June 25
Charlie received a letter from a colleague he had traveled with. When the group bringing medications returned to a village, they found most of the twenty some odd inhabitants dead or dying. They did what they could to try to ease the suffering and save those that weren’t too far gone. However, they arrived too late. They were only able to save two of the twenty. Eighteen were lost. It really wasn’t a village as much as a cemetery now.
I feel guilty for hijacking Charlie from these people. He’s so close to finding a solution. I watched as he finally resigned himself to moving their pictures from the right side of his board to the left. He took each picture, stared intently at the smiling face and then tacked it on the left side.
He left his office, quietly shutting the door and began preparing me tea and crackers. He shut the door on his dream, his promises and his friends. I called Allie; I couldn’t let him do it. I couldn’t let him do what I had done. I have to find a way for him to continue his work. I am not going to be the reason he had to quit.
Allie took Charlie aside. She had a list all of my treatment and doctors’ appointments. She had names by each appointment date and phone numbers. Some I knew and some I didn’t. She had organized volunteers, so that Charlie didn’t have to choose between me and his work. Of course Allie’s name appeared almost daily.
She told Charlie she didn’t want him getting sick trying to handle it all. That he needed a break too. He was already looking exhausted and stressed. She knew he wouldn’t ask, so she decided to help him out.
I insisted he go back to work on his project. People were depending on him. At first he seemed reluctant and then relieved.
When did Allie become someone who I could trust with sensitive issues? When did she start thinking beyond herself? Sometimes, given a challenge people rise to the occasion and even go beyond your expectations. Beyond what you or even they thought they were capable of. I’m glad Allie turned out to be one of those people.
Excellent installment of “Meet Me by the Gate” Deidra. This story pulls the Reader right into the scene right away. Good job!
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Loved the post…hope Charlie and you are feeling better.
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Thank you for your kind comment. This story is based on my experiences from a long time ago. Luckily this is in my past.
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Many caregivers forget they have to take care of themselves in order to take care of someone else. Easier said than done though. Hugs.
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Hi Mary. I appreciate the comment. Luckily this illness is in the past for me.
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We readers are glad Allie rose to the occasion.
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Hi John. I’m trying to make a shift in some of the characters. Thanks for the support. Dee
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You are doing a great job.
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Thank u for sharing your story
Its always great.
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Hi Sharnetha. Thanks for the lovely comment. Dee
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