
“Life has many ways of testing a person’s will, either by having nothing happen at all or by having everything happen all at once.” — Paulo Coelho
The first two weeks home from the hospital. Spent on the lawn enjoying the sunshine. Chris lived in his zero gravity chair. A place that lessened his pain. Standing. Sitting. Laying. All painful. The chair helped. My sister thought of it and brought it over. I can still picture him there. Sitting on the deep green lawn in the warm July sun. Our children playing around him. We laughed and we smiled back then. Chris was in pain, but we knew we were lucky. Lucky unlucky, as I used to say. We thought only of the future before us. It seemed limitless in those days. We believed everything was going to be okay. We believed it was going to be amazing. Life was good.
Every morning, Chris would get up from his bed. We could not share a bed. We would not for months. I slept in a bedroom with the kids. Chris slept on his own. Sleep did not come easily to him. The pain made it hard. He could not get comfortable. Not for a moment. So early in the morning, Chris would get up. Start his morning with coffee. Then he would go outside and walk as far as he could. First he started with the back lane behind the house. Then a little ways down the street that met it. Each morning moving a little bit further. A little bit faster. Pushing ahead. Through the pain.
Blackberries. About a half kilometre from our place there stood a wall of wild blackberry bushes. In full bloom. Full of beautiful blackberries. When he was strong enough to make it we would walk there every day. And pick blackberries with our children. A magical place. A magical moment. A beautiful memory. Something we hold in our minds. Beauty. Simplicity. Healing.
Two weeks later. The beginning of August we had to make a choice. We were feeling concerned because Chris did not have any doctors or specialists following up. We worried about Chris’ healing, and how bad it could be if something was missed. That there might be some danger to his health we did not know about. I did not like that he was not being monitored. Other than his visits to his new family doctor. Specialist appointments take weeks and months to book. We were living in a different province. There was zero follow up. Zero. The systems apparently too far apart to talk to one another.
I spoke with the woman handling his insurance claim. We talked about our concerns. She had a suggestion. Make the 1000+ kilometre trip back to the city we had left two weeks prior. To where the accident had happened. So their doctors and specialists could look over him. Make sure everything was okay. That he would not have a setback just because he was not being watched. He would see a nerve specialist. Have one of their doctors go over him with a find toothed comb. After some thought. We agreed. We would make the trip back.
My sister volunteered to take more time off of work to help us out. We were taking the kids this time. A family affair. There was only a couple of days from when the decision was made to when we headed out. We did not even have time to top up Chris’ painkiller prescription. We believed the doctors he would see in the next province could write him one. He had enough to get him there, and for a couple more days.
We packed up the truck. My sister sat squeezed between the kids and their bulky car seats. I drove. Another stressful journey. Chris sat in the front seat beside me. As uncomfortable as the first journey in the motorhome. Except for the absence of a bed to lie in at rest stops. Thankfully this time he had strong painkillers. Still, he was in pain. It was another tough trip. Tough, but we tried to make the best of it. Enjoying the scenery along the way.
When I think of that trip, I love us. The five of us. We were such troopers. We did not complain. The kids were amazing. It was not an easy journey, but we tried as much as we could to treat it like a vacation. We stopped along the way. Of course we had to. For Chris. And for the kids. For my sister to stretch her legs. For me to relax for a moment or two. The dvd monitors played from the backseat. My sister kept the kids snacked up and as comfortable as possible. We tried to choose picturesque pit stops. And so, my hands gripped the wheel, as we headed back to the place where it all started.

“Determination means to use every challenge you meet as an opportunity to open your heart and soften, determined to not withdraw.” — Pema Chodron



