I figure if I just blog about being a Brewer’s wife I imagine you
will get really bored really
fast. Especially since most of it would me
complaining and whining about not enough time with Kevin, not enough time for
me to do what I want to do, not enough time for the kids, and not enough time
to do the stuff that needs to get done around the house that needs to be
done. So with that I thought about telling you about our
neighbor s when we lived in Atlanta.
This is how I learned that there is something bigger than ourselves and that
events in our lives and the people that come into our lives have meaning and
serve a purpose. It’s being able to
look back on the good and bad and seeing the big picture.
When Kevin and I first moved into our house in Atlanta I
didn’t think that much about our neighbors house, well because I grew up in
WV. Having a junky yard was normal and
didn’t everyone have a car or two that did not run parked in the driveway. We met those junky yard neighbors Sue and Lloyd
when they introduced why their house looked the way it did it seemed Sue was in
remission from breast cancer and Lloyd’s job of installing I think alarm
systems kept him on the road. They had
two grown children that lived out of state. We met the first day we moved in
when they asked if it was ok they keep their satellite dish on house since the
trees in their yard blocked the reception.
One day I cooked to much dinner for Kevin and I and noticed Lloyd was
out of town. I took some over to Sue and
soon this became a frequent thing.
A symbiotic relationship of sorts grew between Sue and
I. She missed being close to her
daughter and I missed being close to my Mom.
My Mom was in WV and I worried about her all the time since my father
passed away she lived alone. Sue was so excited when I had Nate and even
more excited with Mason. The boys became
her grandsons since neither one of her children had kids. It was shortly after Mason turned one is when
we decided to make the move to Savannah.
It was around that same time that we learned Sue had developed lung
cancer. I was having such extreme guilt
and anxiety of over leaving Sue. Who would cook for her?
We put our house on the market shortly after Kevin took the job with Army Corps of
Engineers. It would be almost a year before
we would sell the Atlanta house. During that time Kevin spent 8 months living
with his brother in Savannah and would drive back to Atlanta on the weekends. It was not an easy time. I had two small children and had to keep the
house looking nice. If it had not been for Sue
and the wonderful women Delimi that was really the one that kept my house looking
nice I would have had a mental break
down the first month Kevin was gone.
During those 8 months we had one sale fall through and Sue had
started undergoing chemotherapy treatments.
My work schedule was set up so that I had every other Friday off. Those Fridays became Sue and I’s get away
days. Sue and I would go out to thrift
stores and out to lunch. We shared a
lot with each other on those Friday’s.
Sue began to heal a rift that had grown between her and her daughter and
she was my sounding board of all the stress of having Kevin so far away. Many nights Sue would come over and have dinner
followed by rocking Nate and watching Sponge Bob while I would feed Mason and put him to bed. It became a comfortable loving routine for both of
us.
Our house finally found it’s new owners.
Sue was getting sicker and my anxiety of leaving her was growing. I told Kevin before we left to meet with the buyers and sign all the
closing documents that we needed to tell them about Sue and taking her dinner. Kevin told me they would think I was crazy. As we set down with the buyers and the
attorney went off to make copies of something we started making small talk. I almost jumped out of my seat with excitement when they told us they were both
preachers. That is all I needed before I
blurted out everything about Sue. I
truly found comfort knowing they would be living next door to Sue. It felt right. When Kevin I returned from the closing and
packing up the rest of our stuff to head south Lloyd came over to let us know
that Sue had to stay in hospital do to an infection and not to worry they would
come down to visit soon. I talked to
Sue on the phone and sent her flowers telling her to make sure she kept up with
SpongeBob.
A couple of weeks after we moved into a rental house I sent her a
card so she would have our new information.
The day after I mailed the card Lloyd called Kevin to let him know that
Sue had passed away. I was devastated.
A few days later I called Sue and Lloyds daughter Noel. The moment I heard Noels voice I just started bawling. She sounded just like her mother. Noel
told me of the last few weeks of her life and that she had pictures of
Nate and Mason with her and would tell everyone they were her grandsons. Sue had confided in me on one of Fridays that
she was afraid of dying. I told her the
following “Sue everyone is afraid, your
afraid because it’s not your time. When your
time comes you won’t be afraid you will be ready to go” I am not sure
why I said that, maybe because that is what I hope it will be like for
me I guess. I took great comfort when
Noel spoke of how her brother had come from California to be with them and they
were all together. She also told me of
the ambulance guy that gave Sue so much comfort
when they transported her to the
hospital the first time and how when it came time to transfer her to the
hospice care that in all of the ambulance personnel in the greater Atlanta area
it would be that same guy that would take her to hospice. We laughed and cried a lot.
I have come to believe that there are angels that are sent
to earth to help, but I also believe that we are also used by God/Allah/Jehovah…whatever
you believe in its all one in the same….to
be angels to help or be helped by others.
I have found that if I feel like I need
to talk to someone or do something for someone I no longer worry about if they
think I am totally crazy I just do it. Kevin
thought I was crazy the first time I suggested taking dinner over to Sue. It is when you don’t listen to that inner
voice and later wishing that you had. So
the next time you feel compelled to talk to a total stranger you should, you
may hear something you needed to know or be the comfort or words that someone
else needed to hear. Try a little experiment and do the pay it
forwarded thing. It is an easy thing to
do that has potentially huge impact on
yourself or them. It could be something
as simple as dropping a coin in an expired meter or unbelievable journey that started with making a little extra dinner for a neighbor that is
alone.
God bless Sue she liked my
cooking. I used to tease her that chemo
meds killed her taste buds along with cancer.
This is an absolutely beautiful story, Nikki...such an important message, too! Makes me want to go next door and hug my next door neighbor, Sue!
ReplyDeleteHugs, Cristyl
What a beautiful story and a beautiful sentiment! I totally agree, that sometimes it is the friendship of/to strangers offers us our biggest rewards and lessons. She was blessed to have a wonderful friend!
ReplyDeleteWow. Sue sounded beautiful. You have such a charitable heart and that is beautiful too. Thanks for this. It comes at a time that I needed a reminder. Never pass up a prompting, you may miss out on a huge blessing in return.
ReplyDelete.
Thanks Guys.....I need to give y'all some of the funny stories now...this time every one will be crying from laughing
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