A couple of days ago
several of us were waiting in the hospital as the owner of my lodgings
had surgery. I was struck by the way so many of our conversations
went different ways than they would have in the US, with our
“first-world problems”:
M: I really don't feel
comfortable in hospitals.
Me: Why not? Oh,
right, from the time you had a C-section?
M: Yes – it's just so
horrible, having all these other women in labor next to you and
people dying all around.
. . . . . . . . .
Y: I love to stop at
different churches and pray after work. I pray all the time.
Me: I read a book by a
monk from centuries ago, called Practicing the Presence of God.
He would try to pray without ceasing especially while doing manual
labor – he often baked bread or broke rock. [Okay, I think I
melded Brother Lawrence's bread-baking with Henri Nouwen's carrying
rocks at a monastery. So I also think it might be time to re-read those
books.]
M:
Wow, breaking rock is really hard!
Me:
Have you done it?
M:
No, but a friend of mine, after her husband died, she couldn't take
care of their six children. She started breaking rock. It's really
hard on your hands, they get terribly cut up.
Y:
Yes, that's true. You use a tool that really hurts your hands.
. .
. . . . . . . . . .
Y:
I was always scared to take care of babies, so my sister helped me
out with mine. But then her husband died, and then she died, so I
took care of her children.
. .
. . . . . . . .
But
maybe I was really in some alternate universe, because one of our other
conversations started out like this:
M:
I really wish that I had a flat stomach like you, Elizabeth.
Y:
Yes, me, too.
Bwahahahaha!
;-)