Deeply and gently

From Michelle.  11 August, 2010.  1:30 p.m.

Dear friends and family,

It feels like weeks since my last update.  In fact, it has been a rather long six days.

The weight of details ebb and flow, but this past week has brought another wave of decisions, information and detail.  The “to do” list grows in length and the time in which to do it lags behind.  Perhaps one of the most challenging aspects of this time is the sheer lack thereof.  Dear friends pop in and every minute I spend with them is a minute not spent handling crucial planning.  Ironically, there is no time for processing grief, meeting with supportive friends and family or even having one on one time with each other.  In six weeks in the hospital, Steve and I have not managed to watch a single movie together!  We have become desperate for time as a couple yet the interruptions to our every well-intentioned plan to be alone have become almost comic in their regularity!  Our departure date from Harborview looms in eight days, and the children are not yet definitively enrolled in school, we have no idea what benefits we will qualify for from the state, we have no medical insurance confirmed for the end of the month for myself and the children and due to other paperwork and testing, we have no in home care lined up for Steve.  How in the world all of the running, interviewing and paperwork has lined up so little defies belief, however this is how the system works!  Many of the deadlines loom at the end of a hospital stay, and schools in the Puget Sound just opened this week for enrollment.  Each day provides its own portion of details, and we simply do what we can.  Just the most pressing details often keep me busy until midnight.  Dear friends, perhaps this will explain my inability to contact each one of you personally, though my heart longs to do so!  Please continue to pray for God’s good provision for us as we trust Him for these details.

On a medical note, an MRI has confirmed that the pain in Steve’s shoulder is the result of a torn rotator cuff.  One of the main goals of physical therapy is to work on Steve doing transfers on his own from his bed to his chair.  It is a formidable goal, but greatly increases his sense of independence.  His ability to work on this and other important skills, like propelling himself in a manual wheelchair or rolling himself over in bed, are limited by his injury.  Needless to say, Steve is anxious to work hard and is discouraged by this latest setback.

Last Sunday we tiptoed our way still further into the new yet strangely unfamiliar world of “normal life”.  Steve and I took the boys to a soccer game at the Qwest arena located within eyesight of the hospital.  A kind friend donated tickets, we got day passes from the hospital, we used our wonderful wheelchair accessible vehicle, and with medical supplies in our bag, fresh knowledge in our heads and hope in our hearts, we took ourselves out into the great wild world!  It was both powerfully exhilarating and intensely discouraging, all at the same time.  What was wonderful was being out and about with the kids.  Jude naturally hopped onto the back of Steve’s chair for a ride, both children helped fasten and unfasten the many straps for Steve’s chair in the van, and neither of the boys seemed to blink at the many odd twists and turns it took to do what was formerly a simple task.  We now had to find strangely allotted wheelchair accessible parking halfway around the arena from the entrance, negotiate lines too narrow for a wheelchair, hold open doors, locate elevators, and find wheelchair accessible family bathrooms.  None of this deterred us from cheering the Sounders on to victory, however I cannot lie and say that Steve and I did not have sad eyes most of the game.  The hospital has been a haven from the greater reality of our new life.  Here we are surrounded by others with similar challenges and those who support us for a living.  Everything is wheelchair accessible, and an entire fleet of personnel are here to meet our every need and assuage any medical challenge immediately as it arises.  Out there we will have to direct, educate and problem solve a world that operates on two feet.  We all face challenges, those on two feet and those in chairs, but this is ours.


On a positive note, we are being carried through.  It is hard to imagine that only eight weeks ago, we were simply enjoying our vacation among family and friends, and preparing to return refreshed to our wonderful home in the Philippines!  The road has been both difficult beyond imagining and remarkably punctuated with grace and love.  As we peer into a dimly lit future, we exercise the muscles of our faith in new ways that painfully polish our souls bur hopefully leave us shining brighter.

Please continue to pray for provision in all of the details, from insurance to schools to the perfect caregivers for our family.  Most of all, please pray that Steve would be encouraged and that God would continue to heal.  Your prayers are already heard.

A miracle happened this week that I hope will encourage us all.  After months of catheterization, Steve has been able to urinate on his own.  This may seem like a trivial or overly intimate detail, however I share it with you because it is in many ways truly miraculous, and an answer to many of your prayers.  The nerves that control this area must travel from the brain, past Steve’s level of injury, to the very end of the spine.  He is still practicing, however his ability to exercise any kind of control in this area is nothing short of miraculous to me.  It not only greatly increases Steve’s level of dignity and independence, it speaks to the ability of his nerves to communicate far beyond the level of his spinal cord injury, at least to this most remote area of the spine.  Please pray that God would continue to heal him in this way!  The Message translates Ephesian 3:20 like this: “God can do anything, you know – far more than you could ever imagine or guess or request in your wildest dreams! He does it not by pushing us around but by working within us, his Spirit deeply and gently within us.”  May he continue to work deeply and gently within us all!

Love,
Michelle

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  • Sarah Campbell

    Just last week Steve asked for prayer for freedom from the catheter – and now it’s being answered! Our family celebrates with you at this huge step of healing. May the healing continue. We will be praying for schools, insurance and caregivers – and moments of quiet.

  • Fred Davis

    One of the great days in my life (and certainly in my hospitalization and recovery) was, after 14 weeks, having the catheter removed. It was only tempered by the constant checking and watching by staff to make sure it all worked the way it was supposed to. But that was an incredibly freeing, dignifying, and hopeful step in the process of recovery. I am so moved to hear you talk about that and about how difficult it is to manage in a wheelchair in a standing, two-legged world. ADA requirements have helped but not really changed people’s perceptions or understanding of how difficult it is to wheel up an incline, open a door, cross over a threshold and pass through a doorway that is just barely wide enough for the chair…and this was the Doctor’s office. More public places were even worse. Judy was so glad when I didn’t need the chair anymore because I was a nuisance in department stores, restaurants, malls, etc. because I made sure they all knew how insensitive and unaware they were of the needs of handicapped persons. All that to say I understand. I care. I love you. I am praying for you. I am trusting that the shared grant paper work has gotten to you at least from the Presbytery office. I will double check on that. In the meantime, please call me whenever you need to process with someone who has been (and to a certain extent, still is) there.

    With our love and prayers
    Fred and Judy Davis

  • Cbsample

    Dear Michelle,

    Thank you so, so much for keeping up these updates for us. Grace minute by minute. Chris Sample in Maine [ friend of Sarah Reid Hedberg ]

  • elizabeth

    “I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me” This is one verse that I want to share. Sometimes the road may seemed dark and uncertain but God is there watching over us in our going in and coming out and even while we sleep. Michelle, you are a woman of faith. I pray that God will grant your requests one of by one. I pray for you Pastor Steve that you will not be discouraged. I just pray that in all these God has a purpose far greater than what we see now. Here’ a song I want to share.
    Verse 1:
    Why should I feel discouraged,
    Why should the shadows come,
    Why should my heart feel lonely
    And long for Heav’n and home,
    When Jesus is my portion?
    A constant Friend is He:
    His eye is on the sparrow,
    And I know He watches over me;
    His eye is on the sparrow,
    And I know He watches me.

    Refrain:
    I sing because I’m happy,
    I sing because I’m free,
    His eye is on the sparrow,
    And I know He watches me (He watches me)
    His eye is on the sparrow
    And I know he watches (I know he watches)
    (I know he watches me)

    Verse 2:
    “Let not your heart be troubled,”
    His tender word I hear,
    And resting on His goodness,
    I lose my doubts and fears;
    Though by the path He leadeth
    But one step I may see:
    His eye is on the sparrow,
    And I know He watches me;
    His eye is on the sparrow,
    And I know He watches me.

    Verse 3:
    Whenever I am tempted,
    Whenever clouds arise,
    When songs give place to sighing,
    When hope within me dies,
    I draw the closer to Him,
    From care He sets me free:
    His eye is on the sparrow,
    And I know He cares for me;
    His eye is on the sparrow,
    And I know He cares for me.

  • sandra

    I have to agree with Fred Davis. Although I had ‘only’ sufferered left side paralyzation for 3 months from a stroke (caused by a brain bleed where I had two blood vessels connected in my right brain), in the beginning, I had to have a catheter inserted. It was uncomfortable, disgraceful and embarrassing. Also, not to get TOO personal, but going “#2″ was the worse…needing someone to help clean myself pretty much killed me. “Humbling” is a complete understatement for this experience.

    The day that they said I could have the catheter removed was, as Fred said, “One of the greatest days in my life”!!!

    We’ll keep up the good work Steve! And we’ll keep on praying for your recovery!

    Sandra

  • Helen

    Michelle, you are continuously blessing us with your testimonies – far more than you can imagine! You are a great model and an example of what faith and dependence on God really means! You are in our prayers all the time. Pastor Steve is in the palm of God resting is his grace and abounding love. . .

  • Sarah Hedberg

    Oh hon, I hear it. May time come near, some doors close (those to the rooms where you plan, pray and sleep) so other doors open, and may kairos do all that chronos can not. We are pulling for you in all ways, sweet loves. You are so beautiful, polished painfully indeed. It hurts in my chest. And there He is! Urinating already (finally! says Steve). This is really encouraging, oh yah. Thanks for helping us imagine what we really cannot, as you discover it. LOVE you, Sarah

  • Roger & Helen

    Michelle – great to hear from you again. As always, your words move me to tears. currently we are praying for Steve’s fingers to starting operating properly and for his leg movements to gain strength and control. Praise god that the previous prayer requests have already been answered! Your bulletins are an inspiration to us all, and I am constantly amazed how you find the time (and the right words) to keep us up to date in the best possible way. Prayer continues…….Roger & Helen – UCM

  • Anonymous

    Michelle,
    So good to hear your latest update. We would love to see you. Would it be better to wait until Steve is out of hospital or try to swing by the hospital some time net week?

  • Naomi Diaz & family

    Dearest Michelle,

    This is such a HUGE TASK for you but we know that God’s help is there. We pray for you continually. May you continue to be physically, mentally and spiritually strong in all of these. God bless your heart. We are praying for you. Praise Him.

  • Shehuy93

    “Please continue to pray for provision in all of the details, from insurance to schools to the perfect caregivers for our family. Most of all, please pray that Steve would be encouraged and that God would continue to heal. Your prayers are already heard.”

    Michelle, I just lifted up each of these concerns to our Father. I always feel such a sweet sense of His love and care when I talk to Him about you all. I also pray that He will gently CARRY you over and through the endless myriad of details you are faced with. May you feel His nearness and His peace that He is with you. He sees you. He holds you. He loves you dearly.

  • Sharon Black

    Ah sweetie, I cannot imagine. Your description makes me aware of my neighborhood as well. Daily a woman takes a “stroll” in her wheelchair up and down our street. I can only imagine, thanks to your pointing these things out, what challenges she faces as she roams. Am concentrating on insurance for you!! Love, love.

  • Dawn Nielsen

    Dear Michelle and Steve,
    Amongst the myriad messages, maybe my earlier wish got lost somewhere but I continue to hold you in my thoughts every day and cannot cease to wonder how you manage to find the time to keep us all updated on Steve’s recovery on such a regular basis. Having just moved from the Philippines to Denmark, I can only imagine what YOUR ‘to do’ list must look like…. I though mine was long enough!! Take care of yourselves, it is wonderful to see that every day brings good news. With deepest fondest wishes from Copenhagen.
    Love
    Dawn

  • Bjorkas family

    We will continue to pray for all of these details, for your whole family and praise God for each and every movement and ability that Steve receives. May God continue to encourage you and give you all strength.

  • Melody_Dubois

    Praise be to the Lord, to God our Savior, who daily bears our burdens. (Psalm 68:19) Dear ones, may this be your experience in the burden of myriad details and demands (and disappointments) that you face. As for the latest praise… no, not trivial at all! (as we know from a family member whose spinal injury also affected those functions) We rejoice with you, and continue to pray.

  • Jeri

    Sara and I follow your journey as we can, continuing our own, much easier, although not always internet accessible journey through the U.S. We are now in El Cerrito California with former UCM friends, preparing to move tonight to be with more UCM friends in Piedmont. Prayers for you all continue to be generated around the world with new prayer-ers added daily. Amazing isn’t it how we praise God for pee! Your journey helps to remind me every day to be thankful for the abilities that I take so for granted. Each one is a gift. You both are marvelous gifts to so many. Praying for you for strength, grace, courage and humor in facing the myriad flood of endless detail and what may seem like overwhelming obstacles. Carpe Diem, dear ones, Carpe Diem! Jeri and Sara

  • Elizabeth McLaughlin

    Michelle, my heart goes out to you and Steve and the boys. You are all so courageous! Your faith is truly amazing. I watch for your updates and they always brighten my day… they make me think about what is really important in life. My prayers continue for all of you! Elizabeth

  • Metzgar

    You were much thought of these last 4 days, as Tim and Kathy Hoeweler were visiting Dick and me. They were here to take Andy, their college freshman, to a nearby school. We four all hold you up in prayer, of course; we are so privileged to know you, Steve – and to know much about you, too, Michelle!

    Wish we could be there to help with the myriad of details. I KNOW that they are going to be worked out in due time. You are so brave to “take on” the outside world, but you two will “learn the ropes” and will be traveling the area with more ease as time passes.

    Loving you both,

    Ann Metzgar in GA

  • Suewr

    Dear Steve and Michelle,
    We don’t know each other. I am starting this fall MHGS and have read your story and am praying for you. Today I read your last update. I feel I can pray more effectively for you now. God is great and good. I am praying that He will do more than we can even think to ask. I pray that he will equip you in every way to meet each and every challenge and need. And I pray for continued healing that only He can bring. God bless you.
    Sue R

  • Deborahannegustafson

    It was with great joy that i read of the miracle “Pee”. God is good in all things. I have in these last weeks started to notice how unfriendly our world to those in wheelchairs. My eyes are changing.

    Praying for you as you prepare to leave the hospital.

    lots of love,
    deb

  • Raallender

    Dearest Michelle and Steve,
    I cannot stop crying and I love the five of you and am called to stop and pray…..and pray….
    thank you for spuring me on to see the importance of prayer. Love, Becky