When
Your Worst Fear Becomes Reality
.
I
can’t think. I can hardly pray. But I can trust and love.
by
Myriam Torres
My first big clue that something was very wrong came in February 2009.
I was on a Christian mission trip to Costa Rica, meeting with a small group
of women. Suddenly I couldn’t understand a word they were saying.
I didn’t let on, but I was totally at a loss. All I could do was make
a comment every now and then and hope it was all right. I got some puzzled
looks, but somehow I made it through the next hour. Afterwards, I reverted
to normal.
Things weren’t normal, though, when I got back home. I cried all the
time without knowing why. In my job as a high-level statistician, I found
myself struggling to analyze data and needing to delegate my work to other
analysts.
“Could be menopause,” a friend suggested. I was fifty-six and had already
gone through that stage, so it didn’t seem likely. “Stress,” thought someone
else. I took a month off from work, but things only got worse.
A nurse practitioner urged me to see a doctor, and so began two years
of medical tests. Early on, after a psychological test revealed “significant”
mental impairments, one specialist noted: “probably Alzheimer’s disease.”
If I ever read his comment, I dismissed it right away.
That diagnosis wasn’t confirmed until May 2011. By that time, because
of my increasing confusion and forgetfulness, I had left the job I loved.
And I was wrestling with God in a very serious way.
But I’m your bride!
For most of my adult life, I’ve lived “single for the Lord” as part
of an ecumenical group of women who have chosen not to marry in order to
dedicate ourselves to a life of prayer and Christian service. And so, though
we work at various professions and don’t take religious vows, I see myself
as a bride of Christ, deeply loved and deeply in love with Jesus.
Every day before work, I used to get up to spend an hour with him. I
loved it. I’d praise and worship God –
singing, reading Scripture, reflecting, and writing down
things that struck me. But as I felt myself declining, I became very angry
with the Lord.
“Is this the way you treat your bride?” I’d ask him. But he was silent.
Deep down, I knew that if I refused to choose “your way, not mine,”
I was the one who was going to be the loser. Still, for nearly two years
I fought and struggled. I denied what was happening, tried to cover up,
refused to discuss it. With all my heart I wanted to believe that my problem
was sleep deprivation, stress, or even depression –
anything but Alzheimer’s.
This wrestling went on and on, but at least I kept talking to the Lord.
Then one day, during my prayer time, he gave me an unexpected grace. I
suddenly realized that I could really trust him with my future. “I accept
this,” I told Jesus very simply.
The peace I felt got me through the final medical consultation, which
left no doubt that I have progressive dementia: Alzheimer’s disease, according
to one last test. Sherry, a close friend who is also single for the Lord,
was with me as I got the bad news
“Myriam, you’re too quiet,” she said, when we were back in the car.
“What are you thinking?”
“I’m okay. I worked it out with God last night. And I told him it’s
okay, whatever it is.”
Sherry couldn’t believe what she was hearing. I could hardly believe
it myself. It was pure grace –
and so freeing to be able to admit what was happening and
to talk about it.
Loved and loving
After a couple of weeks, I felt like the Lord was asking something more:
Thank me. Again I wrestled. Accepting my situation had been hard enough.
Did I really have to do this too? It was hard, very hard, but again there
came the grace to say yes.
Months later, I realized that I was truly grateful for some of the changes
I saw in myself. “I’m relating to people differently, in a softer, more
loving way. Thank you, Jesus, for this opportunity.” And as I prayed, I
sensed a call to go deeper –
not just to accept and give thanks, but to embrace the journey
with trust in God’s love and wisdom. This time my response came easily:
I embraced it like a gift from heaven.
This may sound strange, but even as I’m losing my abilities, I’m seeing
the “gift” side of what’s happening. More and more, all I can do is love
and be loved. And I feel so much love from so many people! They’re praying
for me, telling me what I mean to them, thanking me for ways I’ve helped
them.
And God is still using me to speak words that people need to hear. When
women I’ve counseled over the years call and ask my advice, I usually know
what to say. I say it more directly, too, because along with Alzheimer’s
comes a lessening of inhibitions! I noticed this recently, when a woman
in my Zumba exercise class said how worried she was that her husband might
have dementia. Not only did I tell her how to get medical help, but right
there, with other people listening in, I prayed with her. “I feel so much
better now,” she said afterwards.
Suffering servants
Don’t get me wrong, though. Embracing this journey isn’t the same as
embracing the disease. I’m doing all I can to stay fit and slow my decline
– speech therapy,
exercise, social contacts, a good diet. If God chooses to heal me, I’ll
be ecstatic.
And although I’ve arrived at a basic peace, there are still struggles
and tears.
I loved being a statistician, being savvy and capable. Now I can’t
even count. I can’t tell time without a lot of effort. If people talk fast,
I can’t understand what they say. I have a hard time focusing to pray.
It’s hard to accept help, too, hard to let go.
An experience I had at the airport last year drove home this sense of
loss and helplessness. I was traveling with Sherry, but she went through
security just ahead of me and couldn’t help when I got confused at the
guards’ directions. I couldn’t understand where they wanted me to place
my luggage. I didn’t know which hand they wanted me to raise. “Don’t you
know one from the other?” one guard jeered.
I stumbled out of the checkpoint crying. I felt so humiliated. “This
is what’s coming,” I was thinking. “This is the way I’m going to be –
all the time.” Explaining it to Sherry later, I could only
say I’d had a taste of what it was like for Jesus, when he was stripped
of everything and people were mocking him. I take comfort in the fact that
I am being conformed to him. As I wrote in my journal: “As time goes on
and I lose all I have – the
ability to communicate, my memory, being able to do my daily functions
– I see that all
this is making me more like Jesus, the suffering servant.”
St. Ignatius Loyola put it more eloquently in words that I now pray
from the heart:
Take, O Lord, and receive all my liberty, my memory, my understanding,
and my will, all that I have and possess.
You have given all these things to me. To you, Lord, I return them.
All are yours. Do with them what you will.
Give me only your love and your grace, for that is enough for
me.
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Myriam Torres is a lay pastoral
worker and founding member of Bethany
Association, an ecumenical group of women living single for the Lord.
She told her story with a little help from her friends.
This article first appeared
in the January 2013 Magazine issue of The Word
Among Us. Used with permission. |
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