UNSOUGHT JOURNEY
by contemplativeinquiry

Ego sets me up, in both a narcissistic and rational way, to be the hero of my own journey. But it’s at least equally valuable to have a support role in someone else’s. On Monday 8 April my wife Elaine flew to Gran Canaria with her sister Glynis for a restful and undemanding holiday. It worked brilliantly for nearly three days. On Thursday 11 April Elaine had a fall resulting in a fractured femur. Instead of a restful and undemanding holiday, they were in a health disaster overseas.
Elaine was duly admitted to hospital. Other health complications – a characteristic of we older people – meant it took 9 days for Elaine to have a successful operation: not ideal given the problem being addressed. Glynis was the support person and champion at this stage. But soon it became evident that Elaine would not be well enough for repatriation for some time. An original plan for me to be the person who organised things at home was ditched, and I flew to Gran Canaria on 28 April allowing Glynis to go home.
In a way it wasn’t hard. But I was knocked around by Elaine’s predicament, which might have been fatal, and by the culture shock of being in a new place where, but for the kindness of strangers, I had the verbal and communication skills of, at best, a chimpanzee. I also had to be, or at least appear to be, competent in managing (influencing?) the hospital and insurance companies’ relationship both with Elaine and each other. A completely unfamiliar situation for me, and not one that I would want to be in again.
We managed somehow. Elaine and I know and love each other. We supported each other in our respective roles. I liked my hotel though its amenities were largely wasted on me. Its great virtue was in being 15 minutes easy walking distance from the hospital. I spent several hours a day with Elaine, but also had several on my own. I needed to be away from stimulation for a good deal of time. I did enjoy the warmth, and especially at sundown, the sky over Gran Canaria’s south coast.
The repatriation, when it came, felt almost sudden. We flew back, together with a wonderful paramedic and minder sent over for the purpose, on Friday 10 May. Elaine, whose left leg is not weight bearing at all, was trolleyed and chaired both on an off a commercial flight where she got her own row of three seats. The cabin crew were great.
The repatriation process ended with an ambulance journey to the Gloucester Royal hospital, where our paramedic had organised Elaine’s admission in advance and Elaine was wheeled straight onto the orthopaedic ward where she now is. This is also in walking distance from our home. At the moment she is largely being monitored and tested. A new phase will begin when the physiotherapists show up on Monday. I hope soon to get some sense of how soon Elaine will come home, and what resources we will need for our lives going forward. It’s my 75th birthday on 25 May, and my best present would be to have Elaine home by then.
This post has been a simple story, without much obviously contemplative, reflective or overtly ‘spiritual’ content. But I don’t in my own life and practice make much distinction between the spiritual and mundane, and I do know that this has been a life-changing event. A pilgrimage, of sorts.


I hope it all goes smoothly from here. Good that you are both back in Gloucester at least, and here’s hoping that your birthday is everything you want it to be.
Thanks Nimue 😊
Best wishes to you both – I agree about the mundane and the spiritual being intertwined – a symbiosis of sorts – one feeds the other perhaps even a reciprocity. I also believe that those of us who have a spiritual practice are fortunate when life challenges compared to those without. May Elaine find wellness again.
A heartfelt ‘yes’ to both halves of your comment. I like your use of symbiosis and reciprocity to describe the spiritual/mundane relationship. Food for contemplation.
I hope Elaine heals swiftly and that you both recover well from this unexpected situation.
Thanks Potia
Thanks Potia.
I would call this far from a ‘simple’ story, James! I am glad to hear that you are both safely home in Gloucester and I wish Elaine a speedy recovery. Your birthday falls at a beautiful time of year, best wishes for a special day together.
Thanks Lis.
wishing you both a restful recovery 🙏🏻
Thanks Clair 😊
I have to say this got me all choked up. Much respect and best wishes to you and Elaine.
Thanks Bart. Things are getting as little easier now. Elaine is still in hospital, but learning to walk again with physiotherapy and a magic boot.
So sorry to read these trials, for you all , ‘these things are sent to test us ‘ ! comes to mind .Hopefully your birthday wish will be granted and home security will return. I’m mindful of my Hospitalisation in 2020 at the beginning of the pandemic,I counted the staff involved in my stay over 5 days ,plus 5 days the week later, I got to 82 ,including phlebotomists and porters and domestic staff. I felt humbled by the touch of humanity, sometimes it’s not overly evident, but it’s there.
Thanks Andy. A great many people have been involved in Elaine’s care, and there will be more I believe. It seems that she won’t come straight home from the hospital, but be going first to a rehab unit focused on improving her mobility. We don’t yet know the timescale for this.
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