Thursday, January 14, 2010

Love

So, it's been awhile since I've posted last. For those who actually care to read this, here's the update. I got engaged two days after Christmas, and starting the planning has been fun so far, but my parents' constant nagging about this and that is starting to drive me crazy. I love that they're supportive and I love their willingness to help us out, but I would really love if they would back off a little. So there's my mini rant about that. On to what I really want to talk about.

On another note, I could not be happier with the decision I made to get married. Brian is the love of my life and I can't picture spending my life any other way. It's amazing how love works. One day you're just walking through life thinking there's nothing but heartache out there for you, and then your friend calls you up and invites you to go out with her and some friends from work and your eyes meet his, and that's the moment you know your life has just changed. From that night on, I knew that I was speeding down the road of love with no brakes to stop it. He's the best thing that ever happened to me and I would do anything and everything in this world for him.

Brian - I love you more than anything on this earth. I promise that I will always be there for you, through the good days and the bad days, through the laughs and the cries, through the days where we feel we couldn't be more in love and the days we want to kill each other (those days will come eventually). I can't wait til July 9, 2011 when I become Mrs. Jamie Miller and spend the rest of our lives together. I love you with everything I am.

XOXO

Wednesday, December 16, 2009

Final Wish - Short Story

I had just walked in the door from work when I heard the phone ring. “Probably Claire calling to tell me her ride left without her,” I said to myself as I reached for the phone. “Hello?”

“Hello, this is Doctor Allen at St. Luke’s Hospital. Am I speaking to Adelyn Carlisle?”

Slightly frightened, I forced myself to say, “Yes, this is she.”

“Is your husband’s name Ian Carlisle?”

Slowly reaching a point of paranoia, I responded, “Yes, is something wrong?”

“The most I can tell you over the phone is that the ambulance just brought him in they and took him into the Intensive Care Unit. I think you should come down here immediately.”

I couldn’t believe what I was hearing. “Okay, thank you for calling. I’ll be right there.” The longest twenty minutes of my life followed that phone call.

I pulled into the parking lot, not even acknowledging the fact that I just did ninety-five miles an hour to get here. As I turned off the ignition, I had to sit for a moment to calm myself down. Looking upon my tear-stained reflection in the rearview mirror, I then understood why they always tell you not to drive when you’re in a panicked situation. Wiping the tears from my eyes, I exited the car and made my way to the hospital doors. St. Luke’s Hospital was eleven stories high and took up about half of the block.

Walking in the door, I felt like I was walking an endless road, and that the desk to the emergency room was not getting any closer. Finally, after feeling like I had floated there, I composed myself enough to speak to the nurse. “Hi, I’m Adelyn Carlisle. Doctor Allen called me about twenty minutes ago and he told me that my husband was just admitted, and to come down right away.”

The nurse’s name was Greta. A middle-aged African-American, she stood at about five foot three and was “pleasantly plump” so to say. “Yes, they just took him into ICU. They’re trying to revive him right now.”

Feeling like I had entered a parallel universe, it took every nerve in my body to keep stable. “Revive him? What happened?”

From what the person who hit him told us, she was texting while driving and was only glancing down for a second. When she looked up, she saw your husband and tried as hard as she could to stop, but unfortunately, the car struck him on his left side and he flipped over the hood of the car.”

As much as I tried to restrain them from falling from my eyes, the tears started flowing so fast that by the time I caught them off my cheek, there were that many more to welcome my delicate finger. “Can I see him?”

Not just yet. As soon they get him stabilized and into a room, we’ll let you know.”

Okay. I’ll be in the waiting room.” I walked away in awe of what had just happened.

I’ve had one nervous instinct throughout my life, and it only came out when I had to tell someone something unpleasant, or when I had a complicated decision to make. I was pacing in circles, walking three circles to my left, then three to my right, back and forth, until I could figure out what to say and how to say it.

Before I could even call my kids to let them know what had happened, Greta came back and told me that they had stabilized Ian, but he was still in a coma.

I ran faster than a marathon track star to room 208, thinking that no matter how fast I ran, I wouldn’t get to him fast enough. Finally reaching the room, I fell to my knees at the sight of my battered husband lying in the hospital bed. Greta was right behind me to catch me, or else I would have fallen right to the floor, but at that point I wouldn’t have cared. Ian’s head was wrapped in blood-soaked gauze, his left eye was black and blue, and his leg was in a cast, elevated about a foot off of the bed. It was the most painful sight I ever had to endure.

♦♦♦♦♦

Hours turned into days, days turned into weeks, and before I knew it, it had been three months since the accident and Ian still hadn’t woken up from his coma. I still had hope, though, that he would pull through this, that our love was strong enough to withstand anything. Claire and Sean couldn’t bring themselves to see him that much. They came with me once a week, some weeks not at all. I couldn’t help but to be by his bedside for at least an hour or two every day. I would talk to him, tell him things that had happened that day.

“You know, Claire asked me today if I’d tell her the story of how we met and fell in love. It was really hard for me to tell her because I can’t talk about a memory with you without the tears approaching.” It was a lot easier to recall the memories than it was to tell my daughter about them.

♦♦♦♦♦

I can still remember that night, just like it was yesterday. I was heading down to a local concert in Napa to celebrate my friend Layla’s birthday. I had just turned twenty-one, so I was very excited to finally able to go out with her. When I got there, Layla spotted me almost instantly.

“Hey Adelyn! Over here!” Layla shouted with a slight slur to her voice. She was always a lightweight.

“Some party, huh? Where is everyone?” I asked, wondering what kind of man candy she had invited for me that night. Layla was always trying to set me up with someone every time I turned around.

“Well, this is Martin, one of the guys I work with. Ian, George and George’s girlfriend Abby are on their way. You’ll meet them all when they get here.”

“All right sounds good. I’m gonna go grab a beer, I’ll be right back.” I said with a sly smirk on my face, proud of the fact that I could legally go into a beer tent. By the time I came back, Layla informed me that the other three were there, but I had to drink my beer real fast because they were at a bar down the street. I just gave her the “are you kidding me” look while thinking, “Oh God, this is gonna spark a great night.”

After chugging one of the most disgusting beverages I’ve ever drank in my life, we headed over to Murphy’s Irish Pub on First Street East, about a block and half away from where the concert was. That’s where life as I knew it changed. I saw a very attractive man standing in front of me. He was about five foot seven, blonde hair and blue-green eyes, a little on the skinny side, but definitely a sight that caught my eye. “Hi, I’m Adelyn.”

“Nice to meet you Adelyn, I’m Ian. Can I get you a drink?”

I didn’t want to pass this up, even though my head was still racked from drinking that beer so fast. So reluctantly I said, “Sure, I’ll have a screwdriver,” handing him my ID, knowing that the bartender would ask, “I just turned twenty-one two weeks ago.” I said with an innocent smile.

As the night carried on, I felt something that I thought I couldn’t feel. I had met someone who was genuinely interested in what I had to say, someone who looked me in the eyes when he was talking to me, someone who was not afraid to be himself, instead of trying to show off to impress me. Everything fell into place from that night on.

♦♦♦♦♦

The next year and half went by so fast, it felt like it had come up on us too soon, but at the same time it felt as if we had been together our entire lives. I still remember one of the cheesiest, yet completely romantic, nights of my life.

It was just another Saturday night, just like any other had been in the past year and a half. We were out to dinner at a local restaurant called Elements, which was just a few blocks away from Murphy’s. We walked that night with it being such a beautiful evening. The stars were in perfect alignment and there wasn’t a cloud in the sky. There was a light breeze along the pier, but not enough to reach where we were. We had just come upon Murphy’s when Ian looked down at the ground.

“Aw shit, my shoe is untied.” He usually wore Converse shoes, but that night he wore a pair of slip-ons. By the time I could realize this and turn around to say, “Wait a minute…” he was already down on one knee with the ring box open.

“Adelyn, I’ve been telling you every day for the last year and a half that I want to spend the rest of my life with you. Now I want to make it official. Will you do me the honor of being my wife?”

By the time he was done speaking, my eyes were so full of tears that I couldn’t even see straight. “Yes, of course I will. Nothing would make me happier.”

A year later, we were married on Newport Beach, right on the Pacific Ocean. The sky was filled with five different shades of blue, with just a few clouds in the sky, which was enough to make the day perfect. We spent our honeymoon in Ireland, the most wonderful experience of our lives.

♦♦♦♦♦

Two years later, we were blessed with two gifts from heaven. Our twins, Claire Elizabeth and Sean Michael, were welcomed into our family with open hearts and open arms. After nine months of doctor visits and hormone rages, the soccer players in my belly were finally here. Claire had the most beautiful brown eyes I had ever seen, Sean had gorgeous blue eyes that would melt your heart away, and they both had the blonde hair of their Mommy and Daddy. That was the first time I had seen Ian cry.

♦♦♦♦♦

My thoughts and memories were interrupted when Greta told me that Doctor Allen needed to speak with me right away.

“Mrs. Carlisle, as you know, we’ve been running many tests on your husband to see if there’s any indication he’ll wake up. We’ve checked his brain activity and nothing has changed since the accident. At this point, we can no longer care for him, as he’s been here for three months. That’s the longest we can hold a patient. The burdening choice we have to leave you with is whether or not you want to have him transferred to a full-time facility or whether you just want to let him go.”

At that moment, my heart sunk to my toes. How can you even ask me to make a choice like that? This is my husband we’re talking about. This is the love of my life, the man I have loved for twenty years and the father of my children. I could never live with myself if I terminated his life. “Can I have a few days to think about it?”

“Of course you can, but you should know that the absolute latest we can keep him here is next Friday. So we need your decision by then.”

As he left me alone with Ian, I looked back at the hospital bed. With that I was forced to remind myself of the conversation that Ian and I had after his father passed away.

♦♦♦♦♦

At age seventy-five, Ian’s dad had died of a heart attack, his third one in two years. His mother was devastated, as any woman who has just lost her husband should be. He couldn’t leave her side for days, knowing that she needed him just as much as he needed her. Following that, Ian and I realized that life is too short. We started discussing our will and what actions we would want taken in the event that something happened to us. Ian’s words resounded in my head for days.

If I’m ever in a coma or a vegetative state, spare yourself and me the misery and just pull the plug. I don’t want you to put yourself and the kids through something like that in high hopes that maybe, just maybe, I’ll wake up. That’s no way to live your life.”

♦♦♦♦♦

Thinking back on that conversation, I looked over at the hospital bed once again. He looked so innocent and helpless. I couldn’t help but to cry at the thought that I would have to live my life without him. I was torn between granting his final wish or keeping him vegetated solely for the fact that I couldn’t bring myself to let him go. I thought it would be best to see what Claire and Sean thought I should do. Who was I kidding? No sixteen-year-old kid wanted to lose a parent. It was the hardest decision I would ever make.

I went home to talk to Claire and Sean. As I expected, they were not very happy with the choice I had been presented with.

“Mom, you can't do this! Give him more time!” Claire shouted at me in hysterics. She was definitely a Daddy's girl, and was on the verge of hatred toward me if I did this.

Sean was just sat there in silence for a few minutes, trying to hide the tears that were running down his face. “I'll never forgive you if you do this,” his voice was so quiet and melancholy, as if that was the only thing he could think of to see.

After a week of contemplating my choices, keeping Ian’s wishes in the back of my mind, after arguing with Claire and Sean about the situation, I finally made my decision. Hoping that I never had to make a decision like this again, I made my way to St. Luke’s to talk to Doctor Allen.

♦♦♦♦♦

“Hi, Adelyn. How are you doing?” Greta greets me at the front desk. Her tone is more melancholy than usual, knowing that I have just made the hardest decision of my life.

I can’t help but to burst into tears as Greta pulls me into her arms. “I’m still not sure that this is what I should do. I know this is what Ian wants, but this is not what I want, and it’s definitely not what my kids want.”

Doctor Allen approached me as I pull myself away from Greta’s hold. “Hi, Mrs. Carlisle. Are your children coming today?”

“No, they’re too upset with me. They want me to keep him alive, hoping that one day he’ll wake up. No matter how much I tried to explain to them that this is what he wanted, they still argued with me not to do it.”

Walking toward the room, I feel like there is a surround sound stereo hooked up to my heart. I can feel my heart shattering into a million and one pieces. My stomach is twisted into a pretzel.

By the time we get to the room, I feel all the color flush from my face. My kids are sitting at their father's bedside, looking at me with the most disdainful look I've ever seen.

“Daddy? It's me, Claire. You have to wake up. We need you so much right now. I need you. There's only so much that Mom can do. Please wake up.” The brokenhearted look on my daughter's face is enough to break mine even more.

“Dad, it's Sean. Claire's right, you gotta wake up. Who's gonna give me advice on girls and play lacrosse with me? We really need our father, so please wake up.” I can tell my son is trying to be tough, but the expression in his eyes is enough to tell me otherwise. Okay, my turn now. As helpless as he had been looking, there was a look of contentment to his face. Now he would be content in Heaven.

“Ian, I am giving you your final wish and letting you go. I don’t want to do this. In fact, this is the last thing I want to do. I don’t know if Claire and Sean will ever forgive me for this, but I really hope they do.” I look over at them to see the same look they had when I walked in, now mixed with heartache and torture. “I vowed that if it ever came to this, I would respect your final wishes, so I’ll stick to my word and do this for you. I love you with all my heart. I always have and I always will. Goodbye my love, I’ll see you in Heaven.” The tears are running down my face faster than I ever knew possible. This is killing me inside and all I want to do was fall to the floor and not get up. I look at Doctor Allen and, unable to speak through all of the tears, nod my head to indicate my readiness.

As Doctor Allen turns off the life support machine, I kneel down next to Ian’s bedside, with my kids right beside me, and I hold his hand with an intense flow of tears that are completely unstoppable. The heart monitor goes from a steady beat to a slower beat, then finally to a flat line.

I am in shell shock when the machine starts beeping steadily again. I look up at Doctor Allen to see why he turned the machine back on, just to find out that he hadn’t. I look over at Ian to see his eyes fluttering open. He all of a sudden starts coughing. I can’t believe it for everything in my body that my love has just woken up out of a three-month coma.

“Oh my God! Ian you’re awake! I can’t believe it! This is the miracle I’ve prayed for!” I feel all the color come back to my face and the light in my eyes return.

“I-I-I’m sorry, but who are you?”

Escape - Short Story

It had been a typical night. Hailey was in her room, listening to whatever was on the radio at the time, twirling her long blonde hair, but most of all, trying to drown out the noises below her. Her younger brother Ryan was sitting next to her.

“Hailey, when is this going to stop?” He looked up at her with the most sincere look of innocence.

She said the same thing she heard from her mother every time she used to ask the same thing. “It'll be all right, Ryan, don't worry.”

Hailey was seventeen years old and knew better than the bullshit her mother tried to feed her about her not-so-wonderful relationship with her boyfriend, Jerry. She thought that if she wore sweaters and tons of make-up, they wouldn't figure it out, but Hailey knew better than to buy into that. Ryan was only six and much too young to understand. Her mother was hiding something, and Hailey knew that. She just couldn't believe her mother was so naïve as to think she would fall for her act. Her mother was always a shady person, and it all started the night her father was killed.

Hailey's father was her best friend. She loved him dearly, so much that sometimes she used to think she loved him more than her mother did. She then found out that she did. her parents got married when really young, mostly because her mother was pregnant with her. She must not have been satisfied with her father, because she was fired from her teaching career for having sexual relations with the dean of the college. Hailey wasn’t shocked by that. She was shocked when the very same night they found this out, her father was mysteriously killed. They never found out who did it, so the bastard who did it got away with it as well.

Her mother pulled off the grieving widow act worthy of an Academy Award: crying all the time, bringing pity on herself from the neighbors who brought enough food over to feed them for a year, you know, all that shit. But then she started drinking very heavily, leaving Hailey to take care of Ryan. That winter, Ryan got a hold of her glass of whiskey and got really sick and almost died. That was enough for her mother to wise up and go to rehab. Rehab. That’s where their lives took the worst twist of all.

Hailey's mother left her and Ryan behind for six months to go to a 24-hour rehab facility. Just turning eighteen, she couldn't live the life that most people her age were. She was home with Ryan, but they were happier in that time than any other time in their lives. Granted, she was forced to get a part-time job so that she and Ryan could survive. It was almost as if she were a teenage mother, but only temporarily.

When she came back from the center they were introduced to Jerry, a recovered drug addict and alcoholic, who her mother had been seeing while she was there. “Oh, this guy’s a winner.” was the first thought running through her mind.

“Mom, why in the hell would you bring this guy home? First of all, you just got out of rehab! Second, that's where you met this guy?! What the hell is wrong with you?!”

“I didn't meet him in rehab, I've known him for a long time, but yes, he happened to be there too and we got to talking and thing just...I don't know...progressed from there.”

“Either way, he's a recovering drug addict and you want him around your children?! Do you care about us at all?!”

“Of course I do! I went--”

“If you really cared about us, you wouldn't be bringing some guy you hit it off with in rehab home with you!”

“Who I bring home is none of your business, young lady, and I'd appreciate it if you'd butt out of my personal life.”

“Wow, mom, this is the new meaning of low, even for you. Come on Ryan, let's get you up to bed.”

Over the next couple months, Jerry was spending virtually every day at their house, portraying that his relationship with her mother was in the “honeymoon phase” and that they were so happy together. After about two months of the nauseating behavior her mother was displaying, he moved in with them. That’s where Hailey's misery began. Within days, Jerry started drinking again, which led to her mother drinking as well.

One night in particular was the most painful she'd ever witness. She walked in the door after taking Ryan to the store to see her mother with a Jack Daniels bottle in one hand and a half empty glass in the other. She couldn't believe how pathetic she was, but what made her even more angry was that this woman was supposed to be her mother.

“Mom, I'm not even going to lecture you right now. I just want you to know that you are the biggest disappointment in my life. The only thing I have to be proud of is my little brother, and that's because I raised him instead of you. So maybe he'll be a little less fucked up than I am because you don't know how to be a mother.”

Her mother wouldn't even acknowledge her presence because she was so drunk and entranced in her whiskey glass. Hailey could not believe what she was seeing. She was coming in second place to a glass of alcohol. She had no choice but to look the other way and continue to care for Ryan.

The night she saw Jerry throw a glass against the wall and bash her mother's head into the table was the night she decided she needed to get out and take Ryan with her. The sight of her mother's bloody head unconscious on the table was enough to make her want to vomit, so she knew there was no way she could let Ryan see her.

Hailey quickly packed her bags and a couple for Ryan as well. He asked her where they were going and why her mother wasn’t coming with us. She told him that they weren’t safe living with Mommy and Jerry anymore and they had to get away from them. She knew that he was upset, but she also knew that she was doing him a world of good by taking him away and sparing him the misery of the life she had to live out.

Her mother died three months later from blunt trauma to the head, and Jerry was thrown in jail for life. She then knew it was the best decision she could have made to get out of that house because she had the gut instinct that he would not have stopped after her mother.

No doubt it was hard for her to be on her own at eighteen, but with at least with a high school degree under her belt, she was able to get two part-time jobs while she worked her way through college and raised a seven-year-old. She ended up getting her Master's Degree in Psychology and became a therapist for abused women. She figured that since her mother was a lost cause, then she should at least try to help other people through their hard times. Even though her mother was not the greatest person in the world, she still loved her and wished every day that things would have worked out better for her.