花開半夏,溫暖如初

心靈的愈合 The Healing

字體:16+-

桑迪·瓊斯/Sandy Jones

The shock of events of the past 30 hours overwhelmed Jim all at once. His body felt numb, and while the world was moving along, he felt removed from it.

Jim and his wife, Connie, had just lost their beautiful four-monthold son—Joshua. Preliminary diagnosis: SIDS—sudden infant death syndrome.

Thirty hours ago Jim had driven to the baby-sitter’s home to pick up Joshua. It was a routine trip, like the one he made five days every week. He arrived, and little Joshua could not be awakened from his nap. The next few hours were a blur: wailing sirens, swiftmoving paramedics, doctors and nurses…… A decision to air lift Joshua to Children’s Hospital 60 miles away…… but all in vain. Twelve hours later, the doctors had exhausted all attempts at revival. There was no brain activity. The decision was to turn off life-support. Little Joshua was gone. Yes, they wanted all of Joshua’s usable organs to be readied for donation. That was not a difficult decision for Jim and Connie, a loving and giving couple.

The next morning dawned. More decisions and arrangements. Telephone calls and funeral plans. At one point Jim realized he needed a haircut, but being new to the community, he didn’t have his own regular barber yet. Jim’s brother volunteered to call his hairdresser and get Jim an appointment. The schedule was full, but after a few words of explanation, the salon owner said,“Just send him right over and we’ll take care of him.”

Jim was exhausted as he settled into the chair. He had had little sleep. He began to reflect on the past hours, trying desperately to make some sense of it all. Why had Joshua, their first-born, the child they had waited so long for, been taken so soon…… he had barely begun his life…… The question kept coming, and the pain in Jim’s heart just enveloped him. He thought about the words spoken by the hospital chaplain.“We don’t fully understand what part we have in God’s plan. Perhaps Joshua had already completed his mission on earth.”Those words didn’t ease the bitterness that was creeping in.