Beep. Beep.
Beep. The sound of the heart
rate monitor lures me out of my sleep. The
blood pressure cuff on my left arm squeezes uncomfortably in my dazed
state. Out of the corner of my eye I see
the shadow of a man, slumped over in a chair.
I let out a quiet sigh as I try to turn to my other side. I see his eyelids flutter open and focus on
me. His voice calms me, reassuring me
that everything will be okay. I fall
asleep again knowing that he is right by my side.
I wake to
the noise of quiet voices. The surgeon
from last night is apologizing, in broken English, for being rude. My dad doesn’t blame him. He knows why the doctors want to take me in
to surgery. They say I have a Grade II
laceration in my spleen. I don’t know
what that means. All I know is that I am
to stay in the hospital bed as much as possible. My mom and my sister walk in with concerns
masked with smiles. I can tell that they
have just eaten; my sister has breadcrumbs on her shirt. I’m not allowed to eat yet. When my sister, Allison, sits next to me, we
start to play games on my mom’s iPad.
It’s on silent so I don’t disturb the other patients in the massive
hospital room but in the background, behind my sister’s voice, I can hear the
voices that belong to the characters in Captain America. The scenes are playing out in my head as I
hear “The first of many. Cut off one
head…two more shall take its place.”
This entertains my sister and me for too long. Shortly after we’ve taken on this challenge,
a nurse comes to draw more of my blood.
This is the ninth time in the past thirty-six hours. It pinches at first, as usual, but the pain
subsides quickly. While she does this,
my dad explains what is going on. He
tells me that when I fell off my mountain bike, I ruptured my spleen. When we arrived in the emergency room a few
days earlier, the surgeons wanted to remove my spleen. My dad disagreed wholeheartedly. He promised the surgeons that I didn’t need
surgery and he was going to prove it by monitoring me constantly. As I listen to him tell the story, I realize
that my dad gave up his sleep so he could make sure he was justified in his
actions. As it turns out, I don’t need
surgery. Later on in the afternoon,
after the Captain America movie finished up, my dad arranges flight
transportation to take me to a hospital in Germany tomorrow afternoon. I am excited to get out of this Croatian
hospital but I realize that I am still very lucky to be in the situation I am
in, compared to the other kids who shared the room with me. I try to fall asleep but every time I get
close, the blood pressure cuff squeezes my arm and brings me back into
reality. I just want the pain in my side
to go away, but sleep is not that kind to me.
My dad knows I can’t sleep, so he begins to tell me stories about how
different parts of the body function, like white blood cells or the muscular
system. His stories distract me enough
to ignore the band around my arm and I slowly drift off to sleep.
My dad is the hero of this story. He stood up for me and for what he believed
in one hundred percent of the way. He
did this despite the general surgeons that told him he was wrong and was making
a mistake. His actions are a huge
reminder to me that there are so many good people in the world who are willing
to stand up for themselves even when the rest of society is pushing their
beliefs down.
There are different types of heroes
but they all have at least one thing is common: they know what is right or
wrong and they fight for it, even when the rest of society tells them that what
they believe is misguided or different.
Heroes have a significant part in
culture because they can be ordinary people with extraordinary characters. Heroes have existed throughout history and
literature. One of the most obvious
examples of this heroism is Beowulf.
Beowulf at first wants fame, but as he grows older, he learns that he
needs to raise up against the monsters to protect his people. He risked his life to save the lives of
others he knew were more valuable. That
to me is amazing, to realize that anyone has the ability to change the world by
accepting that another’s life is more important than his own. A similar idea was put into action by the many
people who risked their lives and their families to protect a complete stranger
in World War II. They risked everything
they had to stand up for their belief that everyone is equal, that there is no
supreme race. I feel that these
sacrifices are even harder to make when there is something to lose, like a
family. But because these people made
such great sacrifices, they became heroes, especially to the people they
saved. There are so many people and so
many characters that are willing to risk everything.
That passenger was the only passenger to die from drowning in that crash. His selflessness emphasizes the people in the world with strong characters. They are able to face danger, and even death, and stand up against it and they won’t go down without a fight. This selflessness and this strength reminds me of the words of William Ernest Henley’s “Invictus”:
Out of the night that covers me,
Black as the Pit from pole to pole,
I thank whatever gods may be
For my unconquerable soul.
In the fell clutch of circumstance
I have not winced nor cried aloud.
Under the bludgeonings of chance
My head is bloody but unbowed.
Beyond this place of wrath and tears
Looms but the Horror of the shade,
And yet the menace of the years
Finds, and shall find, me unafraid.
It matters not how strait the gate,
How charged with punishments the scroll.
I am the master of my fate:
I am the captain of my soul.
Henley
describes how people control their fate, we can choose to watch from the
sidelines or we can choose to stand up and fight for what is right. I consider this action as one of the many definitions of a hero.
My dad’s actions were small in
comparison to others’, like the people who helped Jews during the Holocaust or
the Man in the Water, but they left a huge impact on me. Which brings me to the question, how do these
people, these heroes, think for themselves in a society where others tell them
what to believe? How are they able to
put aside all their differences and risk everything they have for another
person, sometimes a complete stranger?
Great posting!! You might want to simplify your question--choose one or the other.
ReplyDelete