By January, he was back to work. His $63,000 of debt was by now only $53,000. By February, he moved into a better apartment with his girlfriend. By March, they were settled in. By April, his girlfriend was in a head on collision, found out she was pregnant with twins, and became his wife. He was in shock, but awoke from the shock overjoyed. He quit smoking, he started running again, he lost the weight. He had a second chance at being a husband, at being a father. It had been so long. His divorce made him think he would never have this again. Would never want it. He was reborn. By May, he only had one year left before his retirement from the Navy. He would have a whole new life.
His wife noticed that his lower left lip was twitching. He blew it off as being related to the eye twitching and the constant stress that his life had always been in the last few years. The next day, he looked in the mirror and the whole side of his face was contorted, stretched back as if being pulled up and back from his ear. His wife rushed him to the hospital. He looked like one side of his face was smiling and the other was not. He thought he might be having a stroke. He was not. The name of the disorder is Hemifacial Spasm. They gave him Ativan. It affects .08 per 100,000 people. He took the pills and they calmed his stress level and made him sleepy all the time. He went back to work. The internet told him that it was painless, he knew that there was more to it than that. No sir, I'm not smirking, I have a neuromuscular condition which freezes my face this way. One way they fix this is by using injections of Botox. His eye twitched all day now. Isn't Botox just rat poison? The muscle that pulled his lip up was sore from all the twitching. The same way you can get sore from laughing too much at a comedian or a movie. The Botox injections aren't even a permanent solution, you have to get the shots every 3 to 6 months for the rest of your life, because it never ceases of its own accord. He would dribble when he drinks his coffee. The other option was brain surgery. He would wake up with his eye crusty from it tearing up during his sleep. They cut into to the skull about an inch behind the ear and place a sponge between what is usually the offending artery and the nerve that it puts pressure on. His peripheral vision was affected, and he felt as though this affected his balance as well. His wife did not like the option of surgery. Psychologically, he was embarrassed by the way this looked. To the point he did not want to be photographed. He did not like the idea of injecting poison into his brain every 3 to 6 months. Somewhat reclused. By June, his $63,000 of debt was now down to $45,000 and he was on his way to Florida to pick up his son for the summer. Will he be able to suppress his anxiety enough to protect his son from it during their summer together? So much more at stake. So much more risk. The potential for so much more reward. But will he be able to keep it up? Will he be able to keep his second job if he has surgery and needs time off to recover? Will he recover from it early enough to be an energetic father to his twins? Energetic enough to be a good husband? So much ahead. What will happen?
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