
The Story
of Kristopher Allen Smith
as
told by his mom, Deb Starkweather
June
20, 1997: Kris is a pretty happy and content
23 year old guy. It's pay day! He now has
more than $3500 saved towards a newer car.
He has an ok-apartment, and a decent job. Next
week, he will receive his first-ever vacation
pay, and is heading north up into Michigan
with his friend, Rusty. His older car is paid
for and runs well, even tho it isn't the greatest
looking thing. He is pretty darned self-sufficient,
finally. He only stops at Mom's about once
a week for a meal now! And last week, he got
some great pictures of the aftermath of a nasty
storm and tornado that went through the area
where he lives in Edwardsburg, Michigan (much
to Mom's dismay).
Saturday,
June 21: Kris decides to go to a local bar
in the evening. He asks his Dad to drop him
off, and he says he will walk home because
it's only about a mile and
a half. His Dad offers to pick him up, but
Kris refuses. Kris stays at the bar until after
midnight and heads for home. After walking
one mile, his life is forever changed. He is
hit by a car.
Mom's greatest fear is that middle-of-the-night phone call. This call wasn't
exactly in the middle of the night, but at 5:00 a.m. When Kris was hit, his wallet
and everything in his pockets were thrown, and the police couldn't identify him.
They happened across a pay stub on the road, belonging to a Kristopher Smith.
They also happened across a tiny piece of paper in the road, with a single phone
number written on it. That phone number happened to be mine. Why he had it written
down, and without a name, will remain a mystery to me. But when the phone rang
at 5:00 a.m., and a man, identifying himself as an Edwardsburg Police Officer,
asked me if I knew a Kristopher Smith, and if so, could I describe him, I soon
learned that mine, and all of Kris' families, lives were forever changed too.
Kris
sustained a traumatic brain stem injury, and
ten broken bones. He lost about half of his
blood. I learned later that one of those "suits" where the
blood is pushed up in his body was put on him at the scene of the accident. Over
the next couple hours, he received seven or eight units of blood. He was given
little chance of surviving. Of course, we weren't told this on the phone. But
when we arrived at Elkhart General, and were lead into the "Quiet Room", I wanted
to die. I would have given anything if I could have taken his place. When we
were taken to see him, I remember wondering why they had shaved the back of his
head. It turns out that it wasn't shaved, the hair was ripped out from going
through the car's windshield and then from landing on the ground. His legs were
very mangled, with one having a bone protruding and a piece missing. He had a
collapsed lung, broken ribs, a broken scapula, and multiple scrapes and bruises.
He was in a coma.
But
Kris was a fighter. He spent the first month
in ICU, with so many emergency surgeries (I
think five on his head alone), I can't count them. He had a 3" X
6" piece of skull removed from the side of his head to allow his brain to swell.
This piece of skull was installed just under the skin in his belly to keep it
alive, and later was reinstalled in his head. He had a shunt placed to prevent
excess spinal fluid from making his brain swell. He had a feeding tube installed
and a tracheotomy. On Day 50, one eye opened a tiny bit. The nurses and his family
were excited, but his doctor wasn't. The nurses tried to sit him up, shake him,
talk to him, etc., but nothing roused him.
I learned that comas are not like televison. You don't wake up from them, and
go on with your life. Where the coma ended and the brain injury began is impossible
to say. Depending on the doctor you talked with, some said he remained in a coma
for the 40 months that he lived. He never walked or talked or moved, and his
vision was very impaired, it was thought. He wore a diaper; everything was done
for him.
After
106 days, Kris was released from the hospital.
He was 100% total care, and was sent to a brain
injury/nursing home facility in Grand Rapids.
Actually, this was the only place we could
find who would accept him, because we continued
to battle the insurance company, who was refusing the claim ( we won
a couple months later). The Saturday before
Kris' planned move, we went to visit the facility.
It was a horrible day. One thought kept going
through my mind: KRIS DOESN'T BELONG HERE.
These people were severely brain injured from airplane crashes and
accidents, etc. But he did belong there. He
fit right in. Reality set in.
After
seven months at Grand Valley, about 11 months
after the accident, in May 1998, we had Kris
transferred to Healthwin in South Bend. At
that time, they had two wonderful therapists,
a husband and wife team named Dave and Judy.
They were occupational and speech therapists.
They loved Kris as they loved their own children.
They quickly determined that his most alert
period was very early in the morning, about
6 a.m. They drove from Three Oaks, Michigan,
to be with him at that hour! They worked so
hard with him, and after a short time, learned
that if they placed a couple fingers on the top of his head to support
his head and neck, Kris could turn his head
to one side to indicate 'no' and drop his
head forward to indicate 'yes'! We were soooo excited! This didn't happen
all the time, and it often took Kris a couple minutes to process our question.
The 'fog had to be lifted' at the moment, meaning he was alert. But it happened,
and his answers were correct at least 75% of the time. Then, suddenly, Dave and
Judy were released of their duties. It was obvious that this was a blow to Kris.
He stopped doing the few things that he had accomplished.
In
October 1999, we decided that he should be
in a home environment, rather than a nursing
home. We found a wonderful brain injury facility
in Brighton, Michigan, three hours away and
north of Ann Arbor. Kris was moved to his own
room in a house with four other guys and a
couple caregivers. He received daily therapy,
but he never got back what he had accomplished for those few short
months with The Dave and Judy Team, as we called
them.
January
2000: The year started out with a trip to the
ER. I had arrived for a visit, only to be met
outside by one of the staff, saying that Kris
was having another seizure, but this time,
the medication was not working. They were trying
to regulate his different seizure medications at the ER, and
get him stabilized.
March
2000: Kris' shunt fails. The original shunt had been installed in his
spine. It drains off excess spinal fluid to hopefully keep his brain from swelling.
The new shunt is installed in his head, where most of them are. (We learned that
the first one was installed in his spine, because he had had so many surgeries
to his brain already). After the surgery, they cannot even get his pulse. He
has pneumonia. Family is called in, and everyone drives the three hour drive.
His room looks like a circus, and I am thinking, THIS IS WRONG WRONG WRONG. He
is placed on the ventilator for the second time (he was on it initially after
the accident). Kris' Dad and I talk it over, and agree that there will be no
more ventilator IF he survives this incident. That was so hard, putting a DNR
(Do Not Resuscitate) on your child. Kris was in the hospital for eleven days.
He "celebrated" his 26th birthday there. He can't move, but he does inhale
his breath sometimes to show he is aware. And he can cry. Since his head has
to be in a certain position, or he cannot breathe, his Dad and I agree that he
will not be left alone in the hospital for one second. By then, his Dad had lost
his job because of all the time he missed, and he had an apartment in Brighton,
where he spent every day with Kris. During the night at the hospital, sometimes
I hear Kris wake and draw a deep breath, and sometimes cry. I would reach over
from my cot and hold his hand and tell him I was right beside him, so that he
would calm down. It was so, so sad, and my heart was breaking.
He
miraculously survives this incident. I see
a calmness come over him. Some say that he
gave up, but I say that he was ok with it now,
he was ok with dying. I knew in my heart that
it wouldn't be long now. And at this point,
I was as ready as a parent could ever possibly
be. Kris had no life; he would not recover;
he had a permanent brain stem injury. To wish him to continue
living would have been very, very selfish.
I talked to him about death and dying, and
I told him it's ok to go. I told him we will
all miss him, but we certainly understand.
My prayers had changed over the past three
years. At first, I prayed that he be healed.
By the summer of 2000, I wanted just three
things: that Kris be at peace, that he not
be in pain, and that I be allowed to be with
him when he made his final journey.
Tuesday,
October 17, 2000, 9:30 p.m. I am in my nightgown,
having just taken my sleeping pill. Sleep is
a thing of the past. The phone rings. It is
Denise, Kris' house mom. He is having trouble breathing and his lips are blue, and they
are on their way to the ER. I asked should I come now, and she says to wait,
as she will call me when they arrive. I get dressed, pack a small bag, and tell
my son, David, that he should too, as I knew that this time, it was "it". At
10:00, the phone rings. Kris's Dad says his oxygen saturation level is down to
about 48 (it should be between 95 and 100), and they think he has a blood clot
in his lung. I say, Is he in pain? They think he probably is. I say to start
the morphine going, as David and I are on our way. They tell me he will be really
out of it when I arrive, and I say that his being pain-free is the most important
thing. We make the three hour drive in just over two hours. Afer we arrive, Kris
is taken from the ER and moved to a private room. No machines, no monitors. We
are there to watch him to die. I remember thinking that this is the way he needed
to die, not like back in March. He has the three people he needs most - Mom,
Dad, brother David - with him. The only things that go into his body for the
next 16 hours are oxygen, his anti-seizure medication and the morphine. His breath
gets slower and slower, until it is one tiny intake of air every minute. At exactly
6:00 p.m. Eastern time, on Wednesday, October 18, 2000, Kris takes his final
breath. I am holding his left hand and rubbing his hair. His nurse, Janice, who
is his age, is holding his right hand as she suctions him. His Dad and David
have stepped outside his room while she is suctioning him. I see Janice's white
gloved hand holding Kris', and I realize his hand is as white as hers. I look
at his face, and see the white color take over his face.
He has won his Brain Injury Battle. I firmly believed he went on his own terms,
when he was ready.
Afterthought: After
re-reading this, I realize that I jump from
present tense to past tense, back and forth,
and I am wondering why. But then I know - it
took me several years to sit down and write
this, and for a reason. It has taken me back
to those times. I guess when I write in present
tense, I am re-living that moment. It's hard
not to.