Gifts of Passage: What the Dying Tell Us with the Gifts They Leave Behind
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After suffering the loss of her father while writing her bestselling debut book, Amy Hollingsworth began to search for the meaning behind his dying moments. What she found was a simple truth at the heart of overcoming the deepest grief: the dying leave gifts. With deeply moving stories of how others discovered the gifts their loved ones left behind, this book will gently encourage you to anticipate and uncover your own.
Weaving together the warm intimacy of Mitch Albom's Tuesdays with Morrie and the straightforward honesty of Joan Didion's The Year of Magical Thinking, Amy Hollingsworth adds her hopeful voice to the literature of life and the life beyond. The result is a collection of stories that gives the reader myriad ways to identify their own pain and healing and is an intriguing journey for any and all readers fascinated by this brief overlap of heaven and earth.
From the bestselling author of The Simple Faith of Mister Rogers.
Amy Hollingsworth
Amy Hollingsworth is the author of the best-selling The Simple Faith of Mister Rogers and Gifts of Passage. Before writing books, Amy wrote for various magazines and was a television writer for eight years for CBN. In 2010, she was named one of USA Today’s Top 100 People for her influence on pop culture and was featured in the documentary by MTV’s Benjamin Wagner titled Mister Rogers & Me. Her television appearances include WGN’s Morning News, PBS’s A Word on Words, and Fox’s Morning News. A former psychology professor, Amy lives in Virginia with her husband and children.
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Gifts of Passage - Amy Hollingsworth
ENDORSEMENTS FOR Gifts of Passage
In this compelling book, Amy Hollingsworth’s remarkable gift with words unfolds a thesis that is both powerful and gentle: there are gifts left at the time of passage. The outcome is a wonderfully comforting perspective on life’s final transition.
—SQUIRE RUSHNELL, BESTSELLING AUTHOR OF When God Winks
Amy Hollingsworth has given us a wonderful gift in this book, enabling us to view death from a new and different perspective, which is a rare gift indeed. I can honestly say I have never thought about discerning the gifts that loved ones wanted to give us before their deaths, whether intentionally or unintentionally. Yet it makes perfect sense to me now, for they do want desperately to give us one last gift before they die. Hollingsworth uses stories, literature, dreams, and biblical examples to awaken in us the desire and even a sense of holy urgency to discover, understand, and cherish these gifts. It made me ponder my past losses in a new way. I received gifts I did not know were there. I cannot thank Amy enough.
—GERALD SITTSER, PROFESSOR OF THEOLOGY AT WHITWORTH UNIVERSITY AND BESTSELLING AUTHOR OF A Grace Disguised: How the Soul Grows Through Loss
Amy Hollingsworth’s writing is reminiscent of Henri Nouwen in its vulnerability.
—SEAN HERRIOTT, HOST OF NATIONAL CATHOLIC RADIO PROGRAM Morning Air
™
ON RELEVANT RADIO
®
"If you have lost someone in death, this profound book will give you peace—and insight! Amy Hollingsworth boldly shares her wounded heart, after the death of her father, in the writing style and poignant insight of C. S. Lewis. In the midst of grinding pain and tears, Amy gives hope, spiritual support, and optimistically encourages people to look for the gift that their loved one has left behind.
Amy was one of my encouragers as I walked through the pain of losing my wife to breast cancer. Amy writes from real life —she has been where you are! She is authentic, vulnerable, and radiates a warm connection with God.
—JIM CONWAY, PHD, PRESIDENT OF MID-LIFE DIMENSIONS, AN INTERNATIONAL COUNSELING AND CONFERENCE MINISTRY. AUTHOR OF Traits of a Lasting Marriage, When a Mate Wants Out, Men in Mid-life Crisis, AND Women in Mid-Life Crisis.
Title page with Thomas Nelson logo© 2008 by Amy Hollingsworth
All rights reserved. No portion of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—electronic, mechanical, photocopy, recording, scanning, or other—except for brief quotations in critical reviews or articles, without the prior written permission of the publisher.
Published in Nashville, Tennessee, by Thomas Nelson. Thomas Nelson is a registered trademark of Thomas Nelson, Inc.
Published in association with Yates & Yates, LLP, Attorneys and Counselors, Orange, California.
Thomas Nelson, Inc. titles may be purchased in bulk for educational, business, fund-raising, or sales promotional use. For information, please e-mail [email protected].
Unless otherwise noted, Scripture quotations are taken from the HOLY BIBLE: NEW INTERNATIONAL VERSION®. © 1973, 1978, 1984 by International Bible Society. Used by permission of Zondervan. All rights reserved.
Scripture quotations marked KJV are from the KING JAMES VERSION.
Scripture quotations marked NLT are from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation. © 1996. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Inc., Wheaton, Illinois 60189. All rights reserved.
Scripture quotations marked NASB are from the NEW AMERICAN STANDARD BIBLE®. © The Lockman Foundation 1960, 1962, 1963, 1968, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1975, 1977. Used by permission.
ISBN 978-0-8499-2955-7 (tp)
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Hollingsworth, Amy.
Gifts of passage : what the dying tell us with the gifts they leave behind / Amy Hollingsworth.
p. cm.
ISBN 978-0-8499-1920-6 (hc)
1. Grief—Religious aspects—Christianity. 2. Fathers—Death—Religious aspects— Christianity. 3. Hollingsworth, Amy. I. Title.
BV4905.3.H475 2008
248.8'66—dc22 2007047184
09 10 11 12 — 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Information about External Hyperlinks in this ebook
Please note that footnotes in this ebook may contain hyperlinks to external websites as part of bibliographic citations. These hyperlinks have not been activated by the publisher, who cannot verify the accuracy of these links beyond the date of publication.
This book is dedicated to my mother, Carmela Christin, in honor of and gratitude for many gifts, but especially for the glass-hearted necklace that still holds the love that brought me into the world.
I do love you.
CONTENTS
Acknowledgments
PART 1
1 Out of the Woods
GIFTS OF LOVE
2 The Fourth Love
3 Heaven’s Purse
GIFTS OF PRESENCE
4 The Gold Ring
5 The Last Thing
A GIFT FROM MY FATHER FIGURE
6 Pennies from Heaven
PART 2
GIFTS OF HONOR
7 A Home for Mary
8 Leaps of Faith
GIFTS OF INTRIGUE
9 When Sorrow Needs a Map
10 If Only for an Hour
A GIFT FROM MY FATHER
11 What the Good Son Gets
12 Back to the Woods
Epilogue
Notes
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
In Prince Caspian, the fourth installment in C. S. Lewis’s Chronicles of Narnia, the four Pevensie children have been rescued from the boarding schools of England by virtue of a magic horn, whose beckoning promptly delivers them back into Narnia. (The magic horn has replaced the wardrobe as their mode of transport, for as Aslan, the Great Lion, says, Things never happen the same way twice.
) They are traipsing through the woods with a dwarf named Trumpkin, trying to find Prince Caspian, the true heir to the Narnian throne. Lucy, the youngest Pevensie, spies Aslan off in the distance and can tell from the look on his face that he wants her to come to him. But the other Pevensie children don’t see him; therefore they don’t believe. A vote is taken, Lucy loses, and they continue their traipsing in the same direction. That night Lucy is awakened by Aslan’s voice calling her, and this time she goes to him. She quickly explains why she didn’t obey the first time—because she couldn’t convince the others—and instead of commiserating with her, Aslan emits the faintest suggestion of a growl.
He had expected her to come when he called, with or without the others. Lucy vows to go back and make things right.
Will the others see you too?
asks Lucy.
Certainly not at first,
says Aslan. Later on, it depends.
But they won’t believe me!
says Lucy.
It doesn’t matter,
says Aslan.
In Aslan’s growl was this message: Lucy knew what she had seen, knew what she had understood, and even if she couldn’t convince the others, she was to heed.
Of course she had a responsibility to try to convince the others, but as Aslan pointed out, it was not so much Lucy’s ability to convince as it was theirs to see. You can’t make people see.
My first acknowledgment goes to Jeana Ledbetter, who saw right away, perhaps before I did. Who understood that I had to follow the call of Aslan, and the call of this book, as a matter of personal obedience, whether or not others believed. That she saw right away says infinitely more about her than about me, and her insight, encouragement, and intuitive spirituality gave me the lion strength
necessary to write a book that sees gifts in death. A Narnian task, indeed.
To Joey Paul, who saw next, and with grace passed the baton to Greg Daniel, who with equal grace and encouragement passed it to Matt Baugher, who has been its faithful guardian ever since.
To Jennifer NcNeil, who safeguarded this book’s heart. And to Greg MacLachlan, who dared to give it its face.
To Ed and Jean Bennett, for inviting me into the deepest grief of their lives and letting me stay.
To Andrea Hill, for her careful listening and understanding.
To Bernard and Bonnie Hurley, who provided a refuge from the storm, the mountain cabin that opens and closes this book, when Hurricane Ophelia blew us out of the Outer Banks.
To Bret Lott, who encouraged me first at a distance through his writing, and then up close through his correspondence. I am indebted to you for a word aptly spoken.
To Rebecca Bach of Grace Church of Fredericksburg, who stood up and recited Isaiah 50:4 when I had challenged God to be more specific.
To Kelly Moermond, my father’s hospice nurse. If he was the Miracle Man, then you were the Miracle Worker.
To James and Cenia Hollingsworth, for both their visible and their invisible help.
And finally, to my strategic triad, my husband, Jeff; my son, Jonathan; and my daughter, Emily, for allowing this book to take up residence in our home and in me for the last year. A demanding visitor, it would never have ventured out on its own without your generous hospitality.
Chapter 1
OUT OF THE WOODS
I am sitting on the porch swing outside a mountain cabin, waiting for my dad to come out of the woods. Any minute I expect him to emerge from the thicket of trees that extends to my right, in his denim shirt and jeans and cowboy boots. He will probably be upset, cursing at the mess he has made trying to relieve himself in the wild. It would be payback for all the times he’d taken my sisters and me fishing as kids, only to hand us a roll of toilet paper and nod in the direction of the woods when we whined we had to go to the bathroom. Six girls, no boys, one dad. For a moment I can feel the corners of my mouth lift at the memory, then settle back into place when I look down at the small paperback in my lap, C. S. Lewis’s A Grief Observed. I have read the book once before, years ago, when my brother-in-law’s fiancée died unexpectedly. It helped me then, and I am hoping it will help me now.
How strangely stupid is grief. I have read that somewhere. It must have been written a long time ago, when stupid still meant to be in a stupor. To be struck senseless. Maybe initially grief does strike you senseless, but over time it does the opposite. It awakens the senses: you see, hear, feel, and smell the lost loved one everywhere. I look down at my book again, and as if to add its assent, it reads: We now verified for ourselves what so many bereaved people have reported; the ubiquitous presence of a dead man, as if he had ceased to meet us in particular places in order to meet us everywhere.
¹
Meet us everywhere.
My eyes shift back to the woods. It is a silly expectation. Dad has never gone on vacation with my family— my husband and kids and me—before. There is no precedent for his being at that cabin. It isn’t a real memory. It isn’t a real expectation. Part of the reason for this trip to the mountains is to reflect on his death exactly a year ago.
There is something still to be done, between my father and me, a year after his death. As he was dying, he left me a gift. And now, as I ease out of the grief that stupefies and into the grief that awakens the senses, I am ready to discover what his gift means.
THE GIFT
I first learned that the dying give gifts from the literature the hospice nurses gave me when Dad came under their care. Endof-life giving is so characteristic of the dying that it is listed as a sign of approaching death, sandwiched between symptoms such as restlessness and congestion. It’s part of the pattern, the orderly pattern of death.
This gift giving, the literature explains, is deliberate, and it most often occurs months before death, usually when the person discovers he has a terminal illness.
This was true of Dad. When he was first diagnosed with lung cancer, nine months before he died, he wanted me to have his Bible. He gave my son a telescope and his coveted piece of history, a souvenir from Omaha Beach in Normandy. My daughter got his animal almanac.
But these gifts were very different from Dad’s final gift, bestowed in the last moments of his life, when being deliberate was no longer an option. I had never been with someone who was dying, and the intense spirituality that surrounds death surprised me. Dad seemed to be slipping into eternity by degrees, not all at once. For a time he teetered between two worlds; you could almost measure it in percentages: 80–20 one day, 90–10 the next. It was during this transition—this easing into eternity—that his gift was given.
This, of course, wasn’t the mindful gift giving the hospice literature had described. I couldn’t find any resource that explained these types of gifts—gifts with an otherworldly dimension because they are given during this sacred window, this brief overlap of heaven and earth.
I thought about other significant events in life, events we call rites of passage, that are also marked by gift giving. But usually the persons undergoing the passage—the baby at her baptism, the young man at his bar mitzvah, the debutante at her coming-out party—are the recipients of the gifts, not the givers. But death is different. The dying also make a passage (we even say pass away
to describe their transition from one place to another, as if they were travelers), but they are the ones doing the giving.
That was the best way I knew to describe it; my father had given me a gift of passage, a gift that marked his passage.
Now I had something to call it, even if I didn’t yet know what it meant.
TWO LEGENDS
My kids remind me that there is an image similar to my idea of a gift of passage in one of our favorite books, Where the Red Fern Grows. It is a classic boy-and-his-dog story (in this case, two dogs) that ends like Sounder, Old Yeller, and others, with the death of the boy’s beloved pets.
At the end of the book, when Billy is leaving