It’s healthy to have those questions. I believe that God likes it when we doubt because it requires us to seek Him and His answers.
I visited Andy on and off in June and the first part of July at the same time I was visiting Juan Jose at his hospital. It was mid-July when Andy’s heart stopped beating for 4 minutes. The doctor needed to inform the family of Andy’s condition. I went to the hospital and met with the doctor in his office. He explained to me that Andy had an 80% chance he was going to pass away in the next 48 hours. It crushed me. I remember thinking, “but how is that even possible? We just had one baby die, there is no way we can lose two. God wouldn’t do that to us.” The doctor then told me it was time to wait. “Patience and prayer,” he said. I tried to focus on the 20% chance of survival instead of the 80% chance of him dying. Honestly, it’s easy to say but really tough to do.
For the next month I visited Andy almost every day. The days I couldn’t go, his amazing house mothers would. Also, we notified Andy’s mom and grandma so they could visit Andy in the hospital if they chose to. The doctor gave patient updates at 11am and then the families could see their children from 12-1 and again from 5-6. It took an hour to get to the hospital every day and an hour+ to get home depending on traffic. It made for long days. Family members stayed in the ICU waiting area to receive their info they desperately waited for. Most mothers or fathers slept there overnight so they had their blankets or sleeping bags with them always. And we waited. And waited. When it was time we rushed to get in line so we could find out how our babies/children were doing. Andy’s mom and grandma came almost every day and often spent the night. They usually visited him during the 5pm visit time and I would be with him during the afternoon.
In this ICU there were 12 beds all lined up side by side. They were so close that you could stand between the two and touch both patients. Most were intubated for their injuries or illnesses. Monitors, tubes and IV’s coming from every child. For the first week or two Andy was in bed #2. When he woke up after his heart stopped it didn’t take long before he started charming everyone around him again. That was Andy. A ladies man. He loved flashing that smile around at everyone. Usually when I sat in the waiting room with the other families, people always talked to me about my Andy. They would say, “Your son has the most beautiful smile. When he’s a teenager it’s going to be hard to keep him away from the ladies. “ Of course they all knew he wasn’t my son and I didn’t even call him my son. But the nurses did. For the next month I visited Andy almost every day. The days I couldn’t go, his amazing house mothers would. Also, we notified Andy’s mom and grandma so they could visit Andy in the hospital if they chose to. The doctor gave patient updates at 11am and then the families could see their children from 12-1 and again from 5-6. It took an hour to get to the hospital every day and an hour+ to get home depending on traffic. It made for long days. Family members stayed in the ICU waiting area to receive their info they desperately waited for. Most mothers or fathers slept there overnight so they had their blankets or sleeping bags with them always. And we waited. And waited. When it was time we rushed to get in line so we could find out how our babies/children were doing. Andy’s mom and grandma came almost every day and often spent the night. They usually visited him during the 5pm visit time and I would be with him during the afternoon.
They couldn’t have family members in the room after visiting hours because the children were so unstable that any surgeries or tests that needed to be done were often done right there. There was two times that I sat holding my Andy while a doctor was doing some kind of surgery a few beds down. It was unreal. A real “sterile” environment. One time I was sitting holding Andy with his bed on one side and a 7 year-old boy on the other. I can’t remember why he was in the hospital but they had him sedated with a breathing tube in. The sedation meds were not quite high enough and he began to wake up. I remember the fear that came over me. This little boy starts to sit up with a tube in his throat and begins to freak out. Which in turn makes me freak out! I stood up and turned around to motion at the nurse that the boy was awake. The nurse ran over and pinned him to the bed and began yelling for more sedation meds. You would think that at this time they would have asked me to leave but they didn’t. So I just kept rocking Andy and prayed for them both.
The last time I held Andy he had a high fever. He wasn’t feeling good and I could tell. He just wanted me to hold him. I stayed for over 3 hours that day. After awhile you get exhausted. Exhausted from praying so hard, from trying to keep your composure while in a room full of tragedy, exhausted from hearing bad news, and exhausted from holding a 20lb baby in your arms for hours. My arms would get so tired but every time I would attempt to lay him down he would cry. I sang to him this day. He didn’t smile. But I knew he loved it. I prayed and loved on him. He was so precious. He was weaker than normal so he laid his sweaty head on my shoulder and I rubbed and tickled his naked back. He loved that. When it was time for me to go I asked the nurse to take him so that he wouldn’t cry. I knew he would eventually cry when she put him down but it was too hard for me to see it. She held him and he watched my every move as I walked to the door. Truth is I can still picture that stare in my head. It feels a lot like disappointment. Goodbyes are tough.
I didn’t know that would be the last time I would see him alive. I’d like to say I wish I would have kissed him one more time. I wish I would have told him how much he was loved once more. I would have sung to him once more. But really, all of these things would have only made me feel better and at the end of the day, I don't think it would have made much of a difference. It’s him I miss and I would have never been ready to say goodbye.
His mother and I stood at his bedside hugging and crying. What next?
The following day they had the funeral service. And like that it was over. But it wasn’t. I miss him. Still. I miss his smile.
The day of his funeral we had to tell his two brothers that their baby Andy went to be with Jesus. They are 3 and 6. They loved him so much. The 6 year old asked me almost every day how his brother was doing in the hospital and if I would give him a kiss for him. I was not looking forward to telling them their brother is no longer in the hospital.
Life is short. Unpredictable. It’s ugly and beautiful. God doesn’t always give us answers. We don’t always need them. But we always need to trust him. Trust in the Lord with ALL of your heart and lean not on your own understanding. Proverbs 3:5NIV And I’m trusting that there is truth in that. If not, then those feelings of disappointment and defeat win.
Several days after Andy passed away I was reminded that this was not the first or last trial I have experienced or will experience in my life. But they all have one thing in common. The same faithful God was there for me then and will be with me the next time too. That's His promise to me.
On August 20, 2014 our smiley baby Andy became the luckiest baby. He got to meet our Lord and Savior. He joined our baby Juan Jose and together they are charming the angels, no doubt. I can only imagine how much happier heaven became the morning of August 20th, when baby Andy took his smile to the heavens. I love you, Andy. You will not be forgotten. Thank you for letting me love you.