Hope On Wheels

Epic accomplishments don’t preclude mundane daily necessities.

On the final day of the ride, after the celebrations and high-fives, we stopped at a small community hospital so I could use the accessible restroom. While Becky waited in the lobby, a group called her over and asked her to tell them about “Hope On Wheels.” Apparently they’d seen the trailer as we rolled into the parking lot.

So Becky told the story, and I approached in time for them to express admiration and astonishment. Then Becky’s phone rang and she stepped outside. They looked exhausted, and I asked what was happening.

This burly man and his two sisters came here eighteen days earlier when “Momma” suffered a stroke. After eighty-five strong, healthy years as matriarch, Momma lay incapacitated and weak. They wept as they verbalized the emerging reality that Momma might never be the same again.

They asked me to tell them about hope.

That’s the sort of situation in which platitudes and easy answers just don’t work. We talked about love and faith in the midst of this pain and the big guy whispered, “What can we believe when the docs say Momma probably won’t get better?”

“I don’t know what’s going to happen, but we know this—God’s taking care of her, right?”

He smiled. “You’re right, and she knows that. She knows Jesus is with her.”

He and his sisters were laughing through tears. “How many times did she sing about the ‘glory of heaven’?”

Then things suddenly got quiet again. They remembered where they were.

The man said, “So that’s hope?”

“Maybe that’s part of it, knowing God keeps His promises, knowing He’ll care for her no matter what. And knowing that He’ll care for you folks as well.’

I showed them the back of my bike jersey. They read it quietly: HOPE changes what’s possible.

The sisters shook my hand. The big guy hugged me, and as he leaned close I whispered, “Momma’s gonna be okay.”

“I know.”

That’s hope.

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1 thought on “Hope On Wheels

  1. deccccorative13 - November 29, 2011

    Laughter and tears are both responses to frustration and exhaustion. I myself prefer to laugh, since there is less cleaning up to do afterward.

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