Days
before, family had come to town to visit him–to say their goodbyes, as he laid
there dying. His long lanky shriveled body lay under the blankets of his twin
electronic bed. He refused food, water
or an I.V. for nourishment. He said he was ready. That seemed to give others a
sense of peace, but not me. Ready? What does that mean for a man of little
faith?
I
tried to ignore it and to accept that this was the cycle of life and it was
just his time. I told myself that his own sons knew better than I–the hormonal
granddaughterinlaw, growing a baby in her womb, who had only met this man a
few years before. I hadn't been very comfortable around the man either, the man
who grumbled over matters rather than offering his wisdom and blessing.
I
tried but days later, one Saturday morning, I felt overwhelmingly compelled to
go. I gave every excuse under the sun not to. Why would I go without my
husband and small child? What would I say? It was a completely foreign
thought and well out of my comfort zone.
And so I decided to go exercise
instead–to try to rationalize those thoughts away.
Yet
when I got to the gym, I could not so much as run in place without feeling the
need to get somewhere. I was antsy. I was driven. I was compelled to go.
Within
five minutes of arriving at the gym, I was on my way out the door again and
driving to the nursing home that housed my grandfatherinlaw.
I
walked in. He look surprised. He could not speak well anymore, dying of
dehydration. I can't remember my words exactly, but I remember asking how he
was and if he was ready. He nodded his head, yes.
I
felt a flood coming and so I quickly asked if he believed. He said, just above
a whisper, "Sort of."
I
remember that wasn't enough for me and he attempted to change the subject
with the little he could utter and asked if his son, my fatherinlaw, made it
off okay, back home...but the rain poured just then and I said I was sorry and I
brought the topic right back to where I had left off–that I needed him to
believe because I wanted to see him again in heaven. I sniffled and caught my
breath.
And
I felt an overwhelming amount of love for the man laying there. I wiped my
tears and said I wanted to hold his hand, but I was fighting a cold that I
didn't want to give him.
He
held his hand out anyway, so I took his warm hand in mine and I didn't know
what to say next so I didn't say anything. I just held his hand. And then I
said I should probably go.
He
looked me in the eye and whispered, "Thank you."
I
smiled and I didn't want to leave, but I knew it was time. And so I released
his hand and he whispered again, "Thank you."
I
left his room and went straight to the nurses station and asked for some hand
sanitizer because I was fighting a cold. Then I walked right back to his room.
He looked surprised.
I
took his hand, the hand I had held, and rubbed the sanitizer over it. Then he
lifted his other hand and so I rubbed sanitizer on that hand, too. I looked at
him again and said goodbye.
He
looked me in the eye and most sincerely whispered for the third time, "Thank
you."
I walked away, then stopped at the door, turned and waved. He
lifted a hand and waved back. Then I went home, walked straight into my
husband's arms and wept.
I told him where I had been and I wept because I
didn't feel like I had done enough.
He said I did more than I knew.
I
had prayed on my way to the nursing home that I would see my husband's
grandfather through Jesus' eyes and not my own. And what I saw had little to do
with physical eyes at all. When I left, I felt inseparable. Our family was
heading out of town the next day and I didn't want to go. I didn't want to miss
a day to be there with him.
That
was the last day I saw him and I am told, the last day he had been able to utter
any words.
He
died the following Tuesday night and I don't know what happened between
Saturday and Tuesday, but I have a hunch that the man I saw in those fifteen
minutes saw for the first time, a glimmer of light.
I'll
never know for sure this side of heaven if my offering was enough, but it wasn't
up to me to do or be enough. It was up to me to simply show up. And the rest,
up to Jesus.
It's
Jesus who makes the blind see and the lost found.
And it's Jesus who makes our
small offerings–even fifteen minutes worth–enough.
- Theresa Miller, MOPS Mom
Theresa is a wife and mother of four children (3, 5, 7, and 9), who are embarking on their first year of homeschooling. Theresa has been involved in Sheridan MOPS for the last 9 ½ years, serving in multiple leadership positions, including Day MOPS Coordinator in 2007-2008. She took one year off, then started the Sheridan Evening MOPS group in September 2009. Theresa has published an article with MOPS International MOMSnext Ezine, in addition to other on-line publications. You can find Theresa encouraging mothers on her blog, Heavenly Glimpses.
No comments:
Post a Comment