This is a photo that my father took of the skid marks at the accident site. The two red stars are where my sister Stephanie and I were walking. The drunk driver slammed on his breaks after he hit me in the back with his car. As I flew through the air I kicked my sister in the back. I was fifteen years old and my sister was thirteen. Thankfully Stephanie was not physically injured.
206 North Main Street, Marlborough, CT |
We walked as fast as we could, hoping that our friends would still be there. Ten minutes later, we arrived at the shack. As we ran toward it, we could not see anyone inside. We looked through the window just to be sure. To our disappointment, the shack was vacant. Instead of searching for our friends, we headed straight home so that our mother would not worry.
Stephanie was walking in front of me with traffic passing behind us. The right turn to our street was just ahead. All of a sudden I heard a deafening explosion and I was surrounded by gray clouds.
"Oh my God," I thought, "someone blew us up!" My thoughts were so clear and exact with no feelings of confusion or panic. I was sure that our friends were fooling around and threw an M80 firecracker out their car window and hit us.
I felt no fear just total contentment. It was such a beautiful euphoric feeling like nothing I had ever felt before. It was like nothing I had ever dreamed before. I was being cradled in the clouds like an infant in my mothers arms. Something or someone was protecting me from pain and fear, making me feel like everything was okay. I was in a state of complete peace. I knew at that moment that my soul was outside of my physical body. There was absolutely no connection to my physical form. "I must be dead," I thought to myself. As I looked down from the clouds, I could see myself floating to the ground, like a leaf falling gently from a tree.
Suddenly an overwhelming rush of pain jolted through my body. I could not breathe. My chest felt as though a ton of bricks was crushing it. I could see a blur of Stephanie's body standing over me. I wanted to talk to her, but no words would come out of my mouth. I wanted to get up, but my body would not move. The pain was a torture chamber that paralyzed my body. I was starting to panic, I was so confused. I wanted to know what happened to me.
I heard the voice of a strange man talking to me, but I could not see him. He kept asking me if I was okay, but I could not answer him. Finally, a noise came out of my mouth. I asked the man what had happened to me. He said, "You were hit by a car." "Oh my God, Oh my God, Oh my God, I whimpered sounding like a broken record.
Within minutes there were paramedics all around me. They cut open the leg of my jeans and immobilized my left leg. As they were working on me, I heard my mother say, "I am here with you honey." I knew that she was trying not to scare me because her voice was so calm. I could hear the paramedics talking to each other about me. It was difficult to focus on what they were saying because I was fading in and out of conciseness. The woman paramedic kneeling beside me wrapped a brace around my neck and told another paramedic that my head was bleeding. I could not feel any part of my body except my raw scraped elbows that were digging into the sand and tar.
(Life Star helicopter critical-care medical transport did not begin operation until 1985, one year after my accident). The paramedics then slid a board under my limp body and lifted me into the ambulance. A woman paramedic was sitting beside me as we traveled to Hartford Hospital. She was trying to keep me from falling asleep as I was in and out of consciousness. I kept telling my mother how sorry I was that this had happened. I thought the paramedic was my mother holding my hand and telling me it was okay. The ambulance was traveling on Route 2 West at a high rate of speed. Every time the speeding ambulance hit a bump in the road, I would cry in pain and beg them to slow down.
Me 1984 |
When we arrived at the hospital, I was immediately wheeled into an examining room. The doctors cut off all of my clothes, as I lay helplessly on the stretcher. I was crying and begging them to stop, as they continued to stick me with needles and put tubes into my body. They had stabilized me enough to send me for x-rays.
My body was so cold that I could not stop shaking. I was begging for someone to please help me. The nurse piled blankets on top of me, but I was still shivering uncontrollably. I was wheeled from room to room as they x-rayed and scanned every part of my body.
Finally I was brought back into the examining room where Stephanie and my mother were waiting for me. It was so good to see them both. My mother held my hand tightly as the doctor sedated me and stitched the gash in my head.
Me 1984 |
Me 1984 |
I went through intensive physical therapy in the hospital and my mother slept on a small cot next to my bed for much of my stay there.
After I returned home, it took six agonizing months to physically recuperate from my injuries. I continued to slowly get stronger and finally got rid of the crutches.
As I was healing I became very athletic and started exercising every day. I would wrap up my knee and push myself to extremes that I didn't think were possible.
On December 2, 1985, almost two years after my accident, I was 17 years old and I gave birth to my first child RJ. I continued exercising and thought that I was doing okay until my knee became extremely painful again.
I found out that I had developed arthritis and I had to get the screws removed from my knee.
I recovered from that and surgery and continued exercising as soon as I could. I was feeling so strong and loving the healthy active lifestyle I was living. I would put RJ on the back of my bicycle and ride for hours around the country roads of Marlborough.
A few months after my second knee surgery, I was getting ready to take RJ sledding. I was sitting on the couch putting my boots on and as I stood up, a stabbing jolt of pain shot through my lower back like a shock of electricity. I fell to the floor and I could not move. RJ was bundled up in his snowsuit next to me and I was helpless. I dragged myself to the phone and called for help.
RJ 1986 |
This is when I realized that getting hit by the car had caused lasting problems in my body. I continued to go through similar episodes of my back going out more and more often as the years went by.
I continued to live my life as if I was not in pain. I wanted to live and feel alive. I was enjoying every second of my life and being a mother. I would not accept that my body was betraying me. I gave birth to my next son Travis in October 1988. I was still aggressively exercising and keeping my body strong, in between episodes of bed ridden back pain.
I became pregnant with my daughter Nicole in 1990. I was working full time and raising my two boys. During my pregnancy I had a noticeable increase in back pain. I remember days of crawling to the bathroom because I could not walk.
After Nicole was born in February 1991 I was 23 years old. I tried to start exercising again full force, however my body was not cooperating. My back started deteriorating quickly. The episodes of my back going out became more and more frequent. New bone and joint issues in my body started causing me increased pain as well.
In 2002 I was back in the operating room. The pain had become unbearable. I was on a mission to fix my broken body and get rid of the pain. I had tried every type of natural healing under the sun. I was told by surgeons that I was too young to do multiple-level spinal fusion and I had to wait for ProDisc Surgery to become available. I finally had no choice but to give in to pain pills while I waited for a miracle.
This was an extremely challenging time in my life. For the next five years I went through nine surgeries. With each surgery I was thinking that soon my body would be fixed and my pain would be gone.
2002 - Me after my first rotator cuff surgery holding my niece Ciara & my daughter Nicole next to me. |
2003 - Lumbar ProDisc Replacement: 2 Levels (L4-5 / L5-6) |
I was taking a daily cocktail of medication including morphine for two years before my ProDisc surgery. My morphine dosage was doubled during recovery for pain control. One month after my surgery I stopped the regular use of pain pills, even though I was still in pain. I made this decision on my own because I felt like my soul was dying. I decided I would rather be in physical pain than lose who I was a person. I had to get the drugs out of my body. For about one month I went through horrible text-book withdrawal symptoms. I am so grateful to my amazing family for all of their support. For future surgeries I would only allow myself to take pain pills for one week post surgery. I now continue to use natural pain control.
2004 - My (first) Left Shoulder Rotator Cuff Surgery - Arthritis & Bone Spur Removal. |
In 2005 I was having severe bleeding and I had Hysteroscopy w/Ablation surgery to remove fibroids and polyps from my uterus.
October 2006 - My swollen left knee after my third knee surgery. Arthroscopic arthritis clean up. |
After this routine outpatient knee surgery, I developed a post-surgical blood clot behind my knee. I was put back in the hospital and had to stay on blood thinners for six months. This simple procedure ended up turning into a life threatening condition. It took months of an in-home visiting nurse and dedicated physical therapy to walk again.
It was then that I decided that I was done having surgeries. My dream of being pain free was over. I went through a lot of depression and grieving for the loss of my healthy body. I grieved the loss of my career and the loss of the physical activities that I could no longer do. I felt cheated out of the life that I had dreamed of. I felt lost and hopeless. I was feeling sorry for myself and I was so angry. I was so angry at the drunk driver who hit me with his car.
I knew that I had to forgive him to move forward. I remembered his name and looked up his address. I found where he lived and I drove to his house. My son Travis came with me for moral support and he was waiting in the car.
I knocked on his door and told him who I was. There were no apologies for what he had done. He was clueless as to what I had been through. I told him that I had been through many surgeries and a lot of pain because of the accident. I told him that I was there to forgive him, and I asked him if I could give him a hug. He let me, then I said goodbye.
As I was walking to the car I was shaking from overwhelming emotion. As soon as I got into the car I burst into tears. I told Travis that he didn't even say he was sorry. I cried the whole drive to my mother's house. When I told her what happened she said, "Lisa you didn't go there for an apology, you went there to forgive him so that you can move forward." It all made sense.
There is nothing that I can do about the fact that I will live with chronic pain for the rest of my life. There is no miracle or surgery or treatment that will reverse the trauma that my body has been through. That part is out of my control.
I finally accepted that I have to live my life differently than I had planned. I realize that it is UP TO ME weather or not I enjoy my life. I now focus on the positive things in my life like being blessed with three beautiful children, a beautiful family and beautiful friends.
I made a choice to stop complaining about the things that I cannot change and to focus on the things that make me happy. Through this process I have discovered so much about myself and who I really am as a person. It's so empowering to realize that ONLY YOU control your own happiness.
I have realized there is still joy in life, even if we are forced down a different and difficult path in life. I have realized the importance of doing what I can to look good on the outside, so that I feel better inside. This goes hand-in-hand with making my physical issues seem more bearable. It's the same concept with the cancer patients from the LOOK GOOD FEEL BETTER classes that I volunteer for.
Being positive doesn't take away the physical pain, it simply allows me to enjoy my life. I rarely talk about my pain and I only go to the doctors when I absolutely have to. Positive thinking has proven to be the best medicine physically and emotionally. My thoughts and my happiness are completely in my control.
I almost lost my life when I was fifteen years old and I was given a second chance. I now believe that I was hit by that car to change my path in life. Of course no one would chose to live with chronic pain, but I am so grateful for the lessons I have learned as a result. I would not change one thing about my past because I have learned from every moment I was given. Every moment made me who I am today.
My journey has guided me here, right now at this moment, typing my personal story for the world to read. We all have challenges in life; some physical, some emotional, some big, some small, but we all deserve to be happy. We all deserve to feel like we are not alone in what we are going through.
My hope is that my story can inspire even one person not to give up. That you can find the strength and guidance to create a beautiful life for yourself no matter what you are dealing with. Life is a gift and it's up to us to make it beautiful. You are not alone...
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