On October 11th, our Father John Magdalene and our caretaker’s son Robert were involved in a terrible auto accident. They were returning from a shopping trip in Robert’s truck. They were hauling in our trailer a couch for the Marion House and two mattresses for the monastery, and were just a few miles from home when the truck failed to make a curve in the road and veered off their shoulder of Arch Street into a steep ditch and ran into a tree. A road repair crew working on the opposite side of the road witnessed the wreck and called 911 immediately.

After all x-rays were taken and the shoulder placed back in its socket, Father was moved to Coronary Care where he stayed for ten days. He was put on a respirator to take care of his breathing. On the day after the accident he was in so much pain despite all the morphine and stronger stuff they were giving him, the doctors suggested putting him into a coma so his body could get some rest and begin the healing process. Pulmonary problems prevented the operation on his broken leg that was scheduled for the 15th. We took the scheduling of his badly needed operation as a sign from Saint Teresa as October 15th was her feast day, and were sorely disappointed when respiratory distress caused the operation to be postponed. The operation was performed on the 22nd, and Father was moved into Intensive Care where he remained for almost two weeks.
The doctors took him off the paralytics at the end of the month, but he failed to come out of the coma. An MRI showed no brain damage. On November 3rd he was moved from Intensive Care to a Long Care unit. When the nurses on that floor saw him still in the coma, they told us, “This is such a tragedy!” It appeared that even if he came out of the come he’d be paralyzed from the neck down. On November 12th, as John’s sister Paula was getting ready to return to Kansas, John grasped her hand, and moved his toes. His lung collapsed on the 20th, but on the 26th, Thanksgiving Day they were able to take him off the respirator and we heard him talk for the first time since the coma. He went into respiratory distress on the 29th when the tube that had been inserted into his collapsed lung came out. That afternoon he asked Fr. Raphael, “Am I dying?”
His tracheotomy was removed on December 8th, the Blessed Mother’s feast day. He was moved on that day from Baptist Hospital to Baptist Rehab. There he made such great progress, the local ABC television affiliate did a Christmas story on him. This was picked up nationally by CNN and can be found at: http://www.cnn.com/video/#/video/us/2010/12/28/ar.priest.recovery.katv

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