“If a tree falls in a forest and no one is around to hear it, does it make a sound?”
1979. I was in college, working in a local delicatessen part time. One summer day an older lady came in and before we knew it she was on the floor. No one there knew, but I was the Assistant Coordinator for CPR for the Red Cross in this major metropolis. Actually there was no coordinator, but being a student, they could not give me that title. I taught CPR and at that point my signature was on over 1000 cards.
I jumped over the pastrami and coleslaw and started CPR. While the paramedics were on their way, I had to remove the ladies dentures, re-adjust the wire in her bra cutting us both, and do what I needed to. The trauma center paramedics arrived, said “you’re doing a damn good job, keep going” while they hooked up IV’s, etc. It was about 25 minutes of straight CPR until she was taken away.
I went back to my dorm. I threw up for about 30 minutes. That night I got a call; she died. Nothing I could have done would have saved her.
That was my first brush with death.
1983. I am in a not so great neighborhood of a major city. I am a college professor, the campus police knew I had a license to carry a gun (and no, I never did to class), I had started a rescue squad for the campus so the police knew me very well.
The middle of a Saturday afternoon I am in the alley behind my apartment and I hear a commotion. I go out and I see a campus police car and real trouble going on. The officer sees me and shouts “I need your help.” Several guys had jumped the two police officers. With my gun, I ran over. I ended up standing over a gentleman, he was on the ground, my gun about two feet from the back of his head. I politely explained to him if the moved, I would stop him.
Then one of the cops called an “O.T.” … no, not an occupational therapist, “officer in trouble.” When that call goes out, all police from any organization respond. Even those that are “contentious.” Where we were was actually covered by seven police forces at the time, two colleges, city, state, park, etc. Really, seven. So there I am, in my shorts and a t-shirt, gun in hand, and the entire city lights up in sirens. Literally from all directions.
I am not so quietly requesting that the cops broadcast who I am. I can’t move because the gentleman on the ground was not a nice guy, yet no one knows who that skinny white guy with the gun is. And they are coming. Fast.
Luckily some big freaking state trooper got there first, and he decided to figure out who I was before blowing me away. But yes, he drew his weapon. I was on both sides of a gun at once.
That was my second brush with death. Causing it or receiving it. Does it even matter?
Yes, that tree falling in the forest makes a noise, even if no one hears it. Of course it does. It’s a freaking falling tree.
Morals, ethics? Meaningless. Ideas that someone pulls out of their butt. Am I moral or ethical? I try to be, but again, those are my definitions.
A month or so ago. I didn’t consciously hear anything, I just knew something was wrong. No idea how I knew. Like a seizure dog I guess. I got up and went into Pearlsky’s room.
I had seen this once before. Not a “normal” breakthrough seizure. Different. I had spoken to her last neurologist about this. I did research on her amino acid deficiency, but seeing that she was the first diagnosed, there is not much out there. I have done a lot of learning about the particular amino acid, how it is involved in neurological issues, about where in her brain seizures start (from what we know), etc. No, this was not her normal seizure.
Of course the tree makes noise. It has to. There’s that law of nature thing, no?
Her eyes were vacant, and not bouncing around like other seizures. They were slightly quivering. Her nail beds and lips were not pink, to say the least, and all her color was fading. That’s what happens when you don’t breathe. Nor move.
Do morals and ethics matter if no one is around to observe them? If the Holy One, Blessed be He, is all knowing, or all doing, then who am I to ask Him or Her to stop what He is doing? Or if Ha-Satan offers another test? I have no right to ask. Prayers obviously don’t work. And who do I think I am to ask for His help?
And there I stood. No one beside me, no one with me, alone. With Pearlsky. And maybe Him or the Divine Council. I could hear the triphony of Cerberus’ breath. I watched as Pearlsky’s face took on a blue tinge. Her life, my life, all passing before me. No one to speak to, no one to take my call, no witness, no partner, no judge, no jury, just me. And her. Motionless. Blue.
Maybe the tree does not make a sound for I cannot prove it does. Maybe morals and ethics do not exist for actually, who can say? And does it even matter? Laws matter, but morals? Ethics?
And there I stood. The eternity was in actuality seconds. But what is a lifetime if not a string of seconds. And seconds count. And my life was changing. What a selfish statement, for mine may have been changing, but what of hers? Would mine start at the end of hers?
Standing there alone. With everything I am, everything that made me who I am. I have never been as alone as that moment.
That was weeks ago. I have been too ashamed, or too embarrassed, to blog. Can one be ashamed or embarrassed if there is no one to witness the actions or lack thereof? What does one share?
My world changed in those moments. Everything changed.
I would have blown out the brains of that guy years ago in that alley. I knew when I got the coveted “license to carry a concealed weapon” that I would only carry it if I knew I would use it, when and if necessary. It would have been down to me or him, and he would have lost. (And don’t go all gun control on me, I carried it for the right reasons, and am very pro proper gun control). I know I have it in me, under the moral or ethical circumstances (!!) to take a life. I know, I have proven it, that I have it in me to save a life, or several, and helped bring a half dozen into the world. Those are active actions. Taking a life. Saving a life. Bringing in a life. All active. But what of the passive? When does one stand by? Is “innocently standing by” an oxymoron?
I was losing Pearlsky. We were alone. In every sense of the word. Not even a single god was in the room. No one to hear my voice if I screamed. And I stared at her.
I threw up several times that night.
I brought her to school a few hours late the next day.
And in many many ways, I will never be the same.
In my mind, it is precisely when we ARE totally alone in a “situation” that it all matters: what we’re made of, our “moral fibre”. It is when we are offered these moments that we learn who we really are. It’s not the hesitation that matters…it’s the ultimate decision.
I have no words but in truth, I doubt you were looking for or needing them, anyway.
So tonight I am sending you silent prayers of peace instead. Only thing I can do. And even those, not certain they are of value either, but you are getting them all the same.
Our alone thoughts are sometimes the most traumatic..wishing you peace. Much love <3 xx
P.S I miss you
Always thinking about you and the beautiful one x
I think many of us have found ourselves in your situation at least once, some of us even repeatedly. The fact that you write about it at all is a testament, a very positive testament, to who you are and to your great love for your daughter. I speak for myself but I know my “frailty”, my “weakness” and my “aloneness” are as very real as my son’s disabilities. I wish I could leave the shame, the embarassment and the waves of nausea and vomiting behind after one of those “standing by” moments. But alas there is no cure for that as there is no cure (and barely a diagnosis) for my son. Sending peace and prayers to you, your daughter and all the other parents and children in the trenches
I’m very aware lately of being a single parent, always
alone with my daughter. Her health. My health. Yes, in
some ways we must of course walk our paths alone. But as much as I need solitude, and my daughter has all sorts of needs for sensory comfort/protection, I am not sanguine as I once was about our outlier lives. I crave communal energies and mutuality and supports, and like-minded witnessing of those very quiet moments of a sacred shift. Is it only English where the c and the a might twirl each other around for scared or sacred…
I’m afraid for you because of this post. Not because you wrote it or the experience you had, but because others could cause trouble for you. I wouldn’t want that to happen.
Yes just wth did u mean?! Sometimes its better to just shut up
What he MEANT, I believe, and expressed so honestly and authentically, is what he said. He stood at the line rhat separates life from death and felt the nearly unbearable anguish of conflict. I imagine that space to be as porous as a scrim ans its expression as loud as a tree falling and as primitive as our insides turned outside.
In your solitude, Single Dad, you called us to witness, and I feel that many of us do and did and will.
Amen Elizabeth!
Wonderfully put!!!!
Proudmom, Is that comment to me?
Your writing leaves such an impact, especially this one. I guess vomiting is the body’s way of trying to rid us of what we wish hadn’t happened. (I vomited minutes after watching my terminally ill father pass away and didn’t think it was something anyone else experienced under intense emotional pressure.) I hope she is more stable. I hope you are too. Wishing for peace for both of you.
And at Susan: What do you mean? Or mayb I don’t want to know.
It is such a rarity for someone to be so honest, with themselves and others. I believe your words will make some people uncomfortable but I appreciate them being brought out in to the open where, if we are even half as honest, many of us can relate. You have touched so many of us in cyber-space. A majority, like me, have never communicated directly with you but please know we are here and we care for you and Pearlsky.
“I brought her to school a few hours late the next day.”
I was so happy to read that.
This being the first post in a while, and the way you lead up to the ‘meat’ of the post by talking about your brushes with death, made me sure Pearslky had died.
I recall, at the shouts (Spider?) I walked into my two year old sons bedroom and my wife and daughter are staring at the cot, he is lieing there in his little jumpsuit, back arched..ashen and grey, his lips blue, saliva around them and on the bed, seemingly not moving or breathing and his eyes have rolled right back in their sockets, I pick him up and he is cold. He is floppy.
Which as it turned out was only the nadir of a febrile convulsion (never seen them before) but remains my topmost shit experience of all time; the belief briefly that my child was dieing in my arms.
But I did run about hyperventilating and I did uselessly try and prop his mouth open and make him sit up and hear me and oddly ‘be normal’ and we did call 111 and the Ambulance (under 5 minutes from call to our door, bless you wonderful people).
That was at a time early on when I thought – when I assumed at that young age – that he was normal. Which he is not, and so I understand what you are saying.
I wish that there was something for those deficient Aminos in Pearlsky, that and more.
Holy Moly!! I thought that was gonna end bad, I cried before I got to the end!
I love your honesty Single Dad and your devotion to your beautiful girl xx
SD I hope that you receive the virtual hug and support I am sending you. I am sorry you went through this experience alone, my daughter Ana came dangerously close last spring so I understand the rambling and random thoughts that ran through your mind. I too albeit different experiences have been in life and death situations but nothing compares to your baby. I am so so so glad your baby is okay now; SD that silence that caused you to check in on her I believe was your girl speaking to your heart!
I can’t imagine the intricate pain and wonder that is your life. I can only imagine how much more empty mine would be had I never encountered you in this world we call cyberspace. It takes a great deal of courage, more than most of us have, to share that kind of moment. If there is some comfort to be had here, maybe it is that?
I just….I can’t claim to understand much about your experience, but I know what it is to look upon the face and body of one’s child dying. I am so glad that that fear and certainty were proven wrong for the moment, and faded into a normal, if late starting, day.
Oh SD, I’m so sorry about Pearlsky’s awful seizure 🙁 I was holding my breath as I was reading your post because I was preparing myself for the worst. I missed you and want you to know you have my support.
Having read SD’s entire blog, this is clearly a scenario he has thought about a lot. And now that he’s finally faced it, he knows his choice. And now I respect him for making that choice. I am Pearlsky’s age, neurotypical, live alone with my father when I’m home from college, and I constantly think I could her or she could be me. Good thing her and I have the best fathers a girl could want.
(((Hugs))) just (((Hugs)))
This is the bravest piece of writing I’ve EVER encountered.
Thinking of you with supportive thoughts and wishing I could help or comfort you in some way.
I don’t know what else to say.
SD, I totally get that moment. I think that the fact that you sensed a need to go into her room is not a detail. You were called to act. It was not the ‘time’. I get the aloneness, as for me too it’s just me and her. No onlookers to color the situation.
I’m sorry, SD. I too hope my cyber-hug reaches you.
I think this comment thread is pretty clear evidence that those who don’t have children like ours simply don’t get it because they can’t get it. They just can’t. I wish I didn’t get it.
When I had a somewhat similar experience (although it was in a hospital) I found comfort in the fact that Aria fought back on her own which, to me, proved that she is supposed to be on this earth with me. I think it helped to get rid of some of the guilt I’ve been living with for choosing to have her in the first place.
I don’t know if that makes any sense to anyone else….
I was so glad to hear that Pearlsky is okay. I was kinda freaking out as I read the post. I had to stop a couple of times to catch my breath.
We’ve been thinking about you lots over here and have wondered to eachother many times where you have been. I’m glad to see you are back to the blog but sorry for the circumstances. We miss you when you’re gone.
Thank you all for your comments and support, both on the blog and via emails.
It is obvious that some people “get it” as to what happened and other’s don’t or did not fully understand the post. That is fine, it is due to our own experiences, understanding, etc. That’s what makes the blog worth it.
My original post was a bit clearer:
Again, thanks for reading, thanks for the support.
(If you know why this post is getting readers from Facebook, let me know, ok?)
Jeez, SD. What an experience.
I can’t say that I get it; I don’t. Heartfelt Good Thoughts to those who do; I wish that nobody had to.
I’m glad that the post ended as it did. I’m glad she has you and you her.
Oh, SD. Hugs and prayers.
Thank you for writing so honestly. Now I admire you all the more. Even though you don’t want admiration.
I’ve missed you.