Saturday, January 24, 2004

PURE CURE

There was a little funk coloring my mood today.



Spent the morning with Amy, and she is doing better. She's determined to get out of the hospital on Monday.

But I'm keeping my optimism in check until I see a doctor signing the release papers.

An empty house breeds too much introspection.



I tried to combat it this afternoon by doing some dusting and cleaning, that in itself is a pretty good indicator of how boring life has become when the only other occupants of the house all have four legs, fur and questionable breath.

The plague of the mundane was broken by the ring of the phone.

It was my eldest stepdaughter, Tiffany. In town unannounced. She was around the corner shopping and wanted to stop by.

We had a good visit before I sent her on her way to go see her Mom at the hospital.

The house isn't immaculate by any means, but I've been disinfunked...just in time.

God provides.

Friday, January 23, 2004

SEEING THE END THROUGH THE MIDDLE

My middle brother, Derek, called me last night. This might seem like a common occurrence to most folks, but it's not for me.

When I told Amy she asked with incredulity, "Your brother Derek?"

Derek is a good man, but no one would ever confuse him with Phil Donahue or Alan Alda. He's not exactly touchy-feely. We've never really been very close although we have been in contact a little more in recent years because his dear wife, Mary Kay, has had her own health struggles. Nonetheless usually I end up talking with Mary Kay when I call. If Derek gets on the line at all, the conversation is fairly terse. Derek is a man of few words and we don't call each other just to shoot the breeze. In fact, the majority of my communications with Derek over the years have been in the form of email. I write trying to catch him up on our lives and asking if everything is okay with his family. His email responses invariably resemble telegrams of old, "ALL WELL - DEREK".

When my cell phone rang last night and I realized it was Derek calling I feared bad news; however he only wanted to know how Amy and I were doing . I waited expecting him to pass off the phone and say, "Well, here's Mary Kay" but then he told me she wasn't home. He initiated the call on his own.

When I told Amy that she again said, "Derek, your brother?"

The last few months have been challenging for Amy and me...the last few weeks certainly have as well. However I suspect a few months from now I'm going to look back on this time and think how much better life is...because of what we've been through.

God, I pray that is so.

Proverbs 19:21

Many are the plans in a man's heart, but it is the Lord's purpose that prevails.

THE SIMPLE LIFE

Two things I'm thankful for today.
1. Our homeowners warranty - The washer went out....35 bucks for the service call and it should be fixed in a day or two.
2. Peanut butter and crackers. I've forgotten this simple pleasure, of course this also means I've eaten everything else possible in the house since Amy went into the hospital, but for now at least I can still avoid WalMart

GOODBYE CAP'N!

I heard on the radio on the way home from the hospital this morning that Bob Keeshan has died. He was a fixture of the very early years of my life.

I graduated from Howdy Doody to Captain Kangaroo and became a solid member of the first television fixated generation.

I remember Mister Moose, knock knock jokes, Mr. Greenjeans, Lariat Sam and Tom Terrific.



The memories flood back of times and people long gone. Good memories.

Captain Kangaroo's Treasure House is still alive in me.

That's nice to know.

O Captain! my Captain! our fearful trip is done,
The ship has weather'd every rack, the prize we sought is won

Thursday, January 22, 2004

THE MALE SPIRIT

So let me get this straight. NASA's explorer "Spirit" got to Mars and then suddenly stopped communicating.

Shouldn't we have anticipated this?

It seems like a lack of communication is a charactistic of Mars.



If only we had sent it to Venus...I'm sure it would be a virtual Chatty Kathy.

THAT A WAY

Well, the sign was still there this morning, posted in front of the Bluebird ladies at the hospital.

Amy was having a rough morning and I don't think she really believed me when I told her about it.

We decided to walk downstairs together to see it. I couldn't resist taking the picture.



It did seem to lift Amy's spirits.

DEAN DITTY



I guess I'm obsessing on Howard Dean's little outburst the other day, but quite honestly this is what I first thought of when I heard it.

My apologies to James Brown.

Click here to listen

Wednesday, January 21, 2004

LEFT UP TO MY DISCRETION

As I walked into the hospital today I noticed the information station manned by the volunteer "bluebirds". They are little old women, most all certainly in their 70's or 80's, who although called bluebirds, for some reason actually dress in pink. They do things like deliver flowers and emails to patients; they also answer questions of people entering the hospital. Apparently there are limits to the questions they will answer though.

Today, as usual, there were two little bluebirds sitting at the information desk in the hospital entryway. Taped to the front of their desk was a sign that read simply: "Impotents Anonymous" with an arrow pointing down the hall.

I must admit I wanted so very much to take a picture.

Tuesday, January 20, 2004

GOING UP?


I'm not a doctor, but I play one on elevators...apparently.

The other day while I was riding up to see Amy, a man sharing the hospital elevator with me stretched out his hand suddenly and said, "Hey, Doctor Somethinorother!".

I shook his hand; told him I was glad to meet him, but I had to admit I wasn't a doctor. He looked at me strangely as I exited.

It dawned on me later that perhaps he still thought I was Dr. Somethinorother, but that I had decided at that moment to make an admission of fakery presumably mistaking the elevator in a Methodist hospital for a confessional.

I hope Dr. Somethinorother isn't the guy's proctologist.

This afternoon, I got on the same elevator with another man and asked him to push button 5. He said, "You work on the fifth floor?"

I was dressed in my post nap attire: scruffy jeans, WalMart sandals, socks which Amy later mentioned were dirty, a tee shirt, a ball cap and a slightly oversized sweater. Not exactly surgical scrubs. I would hope any doctor outside of the third world dresses better. I'm fairly certain there are standards of cleanliness for even the lowest level hospital employee which I did not meet at the time. I wondered what job he conceivably thought I might do if I did work there.

I suppressed the urge to say, "Yeah, brain surgeon" and instead assured him I was not a hospital employee.

He said, "You visiting someone?"

By now I was double checking to make sure he actually pushed the elevator button while alternately wondering how long it would take to reach the fifth floor and whether this gent's personal elevator ever reached the top, but I answered, "Yes, my wife."

"She a transplant recipient?"

I was mentally kicking myself for not simply pushing the elevator button for myself instead of asking him to since that evidently primed the pump for this exchange, but I answered something along the lines of, "No, she's been in the hospital for a while...surgery."

"Something serious?"

I briefly toyed with the idea of saying, "Not really, but we've watched so many episodes of E.R. and it looked like so much fun...we had to try it ourselves." Instead, as the elevator finally reached my stop, I muttered something about being thankful that it wasn't more serious.

Then I heard the long awaited "Ding" signalling my escape, and I shuffled off saying a prayer of gratitude ....that the hospital is not a high rise.

BAD POETRY, GOOD SLEEP

It's Tuesday and I'm feeling tired.
In politics and medicine mired.
The energy gap
Might be breached with a nap
At least that's what's desired.

WORDS ARE WORTH A THOUSAND PICTURES

Did you hear Howard Dean's concession speech in Iowa last night?

Click here to listen to a small sample.

If he burns out in New Hampshire, I get to write the headline:

Howard's End!

Monday, January 19, 2004

STAIRWAY TO HEAVEN

Our lab mix, Klondike, parks himself on our stairwell.

That, I suppose, is not unusual. What is somewhat strange is that Klondike won't move. If you decide you might like to climb those stairs, Klondike won't object, but he won't get out of your way either. He will position his carcass in your path and stare at you with a certain blissful ignorance as you are forced to shimmy by him.

He was that way when he was 10 weeks old and weighed 18 pounds, and he's that way 10 years later at 85 pounds.



It's not a behavior exclusive to the stairs. Klondike will lay next to the couch while I'm reclining, but when I step down he holds his ground. He never makes any effort to avoid being stepped upon.

He will sleep next to my bedside and when I roll off the mattress he might occasionally crack open one eye, or even wag his tail, but he doesn't budge to make room for my fairly significant feet.

I've always thought he was at best stubborn, and more likely simply a little dim. No other dog I've ever owned has acted so silly.

Today, at the hospital, our young friend had her surgery. It went fine and she's going to recover although there are some hard days still ahead.

Many of her friends and family members were present as she was going into the O.R..

We prayed together.

We waited together.

Despite the trepidation of the day's events, I noticed there was a certain sense of tranquility about the morning. We had faith that everything would be okay.

Amy and I also spent some time today with her surgeon. He listened to our concerns, and carefully explained what his thoughts were on Amy's recovery and future treatment. Our pastor and a caring friend were in the room at the time providing us with comfort and reassurance.

Although there are still some hard days before us too, I came away feeling better about how things will work out in future weeks.

I left the hospital this afternoon. When I arrived home Klondike parked himself on the stairs again.

I realized it then.

Klondike knows I will go out of my way not to harm him.

He trusts me implicitly.

Today, I feel that same sense of peace

Perhaps it's not the dog who's been silly all these years.

PSALM 56:3

When I am afraid, I will trust in You.

Sunday, January 18, 2004

THE TWO MINUTE WRITING

I'm sitting down to write with no particular purpose, which is not really that unusual.

Most days I have no idea what I'm going to write when I place my hands on the keyboard.

I suspect that often shows.

Tonight, I'm setting a time limit.

I want to watch a little football, and fall asleep so my thoughts will have to gel in about about two minutes, or I'll simply hit delete and walk away. Two minutes seems like plenty.

Time is moving at a different pace for me lately. Hours in the hospital drag on and then seem unfilled. Days blend into each other. Moments on the phone with Amy seem alternately full of sustenance and then too short. Weekends disappear in a blink.

Tomorrow I will rearrange my schedule to be at the hospital again. I'll be there for Amy, but also to spend time in the surgical waiting room with dear friends whose daughter is now going to have to undergo a major operation. They will be scared and fearful.

I remember those times vividly. I should. I spent time in that same place only last week.

And I know that that time is easier when it's shared.

Hard time always is I suppose.