I often upset my parents by saying that if there was a testament to divine intervention than my life would be it. It upsets them because I follow this by saying that I do not believe in divine intervention and that I attribute my success to good luck. The fact that I ended up in the current position I hold and enjoying a career that I love was easily a million to one. I made multiple attempts to derail my cart and yet it always seemed to fall back on path.
For reasons that do not really concern this blog, I moved away from faith in my early twenties. Initially it had to do with trust issues and a lack of understanding of the bad that exists in this world. It is somewhat a clique to say that one sees an innocent suffer and stops believing in God. But given the mistakes that I have made, I will admit that it is hard to believe that God is intervening for me when I see those much more innocent than me suffering.
Still. I can understand that pain may be necessary for a greater good. So I can see God in a world that has suffering. And I can understand that the one suffering the pain may not see or understand the good that comes of it. Take a child with fever and a stiff neck. A lumbar puncture is necessary to diagnose the condition and guide therapy. The procedure hurts and there is no way the child understands why one doctor is holding them down while another jabs a sharp object into his back. But a greater good, not understood by the child is to be gained. God may work that way.
Yet I still do not believe. To be clear: it is not that I don't believe in God, it is that I don't believe that God makes direct influences into our lives. And it is not that I don't see things that defy my explanation. I have witnessed babies breath when I thought they would not. Infants near death who suddenly are better. However, every time one family experiences a miracle, I walk over to the next bed and see where one did not occur.
And still they come.
Jaydon was born prematurely at 27 weeks. When he was one day old the nurse tried to place a tube down through his nose and into his stomach. This is an NG tube, which we routinely place in premature babies to give feedings when the baby is too immature to nipple. Well with Jaydon the tube would not pass. It coiled back up through his mouth. So I was called to the bedside and I advanced the tube as far as I could until I started to feel resistance. We took an x-ray and the tube stopped midway between the mouth and the stomach. Jaydon had a tracheal-esophageal fistula with an esophageal pouch. This means that the tube that he swallows into does not go all the way to the stomach but stops in the chest. A second tube that connects to his trachea (wind pipe) goes to his stomach. For a better picture of this condition you can visit the UCSF web site. www.pedsurg.ucsf.edu/esophageal_atresia/ The problem is that the acid in the stomach may back up into the lungs and the secretions in the mouth will collect in the pouch and spill into the lungs. So this small 1 pound 6 ounce baby needs a surgery, and not just one. Well with a minor cardiac surgery added on he had three surgeries before he was a month old.
Shortly after his third surgery we saw something a little unusual. The diaphragm on his right side started to rise higher in his chest, causing his right lung to collapse. See the diaphragm must move down to increase the space in the chest and pull air into the lungs. For Jaydon, the right diaphragm stayed up rather than moved down.
We tried four or five times to take him off the ventilator and every time he failed. He struggled to breath and I kept blaming that right diaphragm. I had to reintubate (place a tube down through his mouth and into the upper part of his trachea) him every time. He would not come off the ventilator. So we placed a camera down into his airway and everything looked normal. Next we performed fluoroscopy. This is when we take a video x-ray of the lungs. We do not do this very often in small children because of the radiation exposure. An x-ray is a single picture. To create a motion picture, it takes hundreds of pictures. With the study we can actually watch the lungs open and close and the diaphragms move. Every time Jaydon took a breath his left diaphragm went down, but his right went up. It looked like a seesaw. I watched this for about twenty seconds. The study was conclusive, the diaphragm was paralyzed and the infant was ventilator dependant.
After the study we had a family conference and the pulmonologist, surgeon and myself (all having reviewed the study) agreed that a fourth surgery was necessary to tie the diaphragm down in the hopes that this would allow Jaydon to come off the ventilator. Reluctantly Jaydon's parents agreed.
The night before his surgery the nurse caring for Jaydon found him with his endotracheal tube out. He had coughed the tube out of his airway. Normally this would have caused his oxygen levels to drop and alarms would have sounded. But Jaydon was breathing comfortably on his own without any extra support. He was breathing as normal as any healthy, premature baby. He remained off ventilatory support until he went home one month later.
I can't explain what happened. I saw, with my own eyes that the diaphragm did not work. And I witnessed this test just three days before Jaydon coughed out that tube. I took Jaydon off the ventilator many times and he never lasted more than a few hours, even with lots of additional support. Yet here he was breathing comfortably without any support at all.
So was this a miracle. As I told you before I do not believe in miracles. And the God that looks upon me may be shaking his/her head in disbelief, but I will still have to chalk this up to one of those things that happens that I simply can't explain.
However if you want, you can use it to believe. I wont hold it against you.
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2 comments:
Hi Paul,
This is another great thought provoking entry on your blog.
I must say I have been in your position, just not understanding why God permits suffering. But rather than turning away from God, I turned to the Bible for answers. And there are answers to your dilemma. As I have found a person has to want to dig or search for it.
The site below gives a direct answer to your dilemma. When you have time if you so desire, check it out.
http://www.watchtower.org/e/200611/article_02.htm
Keep up the good work in saving babies.
I love reading about the odds of survival for these little ones.
Best to you and your family.
Elaine
Elaine
Sorry that it has been so long without a reply. I have been quite busy with work and moving into a new home.
I think that I initially turned away from God because of certain personal injustices in my life. I think that is probably a common story. I have since moved beyond that and would say that the pain and suffering in this world have little effect on my religious beliefs.
I think that religion is an important and personal aspect for many people. And I have come to respect all religions as long as they do not condone violence or hatred (often a distortion of man). I think that it is a good thing when people gather strength or comfort from a belief that makes this world right for them.
My post is more about the "miracles" people see and attribute to Divine intervention. I see these same miracles. They do exist. But I attribute them to the randomness that is this world. For I also see when the miracle does not come.
Many people think that religion and science do not mix. I think this is crazy. Just knowing how 1 cell can divide and develope into a human body is amazing in itself. When one sees all that can go wrong, it is a miracle of statistics that a fully functioning human being ever is produced. I think the more we know about how we evolve only gives more credence to a higher power. So I am not saying that I do not believe in a higher power. I just have trouble defining it.
My best to you and your family, as well.
Paul
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