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Six Months to Live and Laugh
© Dorothy G. Hensley
This is the day I learned that my life is coming to an end, and that's all right.
Eighty-eight years is more than most people get.
My daughter and I sat in Dr. Barbara's office. "I have done everything I can for you,"
she said, kindness in her voice. "Would you like me to contact hospice?" Surprised, I
didn't know how to react. The doctor was looking into my eyes, waiting for a sign of
understanding. "They can take care of your needs, enabling you to stay home." She paused,
and then said, "Do you know about hospice?"
I said, "Yes, I had hospice when Mia's dad died." I was remembering the flurry of
activity, almost eight years ago, when a registered nurse and two aides arrived
at our home, along with a delivery of a hospital bed, bedside potty, a wheelchair,
and a walker. In no time at all the bed was standing and made up in the living room,
the potty was hidden behind a screen, the wheelchair was out of the line of traffic,
and the walker was folded and leaned against a wall. Yes, I was acquainted with hospice.

Mia spoke, "Are you telling me my mother has six months to live?"
The doctor transferred her attention to Mia. "No. We don't say
that now." She looked back at me, "You may live months or a year..." I
sensed hesitation in her demeanor. I stood, ready to leave; I needed to
go home and talk this over with God.
However, before I could go home, I had to keep an appointment made last
week with a beautician, a stranger, since retirement had claimed the
operator I was in the habit of using. Maybe the hair-do would give me a
lift. Yet I felt a strong need to talk about what I thought of as my new
status. Until I was better acquainted with it myself, I didn't want to
discuss the obvious change in my relationship with Mia; she needed time, too.

Back in the car an unfamiliar silence lay between us. By the time Mia
stopped the car to let me out at the beauty shop, I knew what I was going
to do. Suddenly I was glad I didn't know the hairdresser.
Her name was Melody. After introductions, I was seated in an adjustable
chair, leaned back against a sink, and felt water and shampoo fingered
onto my scalp. Then, before I could change my mind, I said, "I've just
been told that I'm going to die." Her fingers stilled immediately. She
said nothing for a moment, so I added, "I'll have to call in hospice."
Then I sat quietly, waiting. When her fingers started working again, I felt
the muscles in my neck become tense. What was she going to say?
"Hospice, huh? You're telling me you've got six months to live?"
I opened my mouth to speak but didn't have time before she continued.
"You can't have six months. That's mine. You can have three months or
five or nine, but you can't have six."
For the second time that day, I was too surprised to speak. She finished
rinsing my hair and pushed a knob on the chair that allowed me to sit up - and
just kept talking... I began to laugh.

"I get lots of free lunches out of that six-month prognosis. My kids treat
me great too. The other day my granddaughter said, 'Don't say that, Grandma.
It might be bad luck.' I said, 'Well, someday it's going to be true. Then won't
you be glad you were nice to me all those years?" I was laughing out loud now,
and it felt wonderful.
"I tell anybody who needs to know," she added. "One day I parked in a
hard-to-find-space, and a woman in a Mercedes stopped behind my car as
I got out. She yelled at me, 'I've been waiting to park there. I had to
turn around first.' The teenage boy sitting in the passenger seat looked
embarrassed - as well he should. I told her, 'You want this parking place?
Okay. You can have it. I've got six months to live, so a parking place is
the least of my worries. I'll just get in my car and pull out. You can have
it.' The teenager said, 'M-o-m-m-m?' and the lady left without further chatter.
It comes in handy, you know?" I continued to laugh.

Only God has the wisdom and the knowledge to choreograph that particular
afternoon in my life, with all the right people in all the right places
at the right time. As I got ready to go home, I faced the back of the shop
where Melody was shampooing her next client and talking a mile a minute.
Smiling, I said in my head, "Thank you, God."
On occasion, when I sense a dark mood hovering around, waiting to pounce,
I think of Melody and laugh. Oh, I'm still going to die, but I won't die
in six months. I wouldn't dare!

NOTE: Dorothy G. Hensley, age 89, is in the final months of her battle with
congestive heart disease. The, Dream Foundation whose mission it is to grant
terminally ill adults one final wish, worked to honor Dorothy's dream of being a published writer.
This story is: Reprinted with permission from Beliefnet.Com.
MORE ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Dorothy G. Hensley has said of writing that she felt "almost overpowered with a
passion as strong as hunger, as demanding as birth." Dorothy did not complete high
school and never believed she had the talent to be a writer; but she has written
all her life. Her daughter remembers her mother getting up very early in the morning
so she could write at the kitchen table while the house was quiet.
When Dorothy was in her 40's, she went to a junior college to learn to be a
better writer, despite lack of support from her husband and ridicule from
classmates 25 years her junior. Three years ago, at the urging of her daughter,
Dorothy began taking a memoir-writing class. It was in those classes that her
instructors and classmates acknowledged her as a talented writer, and she began to believe it.
Dorothy has written many stories about her family and experiences while growing up.
It is her dream to see her passion of writing in print - to be recognized as a writer
of promise before she dies. She is currently in hospice care.
The Dream Foundation , www.dreamfoundation.org, is the first national organization
in the U.S. founded to bestow a final wish on adults. Dream spokesperson Eve Lechner
wrote, "Our dreams focus on providing resolution, a sense of completion and fulfillment.
We cannot provide a cure for our dreamers, but we can dramatically impact the quality
of their fragile lives with the joy experienced from a dream come true."
If you would like to contact Dorothy and let her know how her story touched you, please email Eve here.

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