America's Broken Heart
Finding Miracles in the Valley of
Death
by Bill
Douglas
This
horror we have witnessed as a nation reminds me of a
personal horror I had years ago. Many years ago I
lost my youngest son after watching him lie comatose
in a hospital bed for a month. The levels of
consciousness I went through, are according to
psychologists, the same levels we are now going
through as a nation. The first is a shocked
numbness, the next rage and anger, and this followed
by a great sorrow that seems so unbearable that
sometimes people stay locked in the rage/anger stage
in order to avoid the sorrow that seems so desolate
and overwhelming.
America will never be the same. What that
means depends on where we go from here. We can allow
this tragedy and travesty to harden us and throw us
into the never-ending spiral of violence that
Israelis and Palestinians have found themselves in
for so many years. We can declare war on a harboring
nation and unleash the full might of the U.S.
military power to pound that nation into oblivion,
including some civilians that would be considered
"collateral damage" just as the terrorists
considered these victims "collateral damage". Or we
can have our hearts opened by this enormous loss we
have collectively experienced, and forever be
changed in the way we feel when we see a bomb
explode in the Palestinian homelands, Belgrade,
Baghdad, or any other city in the world.
Naturally, I and other Americans felt black
anger seeing the innocent suffering unfolding in New
York and Washington, and not really sure of who,
what, or how to direct that swelling rage. I had
felt that before, the night of my son's death -- I
was so hardened and angry, at the doctors, at
myself, at God, at life, that I almost walked away
from the most precious experience of my life.
My son's heart had failed several times, and
my wife and I had agreed that if it happened again,
we wouldn't revive him by torturing his tiny frame
with anymore shocks or needles. So, on the night
they called me into the hospital at 3 am with my two
older toddlers in tow, I knew how the night would
end. But, I didn't really because I allowed
"something miraculous" to happen that night. At
first when the nurse asked me if I wanted to hold
Isaac I said, no, so thick with anger that I had
told myself that Isaac's soul had passed on and that
this body was no longer my precious boy. But, a
voice came to my mind that said, "no, you must now
stand in the center of life, and feel it all, or
forever run from the real meaning of everything."
So, I sat down among all the tubes and wires
attached to my tiny son, as the nurse placed his
fragile being in my arms. The switch was turned off
and the earth stood still. Suddenly a flood of such
unimaginable sorrow and love as I have never ever
felt before or since poured through my hardened
heart -- I thought it would break me in two. And it
did, I left that hospital a shattered man that
night, and it was the best thing that had ever
happened to me. My broken heart was so wide open and
fragile that I began to realize a compassion for
others that I had never ever felt before. All the
suffering of everyone found a channel through my
open heart. I had never experienced such love for
humanity and for the fragility and humility of my
human condition -- our human condition.
America, this tragedy can do this for us all,
if we can pass through the stage of hate/rage. It
can sensitize us, causing us to rethink some facts
that may have seemed unimportant to us before.
Sometimes our foreign policy can seem so "over
there" that it doesn't seem that important. Often
those issues are relegated to back pages of the
paper, while domestic issues like "lotto winners"
and "school bonds" take the front pages. We can lose
touch with the far-reaching ramifications of US
policy elsewhere. Such as the fact that the United
States is the largest exporter of weapons in the
entire world, and one of the only countries standing
against the abolition of land mines, as well as now
unilaterally violating the anti-ballistic missile
treaty. This means that the odds are that when a
bomb lands on people in the world, or a landmine
blows off a child's arm -- it was made in the United
States. Today we will be conducting massive
investigations to find out where the weapons were
made that enabled the hijackings to occur, and we
will hold that source responsible. Other humans are
no different.
Environmentally and economically, we Americans
are only 5% of the world's population, yet we
consume 50% of the earth's resources, with
government programs subsidizing our fuel -- thereby
enabling American's to be quite thoughtless and
wasteful as we are the only industrial nation on
earth increasing our carbon dioxide (greenhouse gas)
output. When the global temperature continues to
rise, and the world experiences higher costs for
fuel, fuel shortages, and less resources because
Americans are wastefully and thoughtlessly creating
larger and larger fuel guzzling vehicles, and our
government stands as the only government that
refuses to sign the Kyoto Treaty to reduce fossil
fuel consumption, the world sees the United States
in a different light than we may have seen
ourselves. Because the "lotto winners" are on the
front pages, these thoughts are buried.
When the earth's resources are increasingly
plundered to satisfy the endless desire for consumer
products in the U.S., those who are left with little
or nothing because of a global multi-national
corporate economy suffer. Remember that this global
corporate economy is designed by the lawyers of
those who the majority of poverty stricken world
citizens will never meet or know, yet suffer
everyday from their decisions and legal briefs.
The rage we feel today at our suffering and
the suffering of our countrymen/women/children, and
the fact that we do not know quite where to place
the anger -- but only knowing that we rage against
the injustice of it all -- is felt by people
worldwide when a bomb or landmine takes the lives of
their neighbors, their children, or when a world
economy run by people beyond their control or
awareness leaves their families scrapping and
starving through no fault of their own.
You see, our own tragedy can now enable us to
"feel" what desolate rage at a force we don't even
really know or understand feels like. It can awaken
us to be more cognizant of what our nation's
policies are so that we do not allow our nation's
policies to add to this suffering -- as human
children we do not want to add to suffering anymore,
the world has enough of it without contributing to
it in anyway.
To make our government's policies healing, we
must become vigilant to them, and be educated of
their effects. As citizens of the world's most
powerful nation, we have responsibilities. Consider
this, if we attack a nation where the terrorists
were supported, the innocent human "collateral
damage" of our attack will be people who very likely
only committed the crime of "not caring," being
"ignorant of," or feeling "powerless to change" what
their government was doing.
The world is at a crossroads. We can use this
horrible event as a catalyst to see ourselves in the
fragility and suffering of others worldwide, to
steer our world down the road of compassion,
creating a world we can ALL love living in. Or, we
can use it as a reason to build yet more weapons, to
militarize our nation and world more, and to callous
our hearts and deafen our ears to the suffering of
others worldwide. I found my life when I allowed
tragedy to break my heart, rather than thicken it. I
honor my son by opening my heart endlessly. I pray
America will find the miracle in this tragedy, and
thereby honor those who have passed.
Book
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The Complete Idiot's Guide
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About The
Author
Bill Douglas is the-? Kansas City
Founder of World Healing Day. You can contact Bill at
www.worldtaichiday.org
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