swimWell, they did it – and I just got the first picture of the two master champions, immediately after they swam, for the first time in their lives, ever, a full mile in a competition.

Irene, Lynn and Melaine Nocher. They both finished in under 52 minutes. (Melanie did not swim in this competition!

Don’t they look so happy?

Thank you for your enthusiasm, perseverance, and support for Pádraig.

Before you ask – Melanie is an Irish swimmer who competed at the 2012 Summer Olympics in the women’s 100 metro backstroke.

In this picture, she is the one not wearing a swim suit!

 

Luftaufnahme+HamburgComing back to Hamburg was as strange as arriving in Dublin the other day. Aer Lingus changed their schedule to Hamburg from 01 April. They are leaving now at 06:50am which meant I had to get up really early, following a really late night, trying to get everything together and ready before leaving again after just a few days. I was (and am☺) still half asleep when I made my way to the airport and on to a packed plane.

When I got into the hospital and into his room, Pádraig had a new gadget. It’s called ‘Bewegungstherapie für Arme und Beine’ and is a massive kind of cycle Unknownwithout wheels. He’ll be using it regularly now we were told – which is great as it will keep his legs mobile as well as his joints moving. He’ll also be getting more speech therapy since the secretions in his lungs are down, and he is swallowing much better than before – which makes it safer for the therapists to fit a speech valve to his tracheostomy. I might have mentioned before that from next week we’ll have a regular meeting with the physio and OT; we’ll also have a meeting with the speech therapist. As the therapies are happening in the morning to a large extend, when we are not here, it is important to stay in touch with the therapists, just to understand a bit better what they are doing with Pádraig and how well he cooperates. It’ll also make it easier for us to support the work of the therapists when they are not with Pádraig in the afternoon during our visits.

His favourite doctor is also back again. Pádraig was so delighted to see her that he moved his arm and toes, and not just for her but patient-transfer-chairs-adjustable-backrests-68698-3727247also for his nurse who had not seen any of this before. All of this is really good because the more people see Pádraig moving the better: because he is showing to everyone that he is making progress. Again, nothing dramatic, but slow and steady progress. We heard that the stockings for his legs (and the thrombosis) will finally arrive on Monday.

AND, today his doctor took him off the oxygen altogether from just after noon. Brilliant. Amazingly, he was doing really well. It’s really important that he manages without the oxygen, even for some hours, in order to make it to the rose garden one day!

Snámh Phádraig is just around the corner and I am sure those who are going to do it are getting both, really nervous and really excited.

Tired. Will take an ‘early’ night today and hope to get back into form tomorrow.

Today’s German Music Tip
Tem Bendzko, Am seidenen Faden (2013). Deutscher Musikpreis, Echo, 2014.
“Jeder Atemzug hängt am seidenen Faden.”

What’s hot
Speaking Valve
What’s cold
Winter
The German word/phrase/verse of the day
Heiter bis wolkig.

Twitter: @forPadraig
http://www.caringforPadraig.org