A Hot Pants, Motorcycles And K
Street excerpt
I lost
my eyesight sixteen years ago yesterday in 1998, the Friday before Labor Day.
The following day, which corresponds to today, I surrendered to the reality of my plight. I don’t recall being frightened.
Was that submission an act of bravery, practicality or foolhardiness?
I still
have no clear answer to date. I do know, however, that my approach to handling
the situation entailed what some would call “spiritual bypassing,” the intent
or practice of attributing spiritual solutions to earth plane difficulties. It did
work for me.
That’s how come I am able to celebrate both my eyesight and my life this Labor Day weekend! And, be able to write this unfolding memoir of mine, Hot Pants, Motorcycles And K Street, at long last.
That’s how come I am able to celebrate both my eyesight and my life this Labor Day weekend! And, be able to write this unfolding memoir of mine, Hot Pants, Motorcycles And K Street, at long last.
No
other way of thinking occurred to me in that moment that I accepted the
certainty of my plight. Nor did any other ever surface, although medical care was,
of course, to be central to all that would follow.
Ascribing
a spiritual way of thinking to what might be considered a catastrophe has
nothing much to commend in me. I had, after all, been expecting to be blind
since a junior in college, many decades ago. Blindness, since that early
diagnosis had, from then forward, become the cloud hovering over my head
thereafter. So I believe I had, long ago, prepared myself for it somewhat.
Now it
was here, my long expected blindness, without any guarantees I would ever see
again. To make my troubles more dire, I had been unable to reach my ophthalmologist.
After all it was Labor Day weekend and most people, including him, were gone
for the holiday.
I had,
fortunately, been able to get a prescription at a nearby pharmacy through his on-call associate. The potential for remedy from these eye drops, unfortunately, had
quickly gone by the wayside. The tale of that ordeal is for another time.
Today I
seek only to mark this day’s importance for me. Today I celebrate the eyesight
I have regained and the beautiful life I am living. Add that to the many
projects the “new” New Horizons and myself are producing.
Today I
am celebrating my miracles!
Knowing
the circumstances of my eye disease, keratoconus, and my long history with it, I
knew, full well, that restored vision would be a far off possibility, if conceivable
at all. I had already had four corneal
transplant rejections to date. I would not be an easy candidate for more, the
most probable treatment for what would likely be the matter with my eyes.
With
that discouraging fact in mind, I succumbed to my situation and slowly made my
way to the deck of my home. I wanted to sit out in the sun that I could feel
but did not expect to see.
Situating
myself in my favorite lounge chair, I discovered I could look directly into the
bright rays of the sun! I could even see a hint of its brilliance, muted as if
through a waxed paper veil. Gratefully, I
realized, I was not in total black blindness!
Thus, I
sat down to talk to that miraculous Source of all life that some call G-d.
“Ok, G-d,” I said, humbling myself.
“I thought you meant for me to publish my research and clinical treatment strategies for treating relationship and
personality addictions. Isn’t that why you brought me that delicious Random
House book contract with such a hefty advance for a formerly unpublished author?
“Am I not to have a broader impact for my
expertise in this area than I have had so far? And, isn’t it in your plans that
I can, thus, also be taken seriously enough in my family to help heal the
dysfunction there? Have I been reading my destiny and your plans for me wrong
all this time?”
“How could I have been so off?” I was perplexed!
“I don’t get it G-d,” I said.
“The three books I’ve been working on for ten long, demanding years are still not yet completely revised and edited for
publication. There is no way they can come out, if I can’t see. How could they get edited, if I would even
have the energy for it in these circumstances?”
“So what now?”
“Did I get my assignment all wrong?”
“Well not exactly,” I heard G-d answer.
“It’s not about your books. The point is that I
am not quite finished with you, as is, right now.”
You are not yet ready to publish. And, it’s not
about the writing. Book writing and publishing can wait. You and I have other
work to do. Trust me and you’ll “see” what I mean.”
With those words, strange as it seems, I immediately
relaxed and humbled myself. I would follow directions all the way from that Labor Day
weekend, 1998, until this one.
And come to believe that it just might be true
that --
“Only those who can see the invisible will dare to reach for the impossible.”
That’s the philosophy I’ve been living on since Labor
Day, 1998.
And so far I have not been disappointed. Besides what else do I have?
And so far I have not been disappointed. Besides what else do I have?