On the 28th April 2006 I had a liver transplant. Not odd enough I was only nineteen, but stranger still is the fact that it was here, at transplantation, where this all began. The first indication that I had anything but a healthy liver occurring in the February of the same year; a spell of jaundice that peaked with me looking like something out of a science-fiction story, often receiving public heckles of “oi, mate, love the St Tropez!” or “shit, look at green guy over there”, only to relent, donning my natural complexion by March. However, Easter heralded another type of resurrection; bouts of seemingly inexplicable stomach cramps, to an extent appeased when forced to retire to the familiarity and security only a bed can provide, a remedy gratefully received in bouts of unwittingly easy, meta-conscious sleep.
A weighted déjà vu, coupled with an unusually high number of untouched chocolate goods, won out over a defining, personal, ‘everything-is-fine’ ethos. It turned out everything was not fine, and now, fast forward four years, I am at pains to conceive the defining points of a personal equilibrium: ‘fine’ changes dramatically upon receiving another’s vital organ, the experience itself residing within a microcosm both complex and personal. I have no clear, conscious memory of being told a transplant was necessary. No, not even necessary, vital – a mere two months after being privy to the legendary regenerative powers of the liver everything crashed. On the 20th April 2006 I passed through the looking glass, the other side. Boundaries became blurred between the possible and permissible, recollection falls now into falsity for all intents and purposes. What was happening? A question, due the nature of liver degeneration, that can only be contemplated now.
During my previous spell on what was then named the Hassell ward I had been educated in some of the pitfalls and plights associated with liver disease, pertaining to both viruses of the blood, the lettered Hepatitis, for example, which I learned ranged far beyond A-C, and ailments by proxy, often the result of a non-liver specific disorder such as Wilson’s disease. As thus encephalopathy existed in the periphery of my knowledge as something indicating exceptional damage to the liver, as well as an ailment capable of reducing any strong constitution to child-like stupor. Basically, for there is much more to it than this, being a topic that for reference sake can be built upon later, when the liver cannot break down dangerous toxins any longer they have a damaging effect on the brain, in particular inciting memory loss upon the recipient. I do remember my coordinator telling me a transplant had become a possibility, yet I met any negativity with a well-nurtured ‘everything-is-fine’ facade, supporting my emotional state with an uncanny vigour in the revision required for imminent first year university exams. The onset of encephalopathy is one of only two true memories I can recall in the five or six days preceding transplantation, besides snippets here and there. I remember a consultant asking me to hold both arms in front of me with wrists bent back so that my fingers were pointing towards the ceiling, a healthy candidate should be able to close ones eyes and maintain this position, your wrists falling otherwise My penultimate memory, therefore, was, to be frank, “shit”, for when I opened my eyes I could see my wrists disobeying my wishes and the doctor’s face momentarily move from ambivalence to sympathy. I also remember being anesthetized, consciousness being forcibly denied and wanting nothing more for my parents to explain why.
I apologize. In producing a physical account of the events preceding, and for that matter since, the transplant it is hard not to utilize literary devices beyond any wholly descriptive means. I don’t want this endeavour to blast ‘me me me’, but I am using personal experience as a marker. I could be more sterile, equally there is an emotive subtext that cannot be ignored.
I guess the point I am simply trying to put is this: I had no understanding of the context surrounding a transplant, liver or otherwise; an understanding, I contend, which continues to eludes me to this day. The operation itself marked both an initiation into the deep seated world of organ donation and transplantation, whilst also having to approach said world as a nineteen year old. The scenario quickly transcended the corporeal, begging answers, or at least something, to moral and psychological dilemmas. Intending not to be dramatic, but in hindsight the series of events surrounding the event truly became my own, personal Inferno. I had not lived the life of one with serious liver disease: trips to hospital, bouts of severe illness or that moment of being told your future depended on the demise of another, privy to the criteria of the National Health Service and human morality – a list where 300 recipients of a new, healthy liver die each year.
I want to raise awareness, not simply for public understanding, but those young people that, or at at least I imagine, are undergoing a life renewed.