbing, Sammy! Let's do it!
    August 5, 2012 7:19 AM

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