MAKING MUSIC
WITH WHAT I HAVE LEFT
Carolyn
Schrock-Shenk
If someone had told me in college
that Id become handicapped in my
40s, I wouldnt have believed them.
I was athletica farm girl more
comfortable climbing trees, milking cows,
and wrestling my brother than cooking,
cleaning, or even studying. My family was
very active as I was growing up, and my
world was dependent on my physical
abilities.
I also got good grades
in school, but that wasnt valued in
my family the way physical abilities
were. Even after childhood, our family
gatherings have continued to be very
activefrom volleyball to crazy
relay races. Along with hard work,
activity is what I learned to value
highly.
In 1980, when I was a
senior at Eastern Mennonite College (now
University), I encountered what I
believed only happened to other people. I
was in a car that rolled down a steep
embankment in the middle of the night.
That began a journey that has intensified
over the years, with the last several
years being the most grueling yet.
After the accident I
was told that my back injury should have
paralyzed memy surgeons called me a
miracle after they operated and saw the
damage. I said then that I believed I
wasnt paralyzed because God knew I
couldnt handle life in a
wheelchair. While I may have ultimately
been wrong about that, I am deeply
grateful for almost 25 more years of
walking.
Several years after my
injury, I began to notice weakness in my
left ankle that caused an uneven gait and
occasional tripping. I gave up running
and skating. Some years later a marked
limp made me I give up tennis. Then my
balance became too precarious to
withstand hitting a ball; I gave up
volleyball.
Those losses were all
accompanied by a fierce denial that
served me well and kept me focused on
what I could still do. By summer 2003,
however, I only had biking and a kind of
hobbled walking left. I fell a lot. On
some days I had excruciating pain.
I was forced to begin
thinking about the possibility of losing
my mobility altogether. After months of
deliberation and the discerning help of
friends and family, I underwent a risky,
two-step surgery to try to stop the
degeneration. Paralysis was a
possibility, but I didnt really
think it would happen.
The two surgeries in
Miami turned into six, with months of
hospital stay. Though my legs had no
sensation when I finally came home from
the hospital, I had a fair amount of
function left. I was thrilled and
immediately began physical therapy. I was
sure I would walk again. My neurosurgeon
didnt think it was possible; I knew
I could prove him wrong.
But the weeks stretched
into months and, despite hard work, I
made little progress. Finally the truth
began to sink in. While my upper body
strength let me drag myself behind a
walker for a few yards, I would never
walk functionally. I would spend the rest
of my life in a wheelchair. I plunged
into a terribly low place. I pled for
healing. I begged God for it. I
couldnt imagine surviving life if I
couldnt walk.
Healing was on my mind
from the moment I woke in the morning to
when I fell asleep at night. And in
between. Many times I squeezed my eyes
shut and willed my legs to regain their
strength. I truly believed it could
happen. "Ask and it shall be
given you." "If you have the
faith of a mustard seed." "The
lame shall walk and the blind see."
"Will God not give good things to
those who ask?"
But it didnt
happen and I finally gave up on healing.
I stopped begging. I resigned myself to
life in a wheelchair. I began to focus on
adjusting to what that meant.
My adjustment attempts
were short-lived however. After another
small surgery to address a new cyst on my
spinal cord, everything seemed to fall
apart. Through all of that semester,
while attempting to teach one class, I
encountered one physical challenge after
another.
Then the most
devastating blow: Over several weeks,
just after borrowing an exercise bike to
strengthen my legs, all of my remaining
leg function leaked awayand with it
went trunk muscles that enabled me to
balance while sitting. I have no movement
left in my lower body. These losses have
made negotiating life in my wheelchair
exceedingly more difficult; I grieve them
deeply.
It was after these losses that my
image of God took a real nosedive. What
kind of cruel trick was this? What kind
of God would allow me to be kicked when I
was already down? I found myself thinking
of God as a punishing God, one who
givesor at least allowsthe
exact opposite of my desires and prayers.
One day I was sitting
on our deck thinking about what it would
be like to be blind. I remember feeling a
deep gratitude for my eyesight. My
immediate next thought was, I
cant let God know how much my sight
means to me or Ill have it taken
away too. Of course my head knew that
that kind of thinking was flawed, but it
came from the deep grief within me.
I no longer wanted to
live. The life I had been handeda
wheelchair and a constant stream of new
problemsdidnt seem tolerable.
Death seemed the only way out. Plus I was
sure my family and friends would be
better off without the added burden I had
become. I again pleaded with God, begging
God to let me die. But that didnt
happen either, and eventually I gave up
on dying as well.
Not long after this I
decided to stop asking God for anything.
Anne Lamott, in her book, Traveling
Mercies, talks about two kinds of
prayer: "Help, help!" and
"Thank you, thank you." I had
been praying the help kind for a long
time, so I decided to abandon those and
simply thank God for the things I could
truly be thankful for.
That commitment to
"thank you" came more out of
giving up on "help" than it
came from the inherent goodness of
thanking God. Even so, I suspect the act
of gratefulness began to do a little
healing work on its own.
Indeed, there was much
to be grateful for when I allowed myself
to notice: the love from so many that
surrounded me; wonderful, competent
doctors; analgesics that took the edge
off the pain; anti-depressants that took
the edge off the despair; a beautiful
setting in which to heal; good health
insurance; the use of my hands (Im
so grateful for the use of my hands) and
much more.
More recently the problems have
decreased, and I am slowly becoming
stronger and healthier. I am very
grateful. Despite yet another two
surgeries to address an infected shunt, I
have some new physical and emotional
energy. A wonderful hand-pedaled bicycle
and learning to drive with hand controls
is adding to thatas is being back
on campus.
This new energy is
enabling me to continue the work of
adjusting to my very changed life. That
adjustment is requiring a major identity
change. Even through the years of gradual
loss, I understood myself to be
fast-paced, full of energy,
self-sufficient, able to multi-task, a
risk-taker. But those characteristics no
longer fit. . . .
Part of my former
identity was my commitment to
peacemaking. I am passionate about
peacemaking because I believe
reconciliation with God and with each
other as human beings is the essence of
the gospel. But periodically in the last
25 years, and particularly in the last
few, I have been almost completely
consumed by my physical healthat
the expense of my passions. And though I
am growing physically stronger, my
identity now includes being handicapped
and will continue to require lots of
energy.
I AM more than just the
chair I sit inmuch more. And I hope
to embrace some of my passions again. At
the same time I am aware that being a
"crip,"
"handicapped," "physically
challenged"whatever you choose
to call itis now as much a part of
who I am as being white and female and
heterosexual. And it will always demand
energy-sapping accommodation.
Being physically
challenged means I must constantly deal
with issues of dependency. I was fiercely
independent in every way that I could be
before landing in this chair. Now I am
having to learn the hard lesson of being
helped and having things done for
meday after day.
I am constantly
second-guessing how others feel about the
extra work I represent. My attempt at
some independence in transportation has
had its own unexpected problems. Several
weeks ago, while navigating my electric
wheelchair from my house to the college,
I got stranded. My aging, second-hand
chair just quitand sat on the
sidewalk beside the hospital.
After considering my
limited options, I began waving and
motioning to motorists who were turning
into the hospital drive several yards in
front of me. Six to eight vehicles passed
by without stopping. What institution
did she escape from? they may have
thought. Finally two nurses on their
lunch break walk called security, who
brought me a cell phone so I could call
someone to rescue me. (I have since
become the humbled owner of my very own
cell phone, as well as a new electric
wheelchair.)
Interactions and social
activities, as a person who is waist high
to most adults, have shifted. I remember
an experience at a church assembly some
years ago. I was standing, talking to an
old friend about the state of the church.
He was eight or so inches taller than I,
though that was not problematic
initially. Before long we were joined by
two other men friends, also quite tall.
The conversation continued comfortably
for a bit. Then slowly I began to realize
that the current of words, questions, and
ideas were flowing above my head.
I pictured myself
jumping up and down to be included,
though of course I didnt. The
experience was disempowering. I felt
smalla diminutive version of my
real self.
That image has come
back to me often now that I am in this
chair. So much
interactionconversation, eye
contact, facial expressions, singing,
prayersall happen at a level over
my head. It is not anyones fault;
it is just the reality of living like
this in a walking world.
I am needing to rework
my body image. My body has ceased to do
what I have expected it do and to look
how I have wanted it to look. It is no
longer celebrated for its capabilities.
My body has become something to be
examined, X-rayed, and puzzled over by
medical personnel.
My body now presents me
with a host of new problems I must
manage: pressure sores, contractures,
circulatory problems, digestive
difficulties, shoulder stress, and more.
My body is lifted, carried, touched by
friends who would never touch
"normal" people in the same
way. Many people do not perceive those
with a disability like mine to be sexual
beings anymore. We are still sexual
beings, though indeed, we all need to
find our way in this.
I am needing to
reconcile the deep longings in my soul. I
miss so many things besides walking. I
miss the ability to do things fast and
cram a lot into a day. I miss the feel of
a good foot rub and water on my body. I
miss playing soccer with my sons and
leaning over to kiss them good night. I
miss running errands, gardening,
traveling with easeand the
potential for leading cross-cultural
student trips. I miss visiting friends
and family without being carried up
steps. (Check out how many houses
dont have steps.) There is so much
more and I ache with these losses. I am
working to grieve them, then let them go.
How would I summarize what I have
learned so far? Its hard to distill
the learnings, because my journey is
still so much in process. But a few
things come to mind.
I have learned that
life doesnt always turn out as we
expect. John Lennon said "Life is
what breaks in on you while youre
busy making plans." Indeed,
sometimes the gap between our plans and
dreamsand realityis huge.
Bigger than we could have imagined or
believed we could handle.
Which leads me to a
second learning: Lament, whether
its in the form of anger, grief, or
doubt, is good. It is honest and
cathartic. And it is very biblical. Check
out the laments in Psalms the next time
youre feeling low. A third to a
half of those chapters are laments of
some kind. They are full of pain,
anguish, fist-shaking anger, and even
accusations. "Why, O Lord,"
mourns Psalm 10, "do you hide
yourself in times of trouble?" . . .
"Why are you so far from helping me?
. . . God, I cry by day, but you do not
answer; and by night, but I find no
rest." Not only can God handle our
lamenting, but I believe God also honors
it and holds us gently as we rage and
crywhether we can sense it or not.
I have learned in a new
way the critical importance of community.
I have been surrounded by so many caring
people, including this college community.
This cloud of witnesses has been
Gods love incarnate through these
difficult times. There are so many people
in this world encountering challenges
much worse than mineand doing so
with little or no community support. I
hope to never take this gift for granted.
I am learning that
peoplefriends and strangers
alikegenerally respond to
differences like mine out of a good place
within them. Of course there are
exceptions, and those exceptions are what
get noticed and make news. But I believe
that peoples responses to me as a
person with a disability generally come
from understandable, healthy curiosity or
empathetic caring.
I dont want
people to "walk on egg-shells"
around meafraid of saying something
insensitive or politically incorrect. My
disability is now a basic part of me, and
I dont mind being asked questions
about it. Nor do I mind people around me
standing to sing or pray or dance. I am
doing all these things with
youinside.
There is much more I
have to learn, much growth that still
needs to happen. I have not yet seen
Godor goodnessin the reality
of this chair. Nor am I a bit grateful
for my paralysis. Perhaps that will
change one day, perhaps not. I do not
understand Gods role in suffering
and healing and I am coming to terms with
the ongoing mystery in that.
What I am clear about,
however, is that God specializes in
helping us mine the gold from these
difficult situations and that much good
can be part of my future. I am trying to
trust that this life, so very different
from what I wanted, can be rich and
meaningful and complete. And that it can
be a blessing to others. While I get
glimpses of that occasionally, I am not
there yet. But I hope I am on the way.
The story is told (though its
sources and exact factuality are hard to
pin down) of the night of November 18,
1995, when violinist Yitzhak Perlman
slowly made his regular trek across the
stage, with his braces, crutches, and
painful limp a testimony to his childhood
polio. He settled into his chair,
signaled to the orchestra and began to
play. Thena string snapped, and the
music stopped. The audience waited,
knowing he would have to make his way
laboriously back across the stage to find
a replacement string or another violin.
Instead, Perlman did
the impossible: he began to play with
only three strings. Improvising,
recomposing the piece as he played, he
finished the performance, drawing
powerful, awe-inspiring music from that
violin.
As witness Jack Riemer
of the Houston Chronicle is said
to have reported on February 10, 2001,
Perlman smiled into the wild applause
that greeted his finale, "wiped the
sweat from his brow, raised his bow . . .
, then he said, not boastfully, but in a
quiet, pensive, reverent tone, You
know, sometimes it is the artists
task to find out how much music you can
still make with what you have left. . .
."
My prayer is that I can
somehow make music with what I have left.
In fifth
grade, Carolyn Schrock-Shenk, Goshen,
Indiana, was the fastest runner in her
elementary school . She is writing a book
onWhere God Went Wrong: Ideas for the
Second Time Around and is Associate
Professor of Peace, Justice, and Conflict
Studies at Goshen College.
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