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When God Lets Us Down
by Terence Byrne '57, '58M.A.
"Don't turn away from him! He's your son."
Sarah had spoken sharply, in an anguished tone. We were in a hospital,
and I was cradling our 2-week old son Patrick in my arms. He had begun
to have another grand mal seizure. Nothing could mitigate it. Feeling
squeamish, I had looked away. Now I turned back toward Patrick and kept
my eyes on him as the seizure ran its course.
Sarah's words had penetrated to my soul and etched themselves there.
Before long, several more phrases related to Patrick would mark themselves
indelibly on my soul.
Sarah and I had been married a scant year when Patrick was born. We
had expectations typical of a young couple bringing forth their first
child. This boy or girl would be bright, beautiful and athletic -- a potential
leader. He or she would be the first of several talented children.
When the time arrived for Patrick's birth, Sarah's labor lasted all
night. Her obstetrician finally delivered the baby by cesarean section.
A smiling nurse brought him to me in the waiting room. He was a big boy,
very big for a small mother. The crown of his head was depressed in front,
apparently pushed in during labor. I smiled and said, "Open your eyes,
lad." He opened his eyes immediately. A moment later, the nurse whisked
him away.
I went to a telephone to call our parents. I was overcome with relief
and joy, and my voice was wavering. I told them that the new mother and
child seemed to be all right, and that the boy's name would be Patrick.
When I stepped out of the telephone booth, our pediatrician approached
me. He said that the obstetrician had summoned him because Patrick had
had a grand mal seizure in the delivery room. He told me he was prescribing
phenobarbital, and that he would have to experiment with the dosage. Patrick
might need to stay in the hospital a few days longer than his mother.
We were allowed to take our child home a week later, still on medication.
At our house he had repeated bouts of seizures. His medicines proved ineffective.
We had to hospitalize Patrick for observation and adjustment of his medication.
Patrick had been born with brain damage, and he was to spend most of
the next two months in hospitals. During that time, his pediatrician tried
different combinations of drugs to suppress the epileptic seizures. The
seizures only continued. Doctors performed various tests to determine
the extent of Patrick's injury. Our hopes rose with the approach of each
one, only to be dashed when every result either confirmed the worst possibility
or was inconclusive. We came gradually to accept that Patrick would have
some degree of mental retardation. Whether he ever would speak was unknown.
He would have limited use of his left arm and leg. Prospects for controlling
his seizures were uncertain.
As the summer wore on, bills poured in from hospitals and doctors. From
time to time, I would take a handful of them to the health insurance clerk
at my office. This woman was close to retirement age, and she usually
processed bills brusquely. But she was Irish, and she picked up on the
name Patrick. When I came in, she would sort through my bills and say,
"Little Patrick, God love him." Then one day as I was rising to leave
her desk, she looked at me through her thick glasses and caught me off
guard with a question.
"He's going to be all right, isn't he?"
I turned away and stammered, "We . . . we don't know yet." I couldn't
bring myself to say, "No, he won't be." And I didn't want this well-meaning
woman to see the tears that were welling up.
By the end of that long summer it was clear that Patrick's pediatrician
was in over his head. He had consulted several specialists during the
period of testing, but he had kept control of the case. It was high time
to transfer that control.
Sarah and I made an appointment with a highly regarded neurologist.
We were desperate for the smallest morsel of good news when we took Patrick
in for his initial work-up. If any doctor in the city could help our baby,
surely this was the one. We stood by anxiously as he made his preliminary
examination. He worked in silence for several moments. Finally, he spoke.
"Our job is to salvage what's left."
Those grim words confirmed what I had known deep down. We could only
hope and pray for something less bad than the very worst. The neurologist
would try to prevent Patrick's condition from deteriorating. He would
try to stop the seizures. Neither he nor anyone else could "make Patrick
better."
The neurologist found drugs that reduced Patrick's seizures to a dozen
or two a week. The number varied. When flare-ups occurred, the doctor
would try a different drug or an increased dosage. Patrick's progress
in the things that normal babies do was excruciatingly slow. For months
he slumped in his high chair like a sack of flour. He was well over a
year old when he learned to drag himself forward and turn himself over
using his one serviceable arm and hand. At age 3, he still couldn't walk
because of the spasticity in his left leg.
One weekend we went to visit Sarah's parents in another city, and we
took Patrick to Sunday Mass. The day was sunny and mild. When Mass let
out, a policeman was directing traffic outside the church. He was smiling
and bantering with the people crossing his intersection. I was carrying
our 3-year-old son. Patrick was a beautiful child, with blond hair and
blue-green eyes under long lashes. As we crossed the street, the policeman
looked at him and chuckled. Then he spoke good-naturedly.
"That boy's too big to be carried."
My heart sank. I tried to smile. I couldn't answer.
Patrick was 3 1/2 when he learned to walk. He walked slowly and unsteadily.
He limped badly. He fell frequently. But he did walk. That is, he walked
for a couple of months. Then his seizures became almost continuous. We
took Patrick to the hospital on Mother's Day. A civil rights demonstration
was blocking access to the hospital, and we had to get a police escort
to pass through. Our son was to remain in the hospital for five weeks.
During most of that time, he was unable to eat regularly because of his
frequent seizures. Patrick had lost a third of his weight by the time
doctors performed brain surgery to reduce the seizures.
Patrick still was having several seizures a day when he was released
from the hospital. Sometimes he had more than several. He would be 4 1/2
years old before he gathered enough strength to walk again. One day that
autumn I came home from work and parked my car in the driveway as usual.
The weather was warm, and Patrick was watching me through the screen door
of the house. Unable to stand upright, he was kneeling. A boy Patrick's
age, who lived next door, was on our front step talking to Patrick. As
I approached the door, this boy looked up at me.
"Mr. Byrne, why can't your little boy run and play?"
I managed to tell him in simple terms about Patrick's brain injury,
and the boy went home frowning. His question made me wonder once again
why God lets terrible things happen to innocent people. I mulled over
what I had been told in theology class about an imperfect universe. The
classroom explanation had been easier to accept when I was in college.
It was years later when a friend, a man who was Jewish by heritage and
not apparently devout, asked me whether my religious faith had helped
me get through Patrick's first months and years. I told him that I had
prayed fervently throughout that period. I had asked God to help Patrick
recover from his injuries and to enable the doctors to bring the epileptic
seizures under control. I admitted that I had even asked God to let Patrick
die a quick and painless death rather than survive gravely handicapped
and wracked by seizures. "In the end," I said, "not one of my prayers
was answered."
I thought for a moment, then added, "Yet my faith somehow gave me strength
to help care for Patrick, deal with his chronic problems, get through
his occasional crises and address other challenges in my life." My friend
responded firmly:
"That is how your prayers were answered."
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Terence Byrne is retired from the U.S. Department of State. Patrick,
now an adult, lives an active life in a neighborhood residential facility.
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