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Ask for What You Want
Paul's 84-year-old father was tired of living. He was down from 155 "Nothing we can do," said the medical staff. They declared him terminal and sent him back to die at the nursing home.
Paul flew to New England to say goodbye to his father. He pushed "What is it that you need?" he asked.
And he found out what his dad wanted. He wanted to feel that he had "Ask for what you want," Paul coached him.
Paul brought pens and magic markers and index cards and paper and "Come smiling," the signs said. "If you love someone, let them be who they are, not who you think they should be." "Stop and listen." "Ask for what you want. Accept it when it arrives." "Don't ask for what you don't want." "Be here. Be clear." These signs meant life to a man who had given up. Paul's dad wasn't eating. "That's OK," Paul said.
He brought in bags of groceries -- bowls of fruit and chunks of cheese
and barbecued chickens and gallons of juice ? and picnicked enthusiastically
in Paul's dad began to look forward to the rest of his life and two weeks later they took him off the critical list. "Resurrection," the nursing home staff said, "it's a miracle." They didn't acknowledge the power of Paul's presence, his willingness to listen, his love for his dad. They didn't know why a tired old man would decide to live a bit longer. "Touched by an angel," they told each other. But I was there, and I watched the miracle happen. I saw the bright flame that lit up the cold grey darkness of that New England nursing home. And I know who the angel" was. It was Paul.
~ by Amy Racina of Healdsburg, California
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