“Determination means to use every challenge you meet as an opportunity to open your heart and soften, determined to not withdraw.” — Pema Chodron
Somehow, without even noticing, I closed off my heart. I tucked it safely behind layers of protection. Put a wall around it and locked it up for good measure. It is just now I am starting to realize this. A Qigong master once told me when we have a massive shock to the body, a trauma, it is the heart that feels it first. It takes the hit full force. I cannot imagine what my heart must have felt in those first few moments. When those words were spoken. The words that held consequence. When life cannot be changed. When life cannot be protected. When things cannot be undone. I know how I felt. Maybe that was my heart, trying to catch its beat. Almost dizzy, like the world was spinning quickly around me, and I could not find an object to focus on that would keep me from falling. I was not ready. I did not protect myself. I did not steel myself. I did not know that it was coming. My heart took a direct hit.
The door to my heart did not slam shut. It was of a more gradual process. A piling on of layers. As I sat beside Chris in the Emergency Room and in the hospital my heart was open in a way that it has never been. Maybe that is why everything felt so pure. Perhaps that is what it feels like when the heart is not hiding. When it is not hiding behind all we protect it with. When it knows it has to be there. Out in the open. Present. Somewhere along the way though, on this long journey, my battered heart pulled back into my body. It grew tired. It had felt too much. It had left itself vulnerable in a way that I had not realized was possible. As I sat beside my husband, hoping beyond all hope that he would be okay, my heart sat with me. Open. Waiting to see when it was needed. I lived those first days and weeks, maybe even months with heart. Then, without me noticing, it receded back into my body to rest.
I have always lived with my heart. My heart is what makes me, me. I am sensitive. I feel. Maybe too much sometimes. Maybe we all do. I am not sure. Perhaps some are just better at hiding it. Have more layers of protection. Have built higher walls. It is a funny thing. Not haha funny. More like a peculiar funny. When one realizes that their heart has been hiding for too long or that it has been hiding at all. It still beats, deep down inside my chest, I can feel it. Its strength is still there. Perhaps, it is time to pull down those walls and to take off those layers one by one, and to reassure my heart it is safe. At least for a while. At least in this moment. At least for now.
To feel is the most beautiful thing, though it is something we fear the most. It takes courage. Our heart gives us that courage, if we let it. The heart, if we trust it, is the strongest of our organs. It is brave. It has to be. It is the one that loves. It is the one that tells us when it is time to move forward. When we are ready to open ourselves up again. It holds the roadmap that helps us to find our direction. If we stop to listen, it tells us which way to go. When we live and make choices based on desperation and fear, we usually stumble. When we stop, pull away the layers and listen to our heart. We find ourselves right in the place that we are meant to be. We find our way home.
After going outside, Chris became more desperate to get out of the hospital. To continue his healing at home. With his children playing around him. Going outside gave him strength. So, we started to go everyday. It was healing. It was good for his soul. One day we walked together, toward the garden patio. For me it was a short walk, but for Chris, it must have seemed like miles. It took twenty determined minutes. He walked slowly, pushing the wheelchair, using it for support. I could see it was painful for him to walk, but he did not complain. Not once did he stop and rest along the way. He did not sit down in that wheelchair, though it would have been so easy. He just kept moving forward, with determination. The same determination that got him out of the hospital so quickly, and that healed his body, got him back into a helicopter and back into the air. Heart. Determination.
I always worried in those first few days, while he was finding his feet again. Finding his balance in a world that had thrown him. I kept it hidden the best I could. My fear that he would fall. That he would get hurt. He had already been through enough. I probably babied him too much. If I did, it did not seem to make a difference. He did not worry about falling for one second. Not from his feet or from the sky. He just pushed to do as much as he could. Determined and sure.
As he walked toward the sun and the warmth that awaited him on the patio, we passed one of the doctors who had been a part of his surgical team. I recognized him from the day of the surgery. He had talked to me after, as Chris lay in the post surgery recovery room. When he was a few feet passed, he stopped and he turned back toward us, standing before Chris.
“I can’t believe it. You are walking so soon. You look great!” He congratulated Chris, and as he turned to leave he added, “you are our walking miracle. It gives us motivation to see things like this.”
Chris is a man who lives with heart. He would not see himself in this way, and before, I did not realize it. I know him better now. If he did not have so much heart and determination, I doubt he would find himself where he is today. The accident still affects him. He still cares for his body daily. He is still searching for his place in the world. But he is thriving and he continues to be brave. He puts himself out there day after day. He is one of the strongest and bravest people I know. I saw this from day one of the accident. From the moment I saw him in that hospital bed, I could see that Chris was fighting. He did not give up for one instant. Not even when things looked bad. Not when a surgery awaited him. Not when he was in pain. Not in the moments that I feel others may have. Somehow through all of it, he has kept his heart open. I have never seen him afraid, though he must have been. Sometimes he still must be. He lives with an open heart. He has courage in abundance, and I saw it there, in that hallway. As a doctor who has had too many patients to count or to remember, stopped. Stopped and paid homage to a man who had not given up. Who would not give up. I could see that the doctor knew that. I know from the moment Chris knew something was wrong, up in that helicopter, up in that sky, that he fought. He fought with all of his might. To make sure, if he could help it, that he would come home to his children, and that he would come home to me. That he would live, and live he would, with an open heart and more courage than most people will ever know.



