The Meaning of Life
Honey and Smokey "helping" me quilt by depositing fur on my projects.
The day following the funeral we went antiquing. I found a charming 1930s quilt top and a remarkable appliquéd quilt that was hand quilted from the 1850s or so. I think of that quilt as my “inheritance”. After antiquing we had lovely omelets at a café filled with locals. They made their own salsa. Outside the windows they had loaded up five or more birdfeeders. I watched the finches and sparrows flutter in the cold, sunny Texas winter morning.
I think about life and death every day because of my job as an oncology nurse. The cliché “every day is a gift” just also happens to be true for all of us. I share this thought with my patients with advanced disease.
A year after first treating a patient she was back on our hospital unit. She said, “You’re the one who told me ‘every day is a gift’.” She told me she used the gift of a year well – going to Paris with her thirteen-year-old son. When she was having anxiety I had her close her eyes and visualize being in Paris with her son at a sidewalk café by the Eiffel Tower sipping café au lait and munching on a croissant. A small smile came over her face and I saw her shoulders relax down into the hospital bed.
When my father died I also asked myself was I doing what I should be with my life. The answer was yes – and a big part of that yes was being an oncology nurse and caring for patients and their families. The other part was the warm and fuzzy, quilted, loving home I have with my quilts, my husband, and two cats.
It’s hard to lose loved ones. When my uncle Walter passed away I wrote this poem:
- Note to Caroline-
life passes -
spirit endures.
death parts us –
love lives on.
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