This is an end-of-the-day summary. Now that Keith has his phone, we have communicated that way, and it's nice.
Keith got a visit today from the fire department captain from Day 1 / March 3, who swims at Sandia Pool where Keith swims (did, will) in the mornings and who recognized Keith while his guys were doing CPR.
There was an OT session in the gym in the morning, Keith ate very little lunch but didn't want me to send any food to him; said he wasn't hungry.
Holly took all the clothes Keith had requested. He's been feeling cold.
Bela was visiting while Holly was there, too, and Holly said they were talking SCA stuff.
Kirby, Destiny, Devyn and little Kirby went and had dinner with Keith in the cafeteria there. Keith said he fed the baby half his mashed potatoes and gravy. He was happy to be feeding her.
This is the first time there are no medical details. That's progress!
Tomorrow is our anniversary. Thirty-five years. Six before the wedding, if anyone's really counting everything.
Sunday:
Marty and Ashlee visited from about 9:30 to 10:00 and wheeled Keith to the gym for his only scheduled session of the day, which was to play Taboo (a game where people guess a word, but you can't use any of the clues on the list on the card). There were five players. I slipped in there pretty early on.
I ate with Keith in the cafeteria there. It was good, and not at all expensive. $5 or so per guest Mine was less. Depends what you order.
We went back to the room and I showed Keith the photos, on the blog posts of this last month. He texted with Gerry, his brother, about a Monday visit. Beau and Laurie came with recorders, and the fours of us played for an hour, in the meeting room next to Keith's room. It was good, and it was fun. Keith sounded great, even though he said his wind wasn't good, and he couldn't manage the tenor, but he wasn't missing the ends of notes and phrases. Probably way better therapy than that little plastic deal to breathe in and hold your breath, that they give post-surgical patients sometimes.
Keith isn't finding a great position for sleeping, because of the broken ribs. Also a big place on the back of his head is sensitive and sore. Probably it's good that I didn't manage to get his hair untangled. It would have hurt for me to mess wih a comb back there, as I turns out. Maybe it's where he hit his head when he fell, four weeks ago.
It's Sunday, and this started on a Sunday, so four weeks have passed.
I sent him a text, to see if there was info to add here; I came home because Marty was coming to help me with some of the bedroom rearrangements. Either Keith is asleep or off at dinner. Either one sounds very nice.
May this anniversary be a good one.
ReplyDeleteCheering- Jean Crawford
Not surprised the tax project has gone out of memory. Typically it's last-in first-out after any brain trauma including reduced oxygen or a knock on the head.
ReplyDeleteAt 15 when I had a concussion from falling off a horse and was unconscious for about three days, for years I couldn't remember the whole week before the accident. And then, one day YEARS later, a remarkably specific memory surfaced about the minutes before I was thrown: I was riding the new horse around the courtyard, and stopped to swap a different style of bit into the bridle. After I changed the harness and was trying out her paces with it, she shied at the honking of a nearby goose and I realized I was falling.
It was so weird that those specific sensory memories lay dormant all that time and FINALLY reconnected. It was like four years later!