Tuesday, March 17, 2026 -- Mattie died 837 weeks ago today.
Tonight's picture was taken in March of 2009. It was St. Patrick's Day and we were headed to the outpatient clinic of the hospital for an infusion of Mattie's experimental treatment. As you can see friends gave Mattie all sorts of shamrock gear to acknowledge the day. I will never forget this moment in time and admire Mattie's ability to smile even when feeling so sick and exhausted.
Quote of the day: There is no exercise better for the heart than reaching down and lifting people up. ~ John Holmes
This morning I had to take both of my parents to the hospital, because my dad had a follow up CT scan of his head. In December, my dad suffered a brain bleed. He has a neurology team following him and therefore my dad gets periodic scans. He had one in January and today the hope was that more of the pooling blood in the brain is being absorbed. Taking my dad to the hospital is no easy feat. Since it involves a lot of walking, I brought Mattie's wheelchair with us. But given the nature of today, my dad's anxiety was up. When his anxiety is high this triggers his irritable bowel syndrome. I swear that I changed him before going to the hospital and then I lost track of the number of changes at the hospital. Literally I was in the bathroom with him every thirty minutes and changed him four more times. Of course once we got back into the car, he went again. There are times that caring for my parents is so overwhelming on top of the emotional turmoil of my divorce that I don't know how I will make it! Life just seems grim and pointless.
Then I met Steven today! When I checked my dad into the radiology center for his CT scan, it was a show. Crowded and noisy! I pre-registered him at home to avoid doing more paperwork at the hospital. But sure enough they wanted my dad's ID and insurance card. Given that I had been going ten rounds with IBS bathroom changes, I was in no mood for more requests. I told them why do I bother to pre-register my dad if you are going to ask me to just repeat everything I just did at home?! Of course they had no answers for me. Mind you my dad is in and out of that same hospital almost on a monthly basis. So he is a known quantity there! If they don't have his ID and insurance on file by now, well I can't help you!
Any case, we waited close to 40 minutes for my dad to be called back for the scan. So the appointment time was not honored. This is when I met Steven. He called us back and he could see that I was balancing my mom, a wheelchair, a tote bag, and a walker. You would be amazed with what I can push, carry and hold. As soon as we got settled in the back, Steven said to me...... I can tell you are a special person and I am sorry you waited so long. I don't do this for everyone (and it is true the hospital do not comp parking for scans) but I am paying for your parking. He took my parking ticket for the hospital garage and had it validated. I was stunned. Then the tech came to get my dad and I went into the scanning room with them. The tech asked if he could help me, and I told him.... no I manage this daily. It was what he said next that was touching. He said, I know you have this, I can see that, but today I am here and I want to help! LOVED him. He immediately understood that my dad's body is frozen in place because of stenosis, making it hard to bend his head and neck to fit into the scanning machine. But together we worked as a team, along with Steven, and we literally taped my dad's head down far enough so that he could be moved into the CT scanner.
Anyone who says that one person can't make a difference, hasn't met that one person. Steven and the radiology tech today made me feel appreciated, heard, and respected. Radiology angels are indeed among us!















