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Subject: Sand Dollar: A Silent Prayer - January06, 2004



                         A Silent Prayer

    In February of 1995, my mother-in-law went to the throat clinic, at
    Scott & White Hospital in Temple, Texas, where she was diagnosed with
    throat cancer.

    The only solution that Doctors offered was chemo radiation treatment.
    So, in March of 1995, she began her long treatment.  She would take the
    treatment every day for several weeks, then three times a week.
    Finally, she would go once a week.  About five months later, the
    doctors told her to come once a month.

    I was on the road, driving a big rig.  So, I called my wife, at the
    hospital, every day, to see how my mother-in-law was doing with her
    treatments.

    One day, when I called, my wife told me that her mother was just about
    ready to give up hope for any recovery.  My mother-in-law kept asking,
    ???Why has God deserted me????

    Several days later, I called my wife, again.  I told her to take down
    this prayer that somehow was given to me, to give to her mother.

    "Somewhere, somebody is praying a silent prayer
    For reasons we do not know.
    Sometimes, one person??™s silent prayer is heard
    Louder than a congregation praying together.
    As they are praying for reasons of their own.
 
    Sometimes, one person??™s silent prayer is answered,
    But not entirely fulfilled.  He has His reasons.
    Keep up your silent prayer,
    'Cause it just might be yours that He answers."

    P.S.  Mine was
 

    About fifteen months after she began her treatment, the Doctors told my
    mother-in-law she did not need to come back anymore.  For some reason,
    the throat cancer was gone.

    I guess my mother-in-law realized that God had not deserted her, nor
    she in Him.  She had just lost faith in herself.

    After nine years of being a recovered cancer patient, she had fought
    for as long as she could.  She was tired all the time, just wanting to
    stay in her recliner day and night.  She was in and out of the hospital,
    in her home town ... kept having water in her lungs.

    My mother had passed away in April of 2003.  So, I decided to move my
    wife back home to be with her mother.

    In August of 2003, my mother-in-law passed away; not from cancer, but
    exhaustion from fighting to stay healthy.  Between 12 Am and 12:45 Am,
    God came and told her that her fighting was over.  It was time that she
    went home, as she needed a good night's rest.

    She had gone into a coma, and the Doctor said it was doubtful that she
    would regain consciousness.

    We know that she did not want to be on life support the rest of her
    life.  So, we had her taken off the life support and we were at her
    side when she took her last breath on this earth.

    Several months passed.  Then, one day, my wife was looking in her
    mother??™s purse and, inside a zipper compartment, she found the poem
    above that I had written for her.  For nine years, she carried that
    poem in her purse.

    So, I know that my mother-in-law had never lost her trust in God.  She
    just misplaced her trust in herself, to let God be in charge for a
    change.
   
    ?© 2003 by Robert H. Gilbert, Jr.  
    RGBLUEBOY @ aol.com
    http://www.geocities.com/rgblueboy/StoryPoetryPage.html


<< December31, 2003 - Sand Dollar: Nothing to Worry About January07, 2004 - Sand Dollar: A Mother's Love, Margo Fallis >>
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