Ten years ago this month I was in a car accident that should
have killed me. I don't want to get all Nietzsche about it, but the experience
and its repercussions have shaped me
in a way that nothing else has, and made me stronger. On that January morning, my
parents got the call from the hospital that must have really sucked. They
packed, made arrangements for my other siblings, and drove without knowing much about my condition, six hours to the
hospital. I was still in surgery when they arrived. Seven broken bones, two
bone grafts, a couple years of physical therapy, a couple hardware removal
surgeries, the diagnosis of epilepsy, twenty or so seizures, some in the middle
of streets and at bus stops, and here I am. Still alive. Still grateful.
I was weaseling around in my old cards and photos the other
day, looking for pictures the boys could cut up for a craft we were doing, when
I found the stash of cards I kept from ten years ago. I decided as I was reading
through them that I need to write something about all those nice people who
were so wonderful during that time in my life. I know I ended up throwing some
of the stuff out-- certainly the majority of the large stuffed animals had to
eventually find new loving homes, and the cards from eighty-something students
I had just finished student teaching, while sweet, I found no reason to keep.
Space is all-important here in our cozy little hive. But most of the notes I
kept-- I'm a sucker for the written word, after all. I found myself tearing up
as I read through them, standing there in my slippers, holding the notes with
my dry-from-too-much-washing mom-hands, stupid Jimmy Buffet singing in the
background as the boys played their guitars with that cringe-y, out of tune
twang. I tried not to let the boys see that I was crying, which wasn’t hard
because they quickly switched from a cheeseburger paradise to fighting over
drumsticks and space shuttles, as I allowed myself to remember that time.
While I make no claims whatsoever to having It All figured out in life, I think it
will be good for me to write a reflection on what I’ve learned from my accident
and my ten years of unusual challenges due to having epilepsy. Hopefully it
will serve as some semblance of a tribute to so many of you who were selflessly
thoughtful and endlessly kind to me specifically during that rough first year of
recovery. I know my inner teacher is showing with this, but here are the main
things I’ve learned:
Control: I don’t have it and that’s okay. I never thought I
was a control-y person before, but my accident and subsequent surgeries and
seizures took away much of the control I had over my life, and it has not been
easy to part with. When all is said and done, what I have control over is simply
my attitude when dealing with my lack of control. I spent months not even being
able to shower or get dressed by myself and I couldn’t stand on two feet and
walk for six months after my accident. I watched as what should have been the
last semester of my college experience passed without me. I watched a
replacement roommate take over my bed in the house I lived in with my best
friends. I watched those friends graduate. I watched the club softball team I’d
helped start go on to play their first season of NCAA Division 2 softball
without me. All this happened while I lay on my hospital bed at my parents’ house
a couple hundred miles away, the muscles in my legs atrophying away. All I could
do about it was get angry, which I definitely did from time to time, or do my
best to let it go. It was a struggle then, and it still can be now. I have to
rely on everyone around me because driving with my epilepsy doesn’t work. Two
times since being diagnosed I’ve gotten my driver’s license back because my
doctor and I have thought we’d figured out the formula for my seizures—how much
medicine I need, why I have them, how to feel them coming on, but both times we’ve
been wrong and the car keys have been taken from me after a year and a half one
time, and after just a few months the next time. I have to depend on the buses
coming somewhere near on-time and hope that people won’t get sick of me asking
them for rides. I used to prize my independence so much that losing control of
much of it has taken me ten years to do, and I still struggle with it.
Perspective: A lot of crap doesn’t matter. This goes
hand-in-hand with the control thing. So much isn’t worth getting worked up
over, all things considered. After I started walking again, everything else
seemed insignificant. The car broke down? I failed a quiz? I spilled ketchup on
my white shirt? I locked myself out? So what? I can walk. I can move around and do things by myself. It sounds cheesy, but
I thought that way a lot the first few months after I started walking again. I
swore to myself I would always remember how lucky I am to simply be walking.
This ten year crashaversary is a good reminder.
Humor: It makes the world a better place. I like to think I
knew this before my accident, but my experience reinforced the fact. Learning
to see the funny in situations also helps
with the perspective of it all. How else am I supposed to deal with being
carried down the aisle in a two giant casts as a bridesmaid and a month later
crutching down the aisle as yet another bridesmaid? And depending on my roommates
to walk to the back of the grocery store to buy my milk and laundry soap for me
because my weak legs couldn’t handle so much walking? The accident and my
epilepsy journey have refined my stellar, completely awesome sense of humor
that you wish you had.
People: Nice people make life richer. I have been blessed
with so many amazing people in my life that it’s almost ridiculous, many of
whom shined that first year following the accident. First and foremost were my
parents and my little brother and sister, who were still at home. My sister and
mom did most of the difficult work—showering me and dressing me, rubbing my
feet to cheer me up, holding me when I cried in pain after the surgeries and
therapy and general frustration, feeding me, entertaining me, taking me to
physical therapy three days a week. And other people came out of the woodwork
to help me. People I had fallen out of touch with for years sent cards and
people I wasn’t sure even knew I existed came to visit me in the hospital. They
prayed for me. The English department, my fellow English Ed majors, and my
friends helped me deal with being out of school and rejoiced in my small steps
of recovery, usually through email. One professor aided in getting me to meet and
talk to the Holocaust survivor Elie Wiesel, about whom I was doing my senior
project. What did we talk about? Mostly the fact that I had two casts on my
legs and was pushing a walker at age 21, because he was in a similar situation after being
hit by a car years before. Friends took me bowling in my wheelchair. Friends of
my parents brought me a little television for my room and drove me places. My
accident helped heal one friendship in my past that I am so thankful to have
back.
As I look back over all the cards people sent and remember
the nice things people did for me, I am astounded and I aspire to be someone as
nice as those family and friends who did and still do so much for me. After I
was diagnosed with a seizure disorder I narrowed down my search for jobs to
places with good public transportation and that is how I ended up in the DC
area. Here I met and married Brian, who drives me everywhere and does all our
shopping, as well as provides love, care, and support for our growing family. I
have twin boys, a condo in a perfect place for walking, and more amazing
friends. I honestly don’t know what more I could ask for, except maybe a smidge
more space. I even got those Russian nesting doll plates from World Market that
I was drooling over because another amazing friend read my blog entry about
shopping!
And that is my ten years ago story and reflection on all it has meant to me—on how it has shaped my character and my life. I hope most people who touched my life in those first months have a chance to read this and know that I have not forgotten their kindness.
The day after the accident...for some reason I can't rotate this. |
Visiting part of my softball team |
Watching my best friends graduate |
Being carried down the aisle as a bridesmaid |
You know what's crazy? I buy and write cards ALL the time. I am really quite awful about mailing them though. I was cleaning out our immense stack of papers a couple of weeks ago and found the card I had written you during your accident. I just tossed it too (I mean, it was 10 years later so I don't think "better late than never" applied here).
ReplyDeleteI loved this post, Dawn. Thanks for sharing. :)
The picture of you being carried as a bridesmaid is still one of my favorites of the wedding party, from our wedding. I can't believe it has been ten years.
ReplyDeleteBecca and I were so worried about you.
We love you Dawn,
Ryan Notbohm
Dawnee P
ReplyDelete10 years! Wow we are old! : )
it seems like just the other day, i got the phone call. I still have to praise the Lord that He keep my dear friend alive. Your blog sure brought back alot of memories from that time. And I have to say that I was blessed to have you as a roomate and still as a friend. love you much
You and Josh made such a cute couple, : )
Becca Notbohm
I love you Dawn..... 'specially now that it's the weekend* =) It is an amazing thing to look back and see all the things we have endured, and yet at the same time see God's undeniable work of grace in our lives in an even bigger way......
ReplyDeletemuch love and memories,
~ shawna ~
Aww, Jessie. You should have kept is as a crashaversary card! Ryan, Becca, and Shawna thank you. I love you too and I could not have asked for better friends to get me through those rough days.
ReplyDeleteI know a little bit about how important is is to be surrounded by awesome friends. We couldn't have gotten through Seth's illness, almost 6 years ago now, without the help of family friends and community. I still get teary whenever I think about it, and how I, too, had to temporarily give up control of my household, my schedule, my plans, in order to deal with the crisis. But we survived, and we're better in many ways, as a result of the experience. And I sense that you are, too.
ReplyDeleteYes, Meg, I know you know much of what I felt. It is interesting how we get stronger in and after challenges. How is Seth now? I remember he was making progress when Brian stopped playing hockey and we stopped seeing you.
ReplyDelete