The Christ Who Heals (Fiona Givens, Terryl Givens)

Chapter 6

Regardless of the religious or moral premises with which we begin, most philosophers and legislators can agree upon a few basic principles. Foremost of these is the assertion that human beings have a right to self-determination. The Universal Declaration of Human Rights adopted by the world community of nations in 1948 is so emphatic on this point that it employs forms of the word free thirty times in it’s short manifesto. We have a right to freedom from slavery, from forced marriage, from labor or sexual exploitation, and a hundred other abuses. We could put this another way: The highest right we have is to be treated as an “I” and not an “it,” a subject and not an object, a person with our own desires, interest, and intentions rather than a means to another persons ends. In this view of things, anything that turns us into an “it,” an object, a means or instrument or vehicle of another person’s interests or intentions, would be evil.

We think this is a powerful moral insight. Virtually all human evils can be interpreted in the light of this basic premise. Human trafficking, pornography, theft, fraud, rape–or more subtle evils, such as flattery, high-pressure sales, emotional manipulation–these and a thousand other varieties of wrongdoing objectify and instrumentalize other human beings. What greater perversity could we imagine then to take a human being made in the likeness and image of God and reduce her or him to a mere object among objects, a rung on the ladder of our own self interest, a stepping stone on the path to our own self aggrandizement, or a disposable diversion in our pursuit of a self-serving aim? Such, however, is the nature of most any human evil one could name.

Twyla

ted-cowboy-shirt-twyla-prettyMy mother has Dementia, similar to Alzheimer’s Disease, Dementia is kind of an umbrella for a memory diseases of old age.  I’d guess it started about nine years ago.

When my dad passed in August of 1999, I remember how hard it was.  I remember thinking… “I had no idea that it would be this hard”.  In our church there is something called a Father’s Blessing.  I was camping in early July of 1999.  One day while camping, I had this urgent feeling… “Have your dad give you a Father’s Blessing”.  The feeling was so strong and urgent that I left the camp ground and drove to the little store down the street.  I phoned my mother, Twyla, and told her about my strange and urgent feeling.  She said, “Dad is doing just fine darling.  Don’t worry, everything is fine”.

I drove back to camp.  Even though the feeling didn’t go away, I finished my camping trip.  I still couldn’t shake the feeling that came and went to have a Father’s blessing.  I even saw my dad, he was fine and we were all busy.  I told myself dad is fine.  I will have time.  I will have him give me a blessing.  But, there’s time.

If my memory is correct, July 19th of 1999 was a Monday.  I flip through the calendar of my computer.  My memory is correct.  It is the last day that I saw my father alive.  It was my mother’s birthday.  Most of our family was there, at our parents house, in the back yard.  My parents had a 19 foot long shed in there back yard in South Weber, Utah.  It was a large back yard about a half acre.  They had a large deck off the sliding glass door that came out of their kitchen.  The deck my ex-husband had made with my dad.

We were gathered there to paint the shed.  My mother, Twyla, had said that was all she wanted for her birthday was to have the shed painted.  So, my father had gathered his family together and we all painted the shed.  What a fun memory.  My brother’s and their families and my sister and her family and my daughters and myself.  My father, Ted, in his chair on the deck observing.  My dad, now 72, had been riddled with arthritis for much of his life.  He had kidney problems that were discover at the age of 45 and I remember the day he came home from the doctor and we were told that the doctors had said that my father only has two more years left to live.  They had discovered that one of his kidneys had been dead since birth and that the second kidney was only functioning at about 25% of what is should be.   Long story short (cliche), my parents delved into health food and herbs and my father’s kidney issues were never what took his life.

Back to the day we were all painting the shed in my parents back yard.  I kept noticing my father sitting on the deck.  He was always a calm man, content to listen to the grandchildren or myself.  Today, I noticed he seemed especially pensive… He was watching us intently.  He was CONTENT!

Two days later my mother called us.  Dad was acting strange in his chair and she immediately headed to the Veteran’s Hospital in Salt Lake City.  My father went into a coma and was placed on life support.  Everyday I made the hour drive to Salt Lake City to see my father and support my mother.  Everyday the same.  He was hooked up to the machines that kept him alive.  No words.  I did remember the time that my father told my mother and I that he did not want to be kept alive with life support.  But, now that wasn’t my decision it was his dear wife’s.  One day while in his room, just my mother and me looking at him, it seemed he looked at us.  I thought he was mad at us for keeping him this way.  My mom glanced quickly my way.  Later she told me, “It was almost like he was mad at us”.  The same thing I had thought.

A couple of my siblings did not think my father was dying.  A couple of us did.  Day after day we continued to pray and wait. Twelve days passed by.  The family decided it was time to have a 24 hour fast.  Fasting is not one of my strengths.  I believe I can name, hmmm, probably 3 times in my entire life that I have completed a 24 hour fast and I’m thankful that this is one of them.  Day 13 is the first time that my mother and all of her children were at the VA Hospital at the same time.  We were there to end our fast and pray for my father.  My brother Randy, was giving the blessing to my father.  Randy happened to be one of the siblings that believed my dad was going to pull out of this coma.  He placed his hands on my fathers head as we all bowed our heads and closed our eyes.  The blessing began, but the word Randy so desired to say would not come.  Quiet, and then through tears my brother blessed that we would be able to let my father go in peace.

We conveyed in the waiting room.  It was one of those happy funeral type gatherings.  My father was in a coma in the other room.  But, sweet feelings of love and friendship between a mother and her children were all around.  Then the door opened.  A man in scrubs stood there.  The pillow that was in my mother’s lap flew through the room as she said, “Don’t you dare say it!  Don’t you dare!”

My father was released from his earthly cares as his family prayed for his best interests and displayed the unity needed to let him leave this earth.

Night after night I cried.  A single mother of four girls, he was my go to guy for that taken care of feeling we usually get from a loving spouse.  He was my protector and my person that looked over myself and the four little girls in my charge.  I longed to talk to him again just once.  I never forgave myself for not getting that Father’s Blessing that my Heavenly Father wanted me to have, to comfort me in the loss of my earthly Father.

This story started out as Twyla and ended up about her other half… Ted.

I love you Father!

–  Your String Bean

A Parent’s Love

172174-R1-220-221Thursday, June 23, 1988

Thursday, June 23, 2005…

As I sat in my car in front of the local amusement park waiting for the two youngest of my four daughters to arrive, feelings started to rush through my head.  I felt my so much pain.  The pain was for the struggles of my seventeen year old daughter.  We’d been facing them for quite some time now.  I was divorced and felt alone in my role as a parent.  Jessica was becoming more distant, more confused, more resentful towards me.  I ached with every once of my being and the words came.  I thought they started out for her.  I rummaged through the car for a pen and paper.  In the end, I knew the words were for me… Loving comfort for me.

To my oldest daughter

Defining moments we have many
But, to take back we haven’t any.
Would I? I ask myself.
And then I stop to contemplate
The choice I made as I chose my mate

Regrets in life I can think of a few
But oh the joy when I held you!
What could I give you, if I had my choice?
A wonderful life, no tears, no pain.
Eternal bliss would be your gain

Have I laid the road?
Have I shown you the way?
I’ve tried my best. I’ve loved, I’ve cried.
I’ve sat up at night and plead with the Father.
Never before have I said why bother.

Seventeen with the world by the tail.
I’m worried now, don’t let me fail!
This world is quickly changing.
Please stop me Lord from interfering.
Help me not to be domineering.

Upon the cross he freely bled.
Remember what the scriptures said.
I hurt, I moan. Father! Do not leave me alone!
Did you love us as much?
What gift did you place within our touch?

Quietly it came…
“To act, to choose, my darling daughter,
It means so much!  Someday you’ll see!
Feel the peace that resides in me”.
I can’t… I’ll try… Help me please!
I feel lost.  Don’t let her be!

Sacred Death

My mother is 87 years old.  Her name is Twyla.  She has the cutest sense of humor and I’ve grown closer to her this year than ever before…

She has had dementia for about 9 years and it’s been a pretty slow steady decline until May of this year.  We’ve been through a lot together this year.

But, this story isn’t about my mother even though she’s in the story.  Twyla sits in a nursing home at Crestwood now.  She is well taken care of.  She doesn’t walk.  She doesn’t sit up straight without being propped up.  She doesn’t dress herself or feed herself.

I visit her often.  Sometimes every day or every other day.  My mom’s room is the last room down the hall on the left.  We’ve lucked out so far and she hasn’t had to have a roommate.  Mom can get aggravated with others at times when she doesn’t understand what’s going on so it’s been nice to not worry about that.

Recently Doris has moved into the other bed in my mom’s room.  She’s quiet.  She stays in her bed all the time.  Doris has been here about a week now.

Today after pulling the privacy curtain between Doris and my mom and getting mom comfortable in her recliner (with the help of a CNA). I prop up her swollen hands on a pillow,  I pick up the speakers with her iPod plugged into them and pull up a chair next to her.  I say hello and kiss her on the forehead.  She slowly and strenuously tells me I’m wonderful.

She has three playlists on her iPod that I’ve added.  Twyla’s fun music, which by the way is not too rowdy.  It has one of her favorites “Tennessee Waltz” and a must hear if you haven’t haha “Bushel and a Peck” by Doris Day.  I’m so seriosu!   A Bushel and a Peck.  Two other playlist on her iPod are Church Music and Church Music Instrumental.  I settle in next to her and turn on Twyla’s Fun Music.

I feel a little strange, almost like im doing something wrong.  I feel like I should turn off the fun music and listen to something more spiritual.  I ignore the feeling and keep playing my word puzzle game next to mom.  I feel it again.  I think I should switch the music.  I ignore it.  A third time, change the music to something spiritual.  Okay, okay I’ll just do it.  I put down my book and switch the play list to Church Music Inspirational and settle back in.

I always feel good here.  The patients make me happy when I talk to them.  I’ve tried hard to learn all their names and something about them.  There situations seem miserable.  But, there is more to this place. I’ve also tried hard to learn the names of all the CNA’s and the nurses.

Some time passes and Steven comes in and peaks around the curtain to where I’m sitting close to my mother.  He’s a young handsome CNA that always has a happy attitude and I’ve heard him in the hall and in patients rooms singing out loud to them.  Steven quietly says to me, “Just so you know… Your mom’s roommate passed away.  I don’t want you to see her and not think that she is being taken care of.”

Over the next thirty minutes or so I sit in the room with my mother pondering what has just taken place.  I hear Tracy, the nurse, and Steven taking about what needs to be done and tenderly washing Doris, combing her hair and making sure that her body looks nice for her family.

I have come to think of death differently.  I feel it is a sacred time.  Sacred enough that I was prompted to turn on sacred music because of what was about to take place.  I heard once there were three life events that God was involved in more than any others, birth, marriage and death.  I don’t think that Doris was sad.  I believe it was a time of rejoicing for family waiting for her.  I know this life is just is an event we pass through and it is not finished once we leave our mortal body for a while.

 

 

Quotes to Keep you going!

Recently I listened to a great book by Mel Robbins called The 5 Second Rule.  Mel Robbins BLOG

Here are a couple of quotes I loved and noted from her book.

  • “You have been assigned this mountain so that you can show others it can be MOVED!”

I definitely feel like I have climbed enough mountains in my life.  Some of them may have been thrown in front of me by none other than myself, LOL.  Regardless, I moved them, one shovel full at a time!  Hurrah for me!

  • “ONE moment of courage can change your day!  ONE day can change your life!  Your life can change the world!”

I have plenty of those moments that I look back and say, “If only I had…”.  May God grant me the wisdom to continue learning from past experience, to forgive myself and others always, to remember the times that I displayed courage and to continue in courage day by day.  I know he is with me, and I want to change the world!  8)

I really love the idea of the 5 Second Rule.  I’m going to try and apply it in my life for a few things I’ve let get out of control.  1. My weight.  My eating habits and less than active life have got to go!  2. Things that I’ve always wanted to do.  Now that I don’t have to work anymore, I promised God I would use my time to try and help others and him.  I think I will start by writing a book.  Hahaha.  5, 4, 3, 2, 1 Take off!

Joseph Courtney (Part 6 Conclusion)

Part 1        Part 2        Part 3        Part 4        Part 5        Part 6 Conclusion

I had held him, a sweet beautiful baby boy in my arms.  He existed.  He had his own unique set of features as do each of us.  I have been taught that my body looks like my spirit.  That each of us were created in heaven before we were created on earth.  Would Joseph Courtney come back to this earth… to different parents… to me?  If he came back to me wouldn’t I recognize the baby I had held?  It didn’t make sense to me that he could come back looking any different if he was created in heaven.  It didn’t make sense that a baby somewhere in someone’s arms could ever look exactly like my Joseph Courtney.  He was mine.  That was my conclusion.

The thought of whether or not I would see Joseph Courtney haunted me at times.  I’m not saying that I obsessed over the issue.  But, I loved him.  He had grown inside me for seven and a half months.  I had felt him move each night.  I had felt his love and held his tiny body in my arms.  It’s may be difficult to understand unless you have experienced it.  I loved him.  Would I see him again?  Is it possible that we would someday be able to be sealed for eternity as a mother and a son?

Life continues, we all know as we get older looking back seems like a dream.  I remarried close to 23 years old.  Before I was suppose to get pregnant, I needed a chromosome test to make sure there was nothing wrong with my chromosomes and that I could have a healthy child.  The test was good.  I heard Jay’s was good as well.  I got pregnant with a little girl.  We spent months going over the baby name book and fell in love with the name Jessica!  She would have my middle name, the same middle name as my mother and my grandmother!

Side Story: We spent months talking to Jessica in my belly.  “Hello Jessica!”, “How are you Jessica?”, “I love you Jessica!”  I had waited to take the chromosome test until getting married and deciding to have a child.  It was about $500 a lot of money for me at the time.  So down deep somewhere was the nightmare that I may never be able to have a child.  I was soooo thankful the results were good and this daughter was a long awaited for gift!  In labor with Jessica, this suppressed fear presented itself.  Once in the birthing canal Jessica wouldn’t come out.  Deep down I was so fearful that once she came out she wouldn’t be alive that I believe my body was fighting to keep her in.  Once again, Doctor Hurst’s face becomes a memory etched within my brain.  His worried look, his glances at the clock, his glances towards my mother.  I knew she needed to come and just as time was running out, Jessica’s cries sounded.  The nurse held her to me to hold and I heard myself saying, “Hello Jessica” and she quieted as she heard my voice.

More time, more experiences and three more beautiful daughters!  Still the thought in my head, “Where is Joseph?”, “Will I see Joseph?”, “Is he mine?”  One night when Jessica was about eight years old.  I wonder if that has any significance for what I’m about to share.  I was dreaming a vivid dream.  I remember every detail.  In the dream I was lying on my bed as I was in reality lying on my bed sleeping.  Jessica appeared above my bed slowing coming into view  the ceiling wasn’t there it was more like clouds.  She was holding a baby.  Upon seeing the baby I knew at once it was Joseph Courtney.  She came close enough to reach me and handed me the child.  I held him to my face.  I felt him.  I knew him.  I LOVED him.  I wept with an outpouring of love and appreciation.  Soon enough Jessica appears again.  Once again she descended from above and this time she spoke to me.  She said, “It’s time.” I knew that she meant it was time for Joseph to return and my vision to end.  My tender mercy!  I awoke as the dream ended.  My pillow was wet were I had wept.

Joseph Courtney (Part 5)

Part 1        Part 2        Part 3        Part 4        Part 5        Part 6 Conclusion

At Saint Benedict’s Hospital I was offered, what at that time was making it’s way into the birthing world, a spinal epidural.  My father was very nervous of my decision to have the epidural block.  In his youth and in the Navy at the time he had known of a young lady who had experienced permanent paralysis during her procedure, one of the rare risks of a spinal epidural.  I remember his deep concern.  But, with my doctor’s assurance that the risk was extremely rare and it was becoming a common procedure, I had the epidural.  I was told to hold extremely still as I leaned over and the epidural was placed.  My daughter says they are not painful at all now.  But, I remember it being painful.

As I remember, because my son was gone, my body wasn’t going to go into labor on it’s own.  I was given medication to induce and imitate labor.  But, told that because my natural hormones are not helping that the labor was harder than the labor of a live birth.  Sometime later I was being examined and a needle type instrument was being touched up my chest starting low on my abdomen.  Each time he, the examiner, would touch the needle to my skin and ask, “Can you feel that?” I would say no.  I was numb.  He would then move the needle up a few inches and say, “Can you feel that?”  Again, my response was, “no”.  When he got as high as my chest and still received the same answer, he frantically called some code over the hospital intercom and several doctors arrived as well as Doctor Hurst.  I’m sure my father in the waiting room was panicked if he knew it was my room.  There were several huddled around me.  Once again Doctor Hurst came to my rescue.  I don’t know why but Doctor Hurst asked me if I could wiggle my toes.  I said that I couldn’t.  He then got closer in my face and it seemed as if her were yelling at me, “WIGGLE YOUR TOES!”  I did.  The atmosphere calmed and people started departing.  That’s how I remember it.

When finally taken to the labor and delivery room, labor was hard.  The medicine was producing contractions.  They just weren’t as hard as they would have been during a normal delivery.  I remember Doctor Hurst had to push down on my belly the procedure.

After recovery, I was returned to my hospital room and lying on my bed calm.  A nurse came in and asked if I would like to hold Joseph Courtney before they took him away.  Babies gain most of their weight in the last few months of pregnancy.  Joseph was about nineteen inches long and weighed about 1 and 1/2 pounds.  I held him.  He was wrapped sweetly in a little blanket and I will always remember him.  He had his own unique features, a mixture of mine and Jay’s.  He was beautiful.

Part 6 (Conclusion)

Joseph Courtney (Part 4)

Part 1        Part 2        Part 3        Part 4        Part 5        Part 6 Conclusion

As time slipped silently past me and my son grew inside, he began a routine with me.  As I would lay in bed each night around 8:30 pm, he would let me know he was there.  He would start to wiggle.  I’ve had four other children now and looking back I feel his wiggle time was a special communication between us.  It wasn’t a kick or a stretch, it was continuous for fifteen minutes or more every night as I settled down in the quiet of my room.  I cherished the moments he rolled around as I gently placed my hand on the belly that housed his precious body.

None of us can cheat time.  The phone rang.  I don’t remember the words this time.  I remember the context.  My time was over.  Next week Joseph Courtney and I will have made it thirty-two weeks.

Regardless of our religion God loves us.  We are His children.  He will help us in ANY situation that comes into our lives NO MATTER WHAT WE HAVE DONE or what our religious background.  I know this to be true!  Reach up to him!  This is one of my stories and it is true.  It is simply what happened.  In the LDS faith we believe men have been given the priesthood which is the power to act for God in righteous situations and according to God’s will.  No matter what your religion is, if you believe God is involved in our lives, you can imagine the reality of his concern and care for his daughters on this earth and that he will help us.

At my parents suggestion, I agreed to having my father and my brother give me a priesthood blessing.  This took place sometime close to and before my regular time for bed.  I don’t remember the words my brother spoke.  I do remember the peace I felt during the blessing.  I went to bed that very night and never felt the touch of my son throughout the night.  When I woke up in the morning, I spoke to my mother, “I haven’t felt the baby kick all night”.  My mother said, “Let’s go to the hospital”.  She knew Joseph was gone.  Oh, how I love my mother!  Later she told me that as I went off to bed my brother had told her that he felt the baby  was already gone.

What a loving Heavenly Father who let me suffer consequence of poor decisions to learn and grow, yet in the hour of my need, comforted and blessed me beyond measure, releasing me from something I wasn’t prepared or armed to handle!  In fact, during the entire pregnancy, I do not recall contemplating the decision or ever coming to one, not even the night of the blessing.  It was just something I could not do.  Perhaps, I had been comforted and released from those thoughts.

(Part 5)

Joseph Courtney (Part 3)

Part 1       Part 2        Part 3        Part 4        Part 5        Part 6 Conclusion

I don’t remember the ride home or much after that except the doctor at the University wanted to see me throughout the pregnancy.  The decision slipped away with my pregnancy as I waited.  Why make such a decision until it was necessary?  Perhaps the life growing inside me would make the decision for me or God.

Sometime before the news of our baby’s difficulties, my parents had made the decision for Jay and I to get married.  We had a small ceremony in the living room of my parents and moved into their home.

One difficult time that I remember was at one of the appointments down at the University.  Doctor Hurst came down as well.  I remember that they wouldn’t let my husband, Jay, come in.  He had to stay in a waiting room.  The University doctor and what I believe were several students were huddled around studying the ultrasound as it was being given.  I think they forgot about me and the life inside of me they were discussing.  To my recollection they were discussing all the things that could possibly be wrong as they looked at the screen.  Maybe this, maybe that, well look at this, that’s strange.  Tears began to roll down my face and as I looked up Doctor Hurst was directly over me looking at me.  He told them they needed to leave.  I was so grateful to him in that moment.

Another difficult thing was when people who didn’t know me would congratulate me or talk about my pregnancy as my belly protruded larger and larger.  Once on the elevator at the University I remember an older lady especially enthusiastic as she congratulated Jay and I and asked about how excited we must be as we were riding to our destination floor.  I’m sure she was confused as my troubled eyes could not conceal the deceit of the positive nod of my head and my quiet lips.

(Read Part 4)