My dad received a scary medical diagnosis this week. My
wonderful, loving father, who is 82.
When my mom called to tell me, I could hardly comprehend her
words. My dad has been my hero all my life, and I can’t imagine a world
without him in it. I’ve been the luckiest of daughters to have him for a father.
The phone call took place in the evening, the night before I
was to work an early shift at the hospital. I have to rise at 4:00 AM to be at
the hospital by 5, which for a former night owl is painful. I went to bed soon
after the call, and as I attempted to settle myself for the night, thoughts of
my dad’s demise kept creeping in and disturbing my peace. I finally drifted off
into dreamland, but slept fitfully, waking at 2:45 AM, planning his funeral.
I work on a unit which cares for post-surgical patients,
many of whom share my father’s diagnosis. As luck would have it (or as I like
to call it, serendipity), one of our newest, and brightest, surgeons walked
onto the unit just as I was telling a coworker of my fears for my dad’s
imminent departure from mortality.
I asked the surgeon for a moment of his time, and told him
of my father’s diagnosis. His words brought immediate relief, and hope.
He explained to me the various ways the diagnosis could be
interpreted, depending on the particulars of the biopsy results, and the
treatment options available. He described the medical interventions that could
be considered should further testing prove the situation to be more dire than
we know at present, and provided me with information that calmed my fears, and
eased my mind.
After our conversation, I called my mother to tell her what
I had learned. She shared my relief to hear that this diagnosis was not a death
sentence for my father.
At the conclusion of our previous conversation, when she had
first shared the bad news, she told me that the family would be fasting
together this Sunday. She said that she knew I no longer participated in
religious practices like fasting, but she didn’t want me to feel left out. She
seemed tentative and unsure, as if she feared that I would mock a revered
religious rite.
I told her that while she was correct that I no longer
believed in fasting as a manipulative attempt to force God’s hand and influence
the outcome, I do believe in fasting as a unifying practice that connects
families and friends in solidarity and love. I just don’t think going without
food for a prescribed number of hours will get God’s attention and ensure that
my dad’s life will be spared. (I didn’t use these exact words, as I am
sensitive to my mother’s sacred beliefs and do not intend to mock them.)
To be fair, my mother doesn’t believe her fasting and
prayers will guarantee a desired outcome, but she will admit, if I were to
press the issue, that she is hoping to impress upon God her devotion and
obedience in exchange for a blessing of health, thereby obtaining for her husband a
miraculous cure.
My issue with fasting, with the intent of procuring a
blessing of health and/or happiness, is that I can’t believe in a Supreme Being
who would reward only those who denied themselves food and drink and prostrated
themselves in humble supplication. After all, the scriptures tell us that rain
falls upon the just and the unjust. As do good health and long lives.
And we all know good souls who were pure in heart who did
not survive a scary medical diagnosis. My mother-in-law is a case in point. No
one better ever walked the earth. Her life was taken by cancer, in spite of
fervent fasting and urgent pleas begging to spare her life. And in the end, no
one blamed God for not answering those particular prayers. Rather, he was
thanked and given credit for having provided life lessons.
Isn’t that the way it goes? Prayers are answered in the
affirmative and our loved ones live, and we thank God. Prayers are not answered
the way we would like them to be, and our loved ones die, and we thank God. God
never loses.
You know what I do believe in? Science. And medicine.
Doctors who spend years learning about the human body and its processes, and
then spend years using that learning to save and improve lives.
I know my parents also believe in science and medicine, or
they would have spurned modern medicine and gone straight to prayer and
fasting. There are those amongst the religious who do so, generally at their
peril.
But you know what really irks me? In the end, no matter
which direction this diagnosis goes, God will be the one who gets all the
credit. God will be thanked for sparing my father’s life, if he does survive
this. God will be praised for stepping up and granting my family’s petition
that my dad be healed. And if he isn’t healed, and this is the end for him? God
will also be praised. Like I said, God never loses.
Know who should get the credit? The doctors who diagnose
him, and operate on him, and provide radiation treatment, and prescribe
life-saving medication. The nurses who provide gentle and compassionate care as
he recuperates. The ancillary services who are there to draw labs and clean
rooms and take x-rays. All of those people who work so diligently to share with
my dad their skills and knowledge so that he might go on to live many more
years with the family who loves him.
The family who will credit God with my father’s survival,
should he outlive this scary diagnosis.
I know my mother will find comfort through prayer and
fasting with her family. I found comfort in the words of a knowledgeable and
skilled surgeon. I guess I am putting my faith in the arms of flesh, since
those arms have held many lives in their hands, and come out victorious. I’m
hoping for a similar outcome for my dad.
As much as I believe in love, and family, and connection, I
also believe in the power of science, and the dedication of those willing to
sacrifice years in the pursuit of life-saving knowledge and skills.
And if the outcome isn’t what I hope for? I will thank the
medical community for their efforts, and I will be grateful for the years I did
have with my beloved dad.
And I will thank my beloved dad for being my dad.
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