Don Greenwood
Even Rose Bushes Have Thorns
My youngest son Jeff and I have always enjoyed joking and teasing
each other. But one early January Night when he called long distance, he
wasn't teasing. He and his wife's first child, a girl named Anna after my
wife, was about to be born. Her Mother, our daughter-in-law, had seemed very
small during the pregnancy, but her doctors assured her all was well. It
wasn't.
"There're pretty sure Anna is a "Trisomy 18," and that means an
extra or third chromosome, on the eighteenth pairing." "That means all
kinds of serious problems!" The immediate pain pushed me into denial. "Now
Jeff, stop kidding, this is no time to joke around." "I'm not joking, Dad,
and I need Mom and you to get down here as soon possible."
We were in Birmingham before Noon the next morning, and what a sad
scene it was. The next few weeks were spent hovering around the neo-natal
intensive care unit, with "Brahm's Lullaby," played over the Catholic
Hospital's public address systems, each time a "normal" baby was born. Anna
was baptized by their Methodist Pastor, I left to go back to my work, and
Grandma stayed for three weeks to help and support. She was a big help, for
not only is she very compassionate, but a registered nurse.
It was a blessing that Anna died a few months later, for she was
badly deformed, severely retarded, and couldn't even swallow. As I sat in
the little chapel during her funeral, I asked the same question I had been
asking myself over and over, "Why?" Immediately, a memory shot up from my
unconscious, of a short walk I had taken with Winnie, Jeff and Angie's
little daschund, not long after Anna's tragic birth.
Not more than two hundred feet from their apartment, I had seen a
garbage can overturned, and an old 45 speed record propped up against a
tree. When I curiously leaned over to see what was written, I saw it was a
song by Lynn Anderson, "I Never Promised You A Rose Garden!"
Truthfully, the impact of that "message," did not sink in until
after the funeral. Actually, it is still sinking in, seven years and two
healthy grandsons later. In time I've added my own phrase to the ending of
the song's title, "I Never Promised You A Rose Garden ---And Even Roses Have
Thorns!"
No where do the Christian Scriptures say God promises our life
will be trouble or tragedy free. However, we certainly prefer it to be, even
think it should be. Our attitude about tragedy and misfortune is, "that
sort of thing will not happen to my family or myself." Another variation on
this theme is, "Well, I know that things can't always go the way I want them
to go, but nothing really serious is going to happen to us; just to others."
Really, that is the way I thought for years. Really, that is the
way many think. This kind of thinking does not prepare anyone for the
tragedy which ultimately comes to everyone and every family. When it does
come, we don't have the inner strength needed to face it. Instead we busy
ourselves in denial, bitterness, and blame.
I have not told my son and daughter-in-law about the record leaning
against the tree. I don't think they would appreciate it. They are not
ready to hear about that, even seven years later. Once when I spontaneously
exclaimed gratitude to God, for our beautiful two grandsons, their sons,
their simultaneous question was, "How can you thank a God who would let Anna
be born?"
I don't have the answer to their question. I don't know why the
horrific tragedy of the World Trade Center and Pentagon happened. I just
finally am beginning to realize and accept that I do not and cannot control
what happens around me and to me. I cannot control both the tragedy and the
good blessings of life. In the remaining years of my life, I will continue
to be surprised by both positive and wonderful surprises, and by unexpected
tragedy. It just also seems that I, like many, tend to emphasize the
negative instead of the positive experiences of life.
A few months ago, our son, his wife, and our 5 and 2 year old
grandsons visited us for several days. I had the idea that when each day
began I would give them each a little gift, which I called a "surprise."
They came to love this, with the oldest climbing into bed with my wife and I
in anticipation, just waiting to see what his surprise would be.
One night earlier this week, the 2 and one-half year old's voice was
on the phone when I answered. "Grandpa, I'm ready for one of your
surprises." Our son informed me he had been begging them all day, to let
him talk to Grandpa.
Our life is full or surprises, both nice and not so nice. We are not
in control of these surprises. However, we can be in control of how we react
to them. We can be in control of how we grow from the experience of them.
God never promised any of us that our life would be a rose garden. And even
roses have thorns!
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