I
have met many lepers over the years.
Social pariahs, outcast by society, outcast by self, these people
soldier on through life as if the import of others words does not affect them,
and the attitudes toward their malady, from which its onset they are completely
innocent, destroy them faster than the disease itself.
I’m
not talking about the various skin diseases the Bible mentions as ‘leprosy.’ For those who had eczema, psoriasis or, yes,
leprosy, life was miserable. Not only
did their outward appearance exclude them from any social, theological or
emotional discourse, it cut them off from everyone else. Everyone, that is, except those who carried
the same marks of the disease. In
communities they were kept outside of villages left to wander and beg shouting
“Leper! Unclean!” so that those who
would approach would know that they would be contaminated by interaction. Imagine the shame of pronouncing your
innocent guilt – being cursed with leprosy not because you’ve done anything
wrong, but that’s just the way the football bounces sometimes – when those that
pass by you are guiltier of worse: slander, envy, greed, lust… you’ve heard of
all seven, probably, but because they occur from the inside, they can be
hidden, to a point. While these lepers
wander in colonies, trapped by their skin and their words, they are left to
ponder the fairness of life. Why has it
come to this? Where did we go
wrong? What have we done to deserve
ostracision and rejection?
No,
we don’t have many lepers any more, what few that inhabit the earth are
constrained in villages cared for by people who are the truest of living
saints. But leprosy runs rampant in every
country, city, town and village in the world.
It is not chained by any human emotion and its evidence seen visibly on
the epidermis.
It
is old age.
Think
about it. Instead of leprosariums, we
have nursing homes. By and large, they
are wonderful places inhabited by excellent people, but society has cast out
the aged simply because their wrinkles are a representation of the sin of the
genome. We cannot escape death so we
push those who carry the mark as far as possible from us. What used to be a sign of wisdom and
erudition is now a symbol of the curse of death.
Gray hair is a crown of glory;
it is attained by a righteous life.
- Proverbs
16:31
The glory of young men is their
strength, gray hair the splendor of the old.
- Proverbs
20:29
Our
Bible states it clearly: with age comes various benefits and for the vast
majority of time, the elderly will looked with reverence. Their opinions were always sought when any
decisions were made. They lived with
their children when age dug furrows in their furrows, stamped crows’ feet
around their eyes and stained their hands with liver spots. But the leprosy of agedness has brought about
the idolatry of youth like no other age.
In
the last fifteen years, cosmetic surgeries have increased by almost 200 percent
in the United States. Ten billion dollars was spent, over half of
which was dedicated to surgical procedures, 1.7 billion dollars on injections,
1.6 billion dollars on skin rejuvenation and a measly $360 million spent on
other non-surgical procedures.[1] Americans spent ten billion dollars on converting our epidermises to plastic, making
sure our breasts don’t succumb to gravity, sucking out fat cells so our
designer clothes will fit and abrading our skin so that we look ten years
younger.
Talk
about a fear of death.
Vanity. It’s all vanity wrapped in the cloak of
despair. We are uncomprehending of the
life after so we are perfectly comfortable abandoning sense so that this life
‘looks’ better. Too bad there isn’t
cosmetic surgery for the soul.
I
remember one ‘leper’ very well. Her name
was Katherine. During the time between
my first two years of seminary, I was required to Clinical Pastoral Education,
which basically meant I had to spend the summer apart from my family and choose
a place where I could learn to listen, learn to ask questions and basically
crucify my own ego.
Yes,
it was that much fun.
Our
family had just increased by one as the birth of our daughter, Greta, occurred
in my first year of seminary. Needless
to say Christine wasn’t all that excited about doing all the domestic
activities for three children all younger than four years of age. But, CPE was required so I opted for the
place that was closest to Wartburg Theological Seminary (which didn’t seem that
logical at the time). I chose a nursing
home in Oshkosh, Wisconsin. I just
wanted to get my CPE over with; there were no night duties, no weekends and I
had a place to stay. Each week I’d leave
Monday morning at 4:00 a.m. and return on Friday after work.
Working
with elderly? No problem. My parents had raised us in a community and
church that was predominantly crowned with glory, ahem, gray haired nobility. From the time of the novelty of our birth, my
brother, sister and I had been parcelled out to homes of various baby sitters so
we were comfortable with conversing with those much older than we. But working in a nursing home, that’s a much
different story.
Most
of the people that arrive in a nursing home are not there by their own
accord. Either they’ve become ill or
unable, and their children have forced them into their cells, I mean rooms; or,
the hospital convinces them that they are no longer able to support themselves
at home. Their home has become the enemy:
the place where they raised their children, lived with their spouses, collected
the dust of memories – this place is no longer available to them. They are allowed to bring a nice recliner,
perhaps, and a quilt they made fifty years ago.
The rest of it is put on the garage sale or divided between children
like vultures hovering over roadkill.
Perhaps
I’m being harsh, but there is no greater damage that occurs to families when
they squabble over things, whether knick knacks or Great Great Grandfather
Vernon’s rocking chair. The one who is
hurting the most, the aged mother or father being confined and condemned to a
foul smelling place, is left largely out of the equation. Power of Attorney means Power of
Division. So, the elderly leper is left
to sleep his or her days away interrupted by meals and sporadic games of Bingo.
I
met Katherine at Bingo. In the first few
weeks of working at the nursing home (or ‘assisted living facility’ as they are
called in all political correctness), I had been encouraged to interact with
residents (another word I despised for some illogical reasons) or ‘inmates’ as
Katherine called them. In her wheel
chair, Katherine relaxed, almost melted, into the plastic where she had sat
every day. I asked if I could sit next
to her and she looked up at me through Coke bottle glasses. Her eyes had that watery look like her
eyeballs were perpetually swimming in tears.
“Suit
yourself,” she said with the typical raspy voice of the aged, “But don’t touch
my cards.”
A
friendship was born.
Roughly
once per day I made my way to Katherine’s ‘cell’ where we could talk, laugh,
share stories of life or sometimes she would even have me play the piano for
her. It would be expected that I’d push
her wheelchair. She never asked, but she
sat on that chair as if it were the throne of England. Proud and short she sat, her legs covered by
a blanket she had crocheted countless decades ago.
One
afternoon I played piano for her and as she sat to my right amidst the plastic
Easter Lilies and faux palms, a tear slid down one of her cheeks. At first she was embarrassed, but then she
recovered quickly when she noticed that I had noticed. Waving a wrinkled hand at me she said with
trembling voice, “Don’t you worry about this eighty-eight year old lady. She’s just leaking at the seams.”
I
stopped playing. “What’s wrong?” I
asked.
Pausing
for a moment, she motioned for me to sit next to her wheelchair. After capturing my eyes for a moment, she
pulled back the blanket from her legs.
She
was a double amputee. I had never
noticed and never asked.
“When
did that happen?” I asked after getting my bearings. “I mean, what happened.”
Katherine
covered the stumps quickly so as no other ‘inmate’ would notice. “I’m diabetic. They’ve been taking parts of me for
years. Pretty soon alls that I’ll have
left is my heart and my head. I’m not
sure they’re worth taking.” She coughed
out a harsh laugh. “Reid, I’m dying,”
she said at last. “I’m not sure how I
feel about that, but anything is better than this,” she punctuated the
statement by patting her stumps.
“It’s
hard being without your legs, isn’t it?” I asked from a very youthful,
inexperienced perspective.
“Not
that you’d know,” she responded, “but it’s not the lack of legs that bothers
me, it’s the lack of visitors. As soon
as my legs came off, my extended family stopped coming. After a while, even my children stopped
visiting. Sure, they’d call or send a
card; sometimes flowers would be delivered.
But to them, I think, I’m already dead.
They just want the mother, or sister, or aunt, or friend that used to be
around thirty years ago. But I’m not
that person anymore.”
I
nodded my head. It was all I could do.
“They
act as if what I’ve got is catchy.
Infections, I think that’s the word.
Not the diabetes, but old age.
They act as if when they come near me, they’ll catch my old age. That’s the worst of it. Not dying, but dying alone.”
Katherine
died two weeks after that conversation.
She was alone when she died.
[1]
From the American Society of Aesthetic Plastic Surgery. Notice the name of the society is all about
‘aesthetics’ – looking better.
1 comment:
Get out the Kleenex! Holy cow! That story got to me. I knew I would cry as soon as you said “nursing home.”
I think nursing homes or assisted living facilities (my dear uncle called them assisted dying facilities and he died in one, but not alone) are the result of our changing culture. Just like childhood obesity. When I grew up, there were no after-school care programs because most of our mothers were home. We dropped our books, changed into our “play clothes,” and went outside to play till dinner. Grandmas and grandpas stayed in the house with their families. There was always someone to take care of them. But it is a different culture now. We live in a fast paced, busy culture where old, slow people don’t fit. We don’t have the time to take care of them. It is a sad reality.
I love to visit nursing homes! I worked in one as a nurse’s aide for a summer. I once had a therapy dog and I would take my two small children and visit the “grandma and grandpa’s” place. Both the dog and my children loved it. They didn’t seem to notice the smell. They weren’t frightened of the sometime unusual behavior of the grandmas and grandpas. But the grandmas and grandpas got the most out of it! They especially loved the kids.
When I’ve asked people who live in nursing homes what they miss most about being there, they say the youth and children. All day long all they see are slow, old, wrinkled faces.
I have always thought we should have daycares and nursing homes in one facility. Both parties would benefit. There are facilities like that somewhere, but if I had my way, I would make sure there were more of them – lots more!
Visiting the shut-ins in our congregations is a worthy task for any congregational member. Loneliness is something that should never have to be endured by anyone!
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