Selfish Love

She is lying awake in the hospital bed, only able to communicate with her lips, eyes and hands.

The radiation has caused her to be unable to eat for months, only tiny bits daily. She has lost so much weight, although now arms and face are swollen due to fluid buildup.

But her eyes twinkle when she sees me. She mouths “I love you too” when I speak my love. She motions with her hand and we finally understand she wants her granddaughter’s boyfriend to play his guitar. He strums and sings Amarillo by Morning and she smiles.

I’ve waited all week for the family to allow me to visit. I hold back my tears until I drive home.

She has many close friends…others, like me have been waiting in the wings for permission to see her. We have prayed, sent our love from our heart hoping she could feel it, while we waited.

Yet, others we contact say they won’t come, they don’t want to see her like this. It would hurt too much. But I wonder at the support she might need. The love she needs to see in our eyes. Our loving touch. Our music.

Trying not to judge, but I do. It seems to be a selfish love they have: that takes the joy she gave them but declines the pain.

She is still here. She is still inside that starving body that struggles to live. Her beautiful caring, loving heart that comforted us in our traumas, listened to our fears, laughed joyfully at our silliness still there.

Do we only take from a loved one or share their pain, lend our strength when they need us most?

Dear God, please help me not to have selfish love.

Radiation day

Every Monday he drives to his mothers house to pick her up. He drives her across town to a modern new hospital building. They don their masks, answer the questions to be admitted and take the elevator to the 3rd floor clinic.

Total state of art machines and techniques are used, and she patiently submits.

Only she may enter the room where the technicians check her vitals and start their procedures.   She is immobilized in a cast made to hold her head perfectly still. The radiation is precisely aimed to focus on the mass that is trying to destroy her jugular vein.

Only she knows the agony of being unable to move or receive comfort as the technology of the moment tries to kill the cancer.

It is brutal. They told her it would be. Her lips are swollen, burns inside her mouth and throat make eating impossible. She is basically starving as one or two spoons of soup or yogurt are all she can tolerate each day.

Even water burns, and anything cold is unbearable.

The son takes her home, helps her inside and to her bed, where she lays exhausted and weak.

Tomorrow he will pick her up again and repeat the process.

She has five more treatments …the machine has five more chances to complete killing the cancer hopefully without killing her.

Expecting miracles

We have come to expect miracles, while voicing fears.

Today’s medical marvels,  unsurpassed surgical skills,

Lead us to a state of assumed victory.

Yet, we pray…

Ask others to pray…

Yet, seem to trust the surgeons skill

More than the God who gave life,

Who designed and created these bodies,

Who has numbered the very hairs of our head…

And can repair without a scalpel.

Four words

“We got it all”

Four short words.

Deep breath

We relax

The surgeon has spoken.

Four words we expect, yet take for granted.

Given the miracles of modern medicine…

Gifted surgeons….

But this time an explanation begins….

Detailing steps taken,

Things removed,

Things found,

Things left undone,

Things damaged,

Things still deadly.

So sorry

What?

What next?

How long?

My ears can’t hear these words

Oh my God!