Work have been very good. We've agreed that I can head off early Monday, Wednesday and Friday's, I'll head to Stoke Mandeville on these days to see Alex. On Tuesday's and Thursday's I'm working from home (I'm lucky enough that my line of work allows this) , I'll head to Oxford on these days to see Daniel. Yesterday was great, I had a cuddle with Alex.
Today wasn't quite so good. I headed over to Oxford in the afternoon after finishing my work. Daniel was being looked after by an agency nurse. My first experience of an agency nurse during this whole chapter. I do have to say I didn't immediately like him. Very abrupt, seemed to be flirting with some of the other female NICU nurses. Didn't seem to have Daniel's best interests at heart. Difficult to put my finger on exactly what it was. I think he must have picked up on it as he was at pains to explain that he was from one of the most expensive agencies and that this meant that he was very good. I eventually warmed to him, but it took a couple of hours.

Daniel didn't look particularly well. He was really fighting the ventilator. He'd had that tube (or at least a tube) down his throat for the last 8 days. The body has a great power to adapt. His body was producing lots of mucus in an attempt to expel the foreign object. The mucus was entering the ventilator tube and partially blocking it. Agency explained that nothing will drive a baby more nuts, "It's like drowning". I was only there a couple of hours but in that time Daniel was drained with a vacuum tube three times. The awful slurping and gurgling sounds from the vacuum were only worsened by watching Daniel then try to cry. His face would curl up and his eyes wrinkle, only for the ventilator tube to prevent him. Silently crying. It was one of the most difficult things to watch.
I also had my first experience of merconium, for those of you who don't know it's a babies first poo, basically. It's produced during the formation of the feotus. It's not normal. I mean medically, biologically it's normal, perfectly normal, just not normal in what you what to have to deal with everyday. Think Marmite. Sticky, sticky, Marmite. Anyway this was actually great news. It means that Daniel's bowels have opened, stuff was passing through, despite his intestines having been monkeyed around with last week. He had been being fed 1ml an hour, now things were beginning to move this could be upped.
However when his feeds were upped, he vomited bile. So his feeds were suspended for six hours and then started again. This happened several times.
Generally, he was on the mend. But with the bile, the ventilator fighting, his tubes requiring frequent drainage and Daniel being quite to obviously upset, I left Oxford feeling quite despondent.