It’s a sunny July day. Kids are riding bikes. Climbing trees. Little League teams are yelling “Hey batta batta!” And Morgan is in a step-down unit from the ICU.
Morgan is a college freshman. She is pretty, smart, and redheaded—so you know she’s trouble.
She is a student at the University of Alabama at Birmingham. She made the president’s list last year. Which is impressive when you consider that Morgan is epileptic, diabetic, and has paralysis on the left side of her body; her left hand doesn’t work.
Also, she has low vision, and is nearly blind in one eye. Her intestines are paralyzed, too, so digestion is an issue.
And yet she made the president’s list.
We became friends when I wrote about her a few years ago. She’s soft spoken. She’s always smiling. And she has an Alabama drawl that sounds like ribbon cane syrup.
A few days ago, Morgan sent me this text:
“I’ve been in the hospital for the last six days, with no discharge date in sight.”
The doctors can’t figure out the cause. They can’t get her
ketones down. On top of it all, the paralysis of her stomach has worsened, so doctors are trying to come up with a plan.
Morgan’s text finished with: “It’s been pretty rough but I’m making it!”
She ended her message with a heart emoji. She always closes texts with a heart emoji. Her last name is, after all, Love.
Since then, I’ve had my friends praying. Since then, she has had more tests. Since then, they did a scope to see what was going on inside her gastrointestinal tract.
“I have erosions and inflammation... Still high ketones. It’s been a busy but productive day! Also, my sorority sisters stopped by which was sweet!”
Heart emoji.
Yesterday, six Delta Gamma sisters surprised her with a visit. Multiple sisters have been coming all week. The halls of UAB hospital…