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Downwind from Flowers
Several years ago in Seattle, Washington, there
lived a 52-year-old Tibetan refugee. "Tenzin," as
I will call him, was diagnosed with one of the more curable
forms of lymphoma. He was admitted to the hospital and received
his first dose of chemotherapy.
But during the treatment, this usually gentle
man became extremely angry and upset. He pulled the IV out
of his arm and refused to cooperate. He shouted at the nurses
and became argumentative with everyone who came near him.
The doctors and nurses were baffled.
Then Tenzin's wife spoke to the hospital staff.
She told them Tenzin had been held as a political prisoner
by the Chinese for 17 years. They killed his first wife and
repeatedly tortured and brutalized him throughout his imprisonment.
She told them that the hospital rules and regulations, coupled
with the chemotherapy treatments, gave Tenzin horrible flashbacks
of what he had suffered at the hands of the Chinese.
"I know you mean to help him," she
said, "but he feels tortured by your treatments. They
are causing him to feel hatred inside - just like he felt
toward the Chinese. He would rather die than have to live
with the hatred he is now feeling. And, according to our belief,
it is very bad to have hatred in your heart at the time of
death. He needs to be able to pray and
cleanse his heart."
So the doctors discharged Tenzin and asked the
hospice team to visit him in his home. I was the hospice nurse
assigned to his care. I called a local representative from
Amnesty International for advice. He told me that the only
way to heal the damage from torture is to "talk it through."
"This person has lost his trust in humanity
and feels hope is impossible," the man said. "If
you are to help him, you must find a way to give him hope."
But when I encouraged Tenzin to talk about his
experiences, he held up his hand and stopped me. He said,
"I must learn to love again if I am to heal my soul.
Your job is not to ask me questions. Your job is to teach
me to love again."
I took a deep breath. I asked him, "So,
how can I help you love again?"
Tenzin immediately replied, "Sit down,
drink my tea and eat my cookies."
Tibetan tea is strong black tea laced with yak
butter and salt. It isn't easy to drink! But that is what
I did.
For several weeks, Tenzin, his wife, and I sat
together, drinking tea. We also worked with his doctors to
find ways to treat his physical pain. But it was his spiritual
pain that seemed to be lessening. Each time I arrived, Tenzin
was sitting cross-legged on his bed, reciting prayers from
his books. As time went on, he and his wife hung more and
more colorful
"thankas," Tibetan Buddhist banners, on the walls.
The room was fast becoming a beautiful, religious shrine.
When the spring came, I asked Tenzin what Tibetans
do when they are ill in the spring. He smiled brightly and
said, "We sit downwind from flowers."
I thought he must be speaking poetically. But
Tenzin's words were quite literal. He told me Tibetans sit
downwind so they can be dusted with the new blossoms' pollen
that floats on the spring breeze. They feel this new pollen
is strong medicine. At first, finding enough blossoms seemed
a bit daunting. Then, one of my friends suggested that Tenzin
visit some of the
local flower nurseries. I called the manager of one of the
nurseries and explained the situation. The manager's initial
response was: "You want to do what?" But when I
explained the request, the manager agreed.
So, the next weekend, I picked up Tenzin and
his wife with their provisions for the afternoon: black tea,
butter, salt, cups, cookies, prayer beads and prayer books.
I dropped them off at the nursery and assured them I would
return at 5:00. The following weekend, Tenzin and his wife
visited another nursery.
The third weekend, they went to yet another
nursery. The fourth week, I began to get calls from the nurseries
inviting Tenzin and his wife to come again. One of the managers
said, "We've got a new shipment of nicotiana coming in
and some wonderful fuchsias and oh, yes! Some great daphne.
I know they would love the scent of that daphne! And I almost
forgot! We have some new lawn furniture that Tenzin and his
wife might enjoy."
Later that day, I got a call from the second
nursery saying that they had colorful wind socks that would
help Tenzin predict where the wind was blowing. Pretty soon,
the nurseries were competing for Tenzin's visits.
People began to know and care about the Tibetan
couple. The nursery employees started setting out the lawn
furniture in the direction of the wind. Others would bring
out fresh hot water for their tea. Some of the regular customers
would leave their wagons of flowers near the two of them.
It seemed that a community was growing around Tenzin and his
wife.
At the end of the summer, Tenzin returned to
his doctor for another CT scan to determine the extent of
the spread of the cancer. But the doctor could find no evidence
of cancer at all. He was dumbfounded. He told Tenzin that
he just couldn't explain it.
Tenzin lifted his finger and said, "I know
why the cancer has gone away. It could no longer live in a
body that is filled with love. When I began to feel all the
compassion from the hospice people, from the nursery employees,
and all those people who wanted to know about me, I started
to change inside. Now, I feel fortunate to have had the opportunity
to heal in this way. Doctor, please don't think that your
medicine is the only cure. Sometimes compassion can cure cancer,
as well."
By Lee Paton
Submitted by Linda Ross Swanson
Reprinted by permission of Lee Paton (c) 2000, from
Chicken Soup for the Gardener's Soul by Jack Canfield, Mark
Victor Hansen, Marion Owen, Cindy Buck, Cynthia Brian, Pat
Stone and Carol Strugulewski.
Lovejoy
Harvest
Shakti Chionis, Reiki Master/Teacher
Whole Foods Chef and Culinary Artist
P.O. Box 864
Coupeville, WA 98239
shakti@lovejoyharvest.com
By appointment only....360-678-5657
© Copyright 2006
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