***Disclaimer: This story contains triggering subjects related to medical emergencies, hospitals, and anxiety. Please read at your own discretion***
I will be writing this down mainly to be able to cope with it. Sharing stories like this is not easy for me and I know for a fact that it is not easy for others to hear. I do hope that one day this story can reach the person that has lived something similar and is in need of some validation or comfort.
It started with a nice evening movie. Let me paint a picture for you…
My sister was visiting from Hawai’i and we decided to have a sleepover. This was supposed to be a nice time together. We picked a movie and some snacks while my husband was playing computer games. We got into our pajamas and settled in for the night after putting my daughter to bed.
Lilly had gone to bed at around 9 pm.
The living room was as normal as always. The lights were low, the temperature of the room was just right, the house smelled like popcorn, and Kona (our dog) was in her bed sleeping. Shortly after the movie started we heard a weird coughing noise coming from both my phone and down the hall in Lilly’s room.
This noise was not her normal coughing noises and it in fact sounded more like a very loud and drowning pleading cry.
Startled, I called got my husband’s attention and we headed to her room in a rush, only to find a very disheartening scene. Lilly was hollering in pain but there was not a single movement coming from her. The noise was there but it seemed as though she was not. We hurried over and picked her up, thinking she might be choking. When we did. She was barely making a noise anymore. She was LIMP. It all felt wrong. Very wrong.
Panic settled in and both of our eyes met with terror in them. Without even thinking about it, our reflexes found us doing infant CPR. While my sister was present in the room, I did not get a chance to warn her or tend to her fear. I only pushed her away yelling “ We are CNAs, and we know what I am doing, PLEASE call 911”.
If you have ever done CPR on anyone, then you know how horrible it actually is. All of a sudden time feels like its running away from you, and every thought you’ve ever had simply decides to take 10 years to come through. Most times I have done CPR on a person, it has been under ideal circumstances. Inside a hospital room, with the right equipment, and the best support team you can think of; nurses, respiratory therapists, doctors, CNAs, etc. It is almost a guarantee that the person in danger is going to make it. This situation felt like my daughter’s entire world was hanging on by a thread, and we were the ones holding the scissors. The level of responsibility of a parent became painfully present and heavy to bear.
The Police, the fire department, and the ambulance came fast. They examined our daughter quickly and asked us a million questions. Then they took her to the hospital with my husband riding in the front. At the hospital, they did any and all tests to make sure that she was fine. All results came back normal. We were sent home with little to no explanation as to why she had stopped breathing. After that whole experience we all made it home around 4am and decided to lay down and sleep for a little. My daughter and my husband slept on our big bed, and I accompanied my sister (who was still in shock) on the couch.
Everything was fine…until it he called my name a couple of hours later.
“DIANAAAAAA!!!!!”













