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Lay Witness
Broken
Wings
by
Chris Erickson
I
had just returned from a three-day snowmobile trip in Wyoming's
Sawtooth range with my brother, Fr. Dave. I call them "retreats"-health,
vigor, beauty, outdoors, time to reflect. My wife Jody and
my seven children greeted me with their usual fanfare. My
world was bursting with life! But that would soon change.
The events that followed over the next seven months could
make a sequel to the Book of Job.
It
began in February with my dear friend Lionnel. He was in ICU
at the local hospital. I arrived at his beside to see him
arrayed in tubes and wires, his body worn from a life permeated
with multiple illnesses. A tube extending through his throat
to his lungs prevented him from speaking. I asked if he wanted
pain medication, and he nodded emphatically, yes! The nurse
gave him medicine and he soon fell asleep. That was the last
time Lionnel and I "talked" to each other. He would
be unconscious for the next three days until, at 4:00 a.m.
Sunday morning, I received a call from the nurse that he had
died.
I
arrived alone at his bedside. His body was almost hot, remnants
of a high fever the night before. Slowly he cooled to a deathly
chill. As I was leaving the room I turned back for one last
"So long, 'ol friend." Breaching the darkness were
the sun's first morning rays peeking in the window, resting
on Lionnel's face. I smiled momentarily. But I knew those
warm rays wouldn't bring warmth back to his body-and that
was reason for me to hurt.
Three
months later I had put down my red ink after a routine day
of editing Lay Witness, and drove home. I usually commute
to work in our Geo Metro and leave the 12-passenger van for
Jody to ferry the kids around town. On this particular day,
however, it would be different. I took the van and left the
Metro for Jody.
I
arrived home to see my 12-year-old son sharpening his basketball
skills in the driveway. Jody was preparing dinner. The baby
was asleep. The other five kids were playing at the neighbor's-so
we thought. It was hot, so I took an after-work shower. When
Jody called the kids home for dinner, they all came running,
except one. Searching for our two-year-old boy, Raphael, my
eldest son found him "asleep in the car." Raphael
had climbed into our Metro. He knew how to get in, he just
didn't know how to get out. He was supposed to be at our neighbor's.
It was the most tragic breakdown of communication a mother
and her friend could endure, a scorching forever etched on
their hearts!
I
had just stepped out of the shower, and the words from my
son will ceaselessly ring in my ears: "Daddy! Daddy!
Something's wrong with Raphey! Call 911! Something's wrong
with Raphey!" I dashed to the living room to see Jody
anxiously administering CPR to our little toddler. The kids
were crying. Jody shouted, "Call 911! Oh, my God. Call
911!" Raphael's big blue eyes were wide open. His pasty
complexion sickened me to the core.
His
natural color would return only after my neighbor's unrelenting
effort to bring life back to our boy. Still, there was no
pulse. The paramedics arrived soon after. For 45 minutes the
doctors in the emergency room worked on Raphael. It didn't
look good. Sitting in a private waiting room I prayed, "Lord,
not my little boy. He hasn't even had a chance to live yet!
My Father, 'let this cup pass from me.'" I would have
much preferred to lay down my own life than to watch my son
die. Jody and the children were at home fervently praying
for a miracle-the intentions of this Rosary eclipsed any other!
They prayed and waited for my phone call.
At
last, the doctor entered the waiting room. "What happened?"
he asked empathetically. "He climbed into our car,"
I answered. "Did you get a pulse?" But the doctor's
silence and a disheartened nod from side to side meant that
all the prayers in the world wouldn't change this now. It
was all so sudden, utterly unexpected, and inexpressibly piercing!
Many
thoughts ran through my mind, one in particular: "My
God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?" (Mt. 27:46).
I had to give Jody the unspeakable news. I called home and
quietly said, "He didn't make it." "He didn't
make it?" she asked softly in disbelief. "He didn't
make it," I replied even more quietly. "You need
to come to the hospital with the children."
My
neighbor and I walked down a hallway to a room. Behind the
curtain Raphael's body lay motionless, his big blue eyes still
wide open. Very dear friends entered the room one by one.
Jody and the children arrived. Numb and weeping at the loss
of this little life, Jody caressed Raphael and held him close
to her. And "a sword will pierce through your own soul
also!" (Lk. 2:35). She would forever know the knife-like
edge of such a piercing.
Raphael's
body was cooling from heat exhaustion. Again, as with Lionnel
three months earlier, I was nose to nose with death in all
its ugly detail.
When
it was time to leave, a "So long, 'ol friend" wouldn't
do. It was too unnatural-a father shouldn't bury his son!
But Raphael was dead, and this was one fix the little guy
got into from which Dad couldn't get him out.
The
next morning we endured a highly charged investigation by
the prosecuting attorney's office and social services, and
a media hungry for "a story." The days that followed
were strenuous. The nights were daunting. What possibly could
heal these broken wings?
Family,
many friends, and a wonderful community in prayer lifted us
"on eagles wings." Even so, they couldn't bring
back our little boy. We would begin to heal in our own way.
Jody looked to friends and books to alleviate some of her
torment. I sought solitude. There I found God's grace brimming
with peace and courage. "My grace is sufficient for you,
for my power is made perfect in weakness" (2 Cor. 12:9).
And was I weak-physically, emotionally, and mentally drained.
From
reflective moments in quiet prayer and a lot of thinking in
the great outdoors, I would try to comfort an aching, wounded
family. "He who knoweth how to suffer will enjoy much
peace. Such a one is a conqueror of himself and lord of the
world, a friend of Christ, and an heir of heaven" (Thomas
à Kempis, The Imitation of Christ).
"Raphael"
means "medicine of God" or "remedy of God."
The Father's medicine can, indeed, be bittersweet. Christ
knew that from the agony of the Cross. Yet He had the strength
and courage to persevere to the end. Jesus always had His
Father's "eternal perspective." I've come to understand
that nothing in life, no matter how hard the blows or how
long the road, can rob me of my peace or steal me of my courage
when that "eternal perspective" remains my lens,
too.
Suffering
from the death of my child, I saw before me a life-long ordeal,
a perpetual wound that wouldn't heal and a bottomless void
that wouldn't fill until I embraced my lost boy in heaven.
I yearned for that future embrace! But it seemed so far off,
some hidden, unapproachable outpost beyond the stars. Jody
was drawn the other way-to the past. Time relentlessly presses
on, and with each passing day she feared that Raphael and
her memories of Raphael would fade into a distant past. Suffering
here seemed almost endless any way we looked at it.
But
that's not God's perspective, and therefore it couldn't be
mine. I declared war on my mind, pressing it to reflect on
our time here from God's perspective. It wasn't easy. My thoughts
preferred to run wildly untamed. So I fixed them to the rack
and lashed them with the truth. I looked to people like Nero
and Attilla the Hun and Adolf Hitler and Slobodan Milosevic,
even Osama bin Laden, who reminded me just how fast their
power comes and goes. On the horizontal timeline of human
existence, they were but a blip on the radar screen of creation.
And far less on the infinite horizon that knows not beginning
nor end. For all "our years come to an end like a sigh.
The years of our life . . . are soon gone, and we fly away"
(Ps. 90: 9-11). Heaven really is close by-uncomfortably close
for many of us.
I
also had another paradigm shift, but this was one of proximity.
An almost unbearable cross came home to roost! This wasn't
child's play anymore, this was more than reeling from a friend's
insult or enduring a financial crunch. This was war! It lanced
my heart and it cut deep. But in the end it steeled my resolve,
in the same way the attack on the World Trade Center buttressed
the resolve of a nation. No longer would I ponder the sting
of acute suffering from the comfort of an armchair and explain
its meaning in theological essays. I knew it through a torrent
of tears.
The
Holy Father reminds us that Christ didn't give abstract answers
about the meaning of suffering. Christ said: "Follow
me!" "If any man would come after me, let him .
. . take up his cross daily" (Luke 9:23). The more I'm
afflicted, the more my spirit is strengthened by God's inward
grace. A morbid view? Are we merely walking shadows fading
in graveyard sunsets? Only if we sever our suffering from
Redemption-because only there is love stronger than death.
It would lead St. Thérèse of Lisieux to admonish
us to pray for an increase in faith so that we might welcome
our cross for the treasure it was. And that's God's perspective,
too.
I
also looked to another truth. If given a choice, would Raphael
want to return to the comfort of his mother's arms? Our Lord
says, "Come, O blessed of my Father, inherit the kingdom
prepared for you from the foundation of the world" (Mt.
25:34). Raphael was before the age of reason. In other words,
he had no actual sin and therefore went straight to paradise.
Unless heaven turns out to be a big disappointment, Raphael's
present happiness should give rise to my joy-if I truly love
him. He delights in company with the communion of saints in
his Father's house. I can focus on my loss or his gain. Grieving
for a time is good. Letting it denigrate to self-pity is unwise.
My focus is obstinately upon Raphael's joy.
In
August, three months after Raphael's death, my Mom suffered
a massive "brain bleed" that left her in a coma
for five weeks. She died on September 15, the feast of Our
Lady of Sorrows.
The
loss of Lionnel, Raphael, and Mom in a span of seven months
has disciplined me in love, steeped me in hope, and refined
me in faith. "Behold, I have refined you, but not like
silver; I have tried you in the furnace of affliction"
(Is. 48:10).
Lord,
you have done more than that. You have mended these broken
wings.
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