Saturday, April 30, 2011

When Corolla met Deville...making me a Cruella De Vil

I received a phone call at 0530 saying "don't come into work."  There was last minute changes and they didn't need me for the day.  I cheered and clapped and crawled back into bed. 

In the mean while a man who had a warrant for arrest and no legal driver's license since 2005, decided it was a good idea to park his car on the emergency lane of the freeway.  Sean was driving to work and pulled into the right lane to get off the exit.  Suddenly a patch of slush manipulated his car toward the cement wall.  Taping the breaks and steering the wheel, Sean finally gained control.  However, by fate or destiny or by misfortune, Sean hit the back of a parked Deville.  



I heard Sean's voice  over the phone and I knew immediately that he had been in an accident.  His voice trembled, I told him to call 911 and I'd be on my way.   

As Sean was filling out the paperwork in the Sentra,  I was told to move my car in front of the tow truck.  The cop asked me to roll down my window and wait for his signal.  Obeying instructions I rolled down the window and was looking for an opportunity to get back into the freeway lane and pull in front of the tow truck.  A lovely trucker decided to drive right next to the accident and instantly I was soaked.  The trucker had sprayed the inside of our car with slushy freeway muck.



Slush was found in my hair and down my neck.  My scrubs were damp and the poor interior of the Sentra became a splash zone. I thought to myself, "somewhere, someone hates me." 

My first car-love had been hit and both airbags were deployed.  The tow-truck personnel said there was little to no hope of a full recovery.  I was cold and wet and frustrated. 

Needless to say, I felt like this...

And I started acting like Cruella De Vil.  I was angry and blaming everyone else.  If I wouldn't have been so stupid and sold the car last week, we wouldn't have been in this predicament.  Sean was blamed for the accident.  He got a ticket for "reckless driving in poor weather conditions."  Why did God allow this to happen?  I was just set apart as a temple ordinance worker, and this was the thanks I received?  A totaled car and no way to get to the temple when Sean worked.  Our lawn mower just broke, and the lawn looks like a jungle.  We still have to register the Sentra and we owe money for taxes.  Thoughts and steam circulated my mind as I shivered and pondered on all the repercussions of the accident.

In the mean while Sean looked like this.


I said, "you were just in an accident, look like it." ....so he gave me this.

He was faking it.

We immediately went to the Emergency Room to make sure Sean hadn't slipped a disc or fractured a rib.  He joked with the nurses and smiled at every employee.  I frowned, murmured, and cried.  While Sean was away in radiology, my mother called me.  She said, "Anne, what a wonderful blessing Sean is safe.  So what if you lose a car? Or if you are further in debt? It is life.  But you still have each other and no one is hurt."  I knew she was right.  Driving 60 miles an hour and hitting a parked car should have left Sean with abrasions.  Not one bruise was found on his body.  As she continued to speak her words of comfort, my mind flashed two memories.

1)  During my summer break four years ago, I was hunting for a good car.  Nothing seemed to be the right price.  And nothing seemed to be dependable.  Months of searching led me to nowhere.  I only had one weekend left to purchase a car for nursing school before I was to return to BYUI.  I found a car I wanted.  It was perfect.  In budget.  Leather seats.   Power windows.  However, it had awful crash ratings.  My mom wanted to check one more dealership before we made the plunge.  There she was.  Dimple.  My very first car.  She was 2,500$ over the budget, but my mom wanted me to be safe.   Little did I know that four years down the road, it may have possibly saved my husband's life.

2) A parable I learned from BYUI immediately popped into my head. 

"There was once a wise Chinese man who had one son, one horse, and one acre of ground on which he made his living.  One day his son went out to feed the horse and left the gate open and the horse ran away.  All of the man’s friends and neighbors came to him and said, “Oh that’s too bad.  You’ve lost your only horse.  How will you make your living?”  The wise Chinese man just said “I don’t know if that’s bad or that’s good.” But they insisted it was bad.  A few days later, the horse got thirsty and came back to the corral bringing 9 other wild horses with him.  Now all his friends came over and said “Oh, isn’t that good. You’ve got 10 horses.”  The wise Chinese man said “I don’t know if that’s bad or good.”  And they insisted it was good.
A few days later, the wise Chinese man’s son went out to break one of the wild horses.  In the process, the horsed reared up and came down, severely breaking the son’s leg.  This time all the neighbors came over and said “Oh, that’s too bad.  That’s your only son. What will you do?”  And again the wise Chinese man said “I don’t know if that’s bad or good.”  And they insisted it was bad.

A short time later, war broke out in the country.  The government came through and gathered up all the able-bodied young men and marched them off to war where they were all killed."

What started out as a "bad circumstance" ended up saving a father's son.  In reality, it is not for us to decide what is "good" and "bad."  Instead we must have faith and trust that God has a plan.  It makes me think of a song that says, "it's alright, it's alright, all-right.  [He] moves in mysterious ways."

As the day progressed, things kept getting worse.  We discovered for some reason, we weren't carriers of collision insurance.  Geico was only going to pay off what we owed and not reimburse us for it's value.  It meant at least another 1,500$ down the drain.

It is hard to stay positive.  I don't know how all of this is going to end.  But it was a crappy, slushy, and expensive day.  And this week has been entirely one of the worst in awhile.  I'm still not pregnant, lost a mound of money and a car, and I'm ever more depressed. 
While complaining to my mom, she asked a profound question.  "Anne, when something bad happens why do you always blame God?"

She was right.  I do.  My face was washed in tears and immediately I felt ashamed.  Yes, the situation was unfair.  However, I miraculously didn't have to go to work and Sean was safe.  If anything, the situation may have been much worse.  God had protected my husband. 

Sean continued his cheery attitude.  When we returned from the ER, Sean served me a hot breakfast in bed.  He immediately made phone calls and returned to his responsibilities.  I, on the other hand, was still acting like a spoiled little brat.  While people across the nation and world were losing loved ones, and homes, I was complaining about some money and a car.  So the bitter and frustrated me is not who I want to be.  But I know God will continue to teach me to be the faithful women He knows I can be.

 One quote sums up this post...
 "Don't miss the donut by looking through the hole."




Monday, April 11, 2011

Our Hero

While I was working Wednesday, I received a text from my mother saying that my aunt Shirley had slipped into a coma.  I was devastated.  My aunt had been battling cancer for over two years.  I thought she was invincible.  I believed that maybe this time, we'd have a cancer survivor in our family instead of another martyr.  I sat and cried at the nurse's station and composed myself to finish working.  I was especially angry when I admitted a patient who had seriously fried her brain with alcohol for thirty years of her life.  She was given the precious gift of health, and she abused it.  Yet there she was, in the hospital, dumb as a post due to intoxication.  Why?

Sean came to pick me up after work so we could go say goodbye one last time.

April 2009, my wedding day.  Shirley is on the far left.

July 2010, Aunt Shirley and Uncle Conway

My aunt Shirley was beautiful.  She laid in bed and had the common appearance of all my patients who are ready to die.  There was a certain peace and comfort in the room as I listened to my mom read her stories of miracles.  I sobbed and sobbed as I watched my aunt slowly slip away.  It wasn't fair.  Why did God do this to families?  My cousins were in the other room talking and telling stories.  Three daughters who were about to lose their mother.  I plunged into the couch next to the bed and sobbed some more.  She was so lively.  It seemed like yesterday that I watched her water fight with all her grandchildren at the family reunion.  Suddenly, my aunt opened her eyes and turned to look at me.  She saw me bawling and furrowed her brow.  Then she gave me a big smile and returned to her unconscious state.  It was almost as if she was saying to me, "Trish, why are you sad?  Be happy, my family will be with me again."  My mom asked me to leave the room and control my emotions.  But I couldn't.  I couldn't stop being angry at God.

That was the last time I saw Shirley alive.  The following morning I received the text declaring that she had passed at 10:35am. 

The Worsley family had temporarily lost their hero.  I mourn for the loss of my aunt, but above all, I mourn for the family.  I have some experience with losing a parent to cancer.  My father died of kidney cancer 11 years ago.  I remember the emptiness, the pain, and the anger that all came from his loss.  It felt like years before I could pleasantly remember him without longing for his hugs.  Even after eleven years I still miss him and cry.  These last days I have constantly thought and prayed for them as they endure one of the hardest trials known to man. 

I called into work sick that night and spent the entire evening with my mother.  This had been particularly hard on her because Shirley was her sister and best friend.  This was the second time she had watched, waited, and lost a best friend to cancer.  We watched Tangled and played games.  My mom shared some of her favorite memories of Shirley.  We all cried and hugged and Sean and I didn't leave until after midnight. 

On the way home from Shirley's house, an ironic song came on the radio.  "With Arms Wide Open" by Creed.

Well I just heard the news today
It seems my life is going to change
I close my eyes, begin to pray
Then tears of joy stream down my face

With arms wide open
Under the sunlight
Welcome to this place
I'll show you everything
With arms wide open
With arms wide open

I thought of a loving Heavenly Father waiting for Shirley to come into His arms.  I thought of my own father who was getting ready to show Shirley all the wonders of Heaven saying, "I'll show you everything."  And last of all, I thought of Jesus Christ who would encircle my Aunt "in the arms of His love." 

My aunt will never be forgotten.  She will be greatly missed.  However, she is now free from the sorrows and ills of this world.  She is free from pain.  And she will now be our family guardian angel.

My thoughts and emotions are all jumbled.  Therefore, I will end this post with a picture of a truck Sean and I saw on on the highway this morning.  When I saw the quote, I immediately thought "my aunt Shirley's motto, and she's still reminding me of it today."



Thank-you Shirley for teaching me some of the greatest lessons of life.  I love you.