reflection

Helpless

Vulnerability is something that I have never been comfortable with. Who is? Opening that door that leaves you virtually naked and exposed is something nightmares are made of. It’s horrifying to reveal yourself to the world about a feeling that can be construed as a weakness. And yet I still felt the desire to share what it means to me when I feel helpless.

There is one occurrence that perfectly exemplifies on where the feeling of helplessness always seems to guide me. On a recent cold December night, everything was as it normally is. My wife was busy cleaning the house preparing to host her family as we usually do on Christmas Eve. My oldest son was taking his bath and my youngest son lay curled up next to me on my bed while we watched the Bears lose another uncontested game.

Suddenly my five-year-old let out a shriek of pain as a piercing stabbing sensation tore through his stomach. Immediately, he looked to me for comfort and I responded like most parents do with reassuring words that he would be fine while rubbing his back to calm him. The usual sequence of events that come when a child falls ill quickly transpired. I’ll spare you the details. But even after all that, his cries of pain didn’t lessen, and his stomach was as hard as a plate of steel. He was in such agony that he couldn’t even walk which triggered me to bundle him up and rush to the hospital.

Those fifteen minutes felt like hours as his pleas for help were ones, I had no answer for. That’s when the dreadful sense of helplessness began to seep in. Yet I held onto the perspective that everything would be fine once we got medical assistance and that seemed to keep the horrid feeling at bay for the time being.

Trying to remain calm, I was thrown into a slight panic when no parking was available in the ER lot. Not wanting to waste another minute, I parked in an unauthorized space, so I could get my ill child in as quickly as I could. Given that I was uncertain on the severity of his condition, I felt time was of the essence. Upon check-in, as my son clung to me with his arms around my neck still in agonizing pain, I was promptly given a choice of taking him back into the car with me and finding a space in the garage or leave my five-year-old alone in the waiting area. I was dumbfounded that they would even put me in such a predicament especially since my vehicle was not obstructive to anything.

I was basically useless to my son. If his condition worsened, even within a short time, he would at least be near medical personnel, so I sat him down in the chair closest to the nurse registering patients and darted for my car. Although I knew it would perhaps only be five to seven minutes for me to park and race back, I felt like I abandoned him. I couldn’t shake that feeling despite knowing he was in better hands than mine. I don’t think my feet had ever moved as fast as they did that night. My primary responsibility in life is to protect my family and I felt like I was failing miserably. That monster of helplessness began to surge inside me with greater strength.

I wanted to burst through the revolving door like a runaway train, but I somehow remained composed. When I rushed up near the registration podium, my adoring little boy was sitting there waiting patiently for me trying as hard as he could to hold back his tears. His small soft voice let out that his stomach still hurt as he reached up and latched back onto me. He was urging me to do something. To fix it. Make him feel better. I could do nothing though but hold him close and wait.

Fortunately, the wait was not long. We were escorted to a room and told that the doctor would be in shortly. The definition of shortly to a parent that had already endured too much time of not being able to ease their child’s discomfort however is different than those that are not emotionally shackled. Help could not come soon enough. My son’s suffering intensified and his pleas to make the pain go away did not stop.

I kept telling myself that they would be able to remedy his situation quickly or at least set my mind at ease but the concerned look on the doctor’s face after evaluating him only escalated my fears. He ordered an ultrasound and we were whisked away to a part of the hospital that felt like it had been abandoned.

My son struggled to remain still causing the ultrasound tech to increasingly become frustrated. Time and time again, he had to start over attempting to get some insight into what was happening. After five grueling tries, he finally had enough images to evaluate. The tech exited the room without uttering a word and left us alone wondering if anyone was going to take his place in monitoring my child’s condition.

The setting of the ultrasound room was like a scene out of Stranger Things. The main lights remained off while only small soft white and blue lights illuminated the corners of the space. My son looked like a mere shadow as he turned towards me and pled once more for me to do anything to ease his suffering. Waiting for direction from the medical team, I felt trapped in this isolated wing of the hospital. At least in the ER, the medical team’s presence made me feel that I was not alone. But now, there was no one I could turn to. No one to share the burden and the guilt of not being able to cure my son of whatever was ailing him. Throughout the night, my trepidation that it may be something serious built to this moment and I was at the breaking point.

My son’s head fell slowly to the side weakened and exhausted. The pain he had endured finally had gotten the upper hand and I thought he was about to pass out. Just before he closed his eyes, his soft voice whispered, “I love you, daddy”, and that monster, that beast, that maniacal feeling of helplessness surged through me from head to toe and consumed every inch of my being.

It was as if his words were a pardon. In that moment, I felt worthless. All I could do was watch him whimper more. I turned to the only thing I could while stranded in that cold dark chamber. I sought aid from something you can’t see. Something that I’m not even sure is there. Something I personally refer to as the great spirit.

The creator, God, Allah, whatever one may choose to refer to that being outside of our concept of space and time. As always, I had turned to the spirit as a last resort. My last reach for a long shot. And it was in that moment as I held my son’s hand that I questioned why it was only in times like these that I tried to tap into whatever connection to a faith I have. The answer was on the tip of my tongue just as I finished the question in my mind. It was because I reached out whenever I felt this massive and all-consuming feeling of helplessness and all I was left with was hope.

Hope that there’s something out there that can make up for my ineptitude. But I carry a guilt each time I have cried out for this aid. I feel ashamed that I don’t stay connected to this relationship. Why should I be helped when I so often abandon it? Is that what I really deserve? I found myself once again conflicted between a philosophy and a blind belief. When reading Emerson when I was young, the idea of self-reliance resonated with me. Whatever I wanted to achieve in life I felt would always come down to my will and determination. I couldn’t rely on some unseen force in the universe to lead me to the end of the road I wished to travel.

Perhaps it was an overreaction, but here I found myself on that road feeling threatened that my son’s hand potentially would not stay within my grasp for the rest of the journey. Within that moment, my will and determination meant nothing. It was crippling to have this revelation that my self-reliance was not enough for him. Whatever ability or knowledge I have had no bearing on my child’s health. I had no choice but to accept that feeling of helplessness and rely on whatever hands could be impactful even if those hands perhaps are ones I cannot see.

After analyzing my son’s results along with additional tests, we were placed in isolation. They concluded that they would simply observe his condition because none of the tests indicated any significant problems. As the night crept steadily closer to the morning sun, his pain began to lessen, and his stomach was no longer a plate of steel. What was so frightening, and debilitating was finally subsiding and simply diagnosed as a severe stomach virus. My three hours of hell ended abruptly and without further worry.

As I stayed through the night and into the morning with him at the hospital, I could not shake off the contemplation that struck me so boldly in the ultrasound room. I walked away that day with a resolve that it was time for me to maintain that spiritual connection beyond only times of need.

When I look back, I wonder if perhaps that is all what faith is really about. I still don’t consider myself to be religious because I associate the term more with its’ institutions and their consistent hypocrisy. This experience though has somehow had a more lasting impact on my perspective. Maybe religion, faith or belief is just a product of what we all are – simple beings that are vulnerable and helpless. Maybe because of that we feel that there is nowhere else to turn and hope that we’re not alone. Hope that something truly is there to help and guide us down whatever road we have taken when we cannot control the obstacles that are thrown in our path along the way.

Open Eyes

It’s a title that haunts me.  This will be my third piece that has gone by the name of Open Eyes.  My first was a screenplay that frankly was poorly executed and never saw the light beyond a semi-final of a screenwriting competition.  My second attempt was a song that was meant to be featured in that film and yet between the two, I feel that I still have only captured a glimpse of what I’ve been trying to say.  How can I put into words that we need to change our perspective and appreciate life for the simple beauty and truth it reveals to us every day?  And how can we do that when not everything is as we would want it to be?

I place myself at the front of the line that fail in what I’m trying to basically preach.  Like a moth to a light, I’m lured to look at everything else that swirls around me.  I miss the days when I would sit at the base of a tree alongside the river and blankly stare at the water pouring gently over the rocks.  I’ve allowed everyday life and expectation to pull me from that serenity.  Why?  Why am I like this?  Why is our society like this?  Why do we crave to go beyond the simple necessities of life and refer to that as a pursuit of happiness?

And thus this title of Open Eyes and this ideal that it is to me brings me back to that question once again of what is happiness?  Do we settle for the answer that happiness is whatever it means to you or is there some consistency within the foundation for all of us?  Are we meant to be truly happy or is this life just a trial to earn our place somewhere else?  These questions bombard me especially around this same time every year as our society becomes deranged with the lust of materialism and expectation that love is expressed by the giving of an object.  I’ve grown to almost despise the holiday of Christmas because of it.  Is this an example of what we define as happiness, running around crazed to purchase things for others that already have their basic necessities met? 

What about those that don’t have food on their table or shelter over their heads?  They seem to always take a back seat in this “time of giving”.  If we were to ask them what is happiness what do you believe their answer would be?  If you wrap a blanket around a man who has no home in the cold of night, is he one step closer to his happiness?  I only assume those that for whatever reason cannot meet their basic needs have a very different perspective on what happiness is and why should their definition of happiness be different from those that are more fortunate?  I’m sure I’ll receive responses to this question of how do I know what happiness is for the more “fortunate”.  I’m relatively confident that in our culture today, I would not receive the answer of food, water and shelter from most people that earn a living wage.  I believe most to an extent take those things for granted.

That confidence comes from my daily interaction with our society.  Because of my viewpoints, I will never share publicly what it is I do to support my family, but it involves working with people and a lot of them at that.  I enjoy what I do and enjoy working with people, but I am not blind to the slow descent our society has taken into irrational outrage and hate that I witness day in and day out especially when most of the events that spark this behavior are trivial.  And that’s before I even turn on the news or see horrific videos through social media feeds.  I ponder so often after these moments as to why these people are so irate.  At the end of the day, I know their basic necessities have been met, so why the rage and indecency? Why is the communication so disrespectful and hateful?  Why does it seem that they are so unhappy?

My conclusion always leads me back to perspective.  Their eyes are not open to what I believe is the one consistency that is at the foundation of true happiness for all of us and it comes down to three simple words.  The little things.  I am an owner of plenty of nice material possessions, but before my body is given back to the earth and I reflect on the things that made me happiest in life, it’s the little things that will make the list.  That soft beautiful sound of a cello, the hysterical laughter of my children that echoes through my head even when they are not with me and nights that I shared with my closest loved ones that were filled with maybe nothing more than a nice glass of wine, good music and a fire.   Only a few examples of my little things among countless other moments in my life that accompany the fact that every day I have good food to eat and a roof to cover my head.  At the end of every day, my only struggle is to remember to open my eyes and really see those things in front of me.  The simple truth of what the little things of life are. Beautiful.  And that is happiness.  You just need to open your eyes.

Purpose

The reason for which something is done or created or for which something exists.  Many of us will advertise or have our stagnant statement of what our purpose is.  Others will claim that they are still pondering the thought when they can find brief moments of silence.  Whatever category one may fall into, I have found that ultimately most will return to the flock like lifestyle that many have chosen as how they will "exist". I don't mean to be judgmental for I have fallen many times myself into the drifting state many of us call life.  If only there were directional signs each time we felt like we had reached the end of a road.  I don't understand and I struggle with why so many breaths are taken in and pushed out alongside moments that are rather meaningless and insignificant.

Or are they insignificant?  Does every moment serve some purpose and we just choose to ignore it?  Is every action or thought that we have, no matter how trivial it appears to be, play a critical role in our grand scheme?  Piece by piece, shaping the puzzle that is put together which is us as individuals.  What is my purpose?  How have all of these moments in my life given me direction on why I was created is a question that runs through my mind as if it was a song on repeat.

For so long, I searched for the answer and didn't see that all of my moments, my lessons, my feelings and my dreams were being captured all along and pouring onto a page with the ink of a pen or a stroke of a keyboard key.  They were being shaped into stories, music, poems and random stream of consciousness statements to an audience of one; myself.  And what purpose did that really serve?

I move forward now to share those moments with whatever audience is willing to listen via my various media platforms including this blog.  I am taking the proverbial shot in the dark that perhaps one of my experiences, my mistakes, my thoughts may lead to inspire, provoke or bring meaning to someone else's purpose.  Do you have or feel one that is real and not forced upon you or expected by what you believe society wants? For without one that is real, you may be something that is created, but doesn't truly exist.  That is one of my greatest fears and it drives me to be who I am now, so that all of my moments are not meaningless and insignificant as I reflect upon them when that final breath is pushed out.