Friday, May 11, 2012
Michael Meegan talks on compassion and love June lectures 2012
Take my hand and I will lead you
Through The darkness
And into the light
Michael Meegan
Fly With Your Wings
Fly with your wings
not another's
neither teach another
to soar on your wings
or on your dreams
Michael Meegan
Song Of Songs
Gentle lips, O blessed one that you
Now in me come for truth
and I for and in thee and thine
blessed bespoke are you
for you know something,
don't you?
Thou knowest me
how did you discover me?
This is my secret self, self of thine
for thou art ever with me
friend of mine
Michael Meegan
In June 2012 Micheal Meegan will be giving a series of readings from
the book of spiritual reflections “Take My Hand” a spiritual journey.
These spiritual reflections written together with Sharon Wilknison,
“Take My Hand” is the first volume of Spiritual Journey. Readings will
take place London: 8th & 9th June, Stockholm; 12th June, Paris; 26th
June
Also, Michael will be reading from “All Will Be Well” and “Changing
The World” in Dublin on the 3rd of June. All of the titles will be
available online as e-books from July 2012.
If you wish to know any more about these lectures, please contact us
at info@michaelmeegan.com
Michael K. Elmore-Meegan
A year before his death, 17 year-old Atria weighs 7 stone (98 pounds).
He has left his village. He is afraid and he is ashamed. He is
embarrassed to be here. He is sweating, he fights. His hands tremble.
His pulse is rapid. He tries to smile. His problems aren't only the
rashes and the intestinal worms. These are easily cleared up. But you
can't "clear up" anger and fear, or sleepless nights and panic
attacks, or how long a few minutes can seem...or the sense of
powerlessness watching your own body fall away, the humiliation of
disintegration.
Some infections are harder to deal with: a mouth filled with ulcers,
an inflamed penis. As the disease progresses so do the nausea, the
backpain, the headaches. Muscle cramps always hurt, especially when
one has very little muscle. Atria has severe diarrhea and the dull
aches in his stomach become sharp pains. Despite our best efforts he
becomes anemic. His sight fades, as well as his concentration. Atria
has stinging burning pain from urinary tract infections, as his
urinary tract is blood red and raw.
Moving his bowels has become a feared ordeal, as his anus has lost its
muscular contractility and often gets infected. He has no buttocks,
not really, just skin stretched over bone, sore to lie on. His joints
are hypersensitive. Above all, Atria finds it difficult to breathe.
His dreadful wheezing-gurgling prevents sleep and he moans a lot
because the painkillers are useless.
Over the coming months Atria finds some support and friendship, some
dignity and encouragement. He was a beautiful young man with stunning
eyes. A proud, energetic guy, very popular and ambitious with a deadly
sense of fun. Now, most of all he hates that he leaks and drips,
smells bad, and often cannot control his bowel movements or urination.
He gets angry at himself. He is weak and dizzy and has constant
headaches. He cannot eat easily and his ability to digest is
deteriorating, as his enzymes are breaking down. The slightest knock
causes a painful bruise. Atria is now 6 stone (84 pounds). After
another few weeks, the boy is drained; his mouth full of thrush, a
thick, white fungus over his tongue and gums - and ulcers - he has
difficulty swallowing. Breathing is increasingly labored. By now,
pneumonia is taking over.
All movement is acutely painful and distressing. Intestinal worms are
back again. Atria's limbs are stiffening and his back is covered with
ulcers that leak and bleed but do not heal, impossible to manage in a
small hut. His issues are controlling pain, managing extreme distress,
reducing humiliation, creating dignity, reducing multiple infections,
reducing cross-infection to others. But the worst thing is loneliness.
To die of AIDS in Africa is an intensely humiliating ordeal, slow . .
. obscene. Atria is now in his last days of life. His tear ducts have
dried up, his hair has fallen out, his bones are brittle. He has no
muscle or fat and his heart is 70% weaker than pre-HIV. He has been
eaten alive and he has no resistance. All of Atria's senses are
shutting down.
His fingernails and toenails have fallen out. His skin is blistered
and scaly, and scabs cannot form. The bedsores and ulcers have spread,
sources of multiple deep infections. Breathing is almost impossible
and the slightest movement is slow and full of dreadful anxiety. I
give him water drop by drop through a straw. I hold his frail,
stiffened hand. He is cold, he has no tears. I look into his eyes. I
whisper to him, and kiss him. He slowly inhales, half closes his eyes.
He breathes out, very slowly.
Atria's face relaxes, his tormented body sags. He is gone.
I held him in my arms and wept.
I cannot describe the fear and emptiness watching such disintegration.
As I write this, the images that flash across my mind are not the
data, the plan, the project, but the faces, the faces of those who
have had no one else to love them . . . nowhere else to go - dumped,
neglected, unwanted. I feel so inadequate, so useless and unworthy,
flawed and pathetic, so utterly overwhelmed. I want to be somewhere
else. I am not able for all of this. The horror of the holocaust
revolts me. I have sights so unspeakable in my mind. What has humanity
done? Why do we allow people to die this way? What manner of beast are
we?
In my aloneness, in my fear, in my pathetic inadequacy, in my own
humanity, despite myself, I fall before the feet of God and cry: Why?
Yet in the end, I find the only thing that matters is to do the best I
can.
I leap into the darkness and find myself in a sweltering,
disease-ridden place, full of flies and gross smells - and a child is
crying. I reach out to gently grasp his small, withered hand, too weak
to tremble. I am here. I am here.
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