Sunday, February 25, 2018

A Time to Give Thanks



"I never saw a wild thing sorry for itself. A small bird will drop frozen dead from a bough without ever having felt sorry for itself."

D. H. Lawrence


For the past nine nights, I dreamed I could walk only to awaken the next morning to a broken ankle. The disappointment hit me. There was no gold medal hanging around my neck because I didn’t smoke the competition at the 5K race I thought I had won.  My mind cleared after I wiped the sleep from my eyes. My sneakers were in the closet. The wheelchair and walker took their place next to my bed.  




I can’t complain. Five weeks will whiz by like the last summer vacation. Today isn’t a time for self-pity. I must rejoice. A skilled surgeon drilled holes in the bones for the screws that realigned my joints. In time, the fractures will heal. I will walk again. That wouldn’t have happened a couple hundred years ago.

My husband is out running the trails as I write this. I’m thankful he can. No one has helped me more since the accident though I have close friends who have gone the extra mile. Mary Lou, Marie, Bonnie, Raven, Blake, Yolanda, and Father Williams made sure I had what I needed.

 When my husband returns, he and I will enjoy the sunshine on our backyard patio. It’s a good day to catch the rays and listen to the radio—a rare treat for February.   

In the coming weeks, I will use the extra time to write. No one ever needed a working ankle to write stories. 


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