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Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Karl's Impossible Life - Definitely Not for Sissies by Robert R. Schwarz


By Robert R. Schwarz



"Your weakness is perfected in your journey" ... Fr. Joji Thanugundla,
associate pastor St. James Parish , Arlington Heights, Illinois



"Do not compare yourself with others, who seem to skip along their  life-paths with ease. Their journeys have been different from yours, and I have gifted them with abundant energy. I have gifted you with fragility, providing opportunities for your spirit to blossom in My Presence. Accept this gift as a sacred treasure; delicate, yet glowing with brilliant Light. Rather than struggling to disguise or deny your weakness, allow Me to bless you richly through it." ...    Sarah Young (listening to Jesus speak to her heart), from her journal, Jesus Calling

     
Karl stood motionless for perhaps a half-hour watching the breeze-blown pond ripples gently come to shore. His face, deeply-lined prematurely for his 55 years, was serene, and his eyes seemed to be welcoming glints of sunlight reflecting from the ripples. At his side was a small black and white dog, its attention riveted on the three ducks bobbing for food among a patch of lilies. Except for the frayed, straw hat that harmonized with his black hair, Karl’s resale shop  clothes were a disturbing mix of colors  and  ill-fitted sizes, more suited for a man much larger than five-foot-six Karl. Ironically, He K  five years ago Karl was successfully selling men's clothing in an upscale department store in Milwaukee. 
Looking at Karl's face  that day, one couldn't escape the thought that standing there and gazing upon those ripples, that  he was being healed of something beyond the grasp of any doctor.   He was not homeless, though constantly  close to it.
Karl at last broke silence by turning to me and saying  softly, "  Glad you're here, Bob."
I hadn't seen Karl for seven years,  since we had  worked together on a cable television  talk show I moderated for our church.  He had suddenly dropped out of sight without any forwarding addresses.
We got in my car and drove to his apartment, stopping on the way at the house of his friend Jill to return her dog,  which Karl often walked through parks and forest preserves. I told Karl I wanted to know all that had occurred in his life.  
            "Are you and Jill—well,  you know…?" I asked.
            "Just friends. I sleep over sometimes when she gets lonely. Actually,  I'm much more serious about  Derrick, her dog,"  he added, laughing.  "We’re  great buddies. He lies on my  chest when I watch TV."  
            Karl and Jill had met in Milwaukee  while attending county-sponsored   rehab meetings for alcoholics, addicts,   an assortment of felons, and  those, like Karl, without  category.   
             Their relationship,  as I was later to observe after a few visits to Jill's house,  provided a much-needed shelter for the couple. She, despite her impulsive  caustic remarks to Karl and her periods of  depression,  nevertheless  had given Karl a cuddly dog to sooth him at critical moments and a spare bedroom when Karl needed a respite from his crazy-quilted life; and Karl ,  despite all of his socially unacceptable behavior,  had offered her some companionship. The relationship, though, was often strained to its  limit.            
Upon entering  his small two- room apartment,  I was jolted. Never had I seen  any habitat—human or animal—so disorganized. It was as if a wacky artist,  looking for subjects to paint,  had spent hours creating the most  disparate piles possible of common household items.  Clothing, soiled linen, open food boxes,  hardware, magazines, ashtrays (at least four)—all lay before us like an intimidating moat daring to be crossed.  The tragic oddity of the scene was that nothing had been purposely placed anywhere.
            "Let me get a light,"  Karl said.
            "Good idea," I replied, now doubting the prudence of my decision to renew our friendship.  I excused myself and walked to the bathroom. The tub was half-filled with pots, pans, and an assortment of jars and Tupperware.  It reminded me of a  decadent  German abstract expressionist paintings so popular in the 1920's and 30's.
            But when I sat down on a chair  Karl promptly cleared for me, I saw there was nothing  decadent about Karl's take on life.  The walls were covered  with  religious writings and icons:  here and there a cross, depictions  of Christ, Biblical verses  and other spiritual maxims.  Karl had obviously tacked them up the very moment he thought  of it and then reached for a  hammer and  tape or  the nearest pencil and paper. Though disturbing to the senses, I saw nothing  irreverent or neurotic about it. Its totality said Karl was obviously a man of faith and hope.
            Yet, I  couldn't take my eyes from the walls. I knew I should say something--but what?
            "I know it's a little messy,"  Karl said.  "I've been here almost a year.  The rent is really cheap."
            "You really  love the Lord,  don't you, Karl?" 
            "My parents made sure I went to church every Sunday, and wherever I am I hunt down a church."
            I  became aware of  Karl's peculiar speech pattern : It had a staccato beat as it  bumped along, and  he repeated phrases again and  again, as if the thought which prompted the phrase faded so fast that  Karl doubted if he had spoken the words. He seemed forced to go into trivial details for long moments in order to approach the point he wanted to make. And  I don't think his attention span would allow even a flash of diversion.  Often it was impossible to interrupt his talking unless I shouted, "Please stop!"  It  tested anyone's   patience, if not his or her  charity.
            I said goodbye to Karl an hour later: "We'll  have to have coffee sometime."  (I didn't mean it.) At his  apartment building complex came  another shock.  My car was gone. I had not seen the  obscured, weather-beaten  tow-away warning sign for non-residents.  I returned  to Karl's apartment. Seeing how upset I was at  soon having to pay $125 to get my car back, Karl actually began to cry. We went to the super's office to plead my case, and Karl shed more tears in front of the super. No  man in my life had ever shown to me such a tender heart.  I got the car back within an hour. No fine.  I told Karl—and meant it—that I would soon be  calling him for coffee .
***
            Two weeks later, we were having lunch at McDonald's. Half-way through his hamburger, Karl suddenly frowned, excused himself, and went to the men's room. Fifteen minutes later  he returned. "I'm sorry," he said.  " I got this diverticulitis thing and I had  to  vomit." He explained that he forgot to take his doctor's advice to drink carbonated water with his meal to prevent choking on food . Truth was he hadn't the money for  the  annual esophagus dilation  that  enabled him to swallow food.      
I now thought it necessary to take some inventory of my  friend's  life situation.  He tolerated  my questions with modesty and some embarrassment  Little  did I sense that we were drifting into a relationship in which Karl would soon be openly  referring to me as "Bob, my  mentor." 
            At the end of our very long talk during which Karl went into detail about his maladies, I sat speechless, finding it astonishing,  unbelievable that any human being could be that afflicted  and still gaze meditatively at pond ripples and, as he was now,  to relate his life so matter-of-factly.  
*      He's been a recovering alcoholic since age l7, when, he says, he  became deeply depressed by the death of his 18-year-old, much loved  brother  killed in an auto accident.  (His father was an alcoholic, often unemployable as his son was now.)
*      He (and his shut-in sister) has major depression, as did his mother,  who likely  passed it on to Karl. 
*      A recent  bicycle accident left him with (manageable)  multiple compression fractures  along his  spine  and a  broken collar bone that will not completely heal. (once losing his driver's license because of an alcohol-related accident, Karl has not driven a car in decades and relies on his bicycle to get around.)
*    Now and then the osteoporosis  in several  bones flares up, as does a hiatal hernia  (a bulging of the stomach through the muscle that separates the chest from the diaphragm).
*      Most embarrassing  to Karl, he says, is his Tourette syndrome, an inherited  nervous system disorder that causes his face to unexpectedly twitch violently.
*      Then there is  some asthma and a variety  allergies, some of which keep him home-bound  for several days in all seasons.   
*       Major anxiety, also inherited, causes Karl to grind  his front teeth—they were now down to the gum line—while sleeping . The grinding  noise at night is so disturbing to his sister and her children  that she regretfully disallows Karl from ever sleeping over.
*  Perhaps the most debilitating of his afflictions, one that  has also marginalized Karl in society, is a crippling combination of  attention deficit disorder (ADD) and a  severe  bipolar disorder.  






             Karl and I began seeing each other weekly, usually for coffee and occasionally for a drive to a nature center, where we would hike while Karl endlessly vented his passion for just about everything growing on the  ground or visible  in the sky. We also visited my brother, a disabled veteran then living in a nursing home. Karl's outgoing, cheerful nature was steadfast with my brother as it was with strangers; I never doubted   the  genuineness of his persona and never saw it overshadowed by a bipolar symptom or any  of his many medications. When one day we were again at that favorite  pond of his and  he was being lulled into serenity by the sun-dappled ripples, I suddenly  understood the severity of his ADD and  manic-depressive disorder and why he kept returning to this pond;  it was the glint of sunlight upon the rhythmic patterns of ripples !  They afforded Karl a precious moment to stay focused  on  something beautiful,  to elude all those senseless distractions that  hourly altered his mind and vision, all that kept him from becoming a friend to himself.  
***
              A year   passed. Karl was frequently telephoning me, taking long moments to repeat phrases and to ramble on with trivia. The rambling and repetitions  were the building block he needed to reach that which Karl really wanted  to say. Sometimes my fortitude waned and I would at last  loudly interrupt and make a summary conclusion for him. He didn't mind my brashness;  the fact that someone—other than the young  counselor he met at his  weekly county-sponsored  recovery group—was willing to actively listen  to him was golden for Karl.  My friend  saw much of his world in  jigsaw pieces  which he was constantly  having to make fit.  Karl's  anguish  was not altogether dissimilar from that experienced by the  schizophrenic who sees reality with  frightening distortions.
             On a few occasions I would exhort Karl to make sure that despite all his health issues, his simple, job-free  life and frequent visits to Jill's house to watch television and walk her dog to the forest preserve  was not a deceiving  comfort zone in which he was a virtual prisoner and  from which he had no intention of leaving. Hesitatingly I once asked him,  "Karl, have you done everything to get healed from all you afflictions and are you sure you really want to be healthy again?"  He assured me that nothing more could be done for him other than taking his meds,  seeing his counselor, and going to church and Bible class.   
             Karl  had been waiting two months for dentures; years of grinding his front teeth had also injured  his lower jaw. For the required surgery and multiple dentist visits,   Karl had had to negotiate a discounted time payment plan with the dentist. He missed a payment or two and each time  had to plead his case to the dentist.  (Karl and his sister had mutually  agreed that she was to  receive  her brother's monthly Medicare  check and deposit it, when she thought  necessary,  in Karl's bank account. "This was a precaution against a manic spending urge of mine," Karl once joked. He often used humor to be ruthlessly honest about himself.)
             A week after Karl got his dentures,  he took them out of his mouth and proudly  waved them at me. That same day he  and I were visiting my brother  when  my friend again  showed a  tender heart. He greeted several nursing home  residents, including the demented, with  typical, outgoing  cheerfulness; upon my brother, Karl poured out humor and a prayer to conclude our visit. On the drive home, we stopped at a fast-food place,  had lunch, and were down the road 12 miles when Karl shouted, "My teeth ! I lost them!"
             I pulled over to calm  Karl, now frantically searching his clothes and car seat. Believing Karl had left the dentures on his tray when he trashed it (his gums were still too tender to chew solid food), I telephoned the eatery and pleaded with the manager to promptly  search all  trash buckets there. I waited while the manager searched,  and when he called back and said the dentures were not to be  found,  Karl openly wept.
          "Let's go home, Karl ," I said . "You'll get another pair from Medicare."
          "I can't !" Karl cried . "They will only pay for one pair!" 
           Karl became inconsolable.  
                 We had been back on the road for ten minutes when Karl began patting  his shirt pockets  for the third time. "I got 'em , Bob !" A moment to celebrate.
***
             If there was any  warning or  foreshadowing of  the rock bottom to which Karl was about to descend, neither one of us saw it .
              As customary, when I didn't hear from Karl in more than five days, I telephoned. He answered,  voice subdued. "I had an accident on my bike again, Bob. I was rushing to make a doctor's appointment, put on the brakes  They failed at the intersection. Dumb driver paid no attention to my bike. My brakes failed."
            Karl had flown over the handle bars, breaking two ribs and  aggravating both   his  old , spinal  compression fracture and the partially  un-mended   collar bone he broke  when his bicycle skidded out of control at an icy  railroad crossing last winter.  He was wearing a truss  over his midsection when I picked him up a few days later and  still in pain. "I was going 20 miles an hour. When I got to the doctor,  he actually  yelled at me , 'What, again ?!'   I could have been paralyzed, you know, Bob."
          Karl, however, had something to be cheerful about.
         "I have new freedom. I love Jill, but she was too much. She's had another breakdown and she's staying with her sister now and so I'm free."
I exhorted Karl to use his new freedom to best advantage.
           Karl moved a few miles away to a two-floor, rundown home, only to  discover  that the landlady and her adult son were cocaine addicts. On the Karl's third day there, the family  dog bit  him, and a week later, the police raided the home but did not find enough evidence for an arrest. "I welcomed them into my room but they just took one  look and turned the other way."  We  both laughed  heartedly, especially me as I imagined Karl with his  bipolar effusion  waving the police into a room that defied even them to make a thorough search.  
              Before that week was over, Karl had left  me a voicemail about "something serious " that  had occurred and would I please come over.
              Karl met me at curbside. "She promised me that her son would never get drunk again."  He related  how the landlady's  drunken son had invited him into his room to introduce Karl to his girlfriend, who was sitting on the bed. Karl, hugger that he was, placed a  friendly and innocent arm around the girl. It  ignited violence in her boyfriend , who charged at Karl and began choking him. "I was losing my breath," Karl said, and explained how  he  broke free and, an hour later, oh-so-unwisely returned to the room to apologize to the  girl for his "inappropriate"  behavior.  (Karl was one of many humans who reflexively say "I'm  sorry" at the sight or sound of anything even vaguely disturbing to them.) e had  Hed      H He had gingerly put one foot in the doorway when the girl opened it, then immediately  slammed it with all her might on Karl's face.  Now fearing for his life, Karl called police.  When they and the paramedics arrived to treat his swollen face and bruised neck,  a detective asked Karl if he wanted to press charges, Karl replied,  "No, he needs rehab not jail."   The detective  who knew of  the previous raid on the house, just shook his head in disbelief  at Karl's show of mercy. 
            I insisted that Karl move.
            " Where?" 
            "Any place— but move today !"
             Karl bowed his head with an expression of hopelessness. "I saw a homeless person this morning… "He voice trailed  off and I believe he was fearing it would only be a matter of days   before  tenants at another place  would once more  find his appearance, his behavioral quirks  intolerable and, with their hostile stares, force him out to the street.
               Together we prayed. 
              Again I lost touch with Karl, who hadn't  returned my calls for two weeks. Though I believed  in God's promise that He never burdens us with more than we can handle, I feared that Karl had run out of Christian fortitude.  I asked: Had not the entire multi-fractured world he had endured year after year, putting  hope, faith, and love to an extreme  test each day— had it not fractured beyond human repair?  I can only imagine the spiritual warfare in which Karl was being engaged day and night, standing fast against  a murderous, ever -deceiving  foe  we identify as Satan.   
***
             Karl didn't take my advice to move. But God's grace  apparently did move.   There were no more incidents in Karl's house. Then,  not much later, on July 10,  2011,  Karl and I were having a  pork steak dinner at a county  fair outside Milwaukee.  He had just spent a week as a volunteer  helping  handicapped  adults at a church camp , working side by side with its chaplain.  I had never seen him so naturally energized, eyes sparkling, speech confident. Here was a new man,  full of hope.
            As he told me of his five days of  helping challenged adults with their camp  activities,  of participating in prayer groups and bonding with two camp counselors, I sensed  my friend had been rescued from  dangling an inch from rock bottom.  He now obviously had a love affair with the camp  people he helped. I reflected on the irony of how Karl had, due to a terribly  wounded mind and body, lost his skills  as a salesman but now had gained  far more precious skills: those  of communicating  in  the uncommon,  self-giving  language of love.  
             "You may have found your ministry in life," I told him  with as much enthusiasm as Karl himself was exhibiting  under our food  tent crowded with fair-goers.  
                He smiled  widely at my  remark and began singing  the refrain of a campfire song he had learned at a sing-along with the camp's  100 guest children:  "I'd rather be a sheep..."  People turned, and  Karl nodded at them.
              "Now, when I'm on the pity pot," he said as if sermonizing to the world,  "I think about those challenged people and, wow, I look at their attitude and how much they're enjoying life ! It's brought me closer to Jesus and what His resurrection means for me."
               I sheepishly averted my eyes from all the farm families sitting nearby, but  couldn't resist teasing Karl. " But, are you still a sinner?" 
             "Absolutely."
             "Did you ever consider it amazing that you're still alive ?"
            "Most definitely. I never wanted to plan anything because I didn't think I would live this long.  But now, I'm in a new chapter of life !"
             "Okay, guy," I said.  "What do you want scribbled  on your tombstone?"
             "I want it to say, 'At Least He Tried."
Maybe the Cistercian monk Dom Boylan  proposed a more fitting epitaph with:
"Let us gladly glory in our infirmities, that the power of Christ may dwell in us."
THE END
© 2011  Robert R. Schwarz


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