I am in Albania. With
Ellie. Nathan is in Ohio with Reni and
the rest of the Waggoner family.
The last I shared on the blog ‘twas the night before
(Sunday). 7 hours later we would get a
phone call that would change our plans dramatically.
I wish I could write more but the details are still coming
to light. Stephen called us at 6:45am to
say that mom had collapsed unresponsive Monday morning at home in Ohio, just
hours after returning from our commissioning service and farewell in Illinois
on Sunday. She was being anesthetized
for surgery to relieve the swelling on her brain.
We would later find out that she had incurred a serious
stroke. With no history of high blood
pressure, this was a major shock. We
were beyond grateful that Dad had not yet left for work when the episode took
place.
We didn’t know what else to do but pray and keep packing as
her condition wouldn’t be known for several more hours. Needless to say, we were extremely distracted,
but comforted by the frequent beeping on the laptop indicating that someone had
posted a word of encouragement on Facebook and indicated that they were praying
for Mom and Dad.
We left for the drive up to O’Hare in the early afternoon,
relieved to hear that Mom had made it through surgery. As we approached Joliet we got a little bit
more information on her condition and as we pow-wowed at a Burger King while
the kids played on what had to be the State’s smallest ‘playplace’ we decided
that Nathan had to go see his mom. Ellie
was distraught. I know she had no idea
how ill her beloved Nonna was, but in her mind, the airport was within
breathing distance and all of a sudden, it appeared it might not be happening?
There’s no going back now, but we decided to split up. I would go ahead to Albania and start the
task of setting up our apartment and getting the downstairs apartment ready for
Abby and Anna (arriving on the 21st). We
decided to postpone Nathan and Reni’s departure for about 8 or 9 days. We had been told that we would know a lot more
about Mom’s prognosis at about the one-week mark.
So hastily in the parking lot we did a quick survey of our
carry-ons and luggage. Since the
contents of our checked luggage was pretty much shuffled altogether, we didn’t
think it really mattered which pieces I brought. As for the carry-ons, I ended up taking four
backpacks, none of which Ellie could carry but I somehow managed with one on my
back, one on my front, and one in each hand (yes, my arms feel like noodles
right now).
With a dying cell phone, Nathan and Reni peeled out for the
5-6 hour drive to Ohio and I numbly climbed in Mom and Dad’s suburban with
Ellie for the short trip to O’Hare. The
only thing we intentionally split up was to make sure that Reni had an i-Pad
and Ellie had a Kindle Fire.
After checking in I was able to briefly cross paths with one
of our classmates from last month. His
flight was an hour before ours and he was bright spot on an otherwise dark day. Ellie lit up when she saw him and gave him a
big hug. I had hoped that we could grab
a bite to eat with him but O’Hare has remodeled the security section of
Terminal 5 and completely absorbed the entire food court area, so we said
goodbye and I trust that he has arrived at his destination by now, safe and
sound!
Ellie was a pretty good traveling companion, other than
spacing out from time to time and not being as alert as I would have liked when
we were walking through airports. We had
a couple of drama moments like when her loose front tooth really started coming
loose and as she worked on it, bled a considerable bit. She was fine until she noticed the blood, of
course. The other was handling the cabin
pressure as we descended both times. She
must have had some sort of sinus congestion I was unaware of. I felt helpless to help her in her pain and
no amount of drinking water nor distractions could help. I’m pretty sure the lack of a full night’s
sleep played into a lower threshold for discomfort. But once we were in the van and driving, she
looked out the window at the lights of Tirana and asked, “Are we going to live
here forever now?” And as we’ve been
opening suitcases and putting a few things away she has remarked over and over
how happy she is to be here. I’m blown
away.
To everyone who prayed for us, thank you. Everything related to traveling through the
airports could not have gone smoother.
It was one of the least ‘stressful’ international trips I can recall
making. Of course, my mind was
preoccupied with a million other thoughts.
I think the hardest part has been ‘not knowing’. In an age when we’re accustomed to instant
access to information, it was like slipping through an information black hole
once I hopped on that Turkish Airlines jet – one that will last at least 48
hours. We got to the apartment around
9PM Tuesday and we have no internet here.
Mandi had been checking FB for me and not seen any updates but promised
to share that we made it here safely. So
I’m writing this post and will hopefully post it to the blog sometime in the
morning, either from an internet café or when we get internet set up here at
the apartment.
I’ve been re-living this weekend over and over in my
head. One of the topics we covered quite
thoroughly at MTI was how to say ‘goodbye’ well. I am so grateful we had the opportunity to
have some time with Mom and Dad on Saturday to share words of love and
appreciation with them. I was so ‘in
the moment’ though, that I don’t know that I took more than a handful of
photos… The commissioning service on Sunday was a special time (I have a few
more photos of that), we just missed Nathan’s sister Rebecca and my sister
Jenny (and her family) to have our immediate families altogether. It made leaving so much easier for us come
Monday to have said our goodbyes well.
But then tonight I walked in the kids’ room in our apartment
here in Tirana. When I was here in
March, I had made up Ellie’s and Reni’s beds with their special sheets and
bedspreads so when they walked in the door, it would feel like home. I pulled back the covers of Reni’s bed (to
crawl into them for sleeping – the master bed is covered in boxes) and caught
my breath, having forgotten that I had made up the bed with construction-themed
sheets that Mom Waggoner had given him.
I just can’t imagine her not coming here to visit us someday in our new
home.
As for Nathan – I have no idea where he is emotionally right
now. I can imagine a bit how he might
be feeling when it comes to creature comforts though. I unpacked suitcases for an hour before I
found any clothing belonging to me. A
good deal of the clothing I found belonged to him, so I have no idea what he’s
going to wear until he rejoins us. I
think I have 4 t-shirts and several pairs of jeans that should get me
through. The rest of my clothes here are
for winter. Somehow we managed to take
the OPPOSITE suitcases that we should have taken. What are the odds?
One thing I did find in my unpacking tonight was our little
re-chargeable blue-tooth speaker for our
iPod (I have a feeling Nathan has the power cord, so I’m using it
frugally). I put some worship music on
‘shuffle’ and the first song that came up and started playing? “He Leadeth Me” recorded by our Global Café
band about 6 years ago… What a blessed reminder when our world feels upside
down from what we expected. Grateful to
be following our Leader.
Cydil, in Albania
P.S. Would you pray
for Ellie? This evening the sounds of
the city are new and scary to her. It’s
definitely not helping us overcome jet lag!
3 comments:
So glad that you made it safely to Albania! I will continue to pray for Nathan's mom and her recovery as well as for Ellie's adjustment to the new city.
Oh dear.... I am glad that you and Ellie are safe, but oh dear. Our prayers are with Nathan's mother and you in this time.
Thanks for the update and more information to help us pray for you all.
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