Friday, October 9, 2015

How to Care for the Sick in the Firth Family


My mother, Kathryn Ellison Firth was a very good nursemaid when I didn't feel well. She was willing to make special favorite foods, organize activities to keep me distracted, and spend extra time with me which was hard with her busy schedule of caring for six children and serving in various church callings. She really made the myriad of childhood illnesses; mumps, measles, chicken pox, etc. pass through each of us as pleasantly as possible. When the illness or accident became overwhelming, my mother used Grandma Mattie Firth as her back up. I have a very special memory of a time when I had been sick for several days but woke up one night with a terrible earache. My mother tried desperately to calm me down and comfort me while my dad tried to get hold of the doctor, but I was inconsolable. Within a short time I realized I could hear my grandmother's voice directing my dad to gather some items for her and then she was at my side with a large, thick, dark book. She asked me to put my head in her lap while she read from the "doctor book." I muffled my sobs because I loved listening to my grandma read, but this wasn't the type of story I was used to. She told me the book had been her mother's and they had used it many times over the years to help them in emergencies. I don't remember what she read but she soon laid a heated towel against my head while my mom held my hand. Grandma quietly told me that I had a strep infection but she and my mother would be there with me until we could get to the doctor's office. She then started telling me stories about teaching school and the students she had known. I don't remember if they gave me any medicine but the feeling of warmth of the towel and the comfort of two strong and loving women next to me is still as fresh in my mind as if it happened yesterday. I eventually fell asleep. Now that I have had my own children and grandchildren I realize that these wise women learned their comforting the sick skills from experiences they had watching wise women in their lives, and by direction of the Spirit. When I have experienced hard times, I have thought about that night and imagined those wonderful women were at my side. For a while I was worried I wouldn't have the strength or ability to be a good caregiver because of my weak stomach, but I trusted the words of my patriarchal blessing "... We bless you because of the cheerfulness of your spirit that the Lord will give to you, different than the Priesthood, but still the Gift of Healing." My own children and grandchildren did not suffer from the same childhood diseases because of advances in medicine but I have been through 4 very active and fearless children who did have their share of illness and accidents. My mother was always my backup and I always had her strength and skills to get through those scary times. I bought my own doctor book because as an adult I realized that my grandma's doctor book was published in the 19th century and practices had changed. My children knew I was serious about getting them better when I brought it out. It was time to take grandkids to get flu shots yesterday, and my daughter asked if I could come to help with crowd control and comfort. It occurred to me we were continuing the cycle of preparing a new generation of mother's and grandmother's to be great nursemaids in their own families when I asked my granddaughters to hold my hand while I got My shot. 

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