Last year was a growing time for our family. We had decided it would be best for myself and the children to return to Kentucky, while my husband remained at his job in Georgia. Of course, tongues started wagging and I hadn't the energy to explain our choice to everyone I met. I laugh now at how I once ended every discussion of my husband not living with us with "....but, we're very happily married."
I am the first to admit that it was a hard year....a year of broken washing machines, broken garage doors, broken bones....there is a pattern starting here. For a time, it felt as if the moment his tail lights disappeared something would break and I would have to wait until his next return trip home for it to be fixed. We coped. We missed one another. We adapted. And, we grew.
In January, our prayers were answered....sort of. A new job was offered to my husband; a job with a competitive salary, good benefits, and a lot of travel. With much discussion, we decided we could handle the amount of travel, after all, with working in Georgia he was gone almost 100% of the time as it was. How bad could it be? Not too bad for the first three days...
Tuesday and Thursday nights I have the luxury of two uninterrupted hours to myself. My daughter sings in the cathedral choir and on those nights I sneak off to the Brides Room for my time. I read, I write, I listen to the beautiful sounds drifting from the choir room and I enjoy every quiet moment. I love this time.
On March 8th, I sat in that upstairs room working on a writing project when I noticed that time had gotten away from me. I usually meet Madeline in the downstairs hallways and she would be there soon. I gathered my belongings, turned off the lights and headed out the door. The hallway light was on....the stairwell light was not. I really thought I could see well enough, but my last thought was of how this could be dangerous (for someone else). I believe I missed the last two steps, not enough to really hurt you, right? I immediately knew I was in trouble. I tried calling for help, but no one was in that wing of the church at that hour. I gathered my strewn belongings, found my phone, and tried to call the security man at the front desk. I was so rattled I couldn't figure out how to use my phone and, once I calmed myself enough to push the correct buttons, I realized I did not have the church's number programmed into my phone. Thank God for Google! The call went straight to an answering machine informing me that if I had an emergency I should call the clergy on duty at ###-####. Yes, even now I can't even begin to remember that number and of all times to not have a pen and paper. By this time I'm talking to myself....
"You can't call Paul, he's in Chicago"
"Okay, just call Madeline and she'll get the security man." Fail. She must turn her phone off during practice.
"Okay, just call Paine (my 17 year old son) and he can drive to the church and take me to the hospital." Fail. He had gone to a movie with friends....turning off his phone.
In the end, thirty minutes after the fall, it was a dear friend"s husband who rescued me.
I won't bore you with the details of the ER visit. Well, just maybe one little story.... My neighbors, upon hearing of my accident, gathered my two sons and met us at the hospital.
While I was having my foot x-ray, Hayden (the youngest) asked Madeline, "Was she crying a lot?"
"No", she replied.
After thinking about it for a bit, he asked, "Well, was she cussin' a lot?"
Evidently, the waiting room audience found this pretty funny and leaves me wondering if I need to watch my language. LOL
In the end, the prognosis is too
So, I did not fall off the face of the earth, I merely went to the edge (of my sanity).
I've been here, in my chair, with my impatience, looking at this.....
P.S. I promise to write more often, if you promise to visit more often. Deal?
P.S.S. My lovely husband has managed to miss most of this drama. He did come home for a couple of days, to assure himself I would live, before leaving for .......... Germany! Some people have all the luck.
wow. i don't know how you have made it through
ReplyDeletethese terrible ordeals. i pray your foot heals
quickly and that your life becomes . . . a little
more boring. :)
Thank you for your prayers....they are much appreciated! There is nothing like an accident to make you miss your boring life. :)
DeleteWhat a trial! God certainly got you through but, that is a lot for one woman to handle without her husband in town. I will be praying for you.
ReplyDelete