“...God left him alone to test him
And discover what lay in his heart...”
–2 Chronicles 32:31b
“...This is a lonely place...”
--Matthew 14:15
After a day in the ER, followed by three nights in the ICU
and an anxious walk through the empty halls of a 4 am hospital; I think I
understand a little better now what it means to be in “a lonely place.” But I am still struggling with the why.
It all started with a strange voice calling out to me: Mr.
Sutter!
It was early Sunday morning (three weeks ago), and I had
gone for my morning walk down at the park.
Being my normal too friendly self, greeting all the other sleepy morning
walkers (I still call myself Jorge, the Happy Jogger –even though I stopped
jogging years ago), I am used to calling out greetings to everyone I meet, and
rarely getting any response. So, hearing
my name startled me. I was looking
around when I caught a glimpse of a young woman with purple-ish hair coming
from a car calling again: Mr. Sutter.
That was how I found out my daughter was in the emergency
room.
According to the visitor’s badge I still have, we arrived at the St. Joseph’s ER at 7:44am. For a time we had to sit in the waiting room not knowing if she was alive or dead. Not knowing anything. Helpless. Waiting for someone to speak to us, to allow us to see her; our daughter. Sitting there holding each other, praying and waiting and anxiously looking about –we were helpless and frightened. Alone. The uncertainty was the worst part. No. The fear was. No. The waiting...
Out of desperation, I kept glancing back at the TV on the
wall behind us. A rerun of some
unfamiliar sit-com; a Christmas episode involving a Nativity pageant and
discovering the true meaning of Christmas.
I kept thinking how strange it was and wishing someone would turn it
off. But a small family on the other
side of the room seemed to be watching; so did one of the security people. My wife and I held hands and waited. Praying.
Glancing about. Waiting.
Finally, someone called our name. We were led back. She was resting for the moment. But that ended pretty quickly. A seizure and
sudden violent thrashing, followed by another bout of quiet. During the calm,
the nurse talked to us. Asked us what we knew. Then told us what she could.
Nothing encouraging. No assurances that
she would be fine. Just the solemn declaration
that what happened was very serious; but she was young and she was in the best
place possible.
My wife sat down on one side of the bed and I sat on other.
We took her hands, held them, clutched them.
Clung to them.
We were stuck in there about 8 hours. Anxiously holding her hands through each
seizure, watching the monitor with each spike in her heart rate, each
incomprehensible cry for help or hope or escape... we couldn’t tell. All we knew was that this poor struggling
creature was our baby and that even the experts didn’t seem to know what to
do.
By 10:30, phones started beeping and moaning. I think it started with my brother calling me
to ask about our mom. Or maybe it was a friend checking to see if I had ever
seen some British comedy from the 40s that was on TCM that afternoon. I can’t remember. It didn’t matter. I just wanted it to stop.
The phone calls. The texts. The beeping monitors. The sudden seizures... the
nurses. The doctors. The man wailing from the other room. People walking by
–looking in, never speaking to us. Just watching. Just waiting. I just wanted
it all to stop.
When people started calling, my first reaction was to throw
the phone away. Not answer. Or lie. Say
everything was fine; I would call back later.
But I couldn’t. I answered and spoke and when help was offered I just
said yes.
Soon friends were there: a priest we know came to pray over
her; a friend from work came with his wife –just to be company. He convinced me
to get out and get food. Again and again
we were told that this wasn’t going to be a quick sprint. It was going to take
time and we were going to need to be strong. We had to take care of ourselves,
so we could take care of our daughter. But
it all felt meaningless. And regardless of whether we ate or not, regardless of
who was there, we felt helpless. Useless. Alone.
Around 6 or 7pm that night she was moved to the ICU. Suddenly we were being told the rules of who
could be where and when; and implicitly encouraged to keep out of the way. My wife and a friend left for the waiting
room and the nurse took a chart and stepped out of the room and suddenly I was
alone with my daughter and her monitor started beeping again and the numbers
kept rising and I called out and no one came and the numbers kept rising and I
was standing there alone about to watch my daughter die and there was nothing I
could do about it. Then the nurse was
there calling for a crash cart and before the cart could arrive the numbers
started going down and though we didn’t know it then, I think that was probably
the turning point. Though we were there
for 2 more nights, nothing so dramatic happened again. The numbers never went
so high nor did the beeping ever get so frightening.
Though the nurses didn’t like it, they finally agreed to let
one of us stay with her overnight. I slept on two chairs pulled together right
next to her bed. My wife and a friend of
hers slept in the lobby. One of the nurses brought me a blanket and a pillow
and warned me that if anything happened I had to get out of the way. The
patient was their main concern. I nodded. Yes.
She was my main concern as well.
For three nights I slept there in those two chairs. The doors to the ICU were always locked. Any
time I had to leave (go to the bathroom, get something to eat) the doors would
close behind me and I had to call someone to let me back in. The first night
this felt strange, and made me anxious; what if no one answered the phone? What
if I couldn’t get back in? The second
night I felt a little safer. I had the
phone number memorized and knew where things were. And by the third night, it was becoming
routine. I was becoming comfortable
sleeping sitting up in a freezing cold room with a hum of monitors and the
constant sound of hospital work quietly going on all about me. I knew when they woke me at 3am that they needed
to do something with her IVs and give her a sponge bath and so it was time for
me to stretch my legs and take a break.
Groggily I wandered out to the waiting room with my Bible and my Rosary
and my journal... my holy relics?
Sitting there, shivering, half awake, I felt grateful for a
moment’s reprieve. For a few minutes I
could sit and read or pray or try to write a word or two... anything. For a few minutes I might escape the constant
fear that was my sole companion as I sat there day and night watching her
suffer, waiting and wondering if it would ever stop. But in truth there was no escape. I sat in the waiting room and discovered that
even at 3:15 in the morning I was no alone.
There was a woman sitting off to my right –her head tossed back and over
to the side, mouth wide open—she was dead to the world –snoring with
abandon. And huddled in a corner over to
my left was a man about my age wearing shorts and a t-shirt. He had pulled his
arms into his shirt and pulled his legs up in the chair, curled up almost
fetal-like, and was leaning over into the corner under a flickering light snoring
also. I sat there with my notebook open
trying to write something –but nothing came to except the stereophonic sound of
exhaustion and escape. I watched the
woman and the man, and wondered who they were waiting on; what was keeping them
here at this hour. And I wondered about the ability to sleep in a public place.
Never have I been someone who felt comfortable sleeping in public. Napping
–even on my own couch at home—makes me uncomfortable. I think I have always feared being observed
unawares; becoming the comic figure in someone’s anecdote. The man with his arms pulled in his shirt and
wrapped around him, seemed a pathetic figure; but there was something sincere
and unconcerned in the woman’s deep untroubled open-mouthed breathing. I am not that free, I thought. I could never
be. I envied her the respite—the escape.
A nurse came up in the elevator, scanned her badge and
headed into the ICU. And I thought about
going back in, but knew they wouldn’t be done yet. But hearing the elevator open and close, I
remembered that there was a vending machine with ice-tea down on the 2nd
floor. I had a couple of dollars and
thought –what the heck. I needed something to keep me going until I could get
back in –otherwise I might make this somnolent duet into a trio.
After getting my ice-tea I walked around the 2nd
floor a bit. There is chapel down there.
A waiting area. And hallways heading off in a few directions. I circled the lobby, looked at the stain
glass of the chapel, wondered about who might go in there. My legs were stumbling, shoes catching on the
carpet; I was so exhausted I could barely bend my knees and lift my feet. My third night without real sleep. It was like when the girls were babies and
wouldn’t sleep. I would take them out in the stroller at 2 or 3 or 4 in the
morning and walk the street, half asleep on my feet. Waking up to find myself
bumping into the curb. Here I was again.
I went back to the elevator. Pushed the up button. And nothing happened. I pushed it again. Looked
at the light for the elevator behind me. Nothing. I pushed the button a third
time. It wasn’t even lighting up. That
was when it occurred to me: the nurse with her badge. After visiting hours, you have to have a
badge to make the elevator work, too. But...
I needed to get back up to the ICU. I had to get back to my daughter. Surely
they were done by now and I needed to get back to her. But how?
I found the stairs. The door wasn’t locked. I headed up. But
when I got to the 4th floor (ICU) it was locked. And no window. I couldn’t see where I was
even. I went back down. I thought: if I
can get to the lobby, surely a security person will let me back on the elevator
and send me back to my daughter. But when I got down to the bottom there was a
warning sign saying an alarm would go off if I opened the door. And I could see that it led out to the street
–not the lobby. I was panicked. I had
left my daughter alone and now I couldn’t get back to her. And why? To get a bottle of ice tea! Good, Lord. How could I have been so stupid?
So foolish? So selfish?
Back on the 2nd floor, the door still wasn’t locked.
I got back in to the empty lobby –near tears. My heart was racing. The bottle of tea in my hand disgusted me,
but I couldn’t let it go. It was the reason I was here –a sign of my weakness. I looked around for a phone. Nothing. It was silent. Like a mausoleum or an empty
hospital. I felt utterly alone. I have
never felt so alone. My wife had gone
home exhausted. She entrusted me with
the care of our daughter and I had failed.
How could I tell her that I had left our child alone so I could go get something
to drink? I was so frightened and
exhausted I couldn’t even formulate a prayer. I was struggling just to tay awake.
Words weren’t coming. No one was coming. I felt abandoned. Alone. Abandoned even by God. Abandoned to my own stupidity. I looked at
the chapel. I whispered half of a Hail Mary but couldn’t remember the rest... I
tried again. I was desperate. There was
nothing left in me but desperation. All
I wanted to do was throw that stupid bottle of tea at those stain glass windows
and scream. Or sit down and cry. But I didn’t. Instead I told God I needed
help.
There was a plate glass window on the wall near the chapel. It looked out on another wing of the
hospital. It was then I noticed there was
a hallway leading to that wing. I had
been so afraid of leaving those elevators that I hadn’t paid attention to the
fact that there were hallways heading off in 2 or 3 directions; someone has to
be here, somewhere.
Before long I caught a glimpse of a woman pushing a buffing
machine into a supply room. I told her
my situation and she shook her head and said something about those darned elevators. Then she told me to come with her and lead me
through some winding halls into an empty operating area where there was a large
silvery elevator for transporting patients to and from surgery. She scanned her badge and within seconds I
was back in the ICU. She wished me well
and went back to her work.
In my desperation I thought I was alone, I felt abandoned;
but the fact is –I wasn’t alone. What
does that tell me about God leaving us alone? Testing us? What is the test? I don’t know? Did I pass? I don’t know. Did mine involve the temptation of the
vending machine? Being too prideful to risk sleeping in a public space? Or was
it simply this: a test to learn my own
insufficiency. To learn some humility. To remind me that I can’t do it all on
my own. To discover what was really in
my heart... I don’t know. What I did learn was this: we are never
alone. Not even in our darkest hour. Not
even when we have brought it on ourself. Even when the elevators don’t work and the
stairs only lead you away... don’t give up. You aren’t alone. You are never
alone. Reach out. Even if all you have
is half a prayer. You may be afraid, but don’t give up. He is there. Walking with you. Maybe even pushing a buffer. That was the lesson I learned that horrible
night in that almost empty hospital. That very lonely place.
p.s.
When I got back to the room my daughter was awake. She smiled. A little
embarrassed. I kissed her head and sat down and held her hand. I don't remember falling
asleep. But I did. A hour or two later a friend texted me. Instead of throwing it, I looked at my phone. He was in the lobby with coffee and breakfast from McDonalds. Like I said... I was never alone.
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