If You Love Her Enough
My friend John always has something to tell
me. He knows so much that young men have to have older and more worldly wise
men to advise them. For instance who to trust, how to care for others, and how to
live life to the fullest.
Recently, John
lost his wife Janet. For eight years she fought against cancer, but in the end
her sickness had the last word.
One day John took
out a folded piece of paper from his wallet. He had found when he tidied up some drawers at home. It was a small love letter Janet had
written. The note could look like a school girl's scrawls about her dream guy.
All that was missing was a drawing of a heart with the names John and Janet
written in it. But the small letter was written by a woman who had had seven
children; a woman who fought for her life and who probably only had a few
months left to live.
It was also a
beautiful recipe for how to keep a relationship together.
Janet's
description of her husband begins thus: "Loved me. Took care of me. Worried
about me."
Even though John
always had a ready answer, he never joked about cancer apparently. Sometimes he
came home in the evening to find Janet in the middle of one of those
depressions cancer patients so often get. In no time he got her into the car
and drove her to her favourite restaurant. He showed consideration for her, and
she knew it. You cannot hide something for someone who knows better.
"Helped me when I was
ill," the next
line reads. Perhaps Janet wrote this while the cancer was in one of the
horrible and wonderful lulls. Where everything is -- almost -- as it used to
be, before the sickness broke out, and where it doesn't hurt to hope that
everything is over, maybe forever. "Forgave
me a lot." "Stood
by my side."
And a piece of
good advice for everyone who looks on giving constructive criticism as a kind
of sacred duty: "Always praising."
"Made sure I had
everything I needed,"
she goes on to write. After that she has turned over the paper and added: "Warmth.
Humour. Kindness. Thoughtfulness." And then she writes about the
husband she has lived with and loved the most of her life: "Always there for me when I
needed you."
The last words she
wrote sum up all the others. I can see her for me when she adds thoughtfully: "Good friend."
I stand beside
John now, and cannot even pretend to know how it feels to lose someone who is
as close to me as Janet was to him. I need to hear what he has to say much more
than he needs to talk. "John,"
I ask. "How do you stick together with someone through 38 years -- not to
mention the sickness? How do I know if I can bear to stand by my wife's side if
she becomes sick one day?" "You can," he says quietly. "If
you love her enough, you can."
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