She’s My Everything by Suzanne Woods Fisher
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She’s…My
Everything by Suzanne Woods Fisher
“A mother is one who can
take the place of all others, but whose place no one else can
take.”
--Cardinal Mermillod
Just a few more months. My mother was
hoping Dad would hang on long enough so they could celebrate their
sixtieth wedding anniversary in April. But on January 1st, as the sun
rose on the new year, my dad’s worn out heart beat its last. Dad
had battled Alzheimer’s Disease for ten years. As many of you know,
AD is a long, hard journey. Hard on the one afflicted with the
disease, hard on the caregivers.
But not without its
blessings.
Four years ago, as I began researching
stories for Amish Peace: Simple Wisdom for a Complicated
World, my path crossed with a handful of Plain families who
were coping with Alzheimer’s. It was just about the point when
Dad’s illness was shifting from early to mid stages AD and the
timing was a divine accident. I learned so much as I observed the
calm acceptance of these families. Rather than waste time shaking a
fist at God for allowing this disease to take their loved one, they
put their energy into trusting God’s sovereignty. They didn’t
deny the difficulties and complications and sadness of Alzheimer’s,
but they didn’t dwell on them. “God has a plan,” one woman told
me. “He always has a plan.”
Something else I noticed was how
privileged my Amish friends felt about caring for their loved one.
Caring for the elderly, they believe, is the time to give back to
them.
Those encounters shaped my perspective
of Dad’s illness. I started to pay attention to how God provided
answers to new wrinkles created by Alzheimer’s, just in time. God
may be slow, but He is never late.
I started to cherish special moments or
good days with Dad—just as he was at each point in his illness. Not
mourning the past, not dreading the future.
I really miss my dad. I miss his
scratchy whiskers and the way his eyebrows would wiggle at us, even
as words failed him. Yet I have such peace in my heart that he was
well loved and well cared for, right to the very end. And as hard as
Dad’s end of life has been, it isn’t the end. We will meet again.
As the saying goes, “Some may see a hopeless end, but as believers
we rejoice in an endless hope.”
There’s a beautiful story that
illustrates my parents’ 59-year marriage. This event happened about
a year or two ago. My sister had accompanied our mother to the doctor
appointment for Dad at the Stanford Memory Clinic.
Dad had declined quite a bit that
month. He was weak and lethargic, even to the point of whispering, as
if it took too much energy to project his voice. During the doctor's
appointment, the doctor told my mother and sister that Dad was now in
late stages of Alzheimer's. Dad didn’t have much vocabulary left,
but when the doctor asked him who mom was, he whispered something
back. The doctor looked at Mom and asked, "Did you hear what he
just said?"
Mom shook her head.
"When I asked him who you were, he
whispered, 'She's...my everything.'"
###
Suzanne Woods Fisher is a
writer of bestselling fiction and non-fiction books about the Old
Order Amish. Her interest in the Plain People began with her
grandfather, W. D. Benedict, who was raised Plain. Suzanne is the
host of Amish Wisdom, a weekly radio
program on toginet.com, and writes a bi-monthly column for Christian
Post. Suzanne can be found on-line at www.suzannewoodsfisher.com.
Re-printed with permission
by Cooking & Such,
www.sherrygorebooks.com.
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