Aga Narloch
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
they might, you know, basically, they didn't say at the very beginning that they're going to amputate the leg, but they said that there might be a huge damage to the muscle and he might not be able to walk.
I think it was approximately a week and a half when
We've noticed that his fingers, his toes, I'm sorry, his toes are getting black.
We were talking to the consultants.
They said, like, what is happening here?
And they started to say, listen, we need to do this.
We need to do that first to check if we're going to find.
So first they said to me, we will remove all the muscles from the calf and see if it will help.
but he will not be able to stand or walk on that foot again because basically there is not going to be any support around the bone of the calf.
Then they said it will be the decision that obviously we won't make him to take when he's going to wake up because after two weeks, almost two weeks, they said they will need to start to sort of wake him up, start waking him up.
But I said, like, you know, what are we waiting here now for?
And he said, well, we need to see if it's not going to make him intoxicated, if the toxins from that damaged muscle are not going to start making him sick.
So that's when it's basically when it all came to me and I started, you know, yourself when you when you're at home.
And you go home after all that, all full day long spent with Sean, you go home, you Google.
It's just natural instinct of a mother.
You just go to Google and say, what happens if a muscle is damaged, is being removed?
What is the next step?
And that's what the next step was.
And then the following morning, I got a call and said, there is a chance, there is a possibility that their sepsis is going to spread into his organism.
And I'm sorry.