They were stabilizing him, removing all the devices, and getting him ready, so we hurried inside the room while he clutched my hand.
While they were rushing to the ambulance, he baptized Brady. Security was keeping the doors open because of Brady’s condition.
We’re sprinting like in those emergency room dramas when I say “running.” As we were leaving through the double doors and into the elevator, he baptized Brady.
Brady’s heart stopped while we were in the ambulance on our way to the hospital. The rest of the trip to Boston Children’s, they had to use compressions.
Because he was not getting enough oxygen, we were concerned about brain damage. We were informed that he had no cerebral activity on January 28.
He was being kept alive by the ECMO machine. Therefore, we needed to make a decision. During Brady’s heart and lung bypass, I had the opportunity to sit with him, but I realized he was already dead.