🪡 Here’s the face of a victorious fighter who’s got more fights in him. When we read that Alejandro Castro spent 299 days in an Oregon hospital battling Covid 19, & then the complications from it, we wanted to know more.
Today, we spent the day with him & his family at their home, 45 minutes outside of Portland. What we didn’t know was the degree to which he fought in the hospital and how that part of the story makes his recovery amazing & inspiring.
1 of his nurses, Levi Cole: “Alex had the heart of a lion. He fought like an animal & he made it out of here against every possible odd…it’s impossible for me to sort of quantify the level of pain & the amount of suffering his family & he went through for him to make it out…”
“In my ECMO career, 108 days is unheard of & for him to leave the hospital was very, very touch and go for a very long time. And after we got him off the ECMO. The day they took him off ECMO…I crawled in bed with him. I gave him a big hug and we were both laughing…”
“…I had tears in my eyes from pure joy. Having had to watch him suffer for many and many months here before he got to go home was very difficult. He was incredibly demoralized & I think he wanted to throw the towel in many many times. And Amanda (his wife) wouldn’t let him…”
“…And his kids wouldn’t let him. And his son (oldest son) would come in here and play bad cop, worse cop with me & everybody else. We all dragged him across the finish line but he did it himself.”
Alex spent 108 days on ECMO! I’ve covered Covid stories for the last year and a half. I had no idea you could be awake while on ECMO and even walk down a hall. Alex did both, and we have the videos to show you.
This story is one of amazement but it’s sobering to see what’s ahead for Alex. He’s just 44 years old.
‘Why Don’t We Have Electricity?’: Outages Plague Puerto Rico
Transferring the power grid to a private company was supposed to help. But thousands protested last week over more blackouts. nytimes.com/2021/10/19/us/…
“Puerto Rican legislators have demanded to know exactly how many line workers LUMA has employed. PREPA historically had about 800. Mr. Stensby said at the hearing this month that the company had about 900, but he did not specify how many had prior experience in Puerto Rico…”
“…but he did not specify how many had prior experience in Puerto Rico, other than saying a large portion of them did. Legislators have also asked how many executives are making salaries greater than $200,000 a year…”
Note how he nails the inflection - there are the pauses so that it times with his breath, or lack there of, in the moment, and never once does he sound like he’s lost his flow.
“How the U.S. Dictates What Puerto Rico Eats”. This is an opinion guest essay published in the New York Times, written by Israel Meléndez Ayala and Alicia Kennedy
Photographs by Damon Winter nytimes.com/2021/10/01/opi…
“…In 1940, agriculture was the cornerstone of Puerto Rico’s economy, employing nearly 45 percent of the work force. But by 2019, it represented less than 1 percent of the commonwealth’s G.D.P. and employed less than 2 percent…”nytimes.com/2021/10/01/opi…
“…disasters, economic crises & mismanagement have contributed to the island’s transformation from agricultural powerhouse to one that relies on imports. But it has been U.S. policies like the…Jones Act & Operation Bootstrap that have strangled local ag…”nytimes.com/2021/10/01/opi…
Denied by FEMA for home repairs, Sterling Guidry is sitting in his truck outside Houma, LA digging through papers to find a document proving he owed a home that hurricane Ida destroyed a month ago. If he can, he can appeal to FEMA. See more of his story, Wednesday on @CBSMornings
Sterling and his daughter Bre have been staying in their car every night where there’s AC and the ability to charge their phones, which is their entertainment source, too. Around 10 PM each night they move to a tent in their yard to sleep.
Today, Sterling made good progress on and outhouse of sorts that has their tub in it. They’re hoping to be able to use it to bath. They’ve been using a nearby porta potty to bath nightly for most of the last month.
Cc: @TannerDMagee who asked that we follow up & find out when FEMA would be able to deliver temporary housing. We are on it.
This is the tent that Sterling & his daughter have been living in. The wooden box is something he’s been building in hopes that they can move in to it. Tonight, he thought they’d sleep in his truck just for the AC.