Suddenly
it became autumn, but it was not so cold or inhospitable on the kitchen porch
this morning that the dog and I could not sit there staring into space and
thinking deep thoughts.
My
deep thoughts started with, there’s nothing like a quick trip to the Emergency
Room to remind you of your mortality.
Yep,
I had another exciting trip to the hospital. I was first seen here on the
island, and was told, no, you may not go home and go to bed. Stop fighting your
fate and lie down on the gurney. You’re going on a little trip into town.
This
is the trouble with having a medical history. All I did was nearly faint, but
anything like that is viewed with suspicion and taken seriously now.
So
there I went, although not with the sirens this time. Nearly fainting is not a
siren occasion.
At
the end of an interesting evening of various tests, I was diagnosed with
“near-syncope,” medical jargon for “nearly fainting,” and sent home.
Once
more I was overwhelmed by the loving response of, well, everyone. My band
mates, especially Lynn Carrigan and Erin Durrett, made sure I got to the clinic.
Lynn literally held me up for a while. They also made sure my grandson was
taken care of, and brought me a few items from home for my trip. Joanna Gardiner
picked up Marley, the dog, and kept her for the night. She also fed Mellow the
cat, who may or may not have noticed I was gone for a few hours.
The
people at the clinic took excellent kind care of me, even though I dropped in
on them unexpectedly. The EMTs who sat with me in the ambulances were friendly
and professional.
The
ER staff, all women including the doctor, was kind and efficient. The Yellow
Cab driver who happened to be in the ER waiting room when I was released took
me straight to Fauntleroy.
My
sister from another mother, Becky, dropped everything to pick me up at the
ferry dock at midnight.
Everything
and everyone was great, all the tests showed I was okay. The near-syncope was
probably caused by a medication I take.
As
I sat on the porch this morning and pondered how wonderful people were to me
that night – including the man in the SUV on the ferry who, when he saw me
carrying a suitcase, offered to give me a ride up to the parking lot, and
Patsy, the ferry person who was going off-shift and offered me a ride home – I
was deeply puzzled by all the kindness and love I had experienced.
Yes,
puzzled. You see, I am at a loss when people are so great to me, whether it’s
their job or they are friends who genuinely care about me or they are acquaintances
or strangers who are kind. I experienced the essential goodness of human
beings, as I am sure many of you have experienced in your hours of need. It was
good to be reminded of that essential goodness, especially at a time when so
much seems so wrong in the wider world, and so many people and nations are
behaving murderously badly.
But
I was puzzled because when I was young I was told, among other things, that I
was a bad person, self-centered and lazy, and that no one would ever love me
because I was fat (which I was not at the time, just for the record).
Thanks,
Mom.
I
have lived long enough to see those words proven to be lies, but somehow, deep
down, when what I experience shows that the lies are nonsense, I am
flabbergasted. The reality does not make sense because of what I was told, and
believed.
I
am pretty sure we have all experienced hard times and hard people. I’m pretty
sure most of us were told lies about ourselves when we were too young to know
better. I’m pretty sure that we’ve all experienced the incredible loving
kindness of which people are capable. Perhaps a lot of us experience the
cognitive dissonance I felt as I contemplated that loving kindness.
When
someone is nice to you, do you feel you don’t deserve it? Do you have old recordings
inside telling you that you are not worthy? Is that your problem, Bunky? Those
are lies. You’ve lived long enough to experience reality now. Believe reality,
not the lies.
Then
head out on the porch with your dog and hang out and think deep thoughts. Those
cosmos you planted from seed might bloom yet.
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