Jesus answered him, “Truly I tell you, today you will be with me in paradise.” ~Luke 23:43 I'm not sure what prompted her, but while sitting with a hospice patient one day, the woman looked at me and asked, "So, how many people have you watched die?"
I didn't know what to say, because in all honesty, I don't know how many people I have been with as they took their last breath. I wish I could say I could remember the names, their faces, and their families, but I can't. There have been literally thousands of people from all walks of life, and all ages. The younger the patient, often the more I remember, whereas, the older the person, the same. The `101-year-old woman that raised two daughters alone, who boldly shared of her relationships with men in order to survive while two 80-something year-old women listened in disbelief as their mother shared of compromising circumstances. The 92-year-old woman who was a nurse that bought 23 and me kits after I made the suggestion when she asked about gift ideas for Christmas, and the shocked look on her face when her oldest child called and asked why her two siblings asked, "Why is your dad different than ours?" The conversation leading back to a memory of a woman who had a fight with her fiance and the night she spent with her best friend who left to be a soldier in Europe, who never returned. Her tears, as she told me how, "God lets us live long enough to realize all of our sins." The conversation I had with a man who had a tattoo across his back shoulder that spelled out, "GUILTY," who in his final hour of life shared with me how he had been drunk with his best friend, and how an argument turned into the man pushing his best friend from a bridge, and then never telling anyone. The friend's death had been ruled a suicide, and how I spent weeks looking, only finding a sister of the friend, to tell her of what I had been told, and the sound of the woman's cries as she realized the truth. The forty-six year old woman with six grandchildren who asked me to help her talk to her grandchildren about what it means to die, and how she wanted to be remembered. The woman then telling me that I had to write a book to help others have the same conversation, and then years later, sitting with the woman's mother, and showing her my book, "Remember Me When..." The afternoon I sat with the daughter of a woman who had become more than just a patient to me, but had welcomed me as part of her family. Her daughter and I had talked in another room for nearly an hour when we got up and walked into the room where the patient was quietly sleeping. The patient had not taken in any nutrition in literally weeks. Her daughter sat on one side of her, and I on the other, each with a hand in ours. All of a sudden, the patient sat up, looked at both of us directly in the face and let out a loud cry, falling back into bed. There was a rush that both the daughter and I felt throughout our entire body, and how the hair on our arms was still standing as we looked at one another, trying to understand what had just happened. We didn't know what to say, except that we knew the woman had just died and we had felt as her spirit was freed. The woman's question cannot be answered because I do not know the answer. What I can share is that I can honestly say that death looks the same with every individual. It's existence creates chapters that end, milestones that signify change, and that the lives of others will never be the same. Death neither confirms nor denies the existence of eternity, nor the validity of one's faith. The afternoon I sat with my cousin, John D. as he watched me enter his room at Houston Hospice, and then silently followed me with his eyes, and without words told my spirit that he was about to die, will forever remain with me. As I watched him swallow really hard when I spoke. "You're dying." Not a question, nor a statement. It was the moment a tear rolled from his eye, as a tear rolled from mine as well, and I placed my hand on his chest, feeling the gentle slowing of a mechanical heart valve, while staring into his eyes. And then as his heart simply stopped, and without a sound, or movement. his face relaxed, and his eyes lost their focus and he was gone. There is something significant about last words that are lasting words, and last moments, that last a lifetime in my memories, my dreams, and with sacred spaces that hold truths that I will carry with me until I am met by my own last breath. The thousands I have been with have taught me about courage, remorse, and most of all, love. That life is not about amassing wealth, or even the number of friends that one might accumulate. The disappointments that can overwhelm accomplishments at times, or the last minute reconciliation between a father and a son. It is, however, the man hanging next to another on a hillside, on a wooden beam, when he turns to the other and asks to be "remembered,," and the response, "Surely today you shall be with me in paradise," is spoken. None of us may have that type of encounter, but in my faith, there is One who will always know the moment, I ask to be remembered as well, and find that the One who responds remembers every single person who has died, and doesn't need to stop and think about the answer to the question I had just been asked because there is no answer. "I have come so that all may have life," will always be the answer to the question from the One I know as the Christ. Stay in God's grip! Todd Rev. G. Todd Williams, MDiv. (c) 2024
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AuthorRev. G. Todd Williams is the author of the book, "Remember Me When..." and is a former hospice chaplain and pastor. Archives
February 2024
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