Does anyone remember a very sweet lady from Australia, I forgot her name, but I think, not sure, had word Gran or Granny? don't wish to confuse anyone with that, I'm sure I'm wrong, I searched GrannyG which is what I seem to remember?
Anyway, she had this condition my dad & Bonnie have. Her doctors did not recomment any treatment. After awhile, she went into hospice...........after her passing her son wrote to us to let us know. Lovely person she was.
My dad had no pain at this stage, he did suffer some mentally, but not physically. Hopefully, medications were left with Frank for Bonnie if she does have pain. These meds prescribed for my dad but he did not require them. I must have stolen them after he passed. I don't remember, but that sounds like something I would have done.


(((Bonnie)))

Her ex, current, ex, current boyfriend (

) stopped by last night...said he just needed to talk. Bonnie's not always easy to love, but Dan does love her very much, and he's pretty messed up over all this. He's been at the hospital everyday since this admission, and he said she's been extremely angry and demanding and irrational.
I told him that's probably because of the brain tumors. The biggest one is in her parietal lobe, which is responsible for understanding where you are in relation to the things around you. I told him to imagine the frustration of not being completely sure where your legs are or able to process exactly where the very bed you're laying on is, and so forth.
I hope we can keep her calm. We'll probly just have to keep reassuring her everything is ok and that we're here, taking care of things. We'll be getting some help from the home hospice nurse. And I set up a nice, tranquil spot in the family room for her. And I went and bought her a pretty purple blanket and a glitzy little purple lamp.
Purple is her favorite color (and glitzy is her favorite thing).
Dan said she might be here today instead of tomorrow. She'll be released as soon as they land on just the right level of pain medication for her. The other thing the parietal lobe does is sense pain, or even understand that it's
your pain and not someone else's.
Anyway, Dan said he's really glad she'll be staying here. "She talks about you all the time," he said...and he meant all the while he's known her, not just lately. So, yeah, I think she'll be happy here....as happy as she can be.
Hopefully, medications were left with Frank for Bonnie if she does have pain.
Since Meesh is taking a nursing course, and I completed nursing school and held a license for several years, I think they'll trust us with Bonnie's meds. I hope so.
Just got a text that her oxygen is en-route for delivery.