Wednesday, September 10, 2008

And the Winner Is...

I walked with my mother and sister today. They were with me at my desk in my office, through the halls of the hospital, in the meetings, phone calls and e-mails. They walked beside me, every step of a busy day that was faced with all the difficulties of our heath care system, the stresses of too many patients, too much illness and too many sad stories. They were with me for the successes, the thanks of a Charge Nurse for understanding and letting her vent, the warm welcome of a colleague not seen since Spring, the excitement of the upcoming move into a new building where new life will be delivered and the smallest will be saved. They shared my day.

They held me up when I thought the final straw, a call to the President's Office, would break my day, they chuckled with me at the joke a staff member emailed because she thought I could use the laugh and they hugged my secretary when she sent pictures of her son's climb in the Tetons. They shared my tears as my sister told me on the phone of her conversation with Mom last night, a conversation that ended with Mom understanding that she could not live alone any longer. An understanding that may be transient, but on some level sits on my mother's soul, an understanding that sits heavy on our hearts, heavy enough to break them.

They listened in the hospital cafeteria when the cashier couldn't remember who co-starred with Gene Kelly in the movie Singing In the Rain. They shook their heads at the guesses: Judy Garland, Julie Andrews, Doris Day, and agreed with me that even though I didn't know the answer, I knew those were wrong. My mother grew up with the movies. She and her friends went to the theater every week and pined for the greats, Nelson Eddy, Betty Davis, Clark Gable. Penny and I joked that our husbands would have to pass a Gone With the Wind trivia test before we would be allowed to marry them. My father agreed to name me Bonnie but drew the line at Bonnie Blue. (Thanks, Dad!) Melanie was choice number two. I was almost a teenager before I watched the movie and discovered I was named for a spoiled child who died at the age of four. Probably a good choice, I'm no Melanie.

And so they walked with me then, up to my office, and held my hand as I dialed Mom's number and asked the question so I could put my mind at ease. Solve one problem that was simple. One problem that didn't involve the technicalities of health care or the hospital or the complexity of meeting the needs of critically ill patients while balancing the business side of the work we do. One that involved nothing more than the name of an actress.


I think it was only my sister's hand I felt in mine after I hung up the phone and googled Singing In the Rain....it was Debbie Reynolds.



2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Bonnie,
I should know better than to read your writing while I am at work....the tears are rolling down my cheeks. I knew the moment I heard you read your first writing in the writing workshop last fall that you were my kind of writer; that I hope to some day read your published best sellera...And now this....as my time to be in your shoes grows ever so close. I am here in Maine with the man I love and my sweet mother and father so far away in Texas. I ache for them and want time to stand still. But your sharing your thoughts and life is a comfort to me.....for a world that we each have to face sooner or later. Thank You. Your words touch my soul.

Peg

pagm17 said...

Hey Bonnie,

You have got to stop blogging! I've read yesterday's and today's blog, and I cried again! I know that being so close to your family, and knowing all the characters makes it more emotional for me.
The player piano was my favorite thing at your house...not the cats, or making french fries!
You and Penny have been remarkable daughters. (Just another thing that you excel at!)
You are maintaining the Love,care,
compassion,respect,courage, and
dignity that Lois deserves. You and
Penny are shining examples for whichever generation is being called upon to be the caregiver for
the next.
I know the helplessness that you feel, as I feel the same, watching
you go through this. As the great
Jon Bon Jovi once sang, "I'll be
there for you." (I think he has
sung it a few thousand times since!) I know that everyone who
reads your blog will relate to it
at some point in their life...maybe
your words will make it seem less
like a burden to someone, and more
like a privilege!

Lots of love,
Patti