I traveled home, to Pennsylvania, the day after Christmas to see my father who is having health problems. Specifically, while undergoing a hip replacement, he had a minor stroke. Only 24 hours into my time here and I find it surreal. I am dining on feelings of sadness mixed with nostalgia being served with a side-portion of gratitude washed down with a tall glass of wonder. This morning I watched as my father began speech therapy. It is a time in which the therapist asked my father to describe objects and pronounce letters and words. I did not have the nerve to sit in the same room due to the sadness of seeing a once strong father pronouncing words like a child in phonics commercial. I found myself choking down deep feelings of sadness.
Later in the day, I drove with my mother through the town I spent some fantastic times as a child. I saw the tree I sat in eating green apples after smoking swisher sweet cigars trying to get the smell off my tongue. I may have gotten the smell off my tongue, but the green apples exacted its toll on my digestive system. I saw homes that were sitting where our neighborhood playground used to. I stopped the car across the street from the house I used to call home and looked at the renovations that the new owner had done. It is funny, but it really does not matter how much a person fixes up a home since it will never look good unless it looks the way it did when you were young. I devour a large helping of Nostalgia.
I then visited a friend named John who, while in his mid twenties, would take me along with a rough gang of friends camping during my 6th-8th grade years during the summer. John will never know how the memories of those days periodically drift through my mind like a cool breeze on a hot day. They were days of deep laughter and endless adventure. Today, my friend John has MS (multiple sclerosis) and he tells me it was not a good day. As he described to me numb limbs and painful aches, I am inundated by feelings of gratitude. I was not grateful for the sickness my friend is enduring, but gratitude to know that his mortality will be swallowed up by immortality one day. Maybe a day in the near future. John tells me the cost of the medicine will be expensive ($1200 to $1800 a month) and since he is self-employed, fear has become a haunting companion. But, I have gratitude as John expresses the richness of drawing close to God while his body begins to revolt against his wishes.
As I drove home, I commented to my mother of the wonder I feel at how God has directed me in my life through no plan or forecasting that I could do, but out of a sheer desire for me to know Him. Do I deserve what I have? No. Did I orchestrate the joy of having an incredible wife and 6 fantastic kids? Hardly. Do I not realize that at any time my life could be torpedoed by some life changing circumstance? Absolutly. However, I simple enjoy the silence of the drive home and the roar in my mind of the overpowering feeling of wonder at the grace of God.
Pat Dirrim says
Good stuff Dan. I too sit back from time to time and marvel at the crazy path that “life” has taken me on and realize how awesome God is. All this in 38 years to bring me closer to Him for His glory. I only hope and pray that I am doing His name the justice and honor that it deserves. God is good.
Ken Rutherford says
Well written, Dan.