Been Down So
Long It Looks Like Up To Me
by Yehudah Fine
Even from the black depths of pain and despair, life can hand out
valuable lessons in compassion, wisdom and love.
Last year, on a lonely rural section of Highway 17B in the Catskill
Mountains, I nearly died. The highway's only claim to fame is that it
is on the way to Bethel, New York, the site of the original Woodstock
festival. I was running errands in the early morning when a car coming
in the opposite direction swerved into my lane at 45 miles per hour and
hit me head-on. It was on that road where my life changed forever. It
was on that road where I learned to deal with daily, severe pain and
reclaim my life from the broken glass and twisted metal that lay strewn
over the blacktop. It was on that road where I took down the spiritual
wisdom I had learned off the bookshelf and downloaded it into my life.
If ever there was a time to find out what sustained my inner core, this
was it.
I vividly remember lying in the local hospital’s emergency room before
being medivaced to Westchester Medical Center. I wasn't a pretty
picture. Firemen had pried me out of the car with the Jaws of Life.
Dried covered my face, teeth and lips, the result of the impact with
the air bag that saved my life. A torn pants leg revealed a smeared
mixture of and dirt oozing out of a deep gash in my knee. The force of
the collision had rammed my femur out of its socket. My pelvis
shattered into nine pieces, I was broken in half. I had not yet
received any painkillers and was suffering incredible, mind-bending
pain. I prayed to pass out like the guys who got shot in the Westerns I
used to watch as a kid. But this was no movie.
The local hospital wasn't equipped to perform major trauma surgery. I
remember thinking, "Oh, I'm Humpty Dumpty, and they can't put me back
together again." Soon I was wheeled into a private room where a doctor
would reposition my femur. I gritted my teeth and said, "Doc, isn't the
pain going to kill me? What if it doesn't go right back in?" He simply
said, "I have to get it back in. We can't transport you until I do."
Without warning, the doctor jumped on my gurney, grabbed my leg, and
shoved it toward what was left of my pelvis. The pain slammed into me
so hard that I let out a horrified scream. The femur didn't go back in.
Crying and moaning, I whimpered, "I thought you'd give me painkillers
before doing something like that." He looked at me in astonishment.
"You havent been given any painkillers?" They quickly shot me up with
Valium and Demerol and repeated the procedure. This time my leg went
back in with a loud pop. At that moment, I was still angry at the
doctors insensitivity, but another part of me was grateful for his
fearless skill in taking the first step toward putting me back
together. I took his hand and said, "I want you to know how grateful I
am for your skill and courage. But damn it, don't ever do that to
another patient." He smiled warmly, a bit embarrassed, and apologized.
Right there, in that emergency room, I decided that no matter what
struggles lay ahead, I would give thanks to every person who attended
my broken body. I was going to honor every act of kindness with words
from my heart. Before I went under the knife, I told my wife how much I
loved her and our kids. I also asked her to forgive me for any stone
left unturned and to tell the kids the same. When we said good-bye, I
did not know if I was going to survive. The doc told me he was very
optimistic, but he also said, "In all my years as the main trauma
physician, I have never seen anyone as badly shattered as you. You will
make it, but it will be touch and go." So I told her how much I loved
her. From the moment we met, I knew she was what the Talmud calls my
zivug rishon, my soul mate. If I was going to die, I wanted to affirm
our love first. The Talmud hints that the love of a soul mate is
something that goes beyond personal identities. As I emerged from
surgery, she was there waiting for me and holding my hand. The sages
got that one right. In the ensuing weeks I was totally helpless and in
excruciating pain. I had lost so much I looked like Count Dracula was
my nightly visitor. My stitched and stapled wound stretched
twenty-three inches from the top of my hip down my thigh. At the bottom
was a big drainage hole dug out of my flesh, open and oozing. Nine
three-inch screws had been drilled into my pelvic bones. Metal plates
held me together. I would spend the next seven months lying flat on my
back for twenty-two hours a day. The morphine drip kept me in a
perpetual fog as I lay catheterized and unable to turn over. I couldn't
sit up or wash myself without assistance. It took four people to move
and bathe me. I needed someone to help me do everything. I could not
cross my legs. I could not lie on my side. All the time I was fighting
incredible pain, and worst of all, I did not know if I would ever walk
again.
My total helplessness brought many moments of spiritual vision. I took
comfort in knowing that others who faced great challenges down through
the ages encouraged me to hold fast and not give up. But I won't kid
you; I often heard the voice of despair. It would whisper that it's
just too painful to go on. I made up my mind to embrace the few things
I was able to do as the fullness of my life. The more I lived in the
moment, the less I worried and the less I cried. Old teachings took on
new meaning. I particularly savored a saying from two great sages,
Rabbi Yochanan and Rabbi Eleazer: "Even if the sword is on your neck,
do not stop yourself from praying for compassion and mercy." My body
felt like a hundred swords were sticking into it. Every movement hurt.
Calling on mercy and compassion was very comforting. In my prison of
pain I rarely felt alone.
There were times late at night when I found myself quietly marveling at
my predicament. For years I had given so much advice about these kinds
of matters to so many, and now I was finding out if I could take my own
advice. It was a wonderful role reversal. I was no longer the
caregiver; now I was the one to whom care was given. The postoperative
rehab room is the first stop for the severely wounded. This became my
new world, and its inhabitants my new community. Some of my new
companions were amputees. Others were literally gutted and re-sewn with
scars that beat my huge wound. There were head-trauma folks, and
crushed-limb people like me. My new teachers were Pain and Suffering.
Let me report to you that in crisis there is no such thing as
transcendence. Anyone who tells you different is playing you for a huge
joke. Suffering is very real, and fear is its sidekick. Fear is a
sneaky % C stealing away precious moments of your life. Much of my time
was spent devising ways to deal with it more effectively. For me, after
weeks of work, I finally tossed fear away into a corner. The secret was
not to fight the pain, but to embrace it. Once I did that I started
finding my strength.
No One Said It Was Going to Be Easy
If I could distill all the great writings on suffering and pain down to
a few words, I would simply say that suffering and crisis transform us,
humble us, and bring out what matters most in life. Accidents open us
to a world of meaning. Still in all, it is a hell of a way to be
blessed. But that is why these things are called "accidents" because no
one in his right mind would ever order up a serving of blessings and
meaning this way! For years I used to marvel at how the Talmud points
out that just as we bless the good, so too do we bless the bad. I
always found that a profound concept. It is only now, when I find
myself stretched between the good blessing and the bad blessing, that I
understand how important it is to surrender to the depth of my life.
Nothing that happens is to be ignored. Everything requires attention
and mindfulness. There are spiritual gems to be recovered from the
difficult challenges. Or as the great Hassidic master Reb Dov Ber of
Mezrich once said, "Sometimes we have to sift through the ashes to find
a single spark."
Pain Opens the Heart
How strange it was to have something so brutal bring out so many deep
changes in my life. There is, of course, a deep mystery at work here,
which the words of Chesbon Hanefesh helped to make clear: "By failing
to accept your suffering, the pain you feel will be much more acute and
harsh." From the beginning I simply accepted that where I was was where
I was meant to be, and this freed my mind up to pursue my healing. It
opened new doors to the spiritual realms, new doors to contemplation
and meditation. There is a deep connection between broken-ness and
Spirit. When you suffer, it is not just the body that gets broken -- so
does the heart. It is never easy looking at life and seeing your dreams
vanish, hopes disappear, and plans get more than put on hold.
The flip side of being helpless is that there are only a few avenues
open to you. As I lay in the hospital and later in my hospital bed set
up in our living room, everything I was accustomed to was gone. No
plans, no dreams, no visions of what I was going to do and be next.
Believe me, I am a very driven person and to have all of that just
pulled away was startling. To heal, I knew I had to be fully in the
present and drop everything I had thought about what I was going to be
doing with my life. Letting go was poignantly sad. But it was not
depressing. Rabbi Scnhuer Zalman said it clearly when he wrote: "A
broken heart is not the same as sadness. Sadness occurs when the heart
is stone cold and lifeless. On the contrary, there is an unbelievable
amount of vitality in a broken heart." And that is the truth. There is
and was in all this pain and sadness a lot of vitality. Why is this so?
What else is there to do in circumstances like this but to turn your
life over to God? My dependency opened me to the recognition that I was
dependent on God. Where else could I hang on?
In The Middle is Mystery
In the middle of the mystery of pain, there are precious jewels to be
harvested. There is incredible beauty and poignancy in discovering the
love in this world. I may have gotten pain dealt to me in spades, but I
also can tell you I have gotten more love and compassion poured over
me, through me, and around me than I ever knew existed. I was often
asked by the hospital staff why I seemed to be happy most of the time.
They would say, "Look at what happened to you. How come you still
smile?" In reality, their question was not directed at me, but at
themselves. They were asking, "Would it be possible for me to be happy
if I were in Yehudah's shoes?" I suspect that everyone harbors such
thoughts. We all wonder how we are going to respond to a crushing
crisis. We all wonder if it will break us. These are natural questions.
We wonder, too, about how we will handle pain. And beyond that, we
wonder if we really will be able to make amends and straighten out our
lives if we are caught in the middle of a buzz saw.
The Three Hurdles
There are three major hurdles to overcome in crisis: dealing with pain,
attitude, and cleaning up the heart. Pain management is a huge issue in
the hospital or for anyone who suffers from chronic, debilitating pain.
I could write a book on the "pain wars" that I had with my doctors. But
briefly, if you do not get proper pain management, it is extremely
difficult to heal or keep your wits about you. Without it, life is a
living hell. When the pain volume is turned up high, all you can do is
writhe, cry, and pray for sleep. Good pain management is essential. At
the same time, however, I don't want to imply that if your pain is
managed, your life will come together. Nothing could be farther from
the truth. Sadly, we live in a world where we are so afraid of
suffering's teachings that we organize our lives around anesthetizing
the messages of our anxiety and pain. Many of the folks I got to know
on the trauma ward ran back into their caves of denial as soon as they
got their meds and the pain went away. There is physical pain and there
is psychic pain. Don't confuse the two and think that when the physical
pain goes away you will be all right psychically. The longer we avoid
dealing with our lives, the more trouble we find at the end. Issues not
attended to can come roaring out like a devouring monster.
Where your attitude is, so be you. Where your attitude is, so be your
consciousness. No matter what has happened in life, you have the
capacity to choose how you want to be. Allowing yourself to be guided
by your core values unlocks a profound spiritual blessing -- the
blessing of living in the moment with grace, dignity, warmth, kindness
and compassion. I am quite certain that the fear of changing our
attitude is the fear of the unknown. While no one likes the crappy side
of each of our lives, it is what we know. It is easier to delude
ourselves into thinking and identifying with what we know than to risk
being what we can be. The thought of really changing is downright scary
for most folks. The issue, when I am caught up in one of the chain-saw
massacre cycles of life, is what course and direction do I choose to
take? After pain management, what precisely do I do to learn, change,
transform and grow? What in my life can motivate me? In my case, I made
a conscious decision to stay with my core, to let its inner light be my
beacon. And most of all, I was motivated by my children. I wanted them
to see what was possible in a time of crisis. I wanted them to know
that their father deemed it worthwhile, even in the middle of hell, to
be a person who does not let go of what is precious in life. But I
would never want anyone to think that attitude equals perfection or
transcendence or any of the other gobbly goop that passes for New Age
spirituality. Don't think there won't be times in the middle of a
crisis when you won't literally break down. I certainly have, and I am
not ashamed to say so. I belong, after all, to the school of the
spirituality of imperfection.
Wisdom for the Heart of Life
Finally, let me share with you some of the wisdom teachings that are my
spiritual companions in life. Teachings that are for the ages are alive
to me. They are imbued with spirit and I carry them as living charges
of pure wisdom inside my consciousness:
"Suffering is meant as a teacher to anyone who sees it or hears about
it. The suffering of anyone in the world can serve as a tool to learn
lessons that will elevate us." (Toras Avraham, p. 54)
"Do not worry about what might possibly go wrong the next day. One
never knows what will occur. Perhaps tomorrow you will no longer be in
this world and you will have worried about a world that is not yours."
(Talmud, Sanhedrin 100b)
"If things do not go the way you wish them to be, you should then wish
them to be the way they are." (Magadolai Hatorah Vachssidus, vol. 20,
p. 107)
"It did not really matter what we expected from life, but rather what
life expected from us. We needed to stop asking about the meaning of
life, and instead to think of ourselves as those who were being
questioned by life -- daily and hourly. Our answer must consist, not of
talk and meditation, but of right action and right conduct. Life
ultimately means taking the responsibility to find the right answer to
its problems and to fulfill the tasks that it constantly sets before
each individual." (Viktor Frankl, Mans Search for Meaning.)
If we realize that life is asking us to respond with our core values,
we awaken to the precious beauty of our life and of others. We abandon
spiritual practice and embrace life. We do not worry. We do not flee.
We act with grace, strength, and compassion. We act even with
imperfection -- but we act. Spirituality born out of crisis is grounded
in the personal. I truly believe that to be the case. Don't fool
yourself and think that Spirit is somewhere else, in other worldly
experiences, in great rushes or ecstatic visions. Surviving my
nightmare has taught me that we are all a lot better off when we
understand that the Holy is in our hands and in our deeds. I suspect
that was King David's message when he wrote the simple statement, "May
goodness and compassion chase me all the days of my life." If we hunger
to live the spiritual, we hunger to serve and to give. Life's deepest
experience is the joy that fills our hearts when we love and give to
others. Ask anyone in the middle of battling a catastrophic illness. Or
survey all my friends from the acute trauma ward, and they will tell
you they live to give a halting hug or to speak a word of grace to
another. The irony can no longer be lost on me. When crisis explodes in
our midst, what we yearn for is a clue to our spiritual life.