I want to write about the mental side of this surgery,
something in which cannot be fully understood unless you have traveled the same
road. Not being able to walk without the
aid of crutches for 3 months sounds annoying on paper, but is also depressing
and painful in real life. So much so I
need to give myself a pep talk almost every morning that this too will be over
at some point and I pray that my knee will be healed. I can no longer jump out of bed to go do
things or retrieve something. Every one of
my steps has to be planned out and I have to look for obstacles in my way that
would trip me up. And forget carrying
anything for a great distance. I have
figured out how to stuff my clothes with things (thanks
to my adult sippy cup and the aid of zip lock backs to carry food!). My back pack also helps me get things from
one room to another which is a great help even though I look like a college
student cramming for finals.
My husband said it best, “In what way does it make sense to
cut someone open to make them better?” They
have to rip open my skin to see what is hiding in the depths. And after they do this there are no guarantees
that my knee will fully recover, just good odds. Every day I look at my scar and try to
imagine all the things the doctors have done to my knee just underneath the surface
to bring healing. I cannot see what they
have done, I can only feel the painful effects and hope on the promise of
healing and new life.
Isn’t this just like my relationship with my Creator? Sometimes I feel I do not see Him in my life,
but He is always just underneath my surface.
And I am reminded that He is working because of my scars I bear for
Him. I feel pain of the fire as He
refines and molds me. He has to cut me
open and expose my hidden sinful depths before I can begin the long process of
changing my character. He promises
healing and new life just as my doctors have for my knee, but praise the Lord
He has better odds than my knee recovery does!
Healing from this is not easy, I
have to do the work to get to my end goal.
I cannot sit back and “let” life happen.
I have to be an active participant in my life and make the hard
decisions to keep going. It is very
painful, but I am not alone. You are not
alone.
Surrounding me is great support during this strange stage of
my life, and I want to thank every one of them.
Thank you for reminding me that this too shall pass, and I will be
stronger because of it.
For today this blog serves as my pep talk, that as of now
(almost 2 months in) I cannot walk without crutches but I will soon.
Wish I had found this blog sooner (I'm on week 12), just reading that someone else felt the way I am feeling is help beyond measure!
ReplyDeleteI just found your blog. I going in for my ACI a week from Friday. I'm enjoying it. I'm glad to see a real perspective on healing.
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