January 7th … My Life and Death Story – Part 4
(part 4, continued)
My brother was still being treated at the hospital in Angola. They discovered he had crushed the 3rd vertibrae in his neck 10%. He spent 8 weeks in a neck brace and missed a semester of college. Because of our accident, he had to stay through the next summer to finish his degree. It was during those summer months that he met his wife, Elizabeth. He would have never been there had it not been for our accident on January 7th.
Meanwhile, Sarah and her parents were now 60 miles away. “I’ve never seen my dad drive so fast in my entire life,” she told me later. Sarah actually had a journal that she recorded her thoughts in later that night. She wrote 8 pages of some of the most raw and gut wrenching emotions I have ever heard come out of her.
The helicopter landed at Lutheran Hospital in Fort Wayne, IN, and I was immediately rushed into the O.R. Dr. Isa Conavatti. I still remember the doctor’s name. He’s the only person on the entire planet who has ever seen my brain. That’s crazy for me to think about.
They shaved the front left half of my head and then cut a moon shaped incision in my skin. They drilled in to my skull to relieve the pressure and when they pulled the drill out, they later told us the blood shot out and hit the wall of the O.R. 10 feet away. They put in a drainage tube and wrapped my head. I think the surgery took like 4 or 5 hours.
I can’t imagine how my parents were feeling… how they got the news was another story entirely…
I remember Conavatti, too. He worked on my brother's brain a few years prior to yours.
A good doctor must make a lasting impression.
Thanks for the story man. Some of the details I've not heard before!
I'm glad I know the story has a happy ending!