Today's post is reblogged from "girl.nurse.ship.africa.dreamcometrue". When you read it, will you take a moment at the end and imagine Thomas' jaw in the hand of our Savior and pray for healing . . .
I’m a pediatric nurse at heart, with a few years of women’s health
experience thrown in there. But there’s an old man in the corner bed
who’s stolen, and broken, my heart. He’s 65 years old, and by
circumstances that are out of his control he’s been on the ward for
about 4 weeks now; 3 more than he’d planned on. I’m sure if you’d asked
him, he would wonder if coming to the ship was the right decision, and
that’s why it hurts so much to see him every day, with his head in his
hands, massaging the headache that’s formed behind his eyes.
Thomas had a large mandible tumor that had been growing on the right
side of his jaw for the past few years. It wasn’t a giant tumor, not
like some that we’ve seen. But big enough that taking it out involved
removing half of his jaw bone, and replacing it with a titanium plate. A
pretty common procedure here on the Africa Mercy. Jaw bone and tumor
come out, titanium plate goes in, the patient stays for 7-10 days then
goes home and returns in 3 months to have a bone graft from his hip
placed onto the titanium plate so that new bone can grow. That’s how it
should work at least. But sometimes, wounds break down. Sometimes years
and years of malnutrition effects one’s ability to heal, and sometimes,
us nurses find ourselves at handover every day praying for a wound to
close, and yet it gets bigger and bigger.
Thomas’s incision had opened up to the point that it would not close
on it’s own. He had a hole that went all the way through his cheek, and
the titanium plate that was put in just 3 1/2 weeks before, was
completely exposed. I sat next to his bed the other day and talked with
him about why we had to change the bandages on his face three times a
day. I told him I was sorry that he’s been here so long and that his
wounds weren’t healing. I told him that he would need to go back to the
OR to have another surgery. He did a lot of nodding, which is culturally
appropriate, and didn’t ask any questions. And then I asked him,
“Thomas, are you discouraged?” and with sad eyes he raised his eyebrows.
The Malagasy expression of “yes”.
Thomas is a man of few words, and mostly facial expressions. I feel
that the things I try to say to him seem to fall flat. That a lot of
what I say gets lost in translation, literally. What do I tell someone
who has a gaping wound in his face that’s not getting better? What do I
tell someone who’s come to the ship thinking he’s finally found the
answer to his prayers, that his tumor will be removed, but then things
don’t go how he hoped, or how we hoped. I find myself frustrated that I
can’t do more for him.
Yet, some moments, I look over at his bed and, instead of his head in
his hands, he’s got his large reading glasses perched on his nose with
the arms of the glasses overtop of his head bandage, and he’s reading
his French Bible. It is in those times, when I see him with his Bible
open on his lap, that I ask the Lord to speak to him. That the
Word would become life to him and encourage him like I am unable to do.
That this time that he’s spent day after day, dressing change after
dressing change, would not be time that has been wasted. But that it
would be time where the Lord drew near to Thomas. Where Thomas heard the
Lord speak to him and encourage him.
Thomas went to the operating room on Friday and they removed the
exposed titanium plate, leaving him with no jaw on his right side. They
also closed the hole in his cheek. As happy as I was that the wound was
closed, I found myself worrying about him. I worry that the incision
line will open up again like it did the first time. That the skin will
breakdown and another hole will form. That without any shape to his jaw
the side of his face will sink in and he’ll wonder if he was better off
having the tumor in his face then having no jaw bone.
Would you pray for Thomas? That his wounds would heal. That the
second surgery will work and his skin won’t breakdown as it’s already
shown to be prone to do? Will you pray for a miraculous healing for him?
And will you pray for my doubt? My doubt that is afraid that it won’t
work. That the wound will never close. That the ship will sail away from
Madagascar in June and Thomas will be left with a hole in his face
wishing he’d never come.
I know that the Lord sees Thomas. That He knows his name, and that
there’s a purpose in all of this. In every bandage change and in every
day that’s gone by and Thomas remains in his corner bed. It’s so easy to
want everything to be easy, to be quick, and to go as planned. But I’m
reminded frequently that our plans are not the Lord’s; even if our plans
seem good. Sometimes, I find myself asking the Lord what he’s doing. As
if He’s out of line. As if He forgot “the plan”. As if I know what He
should’ve done. And then I have to get myself back in line. Who am I to
doubt the Lord? I don’t know how the Lord will use this time, but I can
trust that He will not walk away and leave Thomas alone.
So in that I will put my hope ...
No comments:
Post a Comment