
Home > Marriage > Couples You Should Know
 Marriage Partnership, Summer 2000
A Second Chance at
Life
My husband's brain tumor
was the last thing we
expected. But the outcome
surprised us even more
by Carrie Fearn
Photo by Steve Greiner
Kevin's headaches
started the day before our wedding. He woke up that morning feverish, his
head throbbing. Thankfully, the pain subsided and he felt much better on
our wedding day. We enjoyed a wonderful honeymoon in the Caribbean, but soon
after we returned home the headaches came back.
At first, I joked that my new husband was allergic to me. But as the frequency
and intensity of Kevin's headaches brought on fatigue and depression,
I worried that getting married had somehow upset his equilibrium. Kevin is
a born athletea tremendous runner, an avid tennis player and a fierce
competitor on the basketball court. But when the pain consumed him and he
said he didn't have energy for anything else, I feared he was making
excuses. Maybe in reality he wasn't happy in our marriage.
Then December came and I wanted to get ready for our first Christmas. When
I suggested we go out to find a tree, Kevin said he didn't want to bother
getting one. What on earth would keep a young couple from hunting for their
first Christmas tree? Although we did eventually get one, I wondered what
my husband's headaches would do to our marriage.
And it wasn't just our marriage that was affected. One day Kevin came
home and told me about an incident at work. While sitting at his computer,
he was practically paralyzed by the intense pain in his head. When he checked
with his doctor, he got a prescription for painkillers. Later, when the
medication didn't diminish the intensity or frequency of the headaches,
the doctor lectured Kevin about his posture while sitting at the computer.
Entering the
Maze
A few months passed, and we celebrated our first Easter as a married couple.
But before the day was over, we found ourselves in the emergency room. Kevin
had awakened early that morning to go for his usual five-mile run. Later
in the day, after church and then dinner with my family, Kevin said he wanted
to go home. By the time we got there, he could hardly move. I called the
doctor, with Kevin in the background ready to explode from the pain. "I'm
going to rip the phone right out of the wall if he tells me it's from
working at the computer," he shouted.
We rushed to the emergency room, where I had to hold back the panic that
rose up every time I thought of what might happen to my husband. Finally,
after hours of waiting for test results and X-rays to be studied, the doctor
came in. He got right to the point. "The bad news is you have a brain tumor,"
he told Kevin. "The good news is that it's very treatable."
The doctor seemed optimistic, which gave us hope that my husband's headaches
weren't life-threatening. Still, I couldn't fight off the numbness
that washed over me as I tried to make out what our future would hold.
We would have to wait until morning to learn more from the neurosurgeon.
I wanted to reassure Kevin, but I couldn't find the right words. When
I heard the word tumor, I automatically thought cancer. I wondered
if I would become a widow after just a few months of marriage. Kevin, who
had watched a good friend succumb to brain cancer, struggled with the same
fears. "I just hope there's something left when they start cutting away,"
he said in anguish.
I had never felt this helpless. There was nothing either of us could do to
calm our fears or to change the outcome of the surgery. All we could do was
pray. "Please, God, help Kevin to be okay. Please don't let it be cancer."
I had trusted in a loving Father since childhood, and I had always believed
in prayer. But I had never needed him to answer my prayers more than I needed
it just then.
Life or
Death
It was 2 a.m. when Kevin finally was taken to a room, and he had only a few
hours to rest before the doctor would make his morning rounds. I sat by his
bedside, still in shock, as he tossed and turned. While Kevin tried to sleep,
I prayed through the night.
The neurosurgeon came by at 5 a.m. After a brief introduction, he described
the location of the tumor. It was near the center of Kevin's brain and
about the size of a golf ball. This type of growth was rarely malignant,
he said, but posed other dangers because of its location. The surgeon would
need to drill holes in Kevin's head and make an incision along his hairline
and on the right side of his head to expose his brain and remove the tumor.
The doctor then explained the risks. Even though it probably wasn't
cancer, the threat to Kevin's life was real. He had a colloid cyst in
the third ventricle of his brain. He could be partially paralyzed as a result
of the surgery. He could have trouble speaking or even lose the ability to
speak. And his personality could change. My husband might be a different
person when he came out of the surgery.
'The bad news is you
have
a brain tumor,' the doctor said.
'The good news is that
it's very treatable.'
"Does the surgery need to be done right away?" I asked. "Do we have time
to get a second opinion?"
The doctor assured me that this was a life-or-death situation. "The tumor
is pressing up against your husband's brain," he said. "He could stop
breathing at any time."
We tried not to think about the what-ifs, but there were so many questions:
what if he didn't survive? What if he stopped breathing before they
could get him into surgery? What if I didn't like the person he might
become after brain surgery? What if he didn't like meor himself?
Finally, Kevin voiced his two greatest fears: "I hope I'm the same person
when I come out," and then, "My biggest fear is losing you."
I held his hand and assured him I would be there for him and that we would
go through this together, no matter what happened. We assured each other
of our love. I just wanted to hold Kevin and savor every last minute with
him. At 1 p.m. he would be wheeled into surgery, and all we could do was
beg God to spare his life and steady the hands of the surgeon and attending
physicians. It all still seemed unreal.
Time of
Uncertainty
The hours spent waiting while Kevin was in surgery are a blur in my memory.
I remember going with my mom to the hospital chapel to pray, then returning
to the waiting room where someonemy dad?brought me a cup of coffee. It
was Monday evening. I hadn't slept or eaten and was still wearing my
Easter dress. When my in-laws arrived from Ohio, my mom tried to comfort
Kevin's mom. We could only wait.
After four long hours, Kevin's doctor emerged from the operating room.
The surgery was a success, but Kevin still wasn't out of danger. The
biggest risk now was that the swelling in his brain could cause him to go
into a coma and die.
When I first saw my husband in the intensive care unit, he was groggy, barely
able to squeeze my hand. But the next day was even worse. He looked like
Frankenstein's monster, with large black stitches threaded across the
width of his swollen forehead. The swelling in his brain caused him to lose
his short-term memory. I would tell him something, but he would forget it
within minutes.
Visiting friends and hospital therapists prodded him with questions. His
memories were garbled. When asked where he went to college, Kevin gave the
name of his employer. When asked about his favorite NBA team, Kevin responded
without hesitation, "The Knicks." (His friends teased him about it later
because Kevin hated the Knicks. He was a lifelong Celtics fan.)
I tried to be hopeful, but I couldn't quell the fear that I might never
have my husband back. Would he ever be the same man I fell in love with?
Would he even remember getting married? Once, as Kevin was surrounded by
visitors, I said, "At least you know who your wife is." He looked confused,
like he had no idea. Then he motioned to his friend's wife, as if to
say, "Her?" I was crushed. But I tried to imagine how overwhelmed Kevin must
have been, with so many conversations going on around him.
While I imagined the worst, I was determined to stay positive. Most of the
time, he remembered me. But even when he didn't, I believed that God
would heal Kevin in his own time. And it did take time.
The week after the surgery, my husband couldn't remember our marriage,
our honeymoon or even my name. He'd lost 20 pounds, was too weak to
walk and couldn't take care of himself. Today, six years after he left
the hospital, we know we have experienced a miracle.
Of course, the years haven't been easy. Kevin endured every kind of
therapy imaginablephysical, speech, occupational. But, in a matter of weeks,
he made remarkable progress. After just three weeks in two different hospitals,
Kevin was ready to come home. His homecoming was overwhelming at first. But
once he was in familiar surroundings, the memories came flooding back. He
knew me, and he remembered our wedding, our honeymoon and our first Christmas
together.
Kevin began riding a stationary bike and lifting weights. Although his strength
and mental capacity were improving, he still needed round-the-clock care
for the first. We spent more time together, rediscovered each other and fell
in love all over again.
The Road
Home
While things slowly got back to normal, we realized we both had changed.
When we first met, an active faith in Christ meant more to me than it did
to Kevin. Going to church and spending time with other Christians was a bigger
part of my life than his, and prayer came more naturally to me.
But after enduring months of pain and seeing his life and personality hang
in the balance, Kevin opened himself to the work of God. The personality
change that I had feared turned out to be slightand welcome. Kevin has
become a more sensitive, more relaxed and more spiritual husband than the
man I married in 1993.
Just a few months after his surgery, Kevin made the difficult transition
back to work. He spent many long hours at the office to prove to himselfand
to his employerthat he could function at his former level. Gradually, it
got easier, and four years later Kevin was taken off the anti-seizure medication,
which sometimes made him groggy.
Two years after Kevin's surgery, we welcomed a baby girl into our lives.
Three years later, I cried in the delivery room as the doctor said, "It's
a boy!" I can't imagine life without Colleen and Andrew.
Today there are few visible signs of Kevin's ordealonly a faded scar
and a few small indentations on his head. All of his memories have come back,
and he plans to run the Chicago Marathon this fall to commemorate his fortieth
birthday.
I don't know what our marriage would have been like if my husband had
not had a life-threatening brain tumor. But I know that after supporting
each other through surgery and the years of recovery, we know what it means
to trust God with our health, our marriage, our very lives. God was with
us in our time of suffering; he listened and answered our prayers.
As newlyweds, we faced a life-threatening illness. God chose to give us a
second chance, and we rejoice in the richness of this gift.
Carrie Fearn is a writer and former editor of Safety and Health
magazine. She and Kevin live in the Chicago area with their two children.
Copyright © 2000 by the author or Christianity Today International/Marriage
Partnership magazine. Click here
for reprint information on Marriage Partnership.
Summer 2000, Vol. 17, No. 2, Page 34
Marriage Partnership
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