I have about an hour. I have been wanting to get an update posted to the blog for weeks and have not taken the time. I am going to take this hour and publish whatever comes at the end of it.
Here goes - ignore spelling and other such errors.
Rich and I left Cincinnati knowing airway surgery would change Nathaniel's life. And ours. We were right. We did not know about all the different ways that would happen. In general, everything about living on the edge of life and death is gone. We no longer mentally ask ourselves the thousand safety checks we used to ask: "Are his hands too close to his trach?" or "Who has eyes on Nathaniel?" or "Did he aspirate when he vomited just now?" Life has been taken down a level in intensity. We change trach ties alone now; Nathaniel's three-year old restlessness with this process and grabby hands at his tube will no longer means a potential oxygen deprivation accident. We drive alone with him. We have left him with his older brothers to run to the doughnut shop on Saturday mornings. He plays free with other children and away from our side on the church playground after services. On Thursday, I was in Houston at the conference, Rich was at work, and Nathaniel was home for eleven hours with a nurse who had worked only one shift prior. Quality of life, getting on with life, enjoying life moments.
Another way that life has changed is that Nathaniel has had more respiratory illnesses in the couple months since surgery than he did in the six months prior. We knew this would happen. The freedom to live life means we are in contact with more people and more viruses. He has jumped from one illness to another; most have stayed very minor, however one lingered long enough that it developed into a secondary tracheitis infection. But he has not been hospitalized. Airway surgery removed aspiration. Without aspiration, less pneumonia. Even with the increased viruses, we are using fewer breathing treatments, and Nathaniel requires less suctioning than prior to airway surgery.