In the fall of 2012 Randy and I moved from West Virginia to California ending our hands-on ministry in McDowell County. We handed off the West Virginia work to others while we established ourselves and sought new avenues of ministry in California. I’m sure some people wondered why we left West Virginia for California. Well, in great part, winter weather (which WV has in abundance each year) was never my friend as one who has Myasthenia Gravis (severe muscle weakness) but after a traumatic injury, it became clear we needed to leave ice and snow behind us permanently.
I wrote a blog post about that traumatic event in 2010 and have reposted it here. It is another example of the goodness of God in the midst of bad. Don’t we all cry out for that in our times of trouble? Well, I’ve had a few of those times in my life and I’ve never been disappointed in God and his goodness. Read on.
Broken!
There’s no place like home. There’s no place like home. There’s no place like home. And I am triply thankful to be here after 2 weeks in hospital, for surgery and then rehab hospital. It was not a bad place, just not home. There is no place like home.
Just in case you wonder why I was in a hospital for surgery and then rehab, on Wednesday, December 1, I was walking down our sidewalk to the house when my femur snapped in half and I fell, thankfully onto the grass. When I tried moving my leg the bottom half didn’t move. It was definitely broken. I knew I couldn’t crawl up the hill and cement steps, nor down to the house. I knew Wendy was expecting me to bring the car around (the reason for going to the house was to get my keys) so we could do an errand for the ministry and would wonder why I was taking so long. Surely someone from the office just across the street, which I could see from my position lying on my side, would poke their head out the door and look for me …. I refused to let myself panic, hunkering as best I could against the wind whipping a few snowflakes around me. The ground was cold but not yet snow covered nor frozen. As long as I didn’t move, I didn’t hurt … yet. I prayed God would send someone out of the office soon so I wouldn’t be there too long on the ground. I tried yelling, “HELP!” several times and waved my arm. Amazing that you must use hip and leg muscles for yelling. And how quickly one’s voice gets hoarse.
Though I was scared and cold, I knew this could be much worse. I could be alone here, no one in the office, no one expecting me at any moment. I thanked God that others would soon come looking for me, that the ground and weather was not yet full blown winter, that I had gloves on, that I had a hood on my jacket which I put under my head on the ground; for so many things. It could have been so much worse.
Rescued!
After what we estimate was about 30 minutes, Randy came out the door of the office onto the porch. Just then I yelled and waved my arm and he yelled to those inside to call 911. I was going to be ok. Deliverance was on the way.
Everyone from the office piled out and did whatever they could to assist. I was piled high with blankets and a heating pad to keep me warm. I had begun to get seriously cold just before Randy showed up. It took another 30-40 minutes for the ambulance to arrive and needless to say I have never experienced such pain as when I had to be moved onto a stretcher for the ride to the hospital, and subsequent moves from one pallet to another in hospital. It would be several hours before I received any pain meds. But I was thankful to be rescued, for that is certainly what it was. As I said, it could have been so much worse.
After an agonizing X-ray (my femur bone, in 2 pieces, was crisscrossed), it was determined I’d have surgery the next day. In mid-afternoon Thursday I went to surgery (in which a rod was inserted into my femur) and after a day or so transferred to the rehab hospital next door where I spent a week and a half.
Winter storms came rushing into our area with many inches of snow and single digit temps and even below zero windchill temps. Randy couldn’t even get out every day to come the 35 minutes to hospital to visit me. I was glad he was wise and stayed home in the worst of it, though I missed his company. Mountain roads can be treacherous. With this weather the prospect of getting me down through our yard into the house when I was released seemed daunting. It was of great concern to Randy. But God graciously let me be released on one of the only days we had calm weather, higher temperatures and sunshine. The roads were clear and with the help of 3 friends, who practically carried me in the little wheelchair I had, I got down the several steps in our yard and into the house with no incidents. Again, we are so thankful, so thankful.
Unknowns but No Doubts
I do not know why all this is occurring. The why’s belong to God. But I know beyond a doubt that God is good. I have simply yet pointedly prayed that God make something eternally valuable out of all this. Suffering of any kind should never be wasted. God doesn’t waste anything. He knows I am His, totally abandoned to Him; to live for, love and serve Him. May He work out His eternal, righteous purposes through this brokenness of my body.
I am doing rehab on my own at home so far. We do not yet know if there is a home health company which accepts our insurance which can provide in-home rehab. But I see my orthopedic surgeon this Thursday (23rd December) so please pray all is well, that I will mend properly with no problems, that I will have no blood clots or fat embolisms which can happen with a femur fracture.
Randy has been caring for me at home, fetching and doing everything for me that I am incapable of doing for myself yet, plus running the household: laundry, cooking, dishes, cleaning, etc.
Since our home has a step into our downstairs half bath and a flight of stairs to the only shower, and the yard is all incline and sidewalk steps, Randy has determined for my welfare and safety that as soon as I am ok’d to travel, I will be going back to California to live with our children for my recuperation. It will be a long road to complete recovery with incremental improvements, but by God’s grace I will improve every day.
Randy assures me he sees (my improvement) each day now. If you’ve been through anything like this, you know exactly what it is all about. (While in California, I had surgery to insert a rod into my left femur as it had the same damage the right femur had, with numerous fractures ready to break my bone.)
Thank you for your prayers for me. Please continue them and hold Randy up as he has the extra load of work and burden of concern for me.
Grateful to God for His mercies … and friends like you. May you know more deeply this year His goodness.
Today the Goodness of God Goes On
All those prayers have been answered! The goodness and nearness of God is our comfort and strength in hard times. And in all times. God is good.
First seen on Jacque’sjourney.blogspot.com. Reposted from December 2010 blog post.
Photo by Sadan Ekdemir on Unsplash