Life is a beautiful thing. I am by nature a pretty positive person, and life to me means more than just breathing or being alive. Life to me is the memories and experiences I’ve made along the way, and yet the chance to dream of achieving anything I want…not that I’m an overachiever in capacity really, but I do admit, I love my life.
Sure I’ve had bad days, and lots of good days, but mostly just “ordinary” days. Days when nothing tragic happens whether good or bad, ordinary days when I wake up and do simple daily routine things or days when I wake up and I’m straight up a lazy slug (there are those days). I joke with my husband about how his account of a day is compared to my account of the day…let’s just say I NEVER struggled with writing essays!
In life, I see so much detail, so much color and beauty…in ordinary things. Maybe it comes from having so little as a child, or maybe from the fact that my parents were realists. Whatever the case may be, life is beautiful.
Now I’m not saying my life has been perfect, or that I’ve had a horrible life, it’s been neither of those things. There are plenty of things I’d change if I could, but for the most part I’m content with how its played out so far.
I try to be positive about life, but I admit, I get down sometimes. I’m not a depressed person, and I feel horrible for people who struggle with depression, because I understand it’s real, and it is an awful way to feel. To maybe help one understand me, I can draw to mind two instances in my life that depression hovered around me, nipping at my mind like a relentless fog.
The first time I ever felt “depression” was about 5 years ago as I watched my 2-day old son have a seizure while the nurses tried setting up an IV into his tiny hand, and then performing a spinal tap on him…it wasnt until they took him away from me in an ambulance, all lights flashing, as it sped away towards Seattle’s Children’s Hospital. To follow that ambulance was torture! My very heart and soul was snatched away from me and I was given no choice but to follow behind. I felt like a trapped animal, ready to hurt anything that got in my way, and yet i couldn’t stop crying, I was weak and vulnerable…even today as I write this, my heart feels the intense squeezing i felt that day, the helplessness, the fear, the pain…I’ve told this story many times but I’ve never put the details down to such extent…and I’m taking it easy! Depression was closing in on me, my husband, bless his heart, didn’t know what to do or say, and during the entire day he held his composure together! Not ONE tear fell from his eye that I saw! He knew I needed his steadiness, his “bland” perspective I so often tease him about! Thank God he didn’t have a personality like mine! I would have drowned in sorrow that day! He stayed strong and steady…we finally got to the hospital and I was able to stand at my son’s bedside and hold his precious hand and touch his beautiful face. Oh so many times I would just lose control of my emotions and I would weep, and that “fog” would come a little closer.
I watched my son go through an EEG(brain monitoring test) checking for abnormal activity. Then I watched again as he was wheeled into a room for a CT scan of his head, and then lastly at the end of the day, to undergo an MRI of his head.
I was not allowed to stay with my baby through the night, but finally after walking into the ER around 11pm Thursday night, I was finally able to hold my baby around 8pm Friday evening! He was fed a sugar drip throughout the day, and imagine this, he not once cried or caused any trouble! These people were invading every once of privacy he dreamed of having! They drew multiple vials of blood, poked and prodded and stuck electrodes to his tiny head, and he stayed so calm and so happy! Finally I was able to hold him again! To smell him! To feel his tiny body fighting for LIFE!
You see, he was having seuziers, and he was only 2 days old! There was no explanation of why! He was brand new! He had no history to deduce from, he just barely arrived! The EEG showed “abnormal” activity in his brain waves, and we were still waiting to hear about the MRI…
Finally, after almost 24 hours from the time we walked into the ER, the neurologist called our room to explain what was on the MRI…he had blockages in his brain they said, and that they were causing mini strokes/seizures! They said they’d explain more in the morning, we should get some rest. Well by this point I was thoroughly and emotionally exhausted and I couldnt comprehend the magnitude of the results…my husband calmly explained in as gentle a way as he could, that blockages=lack of blood flow=lack of oxygen=possible brain damage=difficulties beyond imagining. It was at this point the “fog” overtook me! In an instant it was there! I seen it in my mind, walking out of the elevator in the shape of a black form like a man, and it slowly walked down the hall to the door that led to our tiny closet sized room, and it came into the corridor and walked to our exact door, and as it came closer it melted into a fog and began to seep under our door and I knew if it reached me it would destroy me! With it came such evil and vile feelings and images and thoughts that I have NEVER EVER imagined! And I did the only thing I could think of! I SCREAMED for my God to help me! To cast this thing away! And in an instant, it was gone! Then I wept and vern wept for the first time that day, because he felt it too! I remember getting down on my knees and asking God to take control of my son, and to do the impossible, to change the report! I specifically asked Him to place angels around my sons bed that night and protect and heal him, and I promised I’d do my best to handle whatever the morrow held, that I would love my child no matter what the outcome and I would be thankful for him even if it meant a difficult life.
So here’s the good part! We finally slept, about 48 hours awake at that point, we slept 5 hours, woke up and again prayed that God would intervene and give us strength to handle whatever news we were about to hear. We entered the NICU unit where my baby had been through the night, and as we approached his room the nurse was absolutely beaming with pride and love! The very first thing out of her mouth was this and I quote, “Your son is absolutely beautiful! We all took turns holding him and feeding him through the night, he was an absolute ANGEL!” When I heard the word “angel” I KNEW God had stepped in once again on my behalf. The neurologist was smiling ear to ear, shaking his head, saying he didnt understand how it happened but when he looked again at the MRI image it wasn’t the same as before! He showed us the image and in the area where the trauma was, there was a milky cloud over top of it that they couldn’t explain. I could explain it though! God! The doctors said if there would ever be an issue later in life it would be most notable in my sons “speech” & “mobility”. Well folks, let me just say that as I’ve watched my son grow and go from an infant to a 5 year old little boy, he has been extremely advanced in his speech skills and in his mobility! The pediatrician that sent us to Seattle is his pediatrician today, and he gets teary eyed when he sees us, because he knows that our story should be much different!
And that is a day and an experience I’ll never forget, and I know depression is real, and it is terrible, and I will forever be thankful that I have been blessed with a beautiful life and that I don’t fight that battle on a regular basis. I know sometimes there’s nobody to talk to, or maybe you think nobody cares, but I know this…God heard my cry and he stepped in, and even if you don’t sit on a pew every Sunday, He still has His ear tuned towards us. Maybe you don’t know “how” to pray or talk to God, but it’s simply as if you were talking to a person right next to you. He is as close as the mention of His name.
So, I have found so many things to in life that are beautiful and amazing. I’ll save my 2nd experience for another day, but the bottom line can be summed up pretty well in a song by Ray Stevens…”Everything is Beautiful”

