Monday, December 24, 2018

Finding My Christmas Spirit in 1966






I wish you a MERRY CHRISTMAS!  The next post will be on Thursday, December 27th.

The story I have for you today is about the saddest Christmas I ever experienced. I share it not to seek sympathy. Instead, I am posting it to remind all of us that many spend Christmas in hospitals, with uncertainty in their lives, in poverty, fighting serious illness and more. I have always found that in all sadness and bad times there is some good and often a message if we can see it. The story was published two years ago in the December issue of The War Cry magazine.


Christmas Spirit—Lost and Found
By Nancy Julien Kopp

     The first Christmas commercial flicked across the TV screen in early December. My eyes were closed, head resting on the back of my chair, a cup of tea balanced on my lap, but I heard the tinkling of sleigh bells, the sound of carolers and laughter. I stayed still, wishing the joyful sounds away. I didn’t want to feel Christmas this year.
    I didn’t spend my days Christmas shopping or decorating the house or baking cookies. Instead, I read books about babies born with spina bifida, asked questions of doctors about hydrocephalus, and made phone calls to a hospital an hour away from our home to ask about the condition of our only child, born in November.
      It was 1966, and we didn’t have the option of staying with Julie at the large children’s hospital over an hour away from our home. When she was a few days old, we drove on icy roads to admit her after our pediatrician had made the arrangements. A paperwork snafu gave us four precious hours with her in the crowded waiting room before the clerk told us to go to fourth floor west where a nurse waited for us.
     Ken and I rode the elevator to the fourth floor and walked down a long corridor breathing in the hospital antiseptic odor. A white-uniformed woman walked toward us. She put her arms out to take our baby girl. As I placed Julie in this stranger’s arms, I wanted to cry. I wanted to scream. I wanted to crumple in a heap. Instead, I looked into the nurse’s eyes, and we smiled at one another, woman to woman.
   She held Julie in the crook of one arm and smoothed the pink blanket with her free hand. “We’ll take good care of her.” She turned and proceeded down the long, empty hallway before I could make any farewell gesture to our sweet baby girl, before I could hold her close and inhale that special baby smell.
     Ken and I walked down the hall, hand in hand, too choked up to say a word.
     We returned a few days later to find that we could only view our daughter through a nursery window. She lay on her tummy so there’d be no pressure on the bulging tumor in the open area of her spine. She would soon have surgery to close the opening. Later, a shunt would be placed at the base of her brain to drain fluid. Farther down the road would be more surgery to straighten her legs in hopes that she might one day learn to walk on crutches, not a certainty, only a hope.
      I asked a nurse about the big wooden rocking chair that I noticed sitting in the nursery.
      “Oh, that’s for our hospital volunteers who come in to rock the babies. It’s nice to have a personal touch.”
     Why couldn’t it be me who rocked her? Why not a mother’s touch? But hospital rules in those days were stringent, and parents were discouraged from asking favors. The rocking chair appeared to be the one thing that didn’t scream institution. Bare walls, bare hallways, no color except in the waiting rooms. But that would soon change.
   I still didn’t care about Christmas, but the hospital volunteers must have signed on as Santa’s helpers. The next time we visited, the halls glowed with Christmas banners and
ribbons and small, decorated trees sat on tables in the waiting areas. The babies had dolls or toys tied to their cribs, a gift from the hospital auxiliary. The nurses wore Christmas pins on their uniforms, the green and red colors standing out on the snowy fabric. I chose to ignore these obvious signs of holiday spirit. When Christmas drew too close, I pushed it away.
     As we waited with other parents to talk to our child’s doctor, I wondered if these mothers were skipping Christmas this year, too. I’d probably go out soon and buy the necessary gifts for our parents and siblings, but it would be an obligation, not a joy as in past years.
     On Christmas Day, we stopped by the hospital before going to my parents’ home. By this time, Julie had been there for nearly four weeks and come through two surgeries. When the elevator doors opened onto the fourth floor that Christmas morning, holiday music played softly over unseen speakers. The melodic carols fairly floated down the long corridor. The banners and ribbons on the walls seemed brighter than they had on our other visits. A nurse passed by us with a “Merry Christmas” greeting, which I didn’t return.
     Julie was awake when we arrived at the nursery window. Still lying on her tummy, she raised her head and looked right at us with her big blue eyes.  I had a sudden vision of Mary and Baby Jesus looking at one another just like Julie and I were doing. The message was there for me. I needed Mary’s faith, needed to stop the sorrow and self-pity, needed to dwell on the positive strides Julie was making.
    Ken put his arm around me while we watched our little girl on her first Christmas morning. The music surrounded us, and I felt the ice around my heart crack and break into tiny bits as I let the spirit of Christmas warm me. I’d pushed it away with every bit of force I could muster, but today thoughts of Mary and her precious son took over. After all, wasn’t this what Christmas was all about? The birth of a child the world had waited for? Wouldn’t we want to teach the treasured story to our child one day, too?
    Shame for the way I’d tried to shut Christmas out of my life brought a single tear trickling down my cheek. I should have embraced this special holiday from the day I’d heard that first TV commercial. I needed the spirit of Christmas more this year than any other.
     We blew a kiss to our little girl and walked hand in hand to the elevator. I’d finally opened my heart to what Christmas had to offer when I found the spirit in the face of our baby girl. The carols sounded sweeter, the nurses cheerier, and the decorations more elegant. It would be a Christmas etched on my heart forever, the one when God and his holy angels spoke softly to me. (C)




8 comments:

  1. Oh, Nancy, your story touched me and brought tears to my eyes. What a beautiful testimony to the true meaning of Christmas. Thank you for sharing. Merry Christmas to you and your family and many blessings in the New Year.

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    1. Merry Christmas to you, too, Kathy.

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    2. Loved this most poignant of Christmas stories. Thank you for sharing.

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    3. Thank you for your nice comment.

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  2. Thanks for sharing your painful, yet beautiful, story. I recognize parts of your story as I did my training as nurse for sick children 1963-1966 in a children's hospital in England. That hospital specialized in neonatal surgery. Many babies from all over South England were brought in for spina bifida and shunt operations. I may have been too young and inexperienced to understand the pain the parents went through at that time.

    Years later in Thailand, I had to leave a baby in for an operation to correct another kind of congenital defect. We had received two newborn babies, not siblings, to our orphanage shortly before Christmas 1980. I had to take them home as we did not yet have the personnel to care for tiny babies. They were nicknamed Joseph and Maria.

    Soon after Christmas we drove the 200 kilometers to the nearest university hospital with little Maria. When the surgeon spoke the words, "You can leave her with us. We can operate on her and correct the defect," tears welled up in my eyes.
    How could I leave this tiny baby in a strange place with no one who can visit her and hold her?

    All went well. Today Maria is in charge of the same orphanage.

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    1. Yours is a beautiful story, Lisa. I hope you have written the story to share with others. If you haven't, please do so in the near future. It's one to be shared. Merry Christmas.

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  3. Heartfelt story, eloquently written. Thank you for sharing your story with us.

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    1. One of the reasons I do share stories like this is to help others who might be going through a similar situation.

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