She offers a beautiful and important message about being open to life that she learned in a nursing home.
I should say that he pestered me. Because I don’t remember being up for it.
And I know he came to me more than once. And he did ALL the leg work to make it happen.
In my mind the equation went something like this:
3 tiny people under 5 + very pregnant lady + a bunch of old people = bad, BAD combo.
I was stressed about the idea of getting us all rounded up every week to go and about the idea of keeping all three girls happy while we tried to entertain an elderly person.
What would we talk about?
And what THE HECK will the girls do while we try to talk?
What will all the people in the nursing home say when they see us traipse in to try to be charitable.
Would they even think that bringing all those kids every week is anything close to charitable?
I could only think not.
I went over and over the various comments.
We were sure to get from lots of curmudgeonly old folk who were sure to be annoyed at the toddler who can’t stand still (Lucy).
Or the preschooler who tends to stare (Bernadette).
Or the kindergartener who talks too loudly and shares her whole life story with you if you make eye contact (Naomi).
They would hate us!
I was sure of it.
So I was not hot on the idea.
I was even less hot on the idea of getting everyone ready every week. And out the door in time as if Sundays weren’t hard enough.
I definitely let my complaints be heard as much as possible.
But I conceded so as to not seem like a totally horrible person and we have been going ever since.
Obviously, Mike and I are not closed to new life. 4 kids in 5 years is a good track record for proof.
We don’t use contraception or any other sterilization methods, and we never will.
If we feel like we need to postpone pregnancies for a length of time, we use Natural Family Planning. And pray for God’s Will to be done.
However, I realized that my resistance to visit the elderly people at the home- who are just as many people as the babies we’ve made- was fairly close to those lives.
It was going to be inconvenient, it was going to interrupt the normal that I knew.
It was going to be physically hard on me and possibly emotionally hard on everyone.
(sound like reasons people have for not having more kids?)
I am not trying to equate the two entirely, that is not possible, I am just making a small comparison.
And I was expecting to be inconvenienced, expecting to feel awkward.
I was bitter about all the work I had to do to get us there.
And I was sure this would not be worth it.
After 5 months of going, my expectations have been blown out of the water.
Every single week that we go, we are greeted with nothing but the excitement that we are there.
One woman named Verda finds us every time we go now since we’ve had Joseph- she loves him.
Phyllis told us that she hadn’t talked to anyone in months. And when we started coming with tiny baby Joseph, she would not only come over and sit next to us. She asked to hold Joseph and talked and talked to him, and to us and the girls.
Phylis was shocked.
We recently started seeing and talking with a man named Casper.
He can’t hear very well and it is very difficult to understand him.
But one day while we were coloring at a table with Phylis, he rolled over in his wheelchair and sat with us with a huge smile on his face.
While we were sitting there he told Phylis that he had only had one daughter and that she had died.
He told her that seeing our little girls made him so happy.
While he told her he had tears in his eyes.
We try to sit with, or at least go see, Casper every week now.
But it is at the nursing home that I feel the most comfortable.
We have gotten countless comments from workers and residents about how beautiful our family is and how much they love that we come.
I was worried about how the girls would interact and if they would feel too uncomfortable, but if anything I have learned from them how to greet each person with equal joy and a welcoming spirit.
They have no expectations at all and they are just themselves, which is exactly what everyone seems to love the most.
I have seen that openness to those people who are at the end of their lives is vital.
Most of all I am extremely grateful that God is using our own openness to new life in our family to bless and bring renewed joy to the people we have encountered at the nursing home.
Every time we leave Phylis gives each girl a huge hug and tells them each “I love you”, and Joseph has as many kisses as she can squeeze in, then tells him she loves him too.
Every ounce of work it takes to get there is entirely worth it and life is truly beautiful.
Ana
For more beautiful thoughts from Ana, be sure to stop by her blog, Time Flies When Your Having Babies.
my kids are grown but I have two therapy dogs and I visit a nursing facility with them every week. I cannot tell you that I am always eager to go but there is always a smile on my face when I leave. The joy in the faces of the aged inspires me. Some speak to me because the dogs make me different from those people who want the residents to do something. Many of my fellow handlers want to work with children. My rascals and I do both but there is a special joy in working with the aged. Sometimes even those with Altzheimers will respond. How beautiful..
Beautiful! Any advice on how other families might go about doing likewise? You said your husband did the legwork…. what exactly did he do?
Love what your family is doing. We have a 94 year old mother in a nursing and understand how much the residents appreciate someone visiting. Mom has been in the nursing home for 11 years so we shared in the lonesomeness of many residents that never have visitors. God Bless your family for your kindness and consideration of others.
Last Christmas, our family went with some local Missionaries of Charity to a nursing home. Let’s just say that these darling nuns in saris aren’t shy about corralling a load of little boys into rooms of aged and dying folks for a little Christmas cheer. Before I knew what was happening, our children were in a small room singing Silent Night to a woman who was drawing her last breath. At first, I was conflicted, but soon realized the gift this moment was for everyone in the room. You have done a beautiful thing for God!
This is beautiful. You’re children will never forget the love they brought to the elderly and yes they will value life from conception until natural death. I am going to put your family in my daily prayers and thanks for sharing your testimony with all of us. May God continue to bless all of you and keep you in His care. Happy New Year.
Oh Ana how lovely!
Did Mike seek out a nursing home with an existing program for you guys to get involved in, or did they make an exception for you?
I have been going to visit our local Convalescent home. My God-mother was a resident there for over eight years. I am an E.M. in my parish, so I have been taking Holy Communion to them also, They are part of my life, and I feel so blessed to be able to serve them. My family also participates at different occasions
What a lovely perspective. We have an elder neighbor whom the girls have adopted. Such a sweet thing.
I take my kids out every couple of weeks to visit a hospice patient in a nursing home. I never thought about it the way you put it, but we get the same reaction. No matter how ornery they are, everyone is thrilled to see them. And we have never once seen another child there. It’s hospice, so we’ve lost friends, but that’s part of life too. This was very encouraging for me, thanks.
What a beautiful ministry. Such a beautiful way for your kids to experience an important part of life–the end.