Just sixteen years old I ran out in the snow without a coat on to help push a stuck car out of a snowbank. As I started to push the rear of the car the driver floored it as hard as they could to get out of there. Hearing the spinning of the tires I turned my head to avoid anything hitting my face. Just as I started to get out of the way a rock flew up and hit my right eye. I dropped to my knees both hands covering the eye that I thought no longer existed.
I had to go inside my boyfriend’s house and look in the mirror to make sure my eye was still there. As I looked, I could see my right eye, but my vision in that eye was now a black hole. I realized that I had no insurance and no money to go to the doctor. So for the rest of the day and night every time my heart beat my eye pulsed – like the rock had just hit my eye. In agony all I could do is lay down and hold my face together.
By the third day, somehow, I found out I had emergency insurance. While at the ophthalmologist he said that I should have come in immediately for he wasn’t sure about the outcome of my sight. I was given medicinal drops that I applied on a schedule to help numb and give my eye a chance to heal. I had to wear a patch over my eye so that I would not touch it, especially at night. I wasn’t supposed to lift anything over 5 pounds. I did bring a package up the driveway, and I didn’t think it was that heavy, but I could feel the strain on my eye.
Good news – my eye is not a blackhole anymore. Years later my right eye which I almost lost is now stronger than my left eye! Sometimes my right eye looks strained or red, but I am so thankful that I have both my eyes.
Love has made me the person I am today, but pain has shaped my world for the better. Sometimes when I am down, or I think that the world might be crashing down around me I think about how fortunate I am. My pains have been temporary. Yes, many things have hurt. But the old saying is true:
What doesn’t kill you makes you stronger
Not only stronger, pain can change your perspective and enrich your world with newfound appreciation.
I appreciate pain for I would not know what it is to be truly joyful without it. Not that I want to go through extreme pain… I can’t deny the profound impact each extreme event has given to me. I am blessed in many ways even if it does not feel like a blessing while I’m going through it.

Good reminder. 👌
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Good to see you friend. 🙂 I missed you when you were transitioning to your new blog. I hope you are feeling better.
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I am. Some force is keeping these targeters, finally, barely within bounds of sanity around me. They’re still setting fires, creating water and electrical repairs, committing robberies and driving people crazy all around me, though, so I have to assume that force is this blog.
I’m happy to be in touch, my dear. Keep your own eyes open.
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So glad you didn’t lose your sight Kat. Have a great week-end
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Thanks Ernie, Very happy to be able to see, and very appreciative that my heart grew for the better. ❤ I hope your weekend is fruitful.
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