It's so simple to be wise.  Just think of something stupid to say, and then don't say it.     Sam Levenson (1911-1980)

Monday, December 8, 2008

"Maybe I Should Write About It..."

I know, we're not supposed to have favorites.  Or at least, we're not supposed to show them.

But I won't lie to myself, or to you.  I have favorite patients.   And they're not necessarily the sweetest ones, or the friendliest ones, or the ones that always draw a crowd of staff members and volunteers, because they're so darn cute.

OK, I like those patients, too.  I love them, really.  But they aren't my favorites.

My favorite patients are the ones who tell their stories, share their lives, plunge the depths, with an authenticity that astounds.  It expresses itself, often as not, through a mighty silence, a reclaiming of their lives via quiet refusal, or restrained acknowledgement.

T is nineteen years old.  He was meant to have graduated high school last year with a diploma and a qualifying certificate in electronics, but he didn't make it back to school to finish his senior year.  

Meanwhile his hair has grown back, springy dark corkscrews that he still feels a need to hide under a baseball cap.   During last week's visit he was short on patience, fasting before a procedure, so our conversation was brief and centered around Spanish football teams.

This morning, though, T is feeling much better, sitting in Outpatient waiting for his regular check-up, and --surprise -- he wants to talk.   I ask him about the Sidge festival two weeks ago, a holy day for Ethiopian Jews, during which they celebrate aliyah and gather to pray for all Jews to return to the Holy Land.   T claims not to know too much about it, then changes his approach.  

What kind of respect do you think olim deserve? he asks me.  Point blank.  Immigrant to immigrant.   No beating around the bush, and no whitewashing.  

I think immigrants like me, from the United States, get a lot more respect than immigrants like you, from Ethiopia.  

He responds by giving me one of his fantastic smiles that announces:  At last, the truth comes out!  We discuss the discrepancies, the race-based unfairnesses.  We don't get into too much detail, since T is the type that likes to hint at things before laying his trust on the line.  With him, you gotta earn it, over and over.

You know, when we get here, they don't even recognize our university degrees.   No, I did not know that.  I also had no idea that T attended school for the first time only after moving, at age twelve, from his rural village to the far away city of Gondar.  He's telling me this, and I'm imagining a preteen, illiterate village boy falling like Dorothy into a foreign world whose very name sounds nearly Tolkien.  In Gondar T studied math and learned to speak a few basic words of English, though this barely helped him two months later when he arrived in Israel.  My mouth was already too old to learn to speak right, he explains, sticking his tongue out and demonstrating the difficulties he had, shaping that adolescent mouth into the words of yet another set of foreign sounds.

How many times can one kids move?  Multiple times, it turns out.  Once in Israel, he moved from an absorption center in the South to a development town in the Center, to a dormitory trade school along the West Coast, and then... leukemia.  Back down south for treatments. Recovery, and back to school.

Relapse.  

New hospital, new people, new living situation.  T recounts each step but leaves the details behind.

I'm sitting there, trying to follow all of this while keeping track of the number of times he moved in a span of six years.  So far I've counted seven.

Eight, he corrects me, and hints that there were more, prior to his family's move to Gondar. He pauses.  I've been thinking, maybe I should write a book, about all those moves.  

Pretty impressive idea for such a private person.  You'd be good at that, I tell him. Especially since you've been through things no one else has.  He faces me with that intense glance of his. What do you mean?   

He's not looking for me to tell him something new, of course.  He's testing me.  Not as a rebellious teenager, but as someone who has been through so much, he's almost given up believing that anyone else could get it. Especially a Western immigrant like me, with my light skin and state-recognized diplomas.

Well, you're different from most of the other people around here, I continue.  For one thing, you come from a different place, and you can't hide that.  Everyone sees it, right away.  

Now T is staring. What else? he says, waiting, so I continue.  

Beyond that, you've been through all of this.  You know what to expect -- the treatments, the tests, the pain, the complications.   You understand the threat hanging over your head, better than you ever did before.   I pause.  But there's one more thing, the most important thing of all.

He looks astounded, transfixed.  

You're different from other people.  Your personality is different.  You see the people around you;  you see a lot and you notice things.  But you don't jump to open your mouth and talk about it.  You keep your observations to yourself, until you know you can trust someone, and then --  maybe -- you share your thoughts with that person.

His expression says it all:  This revelation, this conversation, is the real thing.  This person might just get it, just a little... so maybe sharing one's inner thoughts and feelings is worth the occasional risk.  

(It's a risk for me, too, not having a direct way of understanding T's thought patterns until he --  or I -- voice them.  A serious misreading of his emotional and cognitive process would only have further isolated him by enforcing his belief that others cannot understand him).

Later on, I offer to help T start the writing process by typing into the computer as he narrate. He hesitates.  As with everything else, he wants to think about it first, on his own, and get back to me. 

We agree to discuss the option the next time we meet.  

Keep the balance,

ALN

2 comments:

Batya said...

He sounds amazingly intelligent.

Fantastic post

RivkA with a capital A said...

The holiday, which originated in Ethiopia, is called the Sigdt or Sig't (I could not find confirmation on line about how to write it) -- In Ethiopia, the Jews would gather on a particular mountain top, face Jerusalem, and pray for their return.