A dear friend gave us a plaque that said, “Home is where your story begins.” It is also where we live, suffer, and tell the stories that matter to us. Home is where we are called to remember all that has transpired under our roof and to anticipate another home that will be the glory we long for most.
After we moved into our seventh home (which was our fifteenth move) I knew the importance of getting house numbers on our house. But the exhaustion of the move had taken a toll on me and the hardware store was one of those things I hadn’t checked off my list.
It seemed we hit the ground running with this move and this included little margin for Dan and his travel and teaching schedule. Why I chose this Sunday morning to plead for a little peace and quiet, I do not know. But I did, and little did I realize the terror that was soon to take place.
“Hey, Dan, why don’t you try out our new bathtub? Maybe it could be a Sabbath ritual to receive some calmness into your week. I will bring up your coffee and give you time to soak in the beauty of this morning.”
When I walked back into the bathroom with a mug of steaming coffee I was taken back to a scene from our trip to Sea World Orlando. Our children loved Shamu and felt especially chosen when they were splashed upon by the killer whale’s tail after breeching. But what I was witnessing now was not in a water park! Who flops into a bathtub like Shamu? I froze as time stood still as I zoomed in on every droplet of water erupting onto all four walls of our new bathroom as well as the floor! With eyes aghast I chose not to furiously scold Dan’s unaware behavior and laughed instead. Then, all of a sudden, pain instantly struck my throat and with our eyes locked on to one another I gasped, unsuccessfully, to breathe.
It was one of those moments when reality turns frightening and both people jump into action without explanation. My “air ways” were completely and furiously locked. I was in agony and possibly in more pain than I had ever felt in my life! Add the trauma of gasping for breath and not finding any. Dan leapt towards me to do the Heimlich maneuver which only added even greater fear. I instinctively knew that if he started Heimlich maneuvering me in my panicked state that I would really “loose it” since my body was telling me that that was not the problem.
There we were both naked and Dan dripping more water on the floor! Fear and trauma were like loud sirens inside our heads. I was frightfully struggling for one teeny breath of air; but as tight as the deadbolt on our new front door, no air came in. Time stood still. I flailed my arms in pain while waving, “No, no, no that is not what I need. Don’t do that to me!” My next thought was, “Dear God, do I even have to instruct someone what to do as I am dying?”
I staggered into our bedroom, pointed at the phone and oddly remembered my failure to purchase four wrought iron numbers from the hardware store. I collapsed to the floor thinking this was “it” and also, imagining how horrific this will be when our houseguests to wake up to a siren and two naked bodies on the floor!
Then it happened! I was able to take a sip, a small sip, of delicious and holy air.
Dan stopped talking and dropped the phone. Our eyes once again “locked” on each other and he watched as I haltingly took another teeny sip of air. Delicious, beautiful, life-saving oxygen!
Before we knew it, I was breathing again! We soon were laughing together uproariously because I was alive, but ever so briefly, I had been thinking that my life was soon to be over. Our Sunday morning was as bright as the sun streaming into our windows.
We told our story to Lottie when she came for breakfast. Tears of wonder were moist in our eyes. Then Robin came in and we told her of our scary and holy morning experience. As only Robin can be, she listened and made us laugh even harder, saying that when the local ambulance driver would have knocked on our door, she would have greeted them and said, “Sorry, no emergency here. You have the wrong house!”
A few months later after Dan had esophageal surgery, the surgeon came to the waiting room to let me know how Dan was doing. Before he left I told him about my frightening experience. He listened and with kind eyes, he said, “You experienced a “Laryngospasm” which is an uncontrolled, involuntary muscular contraction of the vocal chords. It is very painful. But if this happens again, you will pass out and that will allow the vocal chords to relax. You most likely won’t die.
How quickly an ordinary morning can change in an instant. I have never forgotten the pain and fear intertwined with laughter at Shamu in our new home. As I go to take a bath to end my day, I look at the holy altar, our bathtub, and let the memories feed like the first tastes of a Thanksgiving Day feast. “Whatever you eat or drink, do all things to the glory of God.”
Becky Allender lives on Bainbridge Island with her loving, wild husband of almost 40 years. A mother and grandmother, she is quite fond of sunshine, yoga, Hawaiian quilting and creating 17th Century reproduction samplers. A community of praying women, loving Jesus, and the art of gratitude fill her life with goodness. She wonders what she got herself into with Red Tent Living!
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Becky, how frightening to not be able to get your breath! I am thankful you are okay. I’m sure you’ve purchased the metal numbers from the hardware store as soon as you possibly could after this traumatic event. I love the descriptions in your story. Thank you for writing and sharing a piece of your lives with us, your readers.
Barbara, thank you for your kind reply. Don’t we all have life-threatening moments that we bury or need to talk about? Part of our human experience is our frailty and all too often we have so much armor on that we miss the goodness or care from others or gratitude to God for our life! Your words encourage me.
Dear Becky,
You are a delightful dear wonder. Keep sharing your story, I look forward to each and every entry. You are a true blessing.
Thank you so much Marie! Hugs to you from my home to yours and may you feel amazed at the blessing that you are to me!
It’s really amazing how we can go from being terrified in one minute… to deep laughter in the next… it seems like one of those gifts that go unnoticed… thanks for helping me stop and see this kind gift from God!!! And I am glad the medics didn’t have to find too naked bodies on the floor😂
OMG! Right! Can you imagine!!! In a time of life threatening crisis…well, you can’t stop and get dressed! But, obviously, I though about i! Thank you Ro!
Oh Becky! What a terrifying and funny now story. Your courage and honesty are so refreshing. Delightful to meet you at brave on. You challenged me there in new ways of creating home in this new world of the PNW. Maybe a bath?!
It was SO great to meet you at Brave On!!! I do remember you and pray because….it’s a whole new culture, climate and way of being. I love what you are working towards! You inspire me.
Goodness Becky, I experienced a wide range of emotions while reading this entry…fear and panic for you and then joy as I laughed at the image of you and Dan slipping and sliding on a wet bathroom floor. What a feat to weave both together in this story! I have never heard of “Laryngospasm,” but the experience of choking and failing to take a breath is utterly terrifying. That next breath is truly “delicious and holy.” Recently I injured my wrist, and I’ve been unable to practice yoga without pain. Your writing actually spoke into my frustration and fear and offered hope of the restoration of a practice that is “delicious, beautiful, and life-giving” to me.
Susan, isn’t there so much mystery on this side of heaven? I am grateful this entry encouraged you. Bless you as you heal.
Dear Becky, what an incredible record of paralyzing terror and life-giving joy! You are a masterful writer of emotion—taking the reader right into the room, breath suddenly cut off with your words, feeling the pain stifle the laughter just unleashed over the scene of Shamu! Masterful. I particularly love the image of you and Dan “locking eyes” — that place where two are one in a glance and words are not necessary. Masterful. Thank you for the reminder that what we share with our mate is so much more than life and death. Love to you and Dan, Christine
Christine, thank you so much. You are so correct…”what we share with out mate is so much more than life and death.” I am ever mindful of your love and life with your husband. And, my favorite photo at Brave On was the one with you!