Noelle had a great day today overall, and she has maintained her weight
the last two days (no gain or loss). She is still experiencing the acid
reflux, but they were still able to wean her oxygen flow again today
and she handled it well. She is doing so well that the nurses are
already starting to estimate how much longer she will be in NIC 1.
There are two sides to our NICU. NIC 1 has the more critical babies
(where we have been the past 8 weeks), and NIC 2 is babies that are
stable and much closer to going home. The "graduation" to NIC 2 is
significant to parents because of everything it represents, and it is
exciting and a little scary all at the same time to think that that day
is quickly approaching. All of the nurses rotate both sides, but some
nurses can work weeks on one side before working the other side again. I
must admit, that I am a little (okay, VERY MUCH) attached to our little
space that we occupy in NIC 1 and the nurses that we have on a
consistent basis. Some weeks, the care changes daily, and other weeks
you will get the same nurse for days in a row or nights in a row. I
like that part. I enjoy getting to know and build relationships with
nurses that are consistently taking care of her. However, that said, we
have never had a bad experience with even one of the nurses in the
NICU. We definitely are much closer to certain ones and have gotten to
know them really well, but even the ones that we don't know as well have
been really good with her. We have no complaints. And so, when the
time comes to say "good bye" to our little space in NIC 1, it will be
exciting and bittersweet all at the same time. Even I think that is a
little strange to say, but when your life is lived in the NICU, nothing
is quite "normal." I know that we will meet more new nurses on the other
side and develop relationships with them too, and I hope that some of
the nurses we have now will rotate into NIC 2 more often once we are
there. Words just cannot express the thankfulness in our hearts for
these precious people ~ people who do not view this as their "job."
It is their passion; and when they care for your baby, it is from their
heart. I could never say enough about them or to them in thankfulness
for their service to our family. And so, we start mentally preparing
for the day that we show up to the NICU, and the front desk informs us
that we have "graduated." It will be a giant step closer to coming
home.
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