Shopping

I couldn’t think of a more clever title for this entry. Shopping. I don’t care for it…especially IN a store. Online shopping I can do with ease and with very little discomfort or distress. But going to an actual store to shop is another story.

Even 8 1/2 years after my rupture and over a year after my clipping, shopping in stores still causes me and my blinged-out brain some issues. Mostly in stores I don’t frequent as much. If I have trouble finding what I’m looking for, it means I have to go through every aisle and rack multiple times, over and over again. It requires thinking, seeing and concentrating in very compact spurts. Almost like power thinking. It’s extremely tiring and can give me an instant headache and eye strain. There is just too much visual stimulation and requires my brain to process a lot of information and data at once.

All the more frustrating was that I couldn’t find the main thing I went to that particular store to get in the first place. This is also one of the main reasons I shop online…I can find what I’m looking for much easier and in less time. Yes, I cannot try it on immediately, but I can always return something if it doesn’t fit.

I know I’m not the only aneurysm survivor who experiences issues in stores, but it still gets a tad frustrating…and just a wee bit painful. I know I could have far worse side-effects and deficits from my brain aneurysms, so I consider myself very lucky. Some discomfort on those rare occasions when I DO go into a shopping store is a small price to pay.

But this is MY blog and I can complain if I want to, right? 🙂

 

Aunt Heidi

Ian and Jenny – Christmas 2013

 

I will never forget when I was first called “Aunt Heidi”. It seemed so very odd, wonderful, and endearing all at the same time. I was taking my niece Jenny out to see a movie and we stopped at McDonalds. As we were taking our food to sit down, I realized I forgot napkins, so I told Jenny to stay put and I went to grab them. She yelled across the restaurant “Don’t forget ketchup Aunt Heidi”. I think she was 4 or 5 maybe. I loved it!!

Next Saturday, that adorable little blonde is getting married at the age of 30 and I will be representing the Sipe side of her family. She has endured so much loss in her young life. Her father, Fred, was killed in a motorcycle accident only a month before she turned one year old. Devastating my sister Rhonda and everyone who adored him.

A few years later her Papa Bill and Papa Earl (my father) also passed. I’m so happy they were both blessed to know Jenny and they both adored her and doted on her as any grandfather would.

Then many years later, she lost her half-brother Adam to another motorcycle accident. Another devastating loss. It was my sister Dori who broke that sad, sad news to me.

While Dave and I were in England on our honeynoon, we got the horrible news my sister Dori, Jenny’s Aunt, had suffered a ruptured brain aneurysm. We flew back to be with the family, but there was nothing we could do. A wonderful, shining star in this world was snuffed out far too soon. Leaving behind a husband and her handsome 15-years old son, Ian. Another one who calls me Aunt Heidi.

If that wasn’t enough, only one year later, Jenny’s mother, my sister Rhonda, died suddenly of heart failure. The worst, and most devastating thing my niece has gone through. She found her mother and tried to resusitate her. I would give anything to have taken that pain away from her as well as my mother, who lost two daughters in a span of a year and a half.

Jenny, selfishly tended to my mom after Rhonda died and devoted much of her free time to caring for her and running errands. Then last Fall, my mother succombed to heart failure at the age of 88.  Jenny had lost her Nana. Another heart-wrenching blow to a young woman who has already seen so much loss.

My young nephew Ian, now 18 years old, has also endured more memorial services than one should have to attend at such a young age.

I live in Maine and both Ian and Jenny live in western NY state. If I lived closer, I’d be a better and more caring aunt than I am right now. I regret not calling both of them on a daily basis…I’m not a phone person…never have been…never will be. So, it’s completely my fault for not staying in touch and becoming more involved with their lives. At least Jenny and I talk on the phone now and then and we email and text on a weekly basis. Ian is an 18-year old boy…and I’m just not even sure he has processed all he has been through. I adore him and his sweetness…and I feel I am letting Dori and my mother down by not being there for him. But I can only be in Maine for him right now.

After such sorrow-filled years, Jenny’s wedding is a true cause for celebration and one I would not, and could not miss. Seeing how I am now the “matriarch” of that side of the family, it’s my duty and honor to there. Her fiancé Chad, is a wonderful young man and our family adores him. His family has also been so welcoming to Jenny and they had opened their arms and hearts to Rhonda over the last few years, bringing a new lease on life to Rhonda and I’m forever grateful to them for that.

I feel ill-equipped for handling all of the responsibility and emotions I’m feeling these days. I know it will hit me at some point during the days surrounding the wedding that my two sisters and mother aren’t there. They should be. It’s just not right Rhonda won’t see Jenny get married. She devoted her life to Jenny’s well-being and happiness. Why am I the only one left?? Why haven’t these damn brain aneurysms done me in as they have so many others? Just this morning I read a sad story of another victim of a ruptured brain aneurysm who had two small children and a thriving television news career. There is no answer to the question of “why”.

I have adored my niece Jenny Lynn since day one. I recall trying to rock her to sleep and pretending she was MY daugther. And since I have no children of my own…she’s the closest I’ll ever get. I feel the same way about Ian. I babysat him so many Saturday nights before moving to Maine. He’ll never know, or remember just how much I adored and cared for him back then. And probably as an 18-year old boy, he probably really won’t care. LOL Boys, will be boys.

Jenny and Ian are one of the main reasons I decided to start taking better care of myself recently. Even if they don’t want my care and concern, I want to make sure I AM HERE for them and I certainly don’t want them to have to attend another memorial service (for me) for a long, long time. I may still be having serious concerns about my own brain aneurysm issues, but if I take better care of myself, perhaps I can prevent a stroke or another aneurysm from forming in the near future.

I can only hope and pray Ian and Jenny grow up to be the fabulous people both their mother’s worked so hard for them to be. I always wanted to make MY mom proud, and I always knew she was proud of me, because she’d tell me. I will try to be a better Aunt Heidi and make sure I tell my “kids” how proud I am of them. They deserve happiness, not sadness. And…wasn’t I always the “fun” aunt anyway? 🙂

Angiogram Results-With Visuals!

I had an uneventful angiogram last week at Maine Med which is good. It’s probably not a good thing that I’ve been to the radiology department so often over the years that many of them remember me, but it is what it is.

As I was still laying on the angio table after the procedure Dr. Ecker informed me the good news was that there were no new brain aneurysms and the clipped aneurysm from last year looked great. However, there was that pesky “remnant” on the neck of my original annie that he needed to review from previous images and we’d discuss it this week.

So, I went in to his office today for the follow up appointment and finally got to see the images of my clipped aneurysm and the “remnant” in question on my original brain aneurysm from 2006.

I missed getting a photo of the 3D images, but I snapped the photo below from the angiogram last week. It’s a straight on shot looking at my skull from the front. You can see my eye sockets and the large black mass in the middle of my eyes is the 1/2″ diameter (11mm) aneurysm from 2006 that now has 20 platinum coils in it. If you then look to the right, you can see the clip that was placed at the neck of the smaller aneurysm, which is no longer there. The clipping was a huge success. I thought this visual was pretty neat…and scary looking with that black blob there. Can’t see the arteries in this image because they’re only visible when the contrast dye is injected.

Brain Scan

Yet again, I am faced with three potential treatment options:

  1. Do nothing. Have another angriogram in another year and see if it changes size or shape. It may stay the same size for the rest of my life. We just don’t know. Watch and wait.
  2. Re-coil. Insert more coils through the stent into the remnant to fill that up again. This may, or may not be a durable, more perminant option and may require more procedures later…or it may not.
  3. The Pipeline. This is a relatively new, but highly successful option for those wide-neck, large, difficult to operate on brain aneurysms. Dr. Ecker has done 40 of these procedures in the last two years with very good results. I also know another survivor from Florida who has had the pipeline and she’s doing great.

The pipeline is a different type of stent. The issue with my particular case is that the pipeline would have to be deployed inside my existing stent. We’re going to investigate how successful that could be or if it has even been done before.

That’s what I have to think about now. Nothing life threatening, but it could be….or it couldn’t be. It’s that uncertainty that I always hate. At least I know what’s going on and what I have to deal with and my treatment options. Currently I’m leaning towards waiting a year, but at the same time I’m thinking if I took care of it with the pipeline while I’m still relatively young and mobile and have a job and good insurance…I should take advantage of all of those things that are in my favor. I just don’t know. That aneurysm is in a bad spot, sitting on my ocular nerve. If something were to happen during a procedure that effected my eyesight, I may not be able to work or drive anyway….OH, the scenarios that play out in one’s mind!

I know Dr. Ecker wouldn’t guide me in a direction that would potentially pose a serious risk and that his recommendations are based on the experiences he and the fantastic staff at Maine Medical Center Neurology have encountered. I will rely on their expertiese, even though I’ve grown far more knowledgeable than I ever thought I would become about brain aneurysms. The pesky big aneurysm is testing my patience, yet again.

 

Checkup Scheduled

My angiogram to check on my aneurysms has been scheduled for February 18th. Of course, I’ll be nervous the day of the procedure hoping that all goes well and all looks good.

Thankfully the angiograms at Maine Med aren’t the all day events like they used to be. They have improved the tools & procedure and you no longer have to lay completely still and flat for hours and hours afterwards. There still is a significant recovery period, but nothing like it used to be.

However, I’ve had so many angiograms since 2006 that the initial puncture is quite painful due to scar tissue in those exact spots I think. I usually ask for extra meds as a result.

I have to get some labs done next week. Been there…done that!