Amusement parks make me feel
alive. I love rides that spin you
‘round, slam you left and right, and turn your whole world upside down giving
you different a perspective of familiar things. I love to scream, but I am very aware and thankful
for the bar that holds me in and keeps me safe as I take a deep breath and let
go.
It is sweet to see my dad
walk into the hospital room each morning and hug my mom, although it isn’t
clear who is holding up whom. His hands
are full, his head is spinning and while he has only his heart to give, he is constantly
increasing the dose. He is holding on
tight, and I think I saw him trying to sneak a puff of mom’s oxygen. I’m sure he could use it.
My support bar, Keith, is
miles away, but with Whatsapp and Skype, I feel well belted in. I miss him, and need him more than these french
fries, (although I do wear the catsup quite well). If we only live once, and I have heard that
is the case, I’m hanging on to him. He
is the net under the ledge, and when I go flying off the edge, he goes flying
off as well.
Yes, you read that right: I bought us french fries. But don’t judge me, transfats are the least
of our worries right now. Our
perspective has changed. Also, when you
are wearing a DNR bracelet, you can eat whatever you damn well please.
This has been a week of ups
and downs and just hanging on. Thrilling
is not the word I would use, but I sure do want to scream. As the minutes slowly tick on in this
hospital room, life seems to be speeding by.
So we hold on to what matters, and leave trivialities like putting Shout
on this catsup stain until tomorrow.
Sometimes it’s okay if the
only thing you do today is hang on and breathe.
Well put.
ReplyDeletethinking of you and your family and sending you our love, Tanja
ReplyDelete