Daily my friend battles a skulking wolf of a disease. This disease has
devoured and ravaged her. Because she must constantly battle this
disease she is left vulnerable to many others. The disease shows little
mercy; often she must claw her way out of its grasp, and the grappling
leaves her weary and worn.
This
disease has imprisoned her in her own body. She is often confined to a
wheel chair and home. Walking is a labor. It is a chore that must be
crossed off of her to do list each day. She goes to PT twice
a week in order to be able to walk very short distances on a cane or
perhaps unaided. Most of us do not have to think about this rote
activity, but for her it is a discipline to be endured each day in
order to maintain even her limited physical freedom.
Yet she is
full of self-effacing humor, bone-hard faith, bold assertiveness, and
tenacious life. The disease leaves her no space to be timid or
hesitant; instead it has honed her mind and spirit. She is an
incredible writer and artist, and she is one of the most encouraging
and challenging people I have in my life.
Yes, she is hindered
and imprisoned by her body's incapability. She is limited, yet I have
been moved by her insightful encouragement. Her blunt exhortation has
challenged me to action on more than one occasion.
She has
helped me to learn to laugh at myself. She has been quite fierce when I
have fallen victim to my own warped perception of myself and
situations. I think there have been a few times she considered reaching
through the computer and snatching me bald-headed because of my own
diseased thinking. She is one of my fiercest dragon slayers (see archives).
In
late spring she called me and asked if she could come see me. She drove
to my house. This was the first time she had driven in almost a year.
Her medication deprived her of that luxury. And of all the crazy
things, she came bearing gifts. With a delighted grin she told me to
start opening them, and she told me in what order.
At the time I wasn’t
aware she had been having email discussions with my daughters
concerning these gifts. She had engaged them and her own family in this
carefully planned event. I understand now just how strategically
involved they all were.
Each gift contained a thoughtfully
crafted and worded clue. With each one my heart began to soar. In the
back of my mind I thought I knew what these clues were revealing, but I
didn’t dare breathe in case I interpreted them incorrectly.
The
last clue informed me we were going on a trip. Two forty-something
women were going to embark on a journey together. My friend decided to
put me right in the middle of the place I love the very most. We were
going on a cruise—a seven day adventure in the middle of the ocean.
Her
gift to me is full of generosity, but she has offered me more than an
incredible vacation—she is giving me the opportunity for an adventure.
She knows the soul of me. As she, her family and mine constructed this
trip, she opened the chance for some of my dreams to become realities.
Despite
the challenges of her disease she is the leader of this trip. She has
been on several cruises, but someone else planned and led. This time
she has made all the preparations, plans, itineraries, activities,
plane rides, transfers, and excursions (and managed to get us a balcony
room). I have simply watched and listened and smiled. (Actually I have
shouted and laughed and grinned.)
We sail in October, and her goal is to be able to walk twenty steps alone before she will need to sit in her wheel chair again.
Twenty steps.
Count them. Get up from your computer and count out twenty steps and see how far it takes you.
She is concerned.
But I say twenty steps at a time, and I will be waiting with the wheel chair.
When
she is ready we will walk in twenty step increments until we reach the
plane. We will walk in twenty step increments until get to the ship. We
will walk in twenty step increments until we get to our cabin. And then
after I throw open the balcony doors, we will plop on the beds and
laugh from our bellies.
We aren't going to think about the
multiple sets that will be needed to circle the ship. No, we will think
about each set of twenty steps and conquer those first.
Hopefully she will lean on me as I have often leaned on her.
We
will ride on glass-bottom boats, and sit on the beach under umbrellas,
and play with the sea lions. We will collect shells, sketch and write
in our journals, drink something with a funny little umbrella. I hear
we will eat a lot of good food! I will push her through the streets of
the exotic towns we will visit, and she will help me haggle on prices
for gifts for my daughters.
But there are some things she simply cannot do. She planned for me to do them anyway.
On an island in the Caribbean I will visit a lighthouse and climb to the top.
As
I wind upward, I will stop every twenty steps and pray for her. When I
reach the top and feel the warm breeze on my face and smell the briny
salt on the air of the vast ocean below and beyond—I will laugh.
Perhaps the sound will carry across the waves and come back to me.
And I will remember. I will remember the lessons God has taught me through her.
With his grace we can overcome by walking twenty steps at a time.
Twenty steps.