Saturday, March 14, 2015

AN AUDIENCE FOR MY SOLO





By Ada Brownell

“If I’m ever seriously ill and in the hospital, you are the only person who can look out for me,” said my cousin, who had several health problems.
Not long afterward she lay in a hospital bed, alone. Although in severe pain, she had driven herself to the hospital, hitting another car in the parking lot. She hadn’t taken time to call me. I lived across town.
 She had emergency hernia surgery, but when I got there the next morning, something was wrong. Her abdomen swelled and grew larger. She was in misery.
I prayed with her, tried to encourage, but knew she was in trouble physically. She knew, too.
“Do you think she might have sepsis?” I asked the doctor when he came in.
He discovered she was septic. After a CT scan, she was taken back to surgery.
Sepsis is a potentially life-threatening complication of an infection. Sepsis occurs when chemicals released into the bloodstream to fight the infection trigger inflammatory responses throughout the body, triggering changes that can damage organs, causing them to fail.
When my cousin came out of surgery, I was informed her blood pressure went down too much and her kidneys were damaged. She was on a respirator, too.
The first thing I did was turn off the television in her room which was turned to a soap opera and other shows my cousin, a committed Christian, wouldn’t choose to listen to or watch.
I held her hand, talked to her, prayed with her, but she was in a medically induced coma. The respirator also was problem. The straps dug into her face, and I asked the nurse to make that more comfortable for her. The nurse loosened the straps.
Although medical personnel said her kidneys might recover, after about a week they concluded her kidneys weren’t working at all, so I asked them to do dialysis. They did.
But yet her condition worsened. In case she could hear, and many people who had been in a coma later said they could hear, I began to softly sing hymns.
“There’s not a friend like the lowly Jesus,” I sang from “No, Not One!” I followed that with “What a friend we have in Jesus,” “In the Garden,” “Jesus is Passing This Way,” and many others. I hadn’t sung solos in church for years, but every day I visited, prayed, and sang.
One day as I walked out of her room, a nurse met me.
“I kept wondering where the music came from. Then I saw you singing. It was wonderful. I so enjoyed hearing those songs.”
After nearly a month, my cousin died and I prayed the promises of God with her as she passed. I’ll never know if my solos helped, but I was thrilled that nurse was blessed by the words, composed by Christians who also went through sickness, trials and hardships, but their faith was in the Solid Rock, Christ Jesus.
Those composers knew that whether they lived or died they would be with the Lord, as the Apostle Paul declared. I expect to meet my cousin in heaven. The glorious hope is something to sing about, but also something to believe and stand on, live by and go to Glory with.
Jesus said, “Jesus said, ‘I am the resurrection and the life. He who believes in me, though he may die, yet shall he live. And whoever lives and believes in me will never die” (John 11:25-26)..
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