When Aaron was two months old, we met with Dr. John Carey, a renowned medical geneticist who has a special interest in Trisomy 18 & 13. He told us that if Aaron lived very long, there would come a point where we would stop waiting for death and start planning for life. I thought for sure I would recognize when I crossed that line. I knew I hadn’t then. When the hospital made that appointment for us, I let them because it was easier than trying to explain why I didn’t want it. I just really hoped that someone would be kind enough to call, or that there was a system in place to notify Dr. Carey when Aaron died. Because I really didn’t want to get a reminder call about an appointment for my dead baby. Dead baby. Who can even think of such a thing? It’s not natural. But somewhere I crossed that point. I realized I had a few months later when I found myself wondering about the logistics of transportation to school for him. And I realized that if I was worried about school buses and car seats/wheelchairs, I was planning on him living for a long time.I sometimes feel like Janus with his two faces. But his look to the future and the past. Mine looks to the future, but also the immediate present. I find myself trying to figure out logistics of taking him to a family reunion in Heber for a few days in June, and wondering if it’s possible to take him to Arizona to visit my family in a year or two. And then he starts acting up like he did on Monday, and I wonder if I’m about to get a real Easter lesson to grow from as I experience Good Friday in my life. The day when it feels like my whole world crashes down around me and all is dark and hopeless. I know Sunday will come. It will come with all the joy and promise of the resurrection. But I will have to pass through the pain and anguish of a shattered Good Friday to reach that day. There is no other way than to go through it and work towards the resurrection Sabbath. And I don’t want to. I want to put it off as long as I possibly can. I’m not that strong. I am not ready. I don’t know if anyone can ever be ready for it. (ref Elder Joseph B. Wirthlin “Sunday Will Come” Ensign, Nov 2006.)
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