More today on the "Genu Valgum Kid" (pictured at left) - lessons my daughter has taught me in character.
Yesterday we left off with Kelly's return from the hospital. She was told to keep all weight off her legs for the first week or so, and that meant a wheelchair to get around. The hospital has doped her up fairly well before she left, and so life was fairly pleasant; for about the next nine hours. And then it was, for a 12 year old, and for her family, pretty much H-E-Double Hockey Sticks.
Kelly woke up the next morning in the worst, most debilitating pain of her life. I have never seen her like that, and it was very hard to watch. I did the compassionate, mindless father thing that I often do, and showed little compassion. For this, I will always be sorry. I have a heart of stone sometimes. Bad genes, and a selfish and sinful heart. For the next week or so, we had to do just about everything for Kelly. Here was this strong, healthy, almost-teenager reduced to pretty much the state she had been in when she came into the world - dependent on us for everything. As she began to bear weight on her legs about a week later, it was very hard to watch. And in this, the Body of Christ was evident; our Fuller Seminary/house guest/family member/ordination candidate Jill was a godsend to us all. Friends brought movies by, care packages came in the mail.
Here we learned another lesson about the psychology of the orthopedic profession. Never tell the patient that the procedure they are about to go through will be so painful that they might wish they had never been born. And also don't tell the patient that you will have to cut through major muscle surrounding the knee in order to accomplish your medieval task of pounding staples into their bones in order to correct this odd malformation. And one more. Don't tell the full extent of the slow nature of the recovery process.
Recovery was slow. Slow as in continental drift. Physical therapy consisted of the very basics; attempting to stand and walk again, through the intense stiffness and pain of post-surgical healing. When asked, Kelly will tell you that the dealing with the pain was, "like learning to walk for the first time again". But Kelly persisted, she did not give up. In spite of the pain, even though she spent the first two weeks being pushed around school in a wheelchair. Even though she spent the next four weeks on crutches. She did not give up. She worked, went to therapy, continued in school, and developed character. Character like I have never seen, through a difficult journey for a 12 year old girl. And now, she wears on the inside of each knee a scar. But maybe when she looks at those scars, they might seem like badges. Badges of courage and character.
I have been blessed to have a daughter like this. For some reason that only God knows, her legs started out in life a bit off of center. Walking on tip toes, smiling and moving forward. A scary day at the hospital, and as she slept there in a medicated fog of general anesthestic, a pounding sound in a cool, sterile room, surrounded by those who would help her begin the task of healing. A groggy awakening to the smiling faces of her family. Intense pain, very slow recovery, feeling insecure, beginning all over again. And in the end, something crooked became straight. And a girl learned an early lesson in what life is sometimes about.
Maybe that is how it is for all of us. We don't like the diagnosis that life gives us, or maybe God gives us. Its scary. Maybe we can just leave things as they are, then it won't hurt. Kelly elected to face the pain, and the pounding, and the recovery. She showed me in new ways what healing is about. Sometimes, healing means being willing to be healed.
May we know what in us is crooked, and Who is our only hope to make it straight.
4 comments:
I had no idea Kelly's surgery was so difficult. What a trooper. Her courage, and yours too, is inspiring.
Oh! So this is what a blog is for! Reading your blog about Kelly - a funny and poignant reflection on the difficulties of real life - is far more enriching than all the smarty-pants stuff I thought blogging was supposed to be about. Thank you.
Morgan:
I blog because it is a great way to release what is on my alleged mind, and hopefully to give God as much credit as possible. Where is your blog bud? I would read it for sure. You are not a smarty pants, but I am not so sure about that Tod guy!
One thing that I have learned is that children deal with life and pain and adjustment SO much better than us. Your daughter is a trooper! My son broke his arm in 1st grade, but not your typical break by the time we got to the hospital. Everyone was doing the hush, hush thing and did not want to alarm me or Trevor. Turns out he had a very rare break involving surgery. His elbow was completely separated, hanging, and so was his wrist. He was in SO much pain for a little guy. Three pins in his elbow and 2 in his wrist, and NO nerve damage as the bone specialist thought might be the case. AMEN! We learn from them hugh?
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