Haley had had a rough school year
trying to play the sports she loves with the blisters in her eyelids,
wearing glasses and with her allergies. I didn't think things could
get any worse.
|
The family loves to ski together |
|
Haley going down the moguls. She is an excellent skier. |
On the 10th of April, Winn, Cory and Haley
took a day off of school and work because a big storm had dumped a
lot of snow in the mountains and it was their last chance to go
skiing for the season. I was at home and got a call from Haley at
12:30. She was crying and she said she felt scared. She had a bad
headache and she was very confused. She kept repeating things and
forgetting what she had said to me a few minutes earlier. She said
she couldn't walk because the right side of her body was numb and
that she kept drooling out of the side of her mouth. She said she
also couldn't see out of her right eye and she felt sick to her
stomach. I could tell from her confusion and symptoms that she had a
concussion. I kept asking her what happened and trying to tell her to
ask someone in the lodge for help but she couldn't understand me or
even remember what I had said one minute later. I said things to her
over and over, even trying to get her to hand her phone to someone
else in the lodge. She was emotional and scared and didn't understand
me and that scared her more. Then I lost the call. I tried to call
her back, call Winn and Cory and I got no answer. I knelt down and
prayed for her and worried about her all day. It is scary when your
child is going through something hard and it is all out of your
control. Haley later wrote this account of what happened that
morning: One fine powder skiing day I decided to race my brother
Cory. I skied out in front, because I was winning and I reached the
end of the moguls and began to turn, to slow down so I could stop. I
didn't know my brother was so close behind me and he didn't see me
turning in time and he slammed right into me. We hit heads and then I
fell and hit my head hard a second time on the ground. (They were
wearing helmets) The collision caused my ski binding to rip right off
my ski. When I regained consciousness I had a horrendous headache. I
skied the rest of the way down on one ski where my dad was there
waiting for me, with another pair of skis. I felt sick to my stomach,
had a bad headache and I felt like I couldn't see. I didn't want to
do another ski run but my dad assured me that I would feel better
once I started skiing again. (Winn has fallen a lot and just didn't
know how bad Haley was) Through my dad's eyes skiing makes everything
better. I couldn't see anything when I went down, it was like
everything was foggy and I couldn't focus my eyes. So I kept falling
over and I hit my head a few more times. So I told my dad that I was
going into the ski lodge. I went and sat down and I couldn't think
straight. I knew something was wrong. I couldn't operate my right
hand. I couldn't close the right side of my mouth, so I was drooling.
I couldn't walk because my right leg kept giving out. I couldn't
remember how to pray but I know that at the time I had a prayer in my
heart. I just know that I was pleading for help from my Heavenly
Father. I felt bad and I needed comfort. That is when my brother Cory
came in and I felt great comfort in knowing someone was there to
protect me. I couldn't remember what a boot was called or what a
cheerio was or that I told Cory it was 5:30 when it was really 11:00,
or that I kept asking, “Why did you sneeze?” when I actually was
trying to say, “Where is dad?” But I feel like Cory was there to
explain things to me and calm me down. I am grateful that my brother
was there with me!
The skiers didn't get home until 4:00.
Haley was pale and still not feeling well. She still had a bad
headache and she couldn't find words for things. I wanted to take her
to the doctor but she didn't want to go. She felt like her head was
slowly clearing and she just wanted to rest after a bad day. I
watched her closely for the next few days and she seemed to be doing
fine. I asked her a few days later if she had any after effects and
she told me she thought her concussion had made her dumber.
|
Haley's greatest passion at the time was soccer |
Haley got permission to wear her
contacts again, but only while playing sports and life was good
again. I kept worrying about her playing soccer and doing headers. I
did not want her to play. She desperately wanted to play the rest of
the season and promised me she wouldn't do any headers. She didn't
want to tell her coach about her concussion because another
girl on her team had gotten pulled off the team for that reason. She
begged me and I wished now I had been the bad guy and said no. She
had 2 to 3 games a week for the rest of the month. She always had bad
headaches after her games. She played her last game the last day of
April. She played a great game and her team won. She played a lot
more than usual that game and she also did a header, which she
promised not to do. After the game, Haley had a horrible headache,
she couldn't see very well, or walk straight, part of her body went
numb and she couldn't put the lid back on her water bottle. I was
glad the soccer season was over because I knew she needed time for
her head to heal.
|
Haley and her soccer team dressed up together during spirit week. |
|
The end of the season banquet |
At the same time Haley had moved up
to the A vials for her allergy shots and her throat and arm swelled up. She had a bad few days
from this scary reaction and then she got really sick and lost her
voice. She was wiped out. I was actually glad she was sick so she
would lay low and rest. She made it into the fourth level
choir at school which was unusual for a soon to be sophomore so I was
glad she had some safer passions. Then she got whooping cough and a
high fever. She spent weeks being very sick.
|
She begged me to let her run in Columbine's Run for Remembrance |
|
Running in the race |
|
She made it but felt terrible afterward |
In May Haley wanted to run in the
Columbine Run for Remembrance and she said she felt fine. Adam and I
went to cheer her on. She ran the 3.5 miles. I didn't want her to
run but she wouldn't listen to me. Every time she ran in soccer she
would get a bad headache. After the race she had a bad headache and
she couldn’t see very well. She promised me again she would take it
easy.
That summer was rough with her
allergies. I remember one day when her eyes were swollen and she was
coughing and sneezing because she was having problems breathing.
Haley, Cory and I had gone to the grocery store to pick up a few
things and pick up her prescription for an epi-pen and an inhaler
because her allergies were considered severe. I was in horrendous
pain preceding a second reconstructive surgery on my neck that
summer. I sat down in the middle of the store and started crying
because the pain was so bad. Haley was having trouble talking because of
her swollen throat and she still sat down by me and tried to help me.
Cory offered to just buy everything so we could both have a melt down
in the middle of the store. Hard experiences are rough but these are
the times we built the strongest bonds as a family, times when
my children became my heroes. She had a lot of headaches that summer
and the blisters got bad in her eyelids again.
|
Haley and I both had a bad year and we cried a lot together |
Haley loved sports so she played
volleyball in the fall and ran cross country. She worked hard in
cross country, running as much as 6 miles at a time. She got
headaches but she wanted to do it. Then she had a long race where she
ran through weeds she is allergic too, and through a river 3 times and even up a muddy
hill. She made it to the end of the race but she was very sick,
gasping for air, covered in mud, wet, had a bad headache, her feet were covered in blisters, and she was sick. She
cried all the way home gasping for air through her swollen throat. With the concussion after-effects and her
allergies and asthma she was in bad shape. She was beaten and she told me
she could never go through that again. That was her last race.
|
Ready to race |
|
All the girls loved Haley |
|
She was in agony after her races |
|
Warming up |
|
At the staring line of her last race, a big one with a lot of other schools |
|
Ready to take on the muddy hill |
|
This is just one toe. Her feet were covered in blisters |
Haley played
on a church volleyball team in the fall and then in January played basketball. During one of her basketball games she played
really hard the whole game because there were no subs. She took a
hard fall later in the game and I felt instantly scared for her. She
got up and kept playing and she seemed to be fine.
|
Her volleyball team |
|
Her basketball team |
After the game, Haley was sitting on the stage and I went over there because she wasn't
coming down after the game. Her friends told me something was wrong
with her. She was confused and she didn't seem to know where she was
or what was happening. She got a super bad headache and held her head
and started crying. I took her home and by the time we got there she
had lost feeling in her right side, couldn’t walk, couldn't see,
was sobbing because of the pain in her head and she got sick to her
stomach again. She kept asking me questions that didn't make sense. I
would try to answer her and then she would ask me again. She kept
asking me over and over, “Where is February?” She seemed
desperate for the answer to that question. I would answer her and she
would ask me again over and over. I called the doctor, who told me to
take her to urgent care. When I took her there and they saw how bad
she was they sent us to the emergency room and even offered to call
for an ambulance. She was there for 4 hours and they did a CAT scan
on her head. We were able to go home when she felt better. The doctor
told us she had gotten some nerve and blood vessel damage in her two
or more falls and the nerves and blood vessels were short-circuiting
when she ran or bounced her head around in sports. We later took her
to the doctor but got a physician's assistant instead. This lady used
to work for a neurologist who specialized in concussions. She told us
that because Haley spiraled down after exercise, that when her heart
rate went up, pumping her blood harder, that the blood couldn't get
to parts of her brain, which made her brain shut down. She knew a
lot about concussions and told us Haley needed to see a neurologist
specializing in concussions. We called but the wait to see a doctor was
four months. Haley's life just unraveled at that point. She had to
give up all the sports she loved so much. She had problems the rest
of the year with balance, headaches, wanting to sleep all day some
days, depression, and a lot of other things. The fall had really
changed her life. With this added to severe allergies, asthma and her
eye disease, some bad bouts of sickness and high fevers, this poor
girl was wiped out physically and emotionally. In my desperation of
not knowing what to do for her, I poured out my heart in prayer for help.
Every time I got on my knees and prayed I kept getting this voice in
my head that said, “Call Jasen!” I got that strong impression so
many times in one day that I knew he would be the answer to our
prayers.
I called
Jasen. This is the account I wrote in my journal about the call: I
called up Jasen to ask him questions about his concussions. I was
thankful that he answered the phone. I talked to him for a half hour.
He was so sweet, nice, concerned and informative. We had a great
talk. When I would mention any problems Haley was having from her
concussion he could really relate. He has had 6 concussions. The last
one happened while he was playing basketball and it took away two
years of his life, changed his personality and he had to sell his
business. He has had a rough road. He said it was the worst two
years of his life. He would even feel suicidal and almost black out
while driving from the headaches. While I talked to him, I could make
a better connection as to why Haley has had bad crying episodes, has
trouble with math when she didn't before, has a lot more headaches,
especially when she is stressed. It all adds up now. He told me he
would be glad to talk to Haley, that he felt better talking to people
who understood what he was going through and what a concussion does
to your brain. He also said he would write down things that helped
him. He was so sweet and he really wants to help Haley. He is the
answer to my prayers. What a great person he is.
|
Jasen, our hero |
Here is my journal account of the
day Jasen came over to see Haley: Jasen came over to talk to Haley about
her concussions. I was touched that he would do that. Winn, Haley and
I listened to Jasen as he told us everything that had happened to
him. Jasen and Haley talked about all the different things that
concussions bring. Haley would say, “Are you sensitive to light?”
and Jasen could validate it with a story of his own. That happened
over and over again. I had to fight to hold back the tears the whole
time he was here. As they talked, I could see this connection and how
much better Haley felt to know she wasn't crazy, that somebody knew
exactly how she was feeling and why. It helped us as parents to be
able to connect the dots; the problems with math, vertigo when she
tried to dance in the play, headaches with stress, the need to sleep
and sleep after stressful things, her mood swings, keeping one hand
on the wall walking the halls at school to keep her balance, etc. Jasen has had it a
lot worse than Haley. A lot of noise in a room would make him throw
up, he has had erratic behavior, suicidal thoughts, sleeping 20 hours
a day, etc. Wow, he has had a very rough 2 years and he was still suffering the affects of his concussion. We talked for over
an hour. It was an incredible hour. Jasen gave Haley a hug and told
her to call him anytime day or night and he gave her his cell phone
number in case she had any questions or problems. He gave us a lot of
helpful suggestions. I am SO THANKFUL for what he said and did for
all of us. I found a quiet place to pray and I thanked my Heavenly Father
for sending us a hero and then I let myself cry and cry.
Jasen asked us and Haley frequently
over the years how she was doing. He had quite a few talks with her.
He was truly a lifeline to this poor girl when she hit rock bottom. They understood each other and this nightmare they were stuck in. The following year she started doing better. Winn had missed Haley on
the ski slopes and really wanted her to go with him. I was scared
because it had been such a horrible year. I prayed that she wouldn't be able
to go if any harm would come to her from skiing or if her brain was not
ready for this sport. That ski season she woke up sick one day they
were going to go. Another time, her grandpa was staying with us.
Everyone, including him, was going to go skiing the next day. When we
got up in the morning he said he tossed and turned all night and
couldn't sleep at all. He said, I can't shake the feeling Haley
should not go skiing today. He looked at Winn and said, “You cannot
take this girl skiing” so she didn't go. Then another time, the
day before a ski trip, Winn was working on his car and went over to
Auto Zone to get some car parts. He ran into Jasen. Jasen said he
went over to Auto Zone because he was led by the spirit to go there, he had nothing to buy and he had no money to spend. His concussion had taken away his business and income. He was still recovering when he helped us. Jasen just felt like he should go to Auto Zone at the exact time. When he saw Winn he
asked him about skiing. Jasen very strongly told Winn he could not take Haley skiing and risk her falling and going through what he had. I knew
again my prayers were answered, that Haley was not ready to ski
again. She didn't go skiing that winter. It was hard to see her lose
so much of what she loved to do but keeping her safe was more
important.
|
Haley wanted to sleep and sleep |
This was a hard experience but what
we learned from this was that God will send you a hero when you need
one most, that sometimes people go through bad things so that they
can help someone else. Jasen had been through a horrible ordeal and he was still suffering and still he was willing to reach out and help someone else.
Thank you Jasen, our hero, we will never forget what you have done
for our family. Jasen wrote to us the following:
Jasen Pollock : Mosiah 2:17 When I was suffering with my own afflictions I prayed that my burdens
would be lifted. I actually remember begging for relief. Instead of
fixing my afflictions the Lord asked me to lighten others afflictions
and I would
soon be healed. My symptoms
lasted for five years. But my burden was lighter because I forgot
about my self (the best I could) and served my fellow man. Through
service I got to know my Savior's love for me.
|
Haley loved everything active. It was hard to keep her safe |
This poor child went through
another big trial during this same time that I haven't even mentioned
yet. I will talk about that in my next chapter. This poor girl really got hit hard but she is another one of my
heroes for the way she faced all the bad things life handed her at
once and rose up stronger each time she was knocked down.
No comments:
Post a Comment