The portable alarm that I always carry with me in the garden started sounding. The paving flag that I was carrying at that moment as I work on our son’s Garden project, slipped from my hands as I was startled by the alarm. It fell scraping the skin off my shin and caused excruciating pain. My wife was indoors with our son, but something had happened.
Racing indoors, I find our son on the floor contorted into terrible positions as my wife is trying her best to comfort him.
Quickly discarding my gardening boots, I rush over to them. This was the fourth Tonic Clonic seizure our son was having already this morning. He had had at least three each day on the previous, I forget how many days.
There was a difference on this morning. The count had already passed three minutes, four minutes, five minutes, now we were passing six minutes. Our son is not breathing. His body twisted so tightly. Unresponsive, but I can feel his heart beating so rapidly in his chest. I have the syringes with recovery medicine in my hand. Seven minutes. I try to prise open his mouth ready to administer the medicine. His jaws locked vice like. He begins shaking violently. He is coming around. My prayers are answered once again. It takes a long time before his trembling body relaxes, but once again, it does. Returning the recovery medicine to its storage place, I cradle and comfort our son for a long time.
I don’t know where I got my strength from, but I carried him outdoors and into the garden. He enjoys the fragrance and colours of the flowers. As I hold him, his face turns blank and eyes glaze over as another seizure is starting. “Can’t you make it stop?” he says quietly to me. A breeze blew and petals of the iceberg rose fluttered over us. “It’s snowing” he says as his eyes begin to regain focus. I am certain an angel walked past us at that moment.
His awareness is returning. He looks around him as if to ascertain where he is. He looks down at my leg “You have jam on” he says as he sees my scraped shin, still bleeding down my leg. – Don’t garden in short pants!
Our is suffering from four types of seizure now. I think back a few years when he would have one attack over a two or three week period. Now, we cannot leave him alone for a minute as they strike without warning and multiple times a day.
I share this story as I know many of you have taken Marc into your hearts, but also it is a diary, a journal that I often look back on to reaffirm memories of those better times as well as the bad times. Memories which may, one day, be all I have …
As a postscript, this story is from a couple of days ago. Our son is again calmer, and although the seizures persist, he’s ok