Let me just start by saying Harley had the fatal, genetic, mitochondri
The day she passed (Monday), we had to decide on the brain surgery in the morning, first off and the neurologist and neurosurgeo
Turns out it wasn't, so we went home to take showers and got a call from my mother-in-l
They kept checking her pulse and saying she had a weak heartbeat, so we felt hope until the doctor pulled Cameron and I aside and she said they'd been trying to resuscitate her for 20 minutes and she didn't think she was coming back. It didn't even seem like a minute had passed. She then went to go oversee the nurses trying to bring her back and we cried and waited probably a minute or two more (I have no conception of time for when this happened) then decided we needed to let her go. We went to the head of her bed while they still did CPR and ran our fingers through her hair and kissed her and cried. We told her how much we loved her and how so very proud we were that she fought this long. I told her to say hi to my Uncle Wayne and (grandpa) Pa (in Heaven) for me. We then told them we wanted to stop, so they did. I remember watching them take all the lines off her and take the tube out of her throat from bagging her. They let us hold her and sit with her and our nurse, Bree, gave her other patient to another nurse so she could stay with us. She was so nice, I will never forget her.
When I was holding her I asked my mother-in-l
About that time my husband was freaking out and had to leave. He started packing all of our stuff into a wagon that the nurses brought us. The social worker (I think) came in and he brought som
I remember almost every time I’d sit her up to readjust her on my lap her nose would bleed, but it wasn’t just blood, it was clear, watery liquid with some blood in it. I kept wiping her nose off like she was still alive, still talking to her and saying things like “Your nose is leaking, Honey Bear. [Wipe her nose] There. That’s better.” After a while I stopped crying and just held her and rocked her (I was sitting in one of those gliding chairs.). I kept rubbing my fingers through her hair and touched her face and just looked at her. After a little while the blood in her body started to ‘pool’ since her heart wasn’t circulating the blood anymore and she started to get dark red blotchy patches on her feet. I rubbed them and they’d go away. She also turned more yellow. I look back at the pictures and right after she passed (when the only pictures are of Cameron and I bawling our eyes out) she had a more normal skin tone, then the later pictures she was more yellow.
It felt like forever I was sitting there with her, but also like it was 5 minutes. It couldn’t have lasted longer, or shorter. Confusing, I know, but the time drug on in a sense, but also sped by. The lady finally came to do the bronzed prints (maybe around 11pm or 11:30pm? She passed at 9:22pm.) and apologized for being ‘scrubby’ (like we looked any better) and late, but she had a long drive and tried to shove down dinner, too. We didn’t mind. She was very nice and caring, helped that I had cried myself dry, too. Harley’s last nurse, Bree, stayed in the room the whole time to answer questions and be there for emotional support. The lady mixed up the clay (4 of them) and put them on the meal tray holder thing for a flat surface. I held Harley with her back to my chest and stomach with her feet dangling and we did her hand first. I think it was her right hand but I’m not even sure anymore. We did her hand prints twice (same hand) then her feet (I think that was her right, too). Then the lady gave me her card, a receipt that she did it (she said not to worry about paying her that she’d get the payment later) and a sheet with sayings on it for the plaque. I still don’t know what I’m putting on it. Maybe her name, ‘Honey Bear’, birth and death dates and a saying or maybe even something about CafeMom because I would NOT have been able to do it without them and their donations.
The lady then left when she was done (said she got REALLY good prints!) and I laid her back on the bed. Cameron had already gathered together all of our stuff and brought it home, so I didn’t have to worry about that. He had already called me a few times (from home: he’d already dropped his mom off) and was really upset still and needed me to come home, so I didn’t stay for her last bath like I REALLY wanted. I figured Harley wouldn’t mind if I went home to Daddy because he really needed me. My thought almost exactly was that Harley had already passed and instead of staying and giving her a bath that I needed to get home to Cameron, who was still living. I have a small twinge of regret, but I know in my heart that I did the right thing.
Leaving her there, lifeless, on that hospital bed in the ‘F’ wing of the ICU at Phoenix Children’s Hospital was the hardest thing to do. I took pictures and told her I loved her, knowing she’d always be with me now and could enjoy her existence again. I didn’t think I could do it, but I did. I left her body there, alone, with Bree, her nurse to go home to my empty nest. I left the hospital where we’d called home for the last time, empty handed and broken hearted.
Wh
Her empty body, just a shell, a vessel for her beautiful soul, was left behind at the hospital. I am so thankful we transferred to Phoenix Children’s Hospital. I know this may sound morbid, but I felt some peace with the fact that her body would be at the hospital’s morgue with other children, instead of adults. I feel more precautions should be made and more respect should be shown when it’s a child’s body, especially an infant’s, ESPECIALLY MY daughter. Going off of how the rest of the hospital staff had treated Harley (and us) I wasn’t concerned. I know they (regrettabl
T
That’s my story of the day Harley earned her sweet angel wings.
-Kat
Ete
Comments:
She was a strong little girl. I think about you guys all the time and hope you find more strength every day.
what an amazing angel! harley was such a blessing to me and so many others. i hope i can be half as strong as you have been...if I ever have to go through anything like this.
harley is an angel i think about yall all the time,pray you were a strong mommy and she fought fr everyday she was here and now god made her you,youre amazing families angel
Sorry everyone, didn't know only the first paragraph pasted yesterday. Here's the rest of the story and it does get graphic about what happens to a body after the organs stop.
Wow you are so strong I wouldn't be able to talk abut it just yet. thanks for sharing. Baby Harley is always with you now so wherever you are is home.
Your family is in my prayers, Your baby was such a fighter, you have been in my prayers.
this story breaks my heart. Y'all are in my prayers> i am so sorry for your loss :( she is the most beautiful angel in heaven
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that precious baby of yours has touched so many lives. i check your page often for updates. thank you for sharing your story with us. :)
- SThompson21
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