Musings on Marriage

Tag: Death

Vultures and Hummingbirds

A few years ago my husband and I watched a mama cow in the front pasture who had recently given birth.  The little calf was laying in the green grass nearby the placenta which had recently released its occupant.  Just a few minutes after the birth, Larry saw these six vultures hovering around the pasture just waiting to gobble up their meal – the mouth-watering placenta.

Larry Baar
Larry Baar

A little later we also saw a hummingbird fliting around some wildflowers, joyfully drinking some of the sweet juice it had found. 

These two memories recently resurfaced as I finished reading a chapter from the book Winning the War for your Mind by Craig Groeschel, as he made the comparison between vultures and hummingbirds.  When a vulture flies around what is it looking for?  It always looks for dead things.  Apparently, vultures can smell roadkill from over a mile away.  Vultures primarily focus on dead things, smashed, squished or rotting – that is their specialty.

Hummingbirds, on the other hand, are attracted to sweet, life-giving nectar.  As they fly, their wings flapping 20 times per second, they are continually on the search for beautiful flowers and fragrant blossoms.  Hummingbirds focus on life and beauty.

What a difference in the goal of their hunts – one seeking out death and the other looking for life.  Every day each bird finds what they are looking for.

Craig uses these two feathered friends to illustrate the way each of us tend to preframe our perspectives during the day.  At the beginning of each day we typically have a mindset of what we expect during the day.  We can choose how to view something before it happens. 

It’s so easy to fall into the trap of preframing our day with the thoughts:

Today will be the same old same old stuff I face every day.  Same stuff, different day.  I’ll never be able to get done all I need to.  I’m overwhelmed.

 We expect and look for those things that bring us down, despairing and hopeless.  The way of the vulture.

Larry Baar

Thankfully there’s another way to preframe our day even before we get started.  With God’s help we can choose the frame for the day – looking for the life-giving beauty, giving thanks for His care.  If you know you’re in for a challenging day you could say to yourself:

Today I will experience God’s strength through my weakness.  He gives me everything I need for what I’m called to do.  Instead of a bad, busy day, I’m going to enjoy a good productive one.

There is not a moment in your life when God has forgotten or forsaken you.  He assures us, In the world you will have trouble, but be of good cheer, I have overcome the world.  We cannot control what happens to us, but we can choose how we will frame it.  We can see our circumstances through the lens of His mercy and grace, knowing our strength comes from Him. This is the way of the hummingbird.

It’s a beautiful thing to know we are loved and cared for by our Heavenly Father who has promised to carry our burdens.

It’s also empowering to know we have a choice:

To follow the way of the vulture or the way of the hummingbird.

The Symphony is Over

Dear Daughters,

The music is over.  Taps has been played, the dirt has been shoveled on the casket, we have all said our goodbyes.  Tears have flowed, hugs given, the scent of fragrant flowers and memories still lingering as we left the cemetery.

Olivia Prieto

Six weeks ago, Grandpa said the same thing he has said numerous times during the last few years:

I’m going downhill like a rocket.

Inevitably the next days he would improve and we would continue on with our song of life.  So it was no surprise when he commented about the rocket again.  The only difference being that this time he didn’t improve.

Hospice came to the house and gave him military honors, Chaplain Dick presenting Grandpa with a certificate thanking him for his service in World War II.  Tawnya, Jean and Dick – all from Hospice – videotaped a Life Review as I asked questions and he willingly told stories.

Grandpa’s heart was tired, it had served him faithfully for 94 years but grew steadily weaker by the day.

My memories of you four girls calling just a few hours before Grandpa died, will forever be in my heart.   We had planned for your singing at 8:30 Monday evening, but I didn’t think he would live that long.  Fifteen minutes later you were on the phone, singing:

Amazing grace, how sweet the sound

That saved a wretch like me.

I once was lost but now I’m found,

Was blind but now I see.

How beautiful hearing the melody along with tears and wavering voices for several more verses.  And then, as Grandma would always have it, we just had to modulate to the next step higher.  Whenever Grandma would play hymns on the piano she could never stay in the same key – we always had to go higher and with more intensity.

The last verse was the final anthem he heard in his life here on earth:

When we’ve been there 10,000 years

Bright shining as the sun.

We’ve no less days to sing God’s praise

Then when we first began….

Grandpa had not spoken or opened his eyes for over 12 hours, but when he heard your voices his eyes fluttered open momentarily.  He was breathing slowly but steadily.  Two hours later he was gone.

Olivia Prieto

The celebration of life at church was beautiful: 

Amazing Grace

I Can Only Imagine…

Wind Beneath My Wings

I’ll Fly Away

The Dutch song Lang Zal se Leven

And finally,

The Hallelujah Chorus

Every night when Dad and I would come home after a day away, Grandpa would say

I’m glad you’re home Shari.

We would leave a few days a week, leaving Grandpa in the care of friends and helpers.  And every time we would come home his remark was always the same:

Shari, I’m glad you’re home.

And now, after five and a half years of Grandpa saying that to me, I can say to him:

I’m glad you’re home, Dad.

Love, Mom

A Grateful Life

Dear Daughters,

After 94 years Grandpa’s chest is still, his heart no longer beating.  He was sleeping peacefully in his favorite chair, and then he was gone.  The struggle is over, he has met Jesus face to face.

During the previous few days the house has been full of people saying good-bye, recalling stories from the past, memories of his time shared with them, shouldering the pain and sadness of dying with us.  From laughter to tears, to hugs and handshakes, the days have been rich, beautiful, difficult and sad. 

Ginger, the Hospice nurse came and saw some of our family here to visit Grandpa and commented to him,

You are a lucky man to have so many people around you.

Immediately he said,

 I don’t believe in luck.

I am blessed.

He is blessed, we are blessed – by his generosity, kindness and humor.  Every day the nurse would come in and ask, how are you doing, Lou?  And every day, as long as he could speak he would say, I’m great.

This evening it is silent, painfully quiet.  No more breathing treatments, the oxygen machine is still.  Willow, Grandpa’s faithful dog sits quietly beside his friend’s chair wondering what has happened.

A few weeks ago I gave Grandpa a bell he could ring if he needed me.  The bell had a beautiful tone, deep and rich.   The first few times he rang it I felt like coming in the room standing straight and tall saying – just like Lurch from The Addams Family – You rrrang?  But I didn’t, I just asked what he needed. 

He never asked for much, help to get up, a glass of water, reminding me he was ready to go to sleep.

A few mornings ago he woke up agitated, wanting to get out of his bed, yet knowing he was unable to walk anymore we couldn’t let him.  So I started singing hymns to him.  Because of his lifetime of singing plus the tradition of singing a hymn every night after dinner with Dad and I, he knew many of them by memory and started whispering a few of the words as I sang. 

Amazing Grace

In the Garden

The Old Rugged Cross

Great Is Thy Faithfulness

He relaxed, laid back to rest and grew calm.  My mouth got dry but I kept on singing. 

Yesterday morning he was agitated again so Aunt Rhonda and I decided to sing You Are My Sunshine.  Surprisingly, we remembered all three verses so sang with gusto, being quite pleased with ourselves.  But as we were nearing the end of the song Grandpa remarked with a wave of his hand, OK, that’s enough sunshine.  What works one day doesn’t always work the next…

Thank you.  Those precious words were the most consistent and common words I heard from Grandpa.  He was so pleased to be able to die in his own home, surrounded by those he loved and was grateful for all the care he received.  Jolene, Judy, Merilee, Ione, Dotty – all friends and helpers faithfully coming to help for days, months, some for years, have become part of our family. 

From the moment we are born, we are in the process of dying.  We don’t often think about life that way but it’s true.  Some of us live a full life, others don’t.  But we all can make the choice to live our one life well, because even though our bodies are wasting away, our Creator Jesus renews our spirits day by day.

Love, Mom

Death is Not an Emergency

Dear Daughters,

It’s quiet in the house.

We buried Grandma on a snowy blustery day with 25 mph winds howling around us, trying to keep Grandpa warm with blankets and grandchildren shielding him.  When Dad, Grandpa and I pulled into the cemetery – late – the suburban carrying the casket had not yet arrived, icy roads slowing them down as well.

Grandma would have hated being out in that cold, she never walked outside if there was even the slightest breeze.  But now there was no need to have her slippers on, not even a blanket.   Her earth suit had been shed, just like a caterpillar slips out of its cocoon to become a butterfly.  Grandma was no longer laying in the coffin, not needing that worn out, nonfunctioning body, but celebrating and enjoying her new, perfect warm home.

The graveside service was short, ending with the singing of

Praise God from whom all blessings flow

Praise Him all creatures here below

Praise Him all ye heavenly hosts

Praise Father, Son and Holy Ghost.  Amen

 cemetery

Later that evening, my mind wandered back to the past few months when Grandma’s mind was fading so rapidly.  Toward the end, it was getting difficult, bizarre, unpredictable.

weathervane

When the mind is being eaten away by disease, life doesn’t make sense.  Sunlight, moonlight, every light of the day is confusion.  Mealtimes make no sense because there is no hunger.  She frequently asked to go home, asked where her husband was when he was sitting right next to her.  Grandma often called for help, yet when I came there was nothing I could do to comfort her – holding her hand, talking to her, singing, praying – still she moaned.

There were many days I wanted to run away, far far away and not come back until it was all over.  I had seen the geese flying south and longed to be carried on their backs, flying to warmer, more pleasant places.  I’ve always wanted to run away when life becomes hurtful and hard, when I can’t fix or change anything, and this time it was intensified.   There was only one reason I was able to stay here taking care of Grandma, and that because of a single verse in the Bible:

I can do all things through Christ who gives me strength.

 I would repeat that verse in my mind over and over again, hour after hour, day after day, week after week.  I felt some small part of Mother Teresa’s pain:

There is such terrible darkness within me, as if everything was dead…I do not know how deeper will this trial go – how much pain and suffering it will bring to me.  This does not worry me anymore.   I leave this to Him as I leave everything else…Let Him do with me whatever He wants as He wants for as long as He wants if my darkness is light to some soul.

candle

Then when I thought I could not take one step more, Hospice came.  Yes, I had Dad’s help and other friends who helped, but still the bulk of the responsibility lay on me.

When Staci, the intake nurse, walked in the door – snow swirling around her – I could sense the compassion and the ray of light she brought to our home.  She treated Grandma with such care and respect, giving her a swab of water when I was unable to get even a sip into her mouth.  Staci was calm, professional, taking notes and contacting all the necessary people.  Then she stopped to comment,

Death is not an emergency.

 With that one sentence spoken, my body relaxed, I was able to breathe, drink up all the teaching and encouragement she gave and carry on.

A little after Staci left, Jean the RN came, teaching me how to administer morphine and other meds to give Grandma comfort so she could relax and lay and sleep.  No one was dismayed with Grandma’s behavior, they simply accepted her as she was, willing to walk the last days with us.

Then another knock on the door and Chaplain John was there with his guitar.  He came into the bedroom where Grandma lay, took out song sheets and a guitar and started boisterously singing Christmas carols.  There were several people in the room with us, so we sang in the midst of weary tears, Grandpa leaning back against the wall, his eyes shut as he mouthed the words by memory.

We sang hymns of comfort –  In the Garden, Be Thou My Vision, His Eye is On the Sparrow…  John’s presence was not one of sorrow but of joy, assurance and peace.

Death is not an emergency.

 Carolyn came to give Grandma a bath, treating her with respect, tenderness and dignity.  She slept soundly that night. The next day Jean was back again, monitoring Grandma’s vital signs, answering my various questions and teaching me more about how to give comfort in the midst of dying.

candle-2

That night you four daughters made a conference call, all of you living in different cities, and sang His Eye is on the Sparrow.  When one voice would falter, another would pick up the melody and continue on.  There were good-byes and I love you spoken all around.  Even though by that time Grandma was in a coma, she still responded ever so feebly to the singing.  I am sure she heard you and was blessed, as was I.

On the last day, there were people in the house coming to say good-bye, quietly, respectfully, helpfully.  We took turns singing, praying, holding her hand, whispering our farewells.

The last minutes before death are messy, holy and painful.  Yet when I was thinking later about those sacred moments I was reminded that the last few minutes before birth are the same – messy, holy, painful.  In a way, Grandma was being birthed into a new world, a better world.

Everything good in life is hard.

As Grandma took her last breath and her chest lay still for the first time in 84 years, I gave thanks amidst tears that she was now free of pain, free of a cloudy mind, and best of all – safe in the arms of Jesus – her Savior and her Lord.  Till we meet again…

Love, Mom

 

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