Rebbetzin Chaya Sora Gertzulin
Life Challenges, Life Lessons
It was the summer of 2015. Along with a friend of mine, I headed to my bungalow colony in the Catskill Mountains to straighten up my house and ready it for the next few months. Yet when I arrived, I was met by a messy sight. Water had collected underneath the porch, which stood on stilts, and caused it to fall.
After tidying up the outside, I proceeded to organize and unclutter the inside. Amidst my cleaning spree, the door had swung open and gotten stuck in position. I tried shutting it close, but, for some reason, I wasn’t being successful. I tried pulling and pulling, but it was all to no avail. At that point, I called my husband and asked if he could lend me a hand. He placed his faith in me, though, encouraging me to try once more. I listened and made another attempt. This time, however, not only did the door not budge, but a flash of light crossed my eyes. I shivered. I reached for the door again, but still, the door wouldn’t move and a flash of light pierced my vision a second time. The third repeated attempt turned my world black.
Fortunately, my friend who had accompanied me to the mountains was able to drive home. I didn’t mention what had happened, not wishing to prompt an emergency visit to the hospital. Yet, for the entire drive home, I remained considerably worried about my eyes. I finally figured that I would go to sleep and wake up in the morning refreshed and renewed with healthy eyes and heathy vision.
The next morning when I awoke, I was met by an uncomforting and unpleasant surprise. As soon as I opened my eyes, a major black streak crossed my vision. I panicked, not knowing what I was seeing. Now I knew I couldn’t delay going to the hospital any longer.
After the doctor examined my eyes, he turned to me and said, “Did you eat anything this morning?” “No,” I replied. “I was so nervous; I didn’t even take a sip of coffee.” “That’s good. You are going into emergency surgery right now.” He went on to give me the name of an expert eye doctor in Manhattan. I didn’t know how to respond or what to make of everything, but I didn’t have time to sit back and delay. “You need to trust me about this,” my doctor said. “You need to get yourself to the city right now. You have a detached retina and need surgery.” And so it happened. I underwent retina surgery and, thank G-d, it went well.
Two weeks later, I headed to the doctor for another check-up. Yet, since my surgery, my perception of space and distance had been thrown off. When I therefore opened the car door one day, the window point went straight into my eye. For a moment, I saw what appeared to be a red circle. I knew that I had done something.
So there I was, in the doctor’s office again. He examined my eye and looked at it this way and that way, but didn’t say anything right away. Finally, he told me, “We have to take more pictures.” I knew that this meant no good. After processing more pictures, the doctor reported back, “You have a macular hole.” I later learned that the recovery from a macular hole is less than pleasant. To properly treat a macular hole, which is a small break in the macula, located in the center of the retina, a gas bubble is inserted behind the eye. The pressure of the bubble closes and repairs the break in the macula. Yet there is one caveat, which makes for a very uncomfortable recovery.
In order for the bubble to continuously apply pressure to the macula, the person’s head must be positioned downwards. Otherwise, if one’s head is up, the bubble rises and the pressure will not achieve anything. For the next four weeks after this second surgery, I needed to do, what doctors call, ‘face down positioning.’ Chin to chest and nose to the floor. That was it. I could not lift my head up for an entire month. If I wanted to eat, I needed to recline on a massage chair and put a small table underneath. At night, I as well wore a special brace to keep my head in position so I wouldn’t move.
As could be imagined, being debilitated like this gave me a lot of time to think. And so, I began wondering just why in fact this had happened to me and what I could learn from it. Everyone experiences challenges in their lives. The Avos and Imahos all underwent difficulties, and it was all for a purpose. I therefore wondered what I could take away from my own experience.
One day, with little for me to do other than relax, I turned on the radio to a Jewish station called JRoot Radio. To my surprise, what came on was something which spoke directly to me. “Do you need yeshuot (recovery)? Do you need refuot (healing)?” “He is talking to me!” I thought to myself. The speaker went on to say, “Write one hundred thank you notes to Hashem every day. Our Sages teach that we are supposed to recite one hundred blessings every day. Yet, you can also count all the blessings Hashem gives you in your life and you ought to be grateful for. If you write down one hundred thank you notes to Hashem, He will send you back much blessing in your life.” It sounded like a wonderful idea.
I immediately got to work. I sat down and started making berachosand thanking Hashem. But after a while, I had only rallied up to sixty, and still had ways to go. I had compiled a list, but it did not reach one hundred. But then I started thinking some more. What if I would thank Hashem not only for the common blessings that everyone recognizes, such as the ability to walk and talk, but those blessings which Hashem personally put into my life this past year. “What about,” I murmured to myself, “the fact that my son-in-law passed the CPA exam recently? That’s a beracha! And what about… my daughter-in-law who underwent a difficult pregnancy, and yet now she is home and the baby is home and they are both doing well? And what about my daughter who was living in a crowded apartment with all her kids and moved into a larger and more comfortable apartment?” Slowly but surely, my list grew. And then it hit me.
“Maybe,” I said to myself, “this whole situation with my eyes happened because I haven’t been seeing all the blessings in my life.” By then, my list had surpassed one hundred blessings by quite a few. I then realized that such gratitude creates real joy in one’s life. I had so much to be grateful for and so much to be appreciative and happy about.
Before my second surgery for my macular hole, the anesthesiologist came over with a checklist of questions. “Do you have cardiac problems? Neurological problems? Do you feel tingling in your toes? Do you have kidney problems? Liver problems?” The list continued on for some time. After he finished asking the questions, all of which I answered no to, I turned to him and said, “Doctor, thank you for asking me all these questions. You helped me realize how much I have to be grateful for.” He looked at me with a strange smile. “No one ever said that to me,” he said. But it was absolutely true. After thinking of all the problems I could potentially have, I told myself, “You know what? I think I can handle this eye issue. I am going to be alright.”
The word in Hebrew for being in a state of happiness is בשמחה,which when rearranged, also spells מחשבה, thoughts. In life, even if we do not feel any happiness at the moment, we can think ourselves happy. Realize all the blessings you have in your life and allow yourself to swell up with joy and gratitude. The word שמחה, as well, can be broken down into two words – ש מחה (sh’macha) – which means “that is erased.” Erase all those negative thoughts and feelings you harbor in your mind and heart and replace it with pleasant and positive ones. We all too often focus on the negativity in our lives and overlook all the good that would make us happy and appreciative. That was one of the many lessons I learned from this challenge given to me.
But there was also something which stood out for me. I retrospectively called it ‘The Power of a Tissue.’
Before my second surgery, I visited the doctor for a check-up and asked him a serious and sobering question which was on my mind. “Is there a chance that the surgery will not work and I will not gain back my vision in that eye?” The doctor was quiet for a moment, after which he handed me a tissue and walked out of the room.
I, of course, had my cry for a few minutes, taking in the reality of the situation. The doctor shortly thereafter reentered and prepped me for the surgery. Yet, at that moment, I realized that what the doctor had done touched me so much. Sometimes, just handing over a tissue to someone experiencing pain and strife is all that is needed. We often try to offer soothing words, give advice and subtly suggest how someone should be feeling. Yet, many times, the answer is just a tissue. Nothing further need be said.
While there is much more I learned from this personal trial, one thing is for certain: it happened for a purpose and I definitely walked away a changed and stronger person for the better. And for that, I truly thank Hashem.
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