M E R I D I A N M A G A Z I N E
When
Your Son Might be Blind
By C.S. Bezas
It is now evening.
As I write this, I ponder. Every day for the past
four days I have taken my fifteen-year-old son
to a different doctor. This unexpected saga began
when he got up Sunday morning on March 11, 2007.
While in the shower, he suddenly thought he saw
a "worm" or something squirmy on his
shoulder. But when he looked away, the worm went
with his line of sight.
That wormy "floater" continued to increase
in irritation by evening time. Therefore, on Monday
I took my son to the pediatrician, who said he
saw nothing wrong with his eyes, but "just
in case, let's send him to an ophthalmologist
to be sure."
[The amazing miracle is that although the ophthalmologist
is booked out until July, we got in within 24
hours. Definitely the Lord's hand. Never have
I seen this swift of an appointment, even with
my youngest son who apparently has spinal muscular
atrophy and has nearly died from it on a number
of occasions. Even in urgent — but not 911
— situations, it takes on average a week
to get into any specialist.]
My husband is proactive and researches "sudden
floaters." Both he and I become concerned
with the possibility of my son's retina detaching
(leading to blindness). Day Two arrives in this
unexpected journey. We come in gratitude to the
ophthalmologist's office. Even though my son shares
with the doctor that the discomfort feels worse,
the doctor declares that he sees nothing of concern.
Just in case, though, he refers us to a retina
specialist — one of the leading retinologists
in the area. I figure we will have to wait a few
days this time to get in, given the retina specialist's
reputation. Understandably, I'm nervous about
the time it might take to get an appointment with
this well-known doctor.
But not so! Less than 24 hours later, we are sitting
in the retina specialist's office. [Yes, another
scheduling miracle! I feel heaven truly is watching
out for us.] Now it is Day Three and things begin
to get dicey. I know this specialist; I see him
for my own retina problems. Normally he is laid
back and calm. Not so today. Once he finishes
examining my son's eyes, he turns and declares
that both eyes are hemorrhaging inside. "15-year-olds
do not have eyes that hemorrhage," he states.
"Potentially this means he could have a rare
blood or bleeding disorder, cancer, diabetes,
or even mounting renal problems."
[I'm now thinking it was a good thing we didn't
stop after the first two doctors! And what a great
case to be made for seeking help from specialists,
who have finer diagnostic tools than normal doctors.)
After writing a prescription for a boatload of
blood tests and other exams, the doctor sends
us on our way to an aggressive pediatrician for
a full workup. So on Day Four, we're now in another
doctor's office [yes, with less than 24 hours
scheduling time], having a full physical
for my son, after which we go to a lab for blood
work, glucose testing, etc. (a nightmare of an
experience in the lab's disorganization ... but
that's a story for another day)!
So now as I write this, we are on Day Five and
we wait. But the thing I have learned is two-fold:
Each Experience
is Different.
There are many parents who go through far more
frightening things than what my little family
faces right now for my son. There are even parents
who lose their children to death. Although the
threat does exist of my son losing his vision,
we are not faced with losing our son. I am grateful,
for I know somewhat the sting of losing a child.
My second child died of SIDS. Thus, my first thought
while we wait for these test results is gratitude
for the mildness of this current experience —
even though on the surface it might not appear
gentle.
For example, a family just around the corner from my subdivision lost their teenage son to death less than 24 hours ago. A drunk driver killed him within a half-mile of the boy's home. My heart goes out to his family. The sting of this current situation about my son's eyes pales in comparison — at least for me — to death. But each family and each experience is different. We are not to judge another's experience as "difficult" or "not difficult." This is true even when working with our youth in the classroom. Only the Lord can make that call. Only the Lord knows us individually and what we need, which brings me to my next point.
The Lord
Knows Us.
Way back on Day Two of this excursion, the Spirit
taught me an important truth in that second doctor's
office. As I sat there, naively contemplating
the possibility that my son's retina could be
detaching (not yet knowing that both eyes were
bleeding internally), I felt a flash of peace.
The peace astonished me in its largesse. I marveled
at it. And in an instant, the Spirit taught me
— no, better put, the Spirit pressed upon
me that the Lord knows our lives perfectly. He
knows perfectly how to couple what we need with
who we are.
I clarify the sensation, because the experience
at that moment was more than a "truth"
taught to my mind. No, it was much more. It was
a complete and physical knowing, a sensing, a
holistic insight into God's glorious ways. He
knows our needs. At that very moment, in
a flash of mature understanding, I accepted and
actually knew that all was well —
regardless of the outcome — that if my son
needed to be blind in one eye (or now flashing
forward and add to that a rare bleeding disorder,
cancer, diabetes, or whatever else it could be),
someday I would see and feel and know and trust
in the wisdom of that event. Somehow I knew on
every level, I would see the Lord in His goodness
and even praise the passageway we now find ourselves
in.
Words cannot express the significance of this
moment for me in that doctor's office, nor the
pure and astonishing joy the Spirit gave me in
its largesse. This was a most unexpected and unforeseen
experience. As a result, the pain and concern
and fear I had felt were gone, and instead, peace
took their place. Indescribable peace. Peace,
which if I had not felt it I would not understand.
The Spirit taught me that (obviously) I can't
see the future. As a result, I cannot comprehend
how today's events pivot my family into more fruitful
fields, if we but trust the Lord. As a result
of all this, I somehow know that God knows what
He is doing, and that an incident like this that
my son faces does not need to be called a "tragedy"
— as odd as that may seem to mortals.
For some rare reason, at that given moment of
unsurpassable understanding I felt to proclaim
God's goodness. I felt to praise His name and
His glory in these doings and in all outcomes
from them. Of course, I don't want my son to go
through difficulty. Of course, I pray that all
will be well. And you bet that we will pursue
health for my son by showing up at every eye appointment
and doing our part to ensure all is taken care
of. But for some inexplicable reason and for the
first time in my life, the Spirit gave me a seasoned
perspective far greater than my age normally would
allow.
Summary
Words come hard right now in an effort to transcribe the peace that descended on my heart March 13, 2007 when the Spirit visited me with that moment of pure insight. My family is still waiting to find out why my son's eyes were (or are) inexplicably bleeding internally. Additionally, I cannot proclaim to understand the happenings in the lives of others around me.
I think of the book
title When Bad Things Happen to Good People.
It is a book written by Rabbi Harold S. Kushner
and read by many in the world today. I know there
is much confusion as to the existence of pain
in this life. I cannot speak to that which others
experience.
But I have learned for myself from the events
of the past week that the gifts God gives us in
sudden moments may puzzle us at first, but in
time their exquisite nature will be made manifest.
And when it does, I feel we will desire to fall
before the feet of the Lord and proclaim Him great.
The things others call tragedies, we just might
find ourselves calling gifts of the wisest kind.
Only time (and the Spirit) can tell.
It is now evening. As I write this, I ponder.
Five days have passed since we began this journey
to understand why my son's eyes are hemorrhaging.
The saga began in the middle of March 2007. Sometime
in the future we'll look back, knowing well the
end of the story. Until then, in the evening,
each evening, we as a family will go to sleep
in peace, content that the Lord knows our lives
and is in charge of all good things for us. The
Spirit taught me this week that there is no need
to fear that which we don't understand. And some
day we might even rejoice in the gift some would
call a "tragedy."