Thursday, August 31, 2017

A Cloudy August



It was suppose to be a simple D&C and removal of a fibroid in my uterus. I avoided sharing the news at-large as it seemed too dramatic and personal. I asked for general prayer from my church family and a few friends off and on Facebook.

After giving up all my personal possessions, shoes, socks, underwear... you know... I lay in the pre-Op cubical 6 while a tech poked several times and finally got an IV in top of my left hand. Highland Hospital, Friday afternoon, August 11th.

The usual suspects came to say hello-- the surgeon, the operating nurse assistant, and the anesthesiologist. 12:15 I was rolled away and expected to return in about 2 hours. I remember saying goodbye to Peg and watching my bed wheeled by other people coming and going, under white sheets. The ceiling, too, was white and whisked above me in tiled blocks. It’s really all I remember until I woke up about 6 hours later.

My memory is very sketchy at this point. The only thing I remember about post-Op is my surgeon and 3 other doctors standing behind her looking down at me. No one was really smiling. I think I heard someone say, “Well that was a little bit more than we expected.” The next sort of coherent memory was in a small room where everyone in my family had assembled. Again, people were talking to me and I was replying but I don’t remember what was said. I do remember my roommate was a small woman who was very angry that there were so many people now in the room. I go back to sleep.

Later that evening as I begin to come out of a fog I am acutely aware of my belly feeling different. Sore. Painful, actually. A nurse comes and takes my vitals. A technician comes and takes blood. Both stand at the foot of my bed and individually type information about me onto a computer monitor. I think Peggy is there. The surgeon comes to see me. She is still not smiling, and seems very concerned and serious. She tells me what happened in surgery and it really isn’t until the next day that it all sinks in. I had an emergency hysterectomy. Gone is the uterus. Gone are the ovaries. In the process, the top of my bladder was sliced open and a urologist was called in to repair it. There was also a small nick to my sigmoid colon and a gastroenterologist was called in to stitch it and check for any other wounds. It was such a surreal amount of information that it seemed as though she was talking about someone else.

It took several days for it all to sink in. I was rather stunned and in extreme pain, especially when I was asked to get out of bed and walk. The only good thing about that first walk was it took me across the hall to a private room. This was where I got to see the incision that traveled from the left side of my belly to the right side-- better known as a C-section. I also had an abdominal drain, a catheter, and a little green button on the end of a white cord that I was to push whenever I needed pain medication. I wore plastic leg compression boots and got Heparin shots in my thighs 3 times a day. The coming days just ran into one another.

Little by little personal stories came out. My son-in-law was so concerned he visited the hospital chapel, something he said he hadn’t done in 20 years. After hours went by with me still in surgery and nothing was reported to my family, he called the other siblings to come to the hospital. My minister arrived. I had played the surgery down and now realized it had exploded like a scene from Code Black.

I left the hospital the following week for a 6 to 12 week recovery, wearing the catheter that would become the bane of my existence. I had a visiting nurse once a week which was actually a relief to me because in the hospital one is under total observation and at home, well... the mind plays all kinds of worrisome tricks. “Is this normal? What’s that sensation? Is it still suppose to hurt?” I stay away from the computer and resist watching a similar surgery on YouTube. I take up residence in the guest bedroom at our house as the bed is lower to the floor, and my getting up and down will not be a nuisance to Peg -- (though she would deny it.)

There’s not much more to say, actually. I’m still on the journey to recovery and I know that many women before me have gone through this and probably much worse. I think about my uterus and ovaries that created three beautiful children -- now gone to pathology where they were deemed “unremarkable and benign” -- all well and good. But it should have been treated to some ending ceremony of ritual and remembrance, like a croning or buried out back with our deceased cats.

I was released from the Foley bag aka catheter, 19 days later. In numerology that’s a perfect 10. The number of the pre-Op room was 6, which I always related to a negative number but I read that it represents “care-taking.” Just what I’m now doing for myself. Alas, you say that’s all superstition. Maybe.

I have occasional talks over my porch railing with my neighbor Gladys who has been a steady buoy of faith for me these past few weeks. Each day she tells me that God is lifting me up and that I am on the mend. It’s where I need to keep my focus. I tell her when I was young I did not doubt God’s presence, but some times now that I’m older, I wonder if I’m more on my own. She says that’s because when we are young we think we are invincible, and when we get older, we know that’s far from the truth, and I am NOT alone. At night when I lay down in bed and the belly stitches pull and I think about the vacancy inside me, and the darkness hovers around the walls, I think of the angel that enfolds me and also whispers to me throughout the night, “I am here; You are healing; You are going to be just fine.” And I know for sure, this is not superstition.

(Shared from my Facebook Note)

Friday, May 5, 2017

We Are the Easter People

           John Paul II wrote:  “Do not abandon yourselves to despair.                                        We are the Easter people.”
An Easter person is someone who believes it is possible to rise up from any enormous tragedy, to be transformed, and courageously continue the journey. It doesn’t matter what religion you profess, or even if you don’t believe in the mystery of Easter. If you can recognize that it is possible each one of us can rise up from a miserable situation and be transformed, than you are an Easter person.
But what if the situation is so bad and so horrendous you can’t see the end of suffering or find hope in what seems to be a collapsing situation? I recently sat with a young client whose life has been one miserable event after another and who feels despondent about it, as well as about the political climate in our country. 
As a spiritual director I sit and listen with compassion and an open heart. And I have to fight my desire to want to fix things and make people happy again. I do not have the power or the insight to know how to fix people or political corruption. 
I held my client’s hands and prayed for something good to come, to ease her burden. I believed it would come. And when I said “amen,” she gave a little cynical snort and we both laughed. I said, “Would you have rather I prayed in cynical snorts?” And then I snorted several times more and said “amen.”  We both laughed again. We hugged and said goodbye, and I was sure that she felt a bit better.  

Have you ever been in a situation that was so miserable it overwhelmed and tired you out, and all you could do was just sit back and laugh about it? Well it’s in that moment afterwards—when you stop laughing, or crying, or whatever defeatist emotion rises up--it's when you take in your next breath, stand back up and start over again, that you become an Easter person.  

Wednesday, March 1, 2017

Taking some of us into the season of Lent.


Following is excerpts from an online article by Christine Valtners Paintner
The kind of fast drawing me this season isn’t leaving behind of treats like chocolate or other pleasures. This season I am being invited to fast from things like “ego-grasping” and noticing when I so desperately want to be in control, and then yielding myself to a greater wisdom than my own.
I am called to fast from being strong and always trying to hold it all together, and instead embrace the profound grace that comes through my vulnerability and tenderness, to allow a great softening this season.
I am called to fast from anxiety and the endless torrent of thoughts which rise up in my mind to paralyze me with fear of the future, and enter into the radical trust in the abundance at the heart of things, rather than scarcity.
I am called to fast from speed and rushing through my life, causing me to miss the grace shimmering right here in this holy pause.
I am called to fast from multitasking and the destructive energy of inattentiveness to any one thing, so that I get many things done, but none of them well, and none of them nourishing to me. Instead my practice will become a beholding of each thing, each person, each moment.
I am called to fast from endless list-making and too many deadlines, and enter into the quiet and listen for what is ripening and unfolding, what is ready to be born.
I am called to fast from certainty and trust in the great mystery of things.
And then perhaps, I will arrive at Easter and realize those things from which I have fasted, I no longer need to take back on again. I will experience a different kind of rising.
Online at: Abbey of the Arts - http://abbeyofthearts.com/ 

Tuesday, January 17, 2017

Lifted




Imagine being on a train traveling at a constant speed—it never slows down or stops, 
and there is no way you can get off. This train is continuously bringing you closer 
and closer to the end of your life. Try to really get a sense of this, and check what 
thoughts and feelings arise in your mind. 

Article in Spirituality & Health -- 

"How to get really good at dying" 


Painting is called "Lifted", by me.