...Suffering.
That's where
Drain began last winter.
My daughter Daney, almost ten years old, was stuck in a cluster of grand mal seizures. She was tired. She was sore. She missed a lot of school.
It was terrible, watching this kind, bright, lovely girl suffer.
I worried how she'd get through it. I worried how I'd get through it.
Of course, I had stopped going to writing group. I had stopped writing.
Until Christy (who knows I'll try anything she tells me) challenged me to come up with a few new pages. Which, somehow, I did: a story I thought had nothing to do with anything. A story that ended up having everything to do with something--of seeing suffering, without being able to stop it.
That first draft, it was rough. I was writing it on two hours of sleep, between ambulance rides and hospital visits and EEGs. I was was writing it with Daney tucked into bed beside me.
The voice came out hollow, realistic but cautious, sad, and slow.
Exactly the way I felt during those dark winter months.
6 comments:
Oh, you can't stop there, Jennie - hurry up and do the next post! Please?! I want to know everything! :-)
How is Daney doing now?
How is Daney doing now? I can't imagine how scary it must be for your family. I don't have any wonderful words of wisdom, as I've not gone through anything like this. Take care of each other and enjoy every momment you have together. Kids grow up to quickly...
Why isn't the comment posting thing working today?
Sharon K. Mayhew, did you just coin a brand new word to describe a special moment between a daughter and her mom...a "momment"? Nice!
It's Wed. Jennie, and I have an award for you! :-)
Daney is doing so much better now. The seizures are fewer and quicker. There will be a day when she doesn't have them anymore. But these years she does, they're hard.
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