As a new year has dawned, it is a perfect time for the next chapter of our exclusive Chicken Soup for the Soul inspirational excerpts. From the next book in the Chicken Soup series, Chicken Soup for the Soul: Think Positive, comes a story by Saralee Perel entitled The “Who Cares” Bin.
The beginning of the year is a perfect time for inspiration to keep the spirits high as we’re working on our New Year’s resolutions. Thanks to Saralee Perel, we exclusively provide you a look into Chicken Soup for the Soul and The “Who Cares” Bin from their upcoming book, Chicken Soup for the Soul: Think Positive.
Chicken Soup: Think Positive!
Only a few things are really important.
Marie Dressler
I don’t pray as much as I should. But two weeks ago I prayed as my husband, Bob, was taken by ambulance to Cape Cod Hospital with intensifying pain spreading through his chest.
There’s exquisite simplicity and purity in the words “I love you” that two people share when it may be for the last time. And in that instant, everything else, every thought, every action, every other part of your life falls into the “who cares?” bin.
I want to tell you something very important. It is not a big deal to call 911. You call. They come. There’ll be sirens, but you’ll welcome their sound. The EMTs don’t want you to wait until you’re positive something’s wrong.
Bob, on the couch, saw me struggling to quickly answer their questions through my crackly voice. And I wasn’t breathing well. He mouthed the words, “I’m sorry,” which, of course, broke my heart even more. Then he was taken away.
Ten minutes later, I hurried through the hospital parking lot with just one prayer. “Please let him be alive.”
And my prayer was answered.
Joyously, I flopped down on the chair next to his gurney. Apparently, it wasn’t his heart. We were bubbly with happiness.
The nurse connected leads from an EKG machine to different points on Bob’s chest. As she unbuttoned his shirt, he looked at me and started to laugh. It was then I remembered his recent mid-life decision to try Grecian Formula to get rid of the gray in his beard. But afraid to try it outright, he had experimented with his chest hair and was therefore sporting brown polka dots. The nurse was quiet. She also didn’t say anything while Bob and I tried in vain to squelch a giggling fit.
“What have you eaten today?” she asked before taking blood.
“Jellybeans.” By now, he had lost all credibility as a grown-up. After the EKG, he had X-rays. Then he was given a little plastic jar for a urinalysis. It took a heck of a long time for him to come out of the bathroom.
“What was the matter?” I asked when he came out. “Don’t they have dirty magazines or something?”
“It wasn’t that kind of test,” he said, looking around in hopes I couldn’t be heard.
So all continued well, until our drive home. Bob, feeling good, wanted to drive, but halfway down Main Street, I saw him reaching for his chest again.
“What is it?” I said, panicking.
He was feeling around. “They left these things on.”
“What things?”
“They put BBs on my nipples so they wouldn’t be mistaken for spots on my X-rays. But they’re embedded in some sort of adhesive and I can’t get them off.”
I went ballistic. “You’ve got to get them off! What if we have an accident? What are people going to think if you’re wearing nipple buttons?” I grabbed his nipples and started yanking. He swerved to park the car.
So, there I was, leaning over Bob’s chest with my face in his nipples trying to wrench the BBs off. And a couple with three kids walked by, looked in the window, said something to each other, then ran away.
I’m learning to pray more. And one thing I’ve learned lately is to choose my prayers carefully. “Is this really important?” I’ll ask myself, because if it’s trivial or too selfish, I’ll scrap it. And maybe prayer is really a process of evaluation that teaches me what matters and what doesn’t.
And I’ll tell you something else. Most of those things that fell into the “who cares?” bin during those terrible life and death moments… are going to stay right there.
Which is where, when it comes down to it, they should have been all along.
Read on for more Chicken Soup for the Soul exclusives
Chicken Soup for the Soul: My Angel
Chicken Soup for the Soul: Family Matters
Chicken Soup for the Soul: A Fifty dollar Christmas
Leave a Comment