Mackenzie’s Story

Site created on August 8, 2021

Welcome and thank you for visiting my Caring Bridge page. I guess this is the part where I bring everybody up to speed, huh? 😉

On the night of Thursday, August 5th, I sustained a rare & significant injury to my thoracic spine and spinal cord in a ziplining accident. I was taken by ambulance to MercyOne in Des Moines, where they took me emergently to surgery and did a T10-L2 fusion with a T11-T12 decompression and repair of my spinal cord, as it had been punctured in 2 places by the fractures. I was then transferred to the neuro/trauma ICU where I was monitored for a week on pressor therapy - medication given IV to keep my blood pressure up so my spinal cord would be well-perfused and able to heal. After completing the pressor therapy, I was transferred out of the hospital to Madonna Rehabilitation Hospital in Lincoln, NE; during my time there, I received intensive physical and occupational therapy in addition to continued medical/nursing care. After 14 days at MercyOne and 27 days at Madonna, I was discharged home INDEPENDENTLY on September 15th, and have been participating in outpatient physical therapy since then.

As a result of my injuries, I have lost all motor and sensory function from my hips down. There's a chance I may eventually regain some kind of function, but the neurosurgeon has said there is a slim chance I'll walk again. Translation: challenge accepted.


I truly appreciate every one of you who has followed my journey this far. I've made it my goal to be as honest and transparent about this experience as I can be. I definitely plan to keep this page going as I navigate through the changes of everyday life at home, driving, returning to work, etc. Thank you so much for taking a look into my new life & cheering me on along the way. I've said it several times in my journal entries - your positivity, prayers, and well wishes are truly what keep me going!

This is going to be a long journey, but I have zero intentions of giving up or slowing down. I'm very hopeful that I can return to a very close level of functioning compared to where I was prior to the accident. It's going to be painful; it's going to be exhausting; and it's going to challenge me in a way I've never been before, but I've got too much life ahead of me to settle for anything less.

Newest Update

Journal entry by Mackenzie Nash

"Comparison is the thief of joy."

If you're at all in the world of social media, chances are, you've probably heard this phrase a time or two. It's often spoken in reference to comparing the highs and lows of our lives to the highlight reel that, oftentimes, a celebrity or acquaintance chooses to share with the world on social media. It becomes a slippery slope that goes from celebrating each other's successes, to wondering where we've gone wrong in our own lives, because we may not have the luxury material things, the career success, or the "perfect" family that others do.

I'm a victim of it, trust me. I've compared so many aspects of my life to those of others, based on what I've seen on social media. I've compared things as superficial as the workout clothes I wear (I get sweaty as hell anyway, so what does it matter?) and the vehicle I drive; to deeper things, such as my nursing career; the fact that I've been married, divorced, and engaged again before turning 30; and the fact that I'm in the home stretch of my 20s with no children, while people younger than my little sister (27, for the record) are working on their second, third, or even fourth child. It's never a bitter feeling - I'm truly happy for those who share those milestones, those successes, with their audience. It's truly worth celebrating, but - I'm gonna be blunt here - social media makes it so easy for us to feel inadequate and wonder where we've gone wrong on our life's journey.

However, there's another aspect of comparison that I feel is not talked about often enough, that I am an even worse victim of, especially since my injury: Comparing ourselves in the present moment to the us'es of the past, or maybe even the future.

This is where I'm gonna get vulnerable... Lately, I've found myself more & more frequently looking back at pre-injury pictures, videos, and memories - both on my phone & social media - and wondering where my life would be if I hadn't gotten hurt. Wondering if things would be completely different, or not that different at all. Wondering where my nursing career would have lead, if Jordan & I would've been engaged sooner and maybe even be married by now, what travel adventures we would've experienced; all of these things; instead of living out the past year of my life in a wheelchair, looking forward to Fridays, not so I can enjoy beers with Jordan and friends after work, but so I can go to physical therapy in the afternoon & do some walking. 

There are big spaces in my heart & mind that are currently being used to mourn the loss of the path that my life would've continued on if I hadn't gotten hurt. It's something I'm aware of, but have succumbed to frequently. While I could chalk it up to human nature, because - let's be real - it is, the amount of comparison to my past self that I've been doing lately is unhealthy. (Initially, I had the word "borderline" in there before I realized, yeah, it's just unhealthy). I'm writing this because I feel the first step of fixing this kind of issue is to become aware of it. I think mourning the loss of our past selves is healthy after trauma, or in my case, injury, but it becomes an issue when it starts to get in the way of your journey of being who you are right now & working toward who you want to become in the future.

I'm all for looking back at past memories with fondness, but this is not what I've been doing. Every old picture I've seen, video I've watched, or post I've read doesn't have me laughing & smiling; lately, it makes me sad. It breaks my heart. And it has me longing for the life I had prior to my injury, and it makes me realize that nothing is ever certain. Things can change at the drop of a hat.

I guess the whole purpose of this post is to bring awareness to the dangers of comparing. Social media does have its positive purposes, but is something you have to be very, very careful with for this exact reason. I know this bad habit (to put it mildly) is something I need to work on internally. But there are external factors, such as social media, my social circle, my mental health, etc. that can be evaluated & modified to help me get out of this rut of comparison. If anyone has struggled with this, gotten themselves out & are willing to give advice, please reach out to me.  And if you're still reading, thanks for sticking with me while I pour my thoughts out here. You're one of the good ones. ❤️

 

 

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