Our precious son Michael Joseph Skaggs flew to Heaven. We hope and  prayed that our fears would not come true, but they did. I have never  actually wrote everything that happened that day, and so I am going to  now. I apologize that it is so long, but I want to remember everything  from those last hours with my son. Here it goes . . .
It all started on my birthday, August 28 2009. We woke up that day after  a few rough days with MJ, and were hoping for a much better day. After  all, it was my birthday! What better present could I get then a good day  with my sons. We called the hospital and they said that MJ was doing  great, he had a really good night, and the goal for the day was to turn  down his oxygen. He was one 98-99% oxygen, and he really needed to start  making a turn and breathing more on his own. Since he was doing okay,  Willie decided to go to work, at that point we were preparing for a year  long stay in the NICU with MJ, and so Willie was trying to conserve his  days off of work. Will had his month check up at the doctor that  morning, and so I took him in late morning. After our appointment I  stopped by my work to have some birthday treats, and the plan was to  relax a little in the afternoon before Willie got off work and we would  go see MJ. At noon I called the hospital again, and he was doing even  better! I was so elated, MJ was giving me the best birthday present  ever. His oxygen had been turned down to the mid 80s, and they thought  they would be able to turn it down more in the afternoon. The nurse  actually said, "We can't turn it down fast enough, he is doing so  great!" 
After a quiet afternoon, we left for the hospital. We walked up to his  room filled with hope, our son was having a great day in the NICU, and  it was my birthday. We never had a clue what we were about to walk into.  After we scrubbed in, the entered his room to find seven to eight  doctors crowded around MJ. We didn't have a clue what was going on, and  waited in the wings of the room as the doctors tried to figure out what  was wrong. He was have a very bad bout with pulmonary hypertension, and  had a ton of pressure in his chest. His heart beat was erratic at best,  and it seemed as though his little body was shutting down. We were only  able to get a few peaks at MJ while the doctors were trying to find the  best solution. Once we were able to get a clear look at him, we both  knew. It's a moment I will never forget, a moment that I knew my son was  going to die. He had enough, he couldn't fight anymore. It was  something that came over me that I will never be able to fully describe,  almost like someone was telling me he was done, and just couldn't fight  anymore. I had to leave the room to gather myself, and went to go call  my mom and sister to tell them to come to the hospital. 
I went to the parent break room to use the phone. We weren't allowed to  have cell phones in the NICU, and so I had left my phone in the car. My  sister lived an hour from the hospital, and my mom was in for the  weekend, and was spending the night with her. I struggled to remember my  mom's cell phone, and so I called my dad in Chicago, hoping that he  would be home. He was home, and started crying and told him that MJ was  not doing very well. I asked for my mom's cell phone number, and my dad  asked how bad it was. I never forget my response, "Daddy, he looks like  he is dying." My dad started crying, and then I called my mom. All I had  to say was that MJ was not doing very well, and my said, "Okay, we're  on our way, give us an hour." 
The next hour or so, Willie and I struggled for composure. We had been  hit with a brick, and were praying that MJ would pull through and  survive. Our nurse arranged for a room for us to sleep in a parent room that night in  the NICU. They didn't want us leaving the hospital for fear he would die  while we were gone. We wouldn't have left anyway, we knew that MJ  needed us. The doctors discussed our options, and said that for night  his goal was to remain stable. His oxygen was back at 100% support, and  he was oxygenating (the amount of oxygen his blood was getting) around 70%. His goal was to be at least 92% oxygen.
After we got settled in our room Willie ran to the hospital cafeteria to  get us some dinner. It was the last time we would eat there, after we  had basically lived there for 35 days. The food tasted bland and was  cold. 
After awhile my mom and sister got there, and we all struggled to grasp  what was happening. His little body was turning into a color mixed with  gray and green. Everything was shutting down, and the doctors were doing  all they could do to keep him alive. My mom told me that my godmother  and her son were on their way to the hospital, too. She was in town  visiting him for the weekend, as he goes to school at the University of  Kansas. After awhile they got there. It was such an amazing feeling to  be able to introduce my son to only the seventh and eighth people to  meet him other then the amazing doctors and nurses who took care of him  on a daily basis. So many of our family live out of town, and so they  could not meet him. We told everyone to wait until he was more stable,  or able to come home before coming out to visit. We all took turns  visiting MJ for a few hours. Only two people could be at his bedside at a  time. 
Around midnight that night everyone left. My mom and sister had plans to  come back first thing in the morning, and we were going to try and get a  good night of sleep. We went and said one last goodnight to MJ,  thanking God for another day with our son. I was so thankful that he had  made it through my birthday. I didn't want to remember that on my  birthday my son died. (Although I will always remember it as the day  before my son died.) We were physically and emotionally exhausted. We  both layed down and fell asleep. We didn't have a change of clothes,  toothbrush, or anything else with us for that matter. We simply slept on  a bed in the clothes we had on. 
I woke up the next morning about 7 am to feed Will. We were not allowed  to see MJ until 8 am because the doctors were doing rounds. At 8 am, I  left Willie and Will to see how MJ was doing. I walked in to find our  favorite nurse, who I thank God that she was our nurse that day. We  could never have gotten through the day without her. I walked over to MJ  and kissed him good morning. Megan walked over and I asked her how he  was doing. She had asked what time I had last been in to see him. I told  her around midnight or so and she told me that he was doing worse. His  was now oxygenating around 60%, and his arms and legs were turning blue  due to the lack of oxygen. I told her I needed to go get my husband and I  would be right back. 
I woke Willie up and told him we needed to go see MJ, he was doing  worse. We were gone maybe 15 minutes, and we walked in again to find  five or so doctors huddled around MJ. He was having another erratic  hearbeat spell due to the pulmonary hypertension and pressure in his  chest. We quietly took a seat in the corner while the doctors talked  over their plan of action. Megan came over to us and said that there was  something that she needed to talk to us about, and she wanted to be the  one to tell us. They thought that it was the day, and that at some point  that day we would have to make a choice to hold MJ, or let him die  alone on his bed. We had never held him yet, and even though we knew in  our hearts she was right, we still felt as though we were hit with  another bag of bricks. We cried and looked at each other wondering how  we could ever make that decision. A few minutes later, one of the  doctors came over to tell us the same thing. She said that they weren't  out of options yet, but it was coming to that point. She asked us if we  wanted them to continue treatments and try to save his life, or what  else we wanted to do. We said save him, please save our son. 
A little while later a cardiologist specialist came in to see MJ. He was  obivously on his way to play golf, or do some other Saturday activity.  But first he came to try and save my son. He looked over ECHO results  and came over to talk to us. He said he didn't know why MJ was having  the erratic heart spells that he was having, but that it was due to the  pulmonary hypertension, and pressure in his chest. He thought he had a  few tricks up his sleeve that the doctors were going to try. They  started him on a new medicine, and said that they would give it an hour  to work, and then they would try the next one. 
My mom and sister got there shortly and we caught them up to speed with  the plan to save MJ. The next few hours we stayed and prayed by his  bedside. Every hour or so, they would start him on a new medicine,  hoping that one would start to work. His oxygenation kept falling, from  the 60s, to the 50s, and then to the 40s. At some point that day my mom  and sister went out to get some food for us. I think it was Wendy's. I  remember it tasting bland and not good. They forced us to eat, as we  didn't really want to have anything to do with it. My sister and I were  in the parent room by ourselves at some point, and she said that she had  found an organization called Now I Lay Me Down to Sleep, and they would  come take professional photos of us that day, if the worst were to  happen. We had only two medicines left to try, and so I asked her to  call them in two hours if these two didn't work. I told her that if the  worst came, I wanted her to hold him. She promised that she would.
The next two hours came and went with no change, and his oxygenation  still decreasing with each hour. The doctors came to us and said they  wanted to try one last thing: switching his ventilator. He had been on  the oscillating, or jet vent, and they thought that switching him to the  normal, gentle vent would help decrease the pressure in his chest.   They did say that there was some arugment between the doctors on whether  it would work or not, and asked us what we wanted. We said try it, do  anything to help him. Amid arguments from some of the doctors, his  ventilator was changed. The thought was that either it would help him,  or it would cause him to plummet even more. We all held our breath and  waited to see what was going to happen. There was no change, he didn't  plummet, but he didn't get any better. We were going to give him an hour  and then evaluate our options. The next hour was much of the same, his  oxygenation was going down. I remember when it hit 25% I asked our nurse  how much lower it could go, she said not much. I covered his feet  because they were so cold and blue because there was no oxygen going to  them. She said that his body was keeping the oxygen for his major  organs, and so his extremities were getting virtually none. My godmother  and her son had come back to the hospital to be with us, knowing that  we were about to say goodbye to MJ. 
Willie and I looked at each other, each afraid of what to say, because  there was really only one option left for us. Finally I said, I want to  hold my son, I want to hold him. Willie agreed, and we both cried,  knowing that it would be our first and last time holding him. 
Megan came over to us and asked us what we wanted to do, the time was  here, and we had to make a decision. We said we wanted to hold him. I  asked her if the rest of my family could come in, as we had all been  taking turns throughout the day to be with him. She said yes, that in  situations like ours all the rules were thrown out the window. We  prepared for everything that was about to come. Megan called Now I Lay  Me Down to Sleep, and arranged for the chaplain to baptize Will and MJ.  We really wanted them to have that together. I couldn't imagine  baptizing MJ, and not Will. It would be the last and first thing they  would do together as twins. 
The doctors came and confirmed our decision with us. And then the room  swarmed with people helping to prepare us to hold MJ. You see, he was on  a ventilator, which made it tricky. But then you also had to add in all  of the other tubes that he was attached to, which included a drainage  tube (from his chest, after his surgery that had not been removed yet),  and probably at least twenty different types of medicine. That day, they  tried EVERYTHING they could think of to keep him alive. It probably  took about 30 minutes to prepare for him to be moved. Right before he  was about to be moved, Megan told us that sometimes, when they moved  babies as critical as him, it caused them to crash and their heart to  stop beating. She asked us what we wanted to do if that happened. Did we  want them to put him back on the table, and perform CPR, or did we want  them to continue to give him to us and let us hold him. She explained  that performing CPR on him would be pure chaos, with an extra 20 or so  people in the room, and it would be very traumatic to see how it would  happen for us. We told her that we wanted him, we wanted him in our  arms, and we wanted to finally hold our son. 
We asked for them to take away the paralytic that he was on, in hopes  that he would open his eyes for us. He never did, but thought that maybe  he would. 
I don't think that I will ever forget the moment he was placed in my  arms. Tears of joy and sadness rushed down my face. It's really an  indescribale feeling, knowing that I was finally holding my son, and the  pure joy that I had in my heart, but then the pure devastation knowing  that it would be my last. My husband looked at me and smiled, and said,  look baby, he pointed to the screen where MJ's vitals were. His  oxygenation had shot up to 80%, the best it had been in over 24 hours!  He knew that his mother was holding him, finally. I was so happy, I  knew, I just knew that MJ knew I was holding him. We took a ton of  pictures. Our family of four was finally together for the first and last  time, and as sad as it was knowing it was our last, we still were able  to find joy in that moment, our final moments with MJ. After awhile  Willie whispered to me that he knew we had made the right decision, MJ's  heart rate had dropped dramatically, and was going down. At that point  we switched and Willie was able to hold MJ for the first and last time.  My mom and sister had brought us a change of clothes when they had got  to the hospital that day, and so I changed quickly, as I knew the  photographer was nearly there. I knew that the pictures we were about to  take I would treasure forever, and I did want to be dressed a little  nicer then I was. 
Just as the photographer got there, we had switched again, and I was  holding MJ again. She explained that she herself was a NICU nurse, and  she was so sorry that she had to be there. We took more photos, and then  the chaplain came and it was time to baptize our twins. Since MJ was  dressed in nothing more then a diaper, we did the same for Will. It  would be the first and only time that our twins would be photographed  dressed alike, and in nothing more then a diaper. The chaplain said a  few beautiful words, and then they were both baptized. We spent a few  more moments with MJ and we knew that time was nearing for us. Earlier I  had asked Megan how MJ would die, how long would it take. She said that  he was on so much medicine that it could take a few hours, or a day or  so. She said it could be dragged out for a long time, putting us all in  much more pain then we wanted. We knew that we didn't want that for MJ.  Somehow letting him go sooner was more dignified to me. Letting him go  on our terms was better then for him to die slowly. And so we had let  the doctors know that we were ready. We had our options they told us,  they could take away just the medicine, just the ventilator, or both.
Slowly the took away all of the medicine he was on, except for the pain  medicine, we always wanted to make sure that he was never in any pain.  It took a good 15 minutes to unhook and cap all of the medicine he had.  Then they asked if we were ready for the ventilator to be taken out. We  had never seen him without it, but we were ready as we were ever going  to be. They took it out, and for the first time in his short life, we  were able to see him without a tube stuck down his throat. He was so  beautiful and amazing, it broughts tears to our eyes. A few minutes  later the doctor came to check if his heart was still beating. The room  was so quiet, and Willie and I weren't really sure was she was doing. I  had thought that as soon as the vent was taken out, he would be gone.  But then I realized that it was not the case, and they were checking his  heartbeat. A few more minutes after that, she checked again. And she  whispered two words to me that will haunt me the rest of my life, I will  never forget how they sounded, "MJ's gone." We sobbed, Willie and I, we  both lost it, our son was gone, how was that ever possible? 
We took a few more photos, and then I asked if my mom wanted to hold  him, she kissed him goodbye and gave him back to me, and I gave him to  my sister to kiss goodbye. The nurse had offered for us to give him a  bath, or spend as much time with him as we wanted to. At first I thought  it was something that I would want to do, but then we decided against  it. MJ's body was getting cold, and I didn't want to remember him like  that. I wanted to remember holding him alive, and feeling his warmth. I  remember thinking it was odd that the nurse gave us warm blankets, and  then I realized why she did. Looking back, I am glad that we did not  bathe him. He had so many tubes coming out of him, and we would have had  to work around them, and his body would have gotten colder, I don't  really remember any of that, though. I simply remember my perfect little  boy, wrapped in warmth, and how he fit so perfect in my arms. 
We handed him over to the nurse and said our final goodbyes. Everything  after is a blur, we signed some papers, authorized an autopsey, and  within an hour we were on our way out. I remember feeling incredibly  numb and almost as if I was having an out of body experience as we were  leaving the hospital. My son was gone, and now I had to figure out how  to live without him.
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1 comments:
Thinking about you and marveling at your courage to do all that you have done in MJ's memory. What you just wrote was absolutely beautiful, yet gut-wrenching. Love to all of you.
Jean and Al
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