If not, then come and speak to me for I have seen many
miracles, large and small, in my life.
I’ve never seen a miracle without God involved in there
somewhere and with a purpose. Sometimes the miracle even seems to be a curse,
until you can see the purpose. The seven babies that died may not seem
miraculous or purposeful, but they were not a tragedy. Those babies simply took
a short cut to the Lord, but it was through them I came to Jesus as my savior.
I took the scene route with all its potholes and stormy days.

We hadn’t expected a pregnancy, let alone a birth, so had no name planned. We called her
Noelle since it was so close to Christmas. We gave her the middle name Suzanne
to match the French of her first name. Suzanne means Lily. It kind of ties
things together for a Christian, Noelle means “Christmas” and Lilies are often
representative of Easter.
Noelle was taken
overnight from Delaware County Memorial Hospital to the neonatal unit at
Fitzgerald Mercy. She was placed in an incubator with a dozen tubes running
from it obscuring the sight of her. We couldn’t even touch her or hold her she
was so delicate. After a few days some nurse would bring her to the window in
the door to hold up for us to see. After several more days Lois was allowed in
to hold her in her lap to bond, and finally I was allowed to do the same. In order to enter the neonatal ICU and touch our child, we had to first scrub (don't touch me, I'm sterile) put on a green gown, latex gloves, a surgical mask and a elastic cap, like a shower cap.
It was a stressful time.
Every so often a nurse would enter the ward and jab Noelle's microscopic foot heel with a needle. She
was placed under special lights because she got jaundice. It was discovered my
wife and I had conflicting RH factors in our blood, resulting in Noelle having
to endure a complete blood transfusion.

On April 29, we
accompanied Noelle to Wills Eye Hospital in Philadelphia, where under anesthesia
she was given an intense and complete eye examination. The doctors reported
they could find nothing wrong with her eyes. Two of the dire expectations given
upon her birth had not come to be, she obviously lived, and she would not be blind. Now
the only question remaining was mental capacity.
The answer to that came over time. She was to be regularly placed
in the gifted classes in school. She earned many recognitions (left) including the President’s Award for
Academic Excellence and Citizenship signed by President Ronald Reagan and she was
listed in Who’s Who Among High School
Students during both her Junior and Senior years. I think we can safely rule out her being “extremely mentally
retarded”.



At the end of 1980, my grandmother was in much distress. She
was home from the hospital, where they treated her in the coronary unit, but the
exact nature of her problem still was not fully diagnosed. Her daily
suffering continued.
On New Year’s Day, 1981, her back was hurting. She slept the
entire day of January 2. She was brought down to see Noelle on the third, but
went home exhausted. She couldn’t pull herself up on the 8th. Now
she went into a period of being unable to stay awake during the day. On the 14th,
she got herself up off a chair by herself, walked from the kitchen to the
living room, then fell and hurt her stomach. A nurse was visiting regularly and
told her she needed to drink more. Problem was she didn’t feel like eating or
drinking.

On March 3rd, my family, Evelyn Weinmann and Mr. Heaney were at our house for Laurel’s 3rd birthday. (Left is Evelyn, Harry Heaney and Laurel.) Lois and I
began leaving the kids with my parents at times so we could go away or have
celebrations on our own. We took Noelle
to the doctor for her regular checkups on March 30. She now weighted 11 pounds
and 9 ounces. On this same day, President Reagan, along with three others, was
shot in an assassination attempt.

He
took away Lois’ key to his house and half the time wouldn’t answer the door when she
came around. By April 1981 he wasn’t answering her phone calls and she was growing very concerned about his well being. On May 3rd, after having no communications with him for a couple weeks, I suggested we should drive over to his house. She was somewhat hestitent about going there, fearful of his irrability and the loaded weapon, but she did tentatively go knock on the front door. No one answered her knocking, so she yelled for him. Lois was quite fearful about trying to get in somehow. If we tried to open a window he might shoot us.
Finally, she went up the street to her Uncle Ed’s, who was always pretty close with his brother-in-law. Ed was married to Lois' Aunt Evelyn. (On the left are Lois' mother, Dorothy - the tall girl, her Aunt Sally and her Uncle Ed as children.) He came down with a spare key and opened the front door. We discovered her father in the bedroom, half unconscious sprawled across his bed. Ed called 9-1-1 and an ambulance
showed up quickly. The paramedics took him to Delaware County Memorial
Hospital.


Mother’s Day fell on the 10th inbetween all this drama.
My mom and grandmother came down to watch the kids. In the
morning of the 11th Lois and I had to meet with a lawyer. Afterward,
mom took me to Mr. Heaney’s to get his car and Lois to the hospital to be with
her father. There was still no response on his part. My grandmother was
experiencing back pains again and on the 12th mom took her to the
hospital for back and knee x-rays. There were no broken bones. She was given
pills and told to rest.
The doctors
basically agreed with us that Mr. Heaney was probably dead, but they could not legally
turn off life support. That choice fell to Lois. She claims I went in, leaned toward his ear and said to
him, “The Phillies stink.” When he showed no reaction, I said he was dead. I
don’t quite remember doing that. I do remember that I went up to him and gazed
deep into his eyes and then told Lois there was no one there. At any rate, she
told them to turn off the machines during the afternoon of May 13. Mr. Heaney
died that evening. (This photo, as far as I know, is the last one of Harry Heaney, taken on May 1, 12 days before he died.)



Lois and I began the
job of clean up. In the process I tried shutting a drawer in a chest in the
bedroom, but it seemed to be stuck. I pulled out one of the offending drawers and there were envelopes taped
to the under bottom. This was so with the others as well. When I pulled off an envelope
and opened the flap money fell out. There was over $4,000 taped in envelopes
under the drawers. Boy, did we check everything carefully after that.
The noise was from waterfalls pouring down every wall. Part of the living room ceiling lay crumbled on the floor. I dashed in and through the house, down the cellar steps from the kitchen and plunged up to my waist in water. The basement was completely flooded. It’s a wonder I wasn’t electrocuted. I was able to find the valve that shut off the water to the house.


Lois flopped in a
chair to feed Noelle. Laurel sat on the staircase looking terrified. For years after she would panic whenever it rained hard.
A water pipe had
burst in the bathroom upstairs. It had to happen on the one day of the month when I didn’t visit the house. It was a couple days until the beginning
of June. We had to be out of our rental house by July 1 and here we stood in utter
devastation and desolation.
3 comments:
What a life you have lead Larry! If they wrote a movie script no one would believe it. By the way, I do believe in miracles. I have seen them in my own life.
Ron
What an incredible chapter of your life, Larry!
BTW, my local grocery checkout lady told me she and her siblings found $200K in their father's trailer, after he passed...IRS, eat your heart out!!!
:-)
-Andy
What an interesting post! The story about your daughter is especially beautiful and inspiring. Miracles do indeed happen.
By the way, I read your answers to the 40 questions on your other blog and enjoyed them (I could relate to many).
I smiled when you described yourself as "an introvert's introvert".
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