Wednesday, 16 November 2016

17 November 2016 - Parua Bay, Whangarei Harbour, Northland




On Wednesday morning we readied ourselves for our departure. All loose chattels secure, buttons pushed and pegs on blinds (to limit the rattling while en route), I telephoned my friend who had again offered to accommodate our Isuzu; no answer. We decided to drive on up to their property, tuck the vehicle away in its corner and drop the key and a note somewhere safe. Moments before take-off, my phone rang; that would be Liz getting back to me. But no, it was my mother ringing from the doctor’s surgery car park in distress. My father had had a heart attack and was being taken by ambulance to the hospital. We dropped everything and hurried to her.

The day turned life upside down, although not in an entirely negative way; the worst could have occurred. We gathered in the A&E department at the hospital, to learn that my father was to be airlifted by helicopter to Auckland Hospital, my sister accompanying him, while my mother travelled south with Chris and I chauffeuring her in her car, a smarter and more comfortable vehicle than our twenty year old Isuzu. 

We found my father and sister in the labyrinths of the city’s hospital, already attended by a nephew who works in the city and had been able to hurry to his grandfather’s side. My other sister from Rotorua and her youngest daughter were on their way north, so finally we all assembled in the (fortunately) large sterile room, while my father held court from his bed, tubes and wires dangling, monitors and graphs all proving there was much life in the patriarch yet.

As the afternoon wore on, we were to learn that it wasn’t this, or that, or the other, but possibly something else that sounded rather odd, however all would be correctly revealed the next morning when the consultant and her entourage did their rounds.

And so we all retired to our various accommodation, my sisters, niece and mother all having secured beds in the Domain Lodge which caters firstly for out-of-Auckland patients undergoing treatment for cancer and then tops up with all-comers such as our crew. But alas there was no more room at the inn for gypsies; we were referred to a B&B hotel in nearby Parnell which proved to be an absolute gem. From there we were able to walk up into Parnell, buy a bottle of red at the local store from the Indian proprietors then dine in a recently opened Indian restaurant a little way down the hill. The next morning we learned that the Lodged family had ordered in pizzas and spent a wonderful evening catching up. 

Back up in the ward, we found my father much perkier, as well rested as one can be, woken every hour or so for signs of life. We spent over an hour enjoying each other’s company, with our laughter and chatter surely disturbing the folk down the corridor. This was a rare opportunity for my parents to have their three daughters under the one ceiling, a first since early 2008; there was the silver lining to this drama after all.

The consultant, exuding confidence and professional competence, finally arrived with her own support group, and viewed the six extras with surprised acceptance; we were after all, from the north and the central thermal area, homes to Nga Pui and Te Arawa, people who arrive by bus and camp on the floor of the hospital room of their sick members. We had the decency to sit on the two chairs and window sill out of the way.

After fifty questions and gentle probing and poking, she announced that my father had not suffered a heart attack after all, but was suffering a condition called pericarditis, inflammation of the two thin layers of sac-like tissue that surround the heart. While painful, it rarely causes death. This was all good news. The patient could be transferred back to his local hospital and return home once the pain issues were dealt with. Rather than the exciting helicopter ride, he would be transported north by ambulance later in the day, when a back load (human rather than freight) could be arranged.

We all set off, Cindy and her daughter back to Rotorua, and we four Northlanders on the road to Whangarei. Half way back we received a call from the hospital to advise that there was no bed available in Whangarei, so Dad would have to stay another night in Auckland. It was unfortunate that we had proceeded so far; Mum was adamant we continue on.

And so as I write this, my father lies in a hospital bed hitched up to medical machinery over two hundred kilometres away, but safely away from the claws of death, my mother wanders about her apartment eating an abbreviated dinner as women do when they are left alone and we are back in our motorhome out at Parua Bay, wondering what the days ahead will hold. We may delay our departure until early next week by which time my father should have stabilised and my mother free of anxiety. 

But then we have no deadlines, and now, as the daily reports flow in from the disaster areas in the South Island, and even from the capital city at the base of the North Island, the details of our three month trip away from Whangarei remain in limbo.

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