A beautiful interlude

Composed Saturday June 13 in my Dad’s hospital room as I sat at his bedside.

Everything fell to pieces when my eyes met yours in that hospital gown….

Joy Invincible, Switchfoot

My cousin died last week. Today we will have a memorial for him. I woke up a week ago to a phone call to learn of the tragic accident. He was only 36. He was deaf. The world was challenging for him. His parents did everything they could to help overcome the obstacles that is impairment caused. Most importantly he was and is given unconditional love.

Today we will celebrate Brandon’s life as we navigate the rough waters of grief.

I am writing in a hospital right now. My dad is the patient. He had a stroke yesterday. He was supposed to be riding with one of his sisters to his nephew’s memorial.

Dad had a spell last Friday. He is insulin dependent diabetic and thought it was related to that. His sister who lives out of state is in town visiting him. She felt it may have been a ministroke. Dad was not sure but he refused to be driven to hospital or to allow EMS to be called. He recovered the next day so he really thought it was his blood sugar. We know now that was not the case. His spell happened the same day of Brandon’s accident.

After work yesterday my brother and I decided to head to the beach with our children. His youngest had never been to the beach. It has been a long emotional week and we anticipated that today would be even more so. So we loaded up and took an impromptu trip to the beach. We decided taking the kids to do something fun would provide a much needed moment of joy. We hoped it would help renew us as we braced for the next day.

On the way to the beach another call came in notifying me that my dad had collapsed at home and had left side weakness. He was taken to ER. The events unfolding would reveal what I as Family Nurse Practitioner knew to be true , Dad indeed had a stroke. We were almost at the beach. Dad had his sister with him. We were trying to decide to continue or turn around. We drove on as there was much undetermined that would take time. It was late afternoon almost evening and we were not far from our destination.

The remainder of the trip would include calls and texts to siblings and other family members. We learned Dad would be transferred to the closest stroke center hospital and we were waiting on that. We also learned once he arrived, due to COVID, visiting hours would already have passed and despite the situation we could not see him until the following morning at 6 am. We approached the sea wall and let the kids unload. I looked out upon the ocean and cried out to the Maker of this vast expanse of sea. “Lord, help Daddy!” “Lord, help us!”

Galveston Beach- Seawall

We had calls and texts back and forth. I had to tell my husband who was home and did not join the trip because he had a work deadline. After discussing everything he said, ” I know it is hard, Shelly, but try to enjoy the beach.” I had been wanting to go to the beach for a while. My niece, Lindsay had never been and despite all the unfolding events her childlike joy and optimism could not be contained as she had her first experience with standing in the ocean waves holding her daddy’s hands. “EPIC!” she exclaimed. Yes indeed the ocean is epic because its maker is amazing.

My daughter found her epic moment by sitting on her towel and pulling out her guitar. As she listened to the ocean waves she strummed and sang. I realized she was okay. The nephews were with their dad. My niece was building her very first sand castle and her mom was nearby watching her and calling the nurse at the hospital. I walked into the ocean.

I let the waves crash into my body. All of the chaos, the fears, the pain, the grief, the worries, I stood there until the sound of the waves and feel of the wind and smell of the salt forced them to all to be muted. Anytime I visit the ocean the song Saltwater Heart by Switfchoot always plays in my mind. So in that moment of solitude standing in the ocean after my initial cry to God, my mind played……

When I’m on your shore again

I can feel the ocean

I can feel your open arms

That pure emotion

I’m finally free again

Like my own explosion

When I’m on your shore again

I can feel the ocean

– Saltwater Heart, Switchfoot

As I was standing there consumed by the waves and the song in my mental juke box my brother Louis came near. I shared with him I always think of that song anytime I am at the ocean. Louis smiled. He is the one that turned me on to Switchfoot’s music and I knew he “got it.” He moved deeper into the ocean with his eldest as I stood relatively alone again. I prayed and then I resigned myself to this summation, ‘Okay Abba, help my Daddy.’

We finished the day with some joyful moments of sand castles, wave jumping, listening to my daughter play guitar and just standing in the ocean and letting the waves wash over us. It was tranquil. It was joyful. It was a beautiful interlude that the Maker of this ocean and our souls knew we would need.

Now I look at my Daddy here in this hospital gown. Unable to use part of his body due to the stroke with much uncertain in the future. In a few moments I will drive to the funeral home where my brother, Louis who is a pastor and is officiating the service will try to offer words of comfort and peace as we memorialize my cousin, Brandon.

Hallelujah nevertheless, was the song the pain couldn’t destroy

Hallelujah nevertheless, You’re my joy invincible

Joy invincible, joy

Tears were in my eyes when the phone rings

If only life didn’t need us to be this brave

But we don’t live in the world of if only’s

Stretched tight in between our birth and our graves

Hallelujah nevertheless

Joy Invincible, Switchfoot

Thou Art With Me

While waiting on a family member with some general viral symptoms to get tested for COVID-19, I found myself anxious. The anxiety stems from both concern and a feeling of helplessness. I am a caregiver by nature. As a Family Nurse Practitioner for over a decade my brain is wired to observe and analyze symptoms, formulate a differential diagnosis and then provide a treatment plan. Acting, doing, being part of the solution is how I am hard wired. When I am unable to do much of anything my brain at times feels like it is going to short circuit. Thus coupled with my deep care and concern for my family member and this feeling of wanting to (as we say in the south) fix something and yet being unable to do so, I have a lot of potential and kinetic energy balled up within me.

So what do I do in times like these? I rely on my faith and turn to scripture. This past Sunday was Good Shepherd Sunday. So yesterday morning as the nervous energy was building to a crescendo I turned to the 23rd Psalm. As I read over it, song began playing in my mind. It is Jon Foreman’s song”House of God Forever” which is essentially his music interpretation of Psalm 23. Reading over the Psalm, hearing the song in my mind and praying for my family member, one portion of a verse caused me to pause, “For thou art with me.”

FOR THOU ART WITH ME- I wanted to be with my family member to calm them, hold their hand and assure them. I could not . I wanted to be there doing all the things I know to do to help a person’s body overcome any viral illness. I could not. I wanted to make it all better. I could not. I had to lay my family member (yet again) at the feet of Jesus. When I did so and turned to this Psalm reading that very phrase caused peace to flow over me. I cannot be with my family, but GOD is. I am limited. GOD is not. For thou art with me comforting me from my helplessness and anxiety and thou art with my family member comforting, guiding, healing them.

Fear, uncertainty, and anxiety are easily stirred up when illness, disease and fear of death or even death itself enters the stage. It is a sober reminder that this world is passing away. Though we who are in Christ know well the hope that lies beyond is greater than we can imagine, no one embraces loss.

What a difference 24 hours makes. My family member is improving. The test results were negative and things are looking up. However, I have been in the valley of death and dying when we had to bid farewell much sooner than we ever wanted to or felt we should. There for certain I knew thou art with me. In the fears and uncertainty of tomorrow and what the future looks like as we all grapple with the new normal that is unfolding due to this global pandemic, thou art with me.

Come what may, thou art with me.

Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil. FOR THOU ART WITH ME; thy rod and thy staff comfort me.

Psalm 23:4