“Live life so completely
that when death comes to you like a thief in the night, there will be nothing
left for him to steal.”
A recent bout with an unexpected illness has brought to mind
one of the fundamentals of frugality: preparedness.
It was all so sudden. I was
at the clinic and had a bout of cough. I had this cough and cold for few days.
I didn’t take it seriously first. But then I felt like sweating and then, a
vague discomfort in chest.
Just the previous day, I had
done my 6 kilometer regular walk followed by an hour of swimming. And I have
been walking and walking for the last fifteen years, and unusually fast. I
never had any problems. And I never
thought it would come to me.
I was lucky.
To have thought about it,
for being a doctor that I could make the diagnosis myself, to be close to the
hospital, to have some wonderful doctors to take care of me and above all, to
have my daughter with me at that time.
My daughter would have
passed this place in transit dozens of times in the last few years. But just
this time, when I went to see her at the airport, she decided to let her
husband to go on with the trip and stayed back with me. We spent few days
together and were supposed to take the flight home the same evening.
Do things happen for a reason?
I have no clue why my daughter decided to stay back with me. And why it should
happen in the morning time, when all the doctors were ready and available. When
I was at the hospital, I had wondered if it had happened during my travel or at
somewhere else with no access to a hospital. That is the luck I call the grace
of God.
Looking back, I don’t think
I was frightened. My daughter was with me all the time. And then our friend
Christine who was such a blessing at that time. There was a kind of numbness
about the whole episode. While I was lying on the hospital bed, many thoughts
had passed my mind.
Mostly people whom I wished
I could see and bid farewell before I left. Those I wanted to stay in my eyes
before it closed forever. Things I had forgotten to say to some one. Apologies,
which were long pending.
Here's the truth of things: if you ever had
to face death, you have been brought face-to-face with the realization that
tomorrow is promised to no one.
This awareness can help you keep in mind what is important in life, so you
don’t get lost in trivial matters and lose sight of those things that are most
important to you.
It is ironic but one consequence of such sudden event is that it can make you appreciate life more than you ever would have if you had not undergone such an experience.
It is ironic but one consequence of such sudden event is that it can make you appreciate life more than you ever would have if you had not undergone such an experience.
There is
nothing like suffering and hardship to cleanse and purify us. It takes us back
to the essentials of life. When everything is going well we tend to take home,
job, spouse, children, health for granted. We take God for granted too.
When
everything is going well we may feel we don’t need God so much. We may stop
thanking him. Stop acknowledging that everything we have is God’s gift. We
might get proud over our achievements or what we have accomplished. And then
believe that they all happened because of our capabilities. We may succumb to
the illusion of self-reliance that we no longer need God that much.
For
some, death doesn’t bother knocking; it just barges in the door unexpected and
unwelcome. For others, something like a cancer diagnosis can become like a
knocking on the door. You get the warning, but the guest is still unwelcome.
Death is the kind of guest that if you see it coming down the driveway, you
lock the door and hide behind the curtains, hoping it will think you are not
home. When the sound of the knock first came though, there were a few thoughts
that came into my mind.
The
knock made me more aware of others that had been in this same situation.
Knowing that I was still at the beginning of another journey, I thought more of
others who had dealt with what I had faced and how they appeared so composed
and real in the light of dealing with issues that can seem quite surreal. I
have to say, there is a difference between making a choice when you are healthy
to when you make one after you are seriously ill.
My preparation
for the inevitable does not mean I am opening the door and inviting death to
come in and take a seat. I am hoping for a better life and I am looking forward
to everything I was looking forward to before, only now it is with more intensity. When I hear the knocking again,
I am not expecting to hide behind the curtains. But I can’t say that I won't be
turning up the music either.
In the book of Revelation Jesus says “I stand
at the door and knock; if anyone hears My voice and opens the door, I will come
in to him and will dine with him, and he with Me” . Sometimes, His
knocking is a light tapping in our spirit. But other times, when we are
inattentive, He may use a pounding fist of adversity to turn our focus to Him.