{"id":45030,"date":"2024-07-16T10:56:21","date_gmt":"2024-07-16T14:56:21","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/rachellerogers.com\/dev1\/?p=45030"},"modified":"2026-02-27T21:13:32","modified_gmt":"2026-02-28T02:13:32","slug":"falling-into-uncertainty","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/rachellerogers.com\/dev1\/falling-into-uncertainty\/","title":{"rendered":"Falling Into Uncertainty"},"content":{"rendered":"<div class=\"et_pb_section_0 et_pb_section et_section_regular et_block_section\">\n<div class=\"et_pb_row_0 et_pb_row et_block_row\">\n<div class=\"et_pb_column_0 et_pb_column et_pb_column_1_3 et_block_column et_pb_css_mix_blend_mode_passthrough\">\n<div class=\"et_pb_text_0 et_pb_text et_pb_bg_layout_light et_pb_module et_block_module preset--group--divi-text--divi-font-header--default\"><div class=\"et_pb_text_inner\"><p>16<\/p>\n<\/div><\/div>\n\n<div class=\"et_pb_text_1 et_pb_text et_pb_bg_layout_light et_pb_module et_block_module preset--group--divi-text--divi-font-header--default\"><div class=\"et_pb_text_inner\"><p>July 2024<\/p>\n<\/div><\/div>\n\n<div class=\"et_pb_text_2 et_pb_text et_pb_bg_layout_light et_pb_module et_block_module preset--group--divi-text--divi-font-header--default\"><div class=\"et_pb_text_inner\"><p>uncertainty<br \/>fear<br \/>healing<\/p>\n<\/div><\/div>\n<\/div>\n\n<div class=\"et_pb_column_1 et_pb_column et_pb_column_2_3 et-last-child et_block_column et_pb_css_mix_blend_mode_passthrough\">\n<div class=\"et_pb_post_title_0 et_pb_post_title et_pb_bg_layout_light et_pb_module et_block_module\"><div class=\"et_pb_title_container\"><h1 class=\"entry-title\">Falling Into Uncertainty<\/h1><p class=\"et_pb_title_meta_container\">by <span class=\"author vcard\"><a href=\"https:\/\/rachellerogers.com\/dev1\/author\/wprr\/\" title=\"Posts by Rachelle Rogers\">Rachelle Rogers<\/a><\/span><\/p><\/div><\/div>\n\n<div class=\"et_pb_text_3 et_pb_text et_pb_bg_layout_light et_pb_module et_block_module preset--group--divi-text--divi-font-header--default\"><div class=\"et_pb_text_inner\"><p>I\u2019ve shared a lot about learning to live with uncertainty, with change, with the <em>I don\u2019t know<\/em>, and apparently some untoward part of me (perhaps my renegade lower self Spankie), thought it might be enlightening to give me the opportunity to see how well I was doing, because on June 21, in unusual, weird, and terribly inconvenient circumstances, I fell and fractured the proximal humerus of my right arm.<\/p>\n<p>A couple of days before, I had noticed that there was water gurgling up from the ground at the edge of a grassy area that bordered the cement driveway in front of my house creating a widening stream flowing into the bushes in the planting area next to the door.<\/p>\n<p>A little while later, Woodfin Water showed up and said the leak was coming from the underground pipes connected to a house diagonally across the road. Shortly after they started digging, one of the workers knocked on my door. He said they would have to take down all the mailboxes. There were seven of them on the platform structure. He said it would only be temporary.<\/p>\n<\/div><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n\n<div class=\"et_pb_row_1 et_pb_row et_block_row et_animated\">\n<div class=\"et_pb_column_2 et_pb_column et_pb_column_4_4 et-last-child et_block_column et_pb_css_mix_blend_mode_passthrough\">\n<div class=\"et_pb_image_0 et_pb_image et_pb_module et_block_module\"><span class=\"et_pb_image_wrap\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/rachellerogers.com\/dev1\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/09\/succulent-header-1920.jpg\" width=\"1920\" height=\"923\" srcset=\"https:\/\/rachellerogers.com\/dev1\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/09\/succulent-header-1920.jpg 1920w, https:\/\/rachellerogers.com\/dev1\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/09\/succulent-header-1920-768x369.jpg 768w, https:\/\/rachellerogers.com\/dev1\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/09\/succulent-header-1920-1080x519.jpg 1080w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 1920px) 100vw, 1920px\" class=\"wp-image-5485\" title=\"A photo by Annie Spratt. unsplash.com\/photos\/8mqOw4DBBSg\" \/><\/span><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n\n<div class=\"et_pb_row_2 et_pb_row et_block_row\">\n<div class=\"et_pb_column_3 et_pb_column et_pb_column_4_4 et-last-child et_block_column et_pb_css_mix_blend_mode_passthrough\">\n<div class=\"et_pb_text_4 et_pb_text et_pb_bg_layout_light et_pb_module et_block_module preset--group--divi-text--divi-font-header--default\"><div class=\"et_pb_text_inner\"><p>By evening, when Woodfin Water left for the day, the road in front of my house was a mess of wet and dirt, and the whole mailbox structure had been dug up and seemingly hurled onto uneven, grassy, muddy downhill ground to the back of my side of the road.<\/p>\n<p>By that Friday, June 21, the pipes were finally fixed and Woodfin Water packed up and left. The mailboxes were still down, and I had not received mail for three days. After dinner, I decided I was going to walk down to where the mailboxes were, and since I was expecting a check, and since my box was facing up, I thought it would be easy enough to traverse the short distance of slightly hilly grass and seemingly dry red mud and take a look inside.<\/p>\n<p>I was wrong. I can't say I'll ever know exactly what happened, but in an instant, I was lying on the ground, pain when I moved my upper arm, a bang on my chin, my knees affected and wobbly, and no one around. It was hard to see me, and it took a while before my dear friend and neighbor Steph and her daughter Maya who lived directly across the road, heard my cries for help and came running. After quickly ascertaining the situation, I asked Steph to call the paramedics.<\/p>\n<p>The world of doctors and hospitals and allopathic medicine was just one of the many fears I would be invited to face through this event. I do go to the dentist, and since I have eye issues, I do go to the eye doctor, but that\u2019s about it. Over many decades, with the help of channeled guidance, plus my over eight year practice of Wisdom Healing Qigong, I have come to understand that everything is energy. And I\u2019m learning how to feel and move that energy, and to trust in my body\u2019s innate ability to heal.<\/p>\n<p>The paramedics arrived and got me into the ambulance. The first thing they wanted to do was put an IV in my arm and start pumping pain meds. They said that it was going to be a very bumpy ride to the hospital and I was going to be in a lot of pain. I told them nothing hurt as long as I held my arm to my stomach. They argued with me, said that when I got to the ER they would probably want to start pain meds anyway, and that it would make it easier if we started them now. I clearly declined, but out of curiosity, I asked what kind of meds they wanted to give me. They said fentanyl and morphine. I looked at them as if they were mad. The only drug I took, and only when I needed to for anxiety, was usually half (yes half) of 0.25mgs of generic Xanax. My body was that sensitive. Again, I assured the paramedic guys I was not in pain, and bumpy truck and all, that I would make it to the hospital just fine. And I did.<\/p>\n<\/div><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n\n<div class=\"et_pb_row_3 et_pb_row et_block_row et_animated\">\n<div class=\"et_pb_column_4 et_pb_column et_pb_column_4_4 et-last-child et_block_column et_pb_css_mix_blend_mode_passthrough\">\n<div class=\"et_pb_image_1 et_pb_image et_pb_module et_block_module\"><span class=\"et_pb_image_wrap\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/rachellerogers.com\/dev1\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/10\/flaming_june-900.jpg\" width=\"900\" height=\"827\" srcset=\"https:\/\/rachellerogers.com\/dev1\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/10\/flaming_june-900.jpg 900w, https:\/\/rachellerogers.com\/dev1\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/10\/flaming_june-900-768x706.jpg 768w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 900px) 100vw, 900px\" class=\"wp-image-6146\" title=\"flaming_june-900\" alt=\"Flaming June by Frederic Leighton\" \/><\/span><\/div>\n\n<div class=\"et_pb_text_5 et_pb_text et_pb_bg_layout_light et_pb_module et_block_module preset--group--divi-text--divi-font-header--default\"><div class=\"et_pb_text_inner\"><p><em>Flaming June<\/em> by <span>Frederic Leighton<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n\n<div class=\"et_pb_row_4 et_pb_row et_block_row\">\n<div class=\"et_pb_column_5 et_pb_column et_pb_column_4_4 et-last-child et_block_column et_pb_css_mix_blend_mode_passthrough\">\n<div class=\"et_pb_text_6 et_pb_text et_pb_bg_layout_light et_pb_module et_block_module preset--group--divi-text--divi-font-header--default\"><div class=\"et_pb_text_inner\"><p>I had never been to the ER at Mission Hospital in Asheville and part of me was preparing for the worst. A memory of the last ER I had been in flashed through my mind. It was in 1973, at one of the worst hospitals in The Bronx when my father had been shot in the neck and throat in a hold up at the grocery store he managed near Yankee Stadium. That ER was a crowded space with injured people haphazardly arranged around the room, some bloody, some crying out, me, half in shock, rocking and keaning at the edge of an old, hard chair, my mother and then husband attending to my father who, due to lack of available rooms, had been placed on a gurney and left alone, without being given any meds, against a dark wall in the dingy hallway.<\/p>\n<p>Quickly moving into action, my husband thought to call our family dentist, my father\u2019s friend, Dr. Tolk, for help. Dr. Tolk was a miracle. He got my father immediately transferred to the best hospital with the top head and neck surgeon. And yes, my father Morris, who we suspected, like his feline namesake, had nine lives, survived, and years later went on to \u201cgraduate\u201d from Hospice at ninety-one and live to ninety-four and a half.<\/p>\n<p>But everything went fairly smoothly in the ER at Mission. I got into a room very quickly and Steph was allowed to come be with me. The rest took a really long time. Xrays, CT scan, lying in that freezing room, mud all over my calf-length leggings and lapis blue Paris Opera Ballet T-shirt with the neckline cut wide so it fell off the shoulder, shaking from nerves and cold, not allowed to take any <span style=\"font-size: 16px;\">Xanax or drink more than a sip of water in case I needed surgery, a nightmare I promptly put out of my mind.<\/span><\/p>\n<p>While we waited, I called my sister in Colorado to tell her what was happening. She asked if I wanted her to come to NC. This, for me, brought up a whole mess of long ago business between us in which I had sworn to her that I would never ask for her help with anything. It was a very old story, so setting it aside, I welcomed her help. She flew to Asheville the next day, Saturday, and wound up staying for a week, a week that for me was filled with unexpected and difficult realizations.<\/p>\n<p>Back to the ER. I had been in my room for over four hours when my lovely nurse, Kyle, finally came back in to give me the report. There was a hairline fracture of my proximal humerus, which is at the top of the bone between the elbow and shoulder of my right arm. He said it would heal by itself in a couple of months, and I only needed to use a sling, which he slipped over my head and adjusted around me.<\/p>\n<p>It was almost midnight by the time Steph drove us home and helped me up the four steep steps to my door. Exhausted and traumatized, I was a mess \u2014 physically, emotionally, mentally. And I had a ton of things to figure out. At seventy-seven, living alone, already dealing with old knee issues now exacerbated by the fall, I didn\u2019t know how I was even going to do simple things. And the thought of getting naked in front of anyone who would need to help me take a shower mortified me. Even though <em>I\u00a0 <\/em>had come to accept, appreciate, and even love my body for the miracle it is, it has often been a challenge witnessing the constant changes that take place as I move through time.<\/p>\n<\/div><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n\n<div class=\"et_pb_row_5 et_pb_row et_pb_row_1-4_1-2_1-4 et_pb_gutters1 et_block_row et_block_row_1-4_1-2_1-4 et_animated\">\n<div class=\"et_pb_column_6 et_pb_column et_pb_column_1_4 et_block_column et_pb_column_empty et_pb_css_mix_blend_mode_passthrough\"><\/div>\n\n<div class=\"et_pb_column_7 et_pb_column et_pb_column_1_2 et_block_column et_pb_css_mix_blend_mode_passthrough\">\n<div class=\"et_pb_icon_0 et_pb_icon et_pb_module et_block_module\"><span class=\"et_pb_icon_wrap\"><span class=\"et-pb-icon\">\uf004<\/span><\/span><\/div>\n<\/div>\n\n<div class=\"et_pb_column_8 et_pb_column et_pb_column_1_4 et-last-child et_block_column et_pb_column_empty et_pb_css_mix_blend_mode_passthrough\"><\/div>\n<\/div>\n\n<div class=\"et_pb_row_6 et_pb_row et_block_row\">\n<div class=\"et_pb_column_9 et_pb_column et_pb_column_4_4 et-last-child et_block_column et_pb_css_mix_blend_mode_passthrough\">\n<div class=\"et_pb_text_7 et_pb_text et_pb_bg_layout_light et_pb_module et_block_module preset--group--divi-text--divi-font-header--default\"><div class=\"et_pb_text_inner\"><p>My sister Fran arrived late the following evening, and immediately went into fixer mode. I could tell her mind was running a mile a minute, most likely calculating how to take control of the situation. I, however, was enveloped in my trauma, and my sister\u2019s loud, often agitated voice (from her perspective, I never spoke loud <em>enough<\/em>), assaulted the usual peaceful energy of my living space. Yet, enormously grateful that she was there, I struggled to adjust.<\/p>\n<p>During the next days, as I tried to engage in what needed to be done, I felt surreal, like I wasn\u2019t anchored to anything anymore. The reality that had existed for me a short time before seemed to be collapsing around me. My whole body felt precarious, insubstantial, like it couldn\u2019t hold me up or anchor me, like I was fading in and out of form.<\/p>\n<p>Several times, overwhelmed, I spontaneously dissolved into tears in front of my sister only to discover how uncomfortable that made her. Apparently, Fran doesn\u2019t cry. And if I felt the need to speak my momentary anxieties and fears, I found that she took them as definitive truth. There didn\u2019t seem to be any understanding of a constant flow of changing emotions. I didn\u2019t know how to navigate this kind of communication.<\/p>\n<p>Still traumatized, I was not able to logically respond to her initial suggestions of what I would need. For example, when she first said that I would need to get home health care and a physician's referral for it, I reacted from my emotional state at the time. I didn\u2019t want strange people coming to my home and doing personal things, I told her, which seemed to mean to her that she would have to find a way to convince me of what she believed I needed. The fact was that I already knew exactly what I might need, that I had even called various agencies <em>and <\/em>my insurance company for information that morning, but I also needed my own way and my own time to acclimate to so many changes, and to explore all options.<\/p>\n<p>We got a lot done that week. There were constant orders on Amazon \u2014 various slings to try in place of the terribly big and uncomfortable one from the hospital; a raised toilet seat with arms; a transfer bench for the bathtub; a new shower head with a longer hose. Was this what my life had become? I also made arrangements with Steph to help me with things like mail and garbage and recycling and checking in on me. I asked another dear friend Margo, who had also been my massage therapist for twenty-five years, if she\u2019d be willing to help me with showers. She was. And I scheduled my first orthopedic appointment which my sister would take me to.<\/p>\n<p>Fran and I continually placed delivery orders from Whole Foods, my sister intent upon leaving me a freezer full of individual servings of baked chicken and vegetables, and her favorite pasta dishes \u2014 pasta with beef, sauce, and veggies, huge slices of lasagna. To Fran, <em>Food Is Love<\/em>. Even though this was not how I usually ate, and I didn\u2019t have much of an appetite that week, I was so grateful to her for doing this. After she went home, and I had to find ways to lefthandedly navigate my life, I so enjoyed these single portion feasts.<\/p>\n<p>In addition to the <em>doing<\/em> of things, it became obvious many times that week that my sister and I processed the <em>saying<\/em> of things very differently. At times it was like we spoke different languages, each of us often feeling misinterpreted, each of us attempting to explain our perspective to the other. It was exhausting. I felt like almost anything I said was taken in a way I didn\u2019t mean. We came to the mutual conclusion that we lived in very separate realities, most of <em>my<\/em> life fueled by exploring the big questions, like Who am I? Why am I here?, things my sister said she never had any interest in. In our better moments, we tried to except and honor our differences.<\/p>\n<\/div><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n\n<div class=\"et_pb_row_7 et_pb_row et_block_row et_animated\">\n<div class=\"et_pb_column_10 et_pb_column et_pb_column_4_4 et-last-child et_block_column et_pb_css_mix_blend_mode_passthrough\">\n<div class=\"et_pb_image_2 et_pb_image et_pb_module et_block_module\"><span class=\"et_pb_image_wrap\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/rachellerogers.com\/dev1\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/07\/july-5-2024-1500-web.jpg\" width=\"1500\" height=\"879\" srcset=\"https:\/\/rachellerogers.com\/dev1\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/07\/july-5-2024-1500-web.jpg 1500w, https:\/\/rachellerogers.com\/dev1\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/07\/july-5-2024-1500-web-1280x750.jpg 1280w, https:\/\/rachellerogers.com\/dev1\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/07\/july-5-2024-1500-web-980x574.jpg 980w, https:\/\/rachellerogers.com\/dev1\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/07\/july-5-2024-1500-web-480x281.jpg 480w\" sizes=\"(min-width: 0px) and (max-width: 480px) 480px, (min-width: 481px) and (max-width: 980px) 980px, (min-width: 981px) and (max-width: 1280px) 1280px, (min-width: 1281px) 1500px, 100vw\" class=\"wp-image-45035\" title=\"july-5-2024 1500-web\" \/><\/span><\/div>\n\n<div class=\"et_pb_text_8 et_pb_text et_pb_bg_layout_light et_pb_module et_block_module preset--group--divi-text--divi-font-header--default\"><div class=\"et_pb_text_inner\"><p>Sunset from my balcony<\/p>\n<\/div><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n\n<div class=\"et_pb_row_8 et_pb_row et_block_row\">\n<div class=\"et_pb_column_11 et_pb_column et_pb_column_4_4 et-last-child et_block_column et_pb_css_mix_blend_mode_passthrough\">\n<div class=\"et_pb_text_9 et_pb_text et_pb_bg_layout_light et_pb_module et_block_module preset--group--divi-text--divi-font-header--default\"><div class=\"et_pb_text_inner\"><p>When my sister left Saturday morning, I was teary. For me, it had been a super stressful week on every level. I again told her how grateful I was to her for everything, and also how I wished I had been able to better communicate with her. She seemed annoyed and didn\u2019t want to hear it. We hugged tentatively, and she said she\u2019d rather wait outside for her Uber.<\/p>\n<p>Later that evening, Fran texted me telling me that the plane was early and she caught the early bus. She sounded upbeat and made no reference to anything else. When she called the next day to ask how I was, it sounded as if, for her, the previous week had never happened. I wondered if she was squelching, erasing, denying any uncomfortable leftover emotions, or, if she was simply able to immediately move beyond them. Either way, I felt somewhat relieved as we picked up conversing in the same surface way we usually communicated before her visit.<\/p>\n<p>Alone in my quiet again living space, it felt anything but peaceful. I began to see how what had happened called up some of my biggest fears \u2014 aging, vulnerability, having to deal with the medical arena, living alone, having to ask for help, not being able to take care of myself, exacerbated knee issues, vision issues causing imbalance, having to actually get naked in front of someone. What was I to make of this?<\/p>\n<p>There is an expression that says when a bad thing happens, find the \u201cgift\u201d in it. I don\u2019t subscribe to the use of the word \u201cgift\u201d in that context. I take responsibility for what I create in my life consciously or unconsciously. I know I get what I focus upon, whether I want it or not, and I also know that some creations are a lot more complicated than they seem. In this circumstance, finding the \u201cgift\u201d seems simplistic, even ridiculous. My advice to myself was to feel all the feelings; contemplate any new awarenesses, new understandings, new choices, and possibilities; contemplate how to raise my vibration above the many limited thoughts, beliefs, expectations, and self-talk I had watched spin around in my mind unattended for too long. You get what you focus upon\u2026<\/p>\n<p>One evening, alone, depressed and teary, a small pile of soggy tissues growing before me, I noticed an aura of deep orange light pouring through the balcony door window. I walked over and looked out as surreal colors painted themselves across the sunset sky after the earlier rain. Like I would usually do, I grabbed my iPhone attempting to take a horizontal photo with my left hand, only to realize it was impossible. Afraid of missing the moment, I quickly turned the camera vertical and was able to capture a few images. Afterwards, as I stood for a long while gazing upon that scene of immense beauty, I found my heart feeling a little bit lighter, a little more hopeful, even a little more open to remembering that all things are possible.<\/p>\n<\/div><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n\n<div class=\"et_pb_row_9 et_pb_row et_block_row\">\n<div class=\"et_pb_column_12 et_pb_column et_pb_column_4_4 et-last-child et_block_column et_pb_css_mix_blend_mode_passthrough\">\n<div class=\"et_pb_post_nav_0 et_pb_posts_nav nav-single et_pb_module et_block_module\"><span class=\"nav-previous\"><a href=\"https:\/\/rachellerogers.com\/dev1\/above-the-fray\/\" rel=\"prev\" class=\"\"><span class=\"meta-nav\">&larr; <\/span><span class=\"nav-label\">Above The Fray<\/span><\/a><\/span><span class=\"nav-next\"><a href=\"https:\/\/rachellerogers.com\/dev1\/poetic-offerings\/\" rel=\"next\" class=\"\"><span class=\"nav-label\">Poetic Offerings<\/span><span class=\"meta-nav\"> &rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/span><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n\n<div class=\"et_pb_row_10 et_pb_row et_block_row\">\n<div class=\"et_pb_column_13 et_pb_column et_pb_column_4_4 et-last-child et_block_column et_pb_css_mix_blend_mode_passthrough\">\n<div class=\"et_pb_signup_0 et_pb_signup et_pb_newsletter et_pb_subscribe et_pb_bg_layout_dark et_pb_module et_flex_module\"><div class=\"et_pb_newsletter_description\"><h2 class=\"et_pb_module_header\">KEEP UP WITH MY POSTS<\/h2><div class=\"et_pb_newsletter_description_content\"><p style=\"text-align: center;\"><span>Subscribers receive a free PDF of my published memoir <\/span><em><span><br \/><\/span><\/em><span><\/span><span style=\"color: #57006d;\"><em>Rare Atmosphere: An Extraordinary Inter-dimensional Affair of the Heart<\/em><\/span><\/p>\n<\/div><\/div><div class=\"et_pb_newsletter_form\"><form method=\"post\" class=\"\"><div class=\"et_pb_newsletter_result et_pb_newsletter_error\"><\/div><div class=\"et_pb_newsletter_result et_pb_newsletter_success\"><h2>Thank you for subscribing. 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