I promise to stop wriitng about "my trip to the hospital" soon. Very soon! But apparently, I'm a classic case of a writer who doesn't get out much. It's not that I don't see lots of people every day. Family, friends, and friends of the kids flow in and out in a wonderful stream. They bless my life--all of them--even when I bellow, (most often internally) "Hey, I'm trying to get some work done here!"
But what I've missed from my waitressing days, and what the hospital provided was interaction with the wider world. People I didn't know. Stories I hadn't heard. Catalysts to insights and thoughts that stretched far beyond myself and my beloved few. The stream that becomes a vast, transformative river. In the hospital, I walked into that river again.
For my second surgery, I only had one request: I wanted to go back to the same floor, White 7, where I already knew the nurses and the aides, the dietary and housekeeping staff. I loved them all. But it was probably the intimacy of sharing a room with various strangers, all enduring their own crises, that affected me most.
I've written before about the Chinese roommate who had been hit by a car while crossing a street. I've written about how we banished our night terrors and pain by speaking them out loud in the dark. What I haven't written about is the other kind of pain we discussed late in the night. The pain of injustice and invisibility.
Though she had several broken bones, a badly shattered ankle and a dislocated shoulder, what seemed to bother my roommate most was that other kind of pain. After we'd gone through the list of our physical suffering, she would re-tell the story of the woman who'd hit her with a BMW. The woman whose only concern seemed to have been spinning the story to avoid responsibity...
"I was in the crosswalk, but she told the police I walked in front of her car..She never looked at me....I was lying in the street, my whole life changed, and she never even asked if I was all right..."
It seemed incredible to me that anyone could be so callous, so blind. But of course, every day in our world, people make decisions about who we will look at deeply and who we will refuse to see. Every day, we turn away and deny responsibility just like the woman in the BMW did.
"They won't believe her," I said in the dark.
But my roommate's experience caused her to doubt. "She was rich, and I'm an office worker...my English, it's not so good...maybe they believe me and maybe they don't."
As our week together went on, our families got to know each other, and a genuine bond formed. One of her nephews wanted to become a writer, but the family worried that it wasn't a practical choice. (I couldn't disagree, but I also couldn't help telling him to keep writing!) A niece was a talented artist. I admired the caring and closeness of her extended family, and envied the wonderfully fragrant home cooked dinners they brought to her every evening.
One of the more baffling (and entirely subjective) questions a hospital patient is asked regularly is to rate your pain from one to ten. In my reference point, ten was childbirth, and seven was a throbbing tooth in need of a root canal. I wondered where the pain of invisibility fell on the scale.
No one ever asked me to rate my bliss, but I did anyway. Bliss was the gorgeous, concerned faces of my roommate's nieces and nephews and my children as they entered our room in the evening, their coats glistening with snow, cheeks bright with the cold. Bliss was seeing and being seen by the people in front of us, and by each other.
Though we talked about our suffering in the night, during the day, we joked with the aides, and told stories about our very different childhoods. In a cramped hospital room, looking out on the snow, I traveled far. We sipped our tea together, and talked about how good, how very good, it tasted. My roommate had a wonderful, tinkling laugh, which I'd heard--amazingly--on the first night when they brought her in on a stretcher.
That laughter is still with me. On the bliss scale, it's a ten.


Comments: 56
I am at the opposite pole of where you are right now--I'm trying to "draw in" and focus more on my own projects. As a musician and mother, I will never have a lack of people contact, lol!
Patry, please do not spare us the "my trip to the hospital" stories. We need to read them, as much as you need to write them. I have some of my own and you made me want to write them. Thank you. I have been barren but have now concieved, thanks to your acknowledged bliss.
Reminded me of a joke: A woman calls the hospital to inquire about her friend, Gertrude Lee in Rm 203. They tell her she is in stable condition and will be leaving tomorrow; they ask her if she is a relative and would she like them to telll her that she called. To which the woman responds, " No I'm Gertude Lee , no one will tell me a damn thing in this hospital".
penni: Thanks for noticing I was gone. I missed my connections, too.
Jan: Thank you. I like to raise questions--especially when I don't have the answers!
Spencer: What an incredibly beautiful story. The world needs more people like you!
Teresa: We only knew each other for a few days, but I will never forget her.
John: Epidural? Why didn't someone tell me sooner?
Kim: Feel better soon! p.s. Five isn't too bad when you're talking bliss...
flit: Just from your icon, I can tell that you're a person who looks for the bliss and not the sorrow.
Elaine: THank you!
Alison: I've always envied musicians the opportunity to get together and make people happy on the spot.
vivian, donna: Thank you!
Sandy: Thanks for being open to more hospital stories. Actually, i have another surgery coming up in early March! I can't say I'm looking forward to it, but I'm grateful for the good care I'm getting. In the meantime, I'd love to read some of your reflections on the subject.
r: And it's not even joke Friday! LOL
lynn: Thanks for your good wishes. Right here on Gather i've met so many caring people, as I'm sure you have.
Ron: I'd much rather find my bliss here on GAther (where it's surely abundant) than in the hospital, but sometimes you have to look for it where you are.
Phyllis: Thank you for your interest and your comment!
Mark: It's a special bond, isn't it? I bet your wife has many stories to tell...
chris w.: Your words would make a great life motto...thank you.
Bret: Thank you. Always happy to induce bliss.
Becca: Thank for such kind comment.
Carol: That's the kind of comment I want to mail to my editor! Thank you--
Bliss will get you through the day.
On a side note, I read a Psychology Today article a couple of years ago that did a study on whether people preferred to spend an evening in with good friends or out with new friends or strangers. Most preferred to go out with new friends or strangers. The thrill of constant contact with people, smiles, eye-contact - is important - it keeps building up our confidence in a way that is different and no greater or lesser than being with deeply loved ones. We need both.
Mariana: As always, your comment is full of light. I appreciate it!
Gigi: Thanks for the kind of womment we writers live for. Truly.
Kathryn: "Bliss will get you through the day"--I like that motto. If it was for sale in the drug store, that would make a great ad. But of course, the great thing is that it's abolutely free, and there for the taking. In any case, thanks for sharing the article you read in Psychology Today. Very interesting.
Bert: For a writer, it's always a balance between exploring that large and complicated inner world, and keeping ourselves fresh through new experiences. I'm sure you're not lacking in either.
I was thrilled to see you mentioned in today's Publisher's Weekly and the outpouring of support from other writers.
Everyone; January 29th is all about promote/blog/buy The Liar's Diary.
WwW.SparkleTags.Com
hugz,gayle
I even forget to bring my cane nowadays!
it is important to believe the glass is half full rather than half empty
congrats on the book too!
What a great idea, Patry.
It's great that you can see the bliss.
10 4 u