I received a call from an R.N. one day. Her name was Jane Blair (all names
are fictional) and she attended my church. It was a referral; something that
happened occasionally, though not as often as direct calls from prospective
clients. Jane volunteered for an anti-abortion counseling center in a nearby
town, and Valerie had contacted her. She was embarrassed, she was enrolled in a
private college, and she wasn’t willing to show her face at the public
counseling center, though she needed help badly, and she needed it now.
Jane continued. Would I be willing to take her on? Valerie could donate
part of my costs, and Ms. Blair would be glad to supplement the remaining
amount. I quickly agreed. I had rarely counseled a pregnant woman who was
considering abortion. Before the R.N. hung up, she added, “Oh, by the way, (and
this is important) Valerie is HIV Positive.” Well now, that did cast a whole new
light on the subject… for some, but not for me. I had counseled a couple of
younger people in the past, who had contracted the virus. I made Jane aware
that this variable wouldn’t make any difference, at all.
I received a call from Valerie later that afternoon. She seemed nervous,
and stuttered a couple times during our conversation, though her innocence and
vivaciousness were infectuous, (no pun intended.) Before our conversation
ended, I assured Valerie that I was “the most empathetic and unbiased counselor
in this universe or any other,” a phrase designed to both reassure my
prospective client, and lighten her mood. I heard Valerie chuckle in the
background, and I was glad I made her laugh. We decided on a day and time to
meet, and I told her I looked forward to seeing her.
The day dawned cloudless and bright, and I ran off a few intake forms, and
put them on my clipboard. Valerie had an early appointment, and I found myself
standing in my “usual place of honor,” just inside the front lobby doors, before
9AM. I heard the secretary’s clock chime its fake Big Ben nine bells… and
waited. I began to think that my new client would find herself on the
proverbial “no show list,” as perhaps a third of my new clients did. For the
life of me, I never understood why people scheduled an appointment, and then
failed to call or show. I remember the one time in my life I scheduled an
appointment with a medical doctor, and decided I really had better things to
do. I received his bill in the mail. Well now, this was a pastoral counseling
center, and I was too sensitive about how the public regarded us to do that. (I
was oh so tempted to institute this policy, though I never did.) This issue was
always on the top five of my “Pet Peeve List,” however, just under Pedophiles
and “Tail Gaters.” Obviously, I felt strongly about the tendency of some people
to take advantage of my good graces. Thankfully, I lived close to the church.
Fifteen minutes came and went, and just as I walked out the front door to
leave, and headed towards my nearby vehicle, a car pulled into the parking lot.
I stopped in my tracks, and waited to see if this was my client. The old Altima
pulled in next to my car, and a young lady hurriedly stepped out. There was
little doubt that this was Valerie. She looked rattled, cast a glance at me and
leaned her head to one side, as if to say, “Golly, Gee Whiz, I’m so sorry I’m
late.” Walking quickly up to me, and in mid-stride she said, “You must be Dr.
McDonald. I’m very sorry. I got caught by a train.” Honestly, I had heard this
one before. As Valerie spoke, a train whistle sounded in the distance, and we
smiled at the same time.
Valerie looked like she needed a hug, and while it was the last thing I
would normally do with a new client, especially considering ours was a church
agency, she reached out to me. The young lady wasn’t interested in a perfunctionary
handshake. As a result, I reciprocated, and gave her a warm, but quick hug. (I
silently mused that many people who had contracted HIV seemed hesitant to
display affection with friends and family, much less with strangers.) Valerie
was an exception to the rule. As it turned out, she was an exception to most
every rule. I could sense that she was silently thrilled that I didn’t hesitate
to touch her. I think this precious lady might have turned on her heel, and
walked back to her vehicle had I exhibited a stand-offish attitude towards her.
At the same time, I was rather surprised she was so unreserved considering the
public’s mindset towards this mysterious and deadly disease.
As I put my key in the lock, and opened the door for her, I patted Valerie
on the back, and formerly introduced myself with, “Yes, indeed. I’m Dr.
McDonald. (But you can call me Bill.) You’ve come to the right place, Valerie.
(And don’t worry about the train. It happens to many of my clients.”) This
seemed to put her at ease.
I led the way up the winding staircase, an inclined trail that I was all
too used to climbing. And since our church carpet was a mustard yellow, I often
referred to it as “The Yellow Brick Road.” I led the way, and heard myself
referring to it that way again. Valerie had a ready smile, and I could tell she
enjoyed my “square humor” a great deal. I liked to think she thought, “Hey, I
do believe I can deal with this fellow. He’s a straight shooter.” (My words,
not likely hers.)
I ushered Valerie into my office, and invited her to sit on the sofa. As
she sat down, I noticed she glanced at my décor. I had recently placed a
wallpaper border around the perimeter of my ceiling. My co-counselor had
selected it. It was a modest representation of Da Vinci’s “God and Adam.” The
image was faithful in every detail, except one. (As I mentioned… It was
modest.)
Valerie seemed to smile slightly, again. My wife has often mused that she
wouldn’t have selected that particular border, but I always defended it. I just
plain liked it. Apparently, we would just have to agree to disagree on that
issue. Valerie was thin, but about my height and she had blue eyes and blond
hair. If I had not known she was HIV Positive, it would not have been apparent.
If I had not known she was pregnant, this also would have not been readily
apparent, at this stage in the embryo’s gestation.
I decided to wait ‘til the end of the first session to deal with the
preliminary forms, an omission Valerie seemed to recognize and appreciate. As a
result, I began with, “Valerie, I think the best thing we can do today is hold
off on your family history; at least ‘til next time. I generally begin with
‘please tell me all about your parents and your upbringing… beginning at
conception,’” (momentarily forgetting the nature of my client’s issue.) Well,
rather than respond in abject shock, something about my entre caught Valerie
off guard, and she began to laugh aloud. And I laughed with her. I think it was
comforting to her that, even in the face of her condition, her counselor was
able to loosen up, and give her the opportunity… to laugh; a trait that is
highly under-rated among many counseling professionals.
After this, Valerie grew quiet, and pensive for a moment, and then asked,
“Uh, where do you want me to begin?” Having worked with literally thousands of
clients, my response came easily, “Well, Valerie, let’s deal with what you
regard as your most sensitive issues today. Share with me exactly why you’re
here, and how you want me to help you.”
My client’s eyes displayed more understanding now, and she seemed to
consider how best to proceed.
“Dr. Bill, (should I call you that?”) And I nodded affirmatively. “I
contacted Ms. Blair, she is a neighbor of mine, and I inquired whether she knew
a pastoral counselor I could speak to about my ‘double trouble.’ I squelched an
involuntary smile when she used this phrase. It brought to mind a scene from
the second Karate Kid movie in which Daniel tells an oriental ruffian, “Hey
man, I’m not looking for trouble,” to which the bully replies, “Maybe twouble
looking for you!”
Knowing what I already knew about Valerie’s circumstances, I could only
mentally agree with her persuasion that this was “double trouble.”
She continued. “I’m currently enrolled at Sandover University, though I
haven’t been attending classes in the past couple weeks. Well, you know how
conservative that school is, and God knows I grew up with Christian morals, and
was glad to have the opportunity to move a thousand miles from home, and attend
the university I had always hoped to attend. But everything has fallen apart
for me now, and I think it will never be the same again.”
Based on her preliminary remarks, and what the nurse had told me, I could
tell this was going to be a good story, (if a tragedy such as this one could
include that adjective.)
“I met this guy at Sandover during my first year, and he seemed like the
kind of guy I could spend the rest of my life with. We began to spend a lot of
time together, and my grades began to suffer. Robert seemed to be a gentleman
and he told me he’d never had a sexual relationship. As a matter of fact, I
never had either… up until that point anyway. The amount of time we spent
together caused us to be increasingly frustrated, and I guess it was just a
matter of time. He came up with the idea and I’m sorry to say, I went along
with it. Robert made up an excuse that his Uncle had died and he had to drive
back home on Friday night. I came up with an equally plausible plan, and told
my Resident Advisor that my Aunt had invited me to spend the weekend with her.
Robert and I signed out Friday afternoon, and we drove separately to a motel a
hundred miles off campus. We continued to make up excuses, and sign out as
often as we felt we could get away with it; which averaged once every three or
four weeks. Then the day came when I missed my Monthly, and of course I was
mortified. I picked up one of those home pregnancy tests, and I tested
positive. When I told Robert, well, he became very defensive, and told me he
had to go, that he had an important test the next day. The next time I saw him,
he put me off, and said he had to meet a professor about his grades. Every time
I tried to talk with him he changed the subject, or said he was in a hurry. A
couple weeks later Robert rang my cell phone and suggested I get an abortion.
Even now I haven’t told my parents, but I was adamant with him that there was
no way I was going to have an abortion. He was extremely angry, and almost
pleaded with me to find a clinic that would do it. Well, I confided to my
roomie that I was pregnant, and that my boyfriend wanted me to terminate the
pregnancy. Of course, being the fine Christian girl she is, she was shocked.
Julie is a gem. Even considering her uncompromising values, she was objective
enough to talk to me about it. She suggested I do something that hadn’t
occurred to me; that I have all the standard STD testing. This seemed logical
to me, and I scheduled an appointment with the county health department. The
waiting period was the hardest thing I’d ever done. I received a follow up call
from the R.N. and received the worst news in my life. I had contracted HIV. The
test results were definite. Of course I realized that the only possible carrier
was Robert; since he was the only guy I’d ever been with. Needless to say, he
lied about my being his first intimate relationship. Not long after I
discovered I was pregnant and HIV Positive, Robert dropped out of school and
went back to South Carolina. Of course I came down big time on him about my lab
results, and he admitted he had lied ‘cause he figured ‘a nice girl’ like me
wouldn’t date him if he told the truth. Robert denied knowing he was a carrier
of the disease, and the way his face turned pale, and his hands trembled, I
have to think that much of his story was the truth. So, he’s gone now, left me
high and dry, and I don’t have a clue what I should do.”
It was referrals like this that I both appreciated and approached with
great trepidation. But I had already developed a fine professional rapport with
Valerie, and I had told Ms. Blair that I would do my best to help her. However,
the definition of “helping her” was open to debate, and I had no idea where all
this was going.
I happened to be an adjunct faculty member at Sandover U., but I counted
client confidentiality more sacred than any allegiance I owned to a university
where I earned all of $4,500 per semester. It occurred to me to tell Valerie,
at this interesting juncture, that I was employed by Sandover, but that client
privilege outranked my duty to report her to the Dean of the College of
Communications. Having had this bombshell dropped on her, my young client
seemed extremely nervous, and I could sense she wasn’t quite convinced that I
would keep her secret. At this point, I took Valerie’s hand, looked her
directly in the eye, and said, “Now listen, Valerie. You have my solemn word. I
will never divulge your situation to the university, or anyone else, for that matter.”
This ad-lib ceremony seemed to ease her mind, and in no time, the tension in
the room had abated.
I spoke. “Okay, Valerie. Let’s see where we find ourselves. I promise you
that I won’t lay any pat solutions on you. I recognize how complicated this is.
But to be fair to you, I am pro-life. I hate abortion. But this is a totally
different scenario.”
Valerie hadn’t told anyone at the university, other than her roommate, and
she wasn’t yet “showing,” so she had a place to stay, and food to eat for the
moment. She had told me that her parents were “old school,” and that it was
possible when they found out, they wouldn’t allow her to return home. Having
thought about it, I encouraged Valerie to hold off telling her parents, until
we had an opportunity to spend some time working through what I had long since
called the “presenting issues.”
I asked Valerie to imagine the embryo in her womb; how it looked and
exactly where it was in her body at that time. She automatically closed her
eyes, and a winsome smile appeared on her face. Afterwards, I asked her what
she had been taught about conception and when life could properly be called
life, “but better yet, what do you personally believe in this regard?” Valerie
rattled off the standard Christian dogma, but her words seemed a bit too
rehearsed, and I suggested she do some research, independent of my input. While
I am convinced that life begins at conception, I adamantly believe I cannot
possibly choose for my clients.
“Valerie, I’d like you to do some reading this week from books, the
internet and other resources, as well as scripture. Check out what various
professionals have said about conception and when it is life begins. Bounce
that off what God’s Word tells us about when life begins. We’ll talk about your
findings next time.”
I couldn’t think of a better place to begin. Valerie needed to formulate
her own mindset on the subject. I felt justifiably biased, I must admit, since
I had long since decided what I believed about the issue which had long since
led to intense disagreements between father and daughter, mother and son,
brother and sister in America, and I was convinced that Valerie would come to
terms with what I regarded as the truth. But she had to do THIS herself.
When I met with this precious young lady, the next week, she seemed to have
the faintest evidence of a belly that had not been there, heretofore. Valerie
was assuming a glow that one only sees on the face of an expectant mother. We
spent some time on the subject I assigned her the week before, and her part of
the dialogue this week seemed so much more informed, and her persuasion of when
life begins seemed measured and unrehearsed. I asked Valerie what she would be
inclined to do if she were simply pregnant out of wedlock, and not also HIV Positive.
She responded with, “Well, I’m ashamed that I compromised my values, and
betrayed my parents, and the promise ring they gave me was nothing but a lie.
But I have no doubt that I would go through with the pregnancy, and perhaps I
would put the baby up for adoption.”
All this was hypothetical so far, as Valerie had not reached the time and
place where a choice was inevitable, and absolutely had to be made. I reminded
her of this fact. While she nodded her head, I was beginning to think her
decision was beginning to take on reality, and I assumed she would keep the
baby. But my assumptions had proved incorrect many times, as I counseled
clients of with a myriad of issues.
I considered it imperative that Valerie have the latest information as she
attempted to reach a conclusion about the fate of her unborn child. While I was
pro-life, but my mindset allowed the slightest sway in terms of the life of the
mother; (a concept that has been terribly abused in terms of third trimester
abortions and the previously legalized killing of babies just prior to their
birth. ) I also concluded that deformities in the embryo which would contribute
to life-long medical problems might be a justifiable reason for abortion.
I made Valerie aware of a particular medication that, when given to the
mother, insured a higher likelihood that the baby would be born HIV Negative
and remain negative throughout their lifetimes. She had been under the
impression that it was a foregone conclusion that her baby would have the same
condition as hers. She received this news with a bit of shock, and much
gladness, it seemed to me. I encouraged her to speak to her pre-natal doctor
about this medication. She informed me that she hadn’t yet visited a doctor,
but had self-administered three over the counter pregnancy tests, and they all
confirmed her pregnancy. Valerie was aware of her eligibility for Medicaid and
the use of county health facilities, and I encouraged her to apply for both.
This she did the following week.
Being the “Master of Pat Phrases,” I have one for research and dispersal of
information. I often tell clients that “Information is salvation (with a little
s,) since information saves us from a multitude of problems, and allows us to
make informed decisions. I was grateful I was able to share this particular bit
of information with Valerie, but if she chose to keep her baby, there was still
no guarantee he or she would be born HIV Negative.
The next week, Valerie made me aware that she and Robert were still in
contact, and that he was pressuring her to get an abortion. He even made a
thinly-veiled threat to tell both her parents, and university officials about
her pregnancy. I countered that her parents and the university would know soon
enough anyway, so Robert really didn’t have much “ammunition in his ammo
pouches.” This seemed to encourage her. Somehow, as intelligent as I knew
Valerie was, her common sense seemed to be a bit shallow, at times.
I received a call the following week; a couple days prior to Valerie’s
session. She made me aware she had applied for pre-natal benefits, and had
reached that most crucial decision she might ever make. “Well then, what is
your decision?” I asked. She responded that, “Oh no, you won’t get it out of me
that easily. I’ll tell you when we meet again.” I was relatively sure what her
choice would be, but even so, I didn’t take it for granted, and the next two
days were a bit anxious for me. I cared equally for the lives of Valerie and
her child.
Of course, I had already encouraged Valerie to explore her options for
treatment of the dread disease. The early months after her diagnosis were
crucial, and she had already consulted a doctor in this regard, and he laid out
a plan of treatment which involved a “cocktail” of medications. One notable
personality named Magic Johnson has experienced great success in terms of
maintaining his vitality and personal health, though he had carried the virus
for years and years.
Valerie had a bright smile on her face as she met me in the lobby that day,
and as we walked together up the “Yellow Brick Road.” As she sat on the couch,
she said, “Okay, Dr. Bill, here’s the deal…,” then she paused, and waited for
me to say, “This ‘ain’t’ fair, Valerie. Tell me. Tell me now!” Well, I can’t
say I sounded all that professional, but this momentary wait was killing me.
She brimmed with joy, as she finally said, “I’m going to keep my baby. I just
can’t murder my own flesh and blood. Whether he is born HIV Positive or
Negative, I have to at least give him a chance to live.”
It was then that Valerie told me something that, no doubt, influenced her
decision to keep the baby. “Dr. Bill, there’s something I never told you. I
didn’t want you to use this information against me. I so much wanted you to be
as neutral, as possible. My mother…. almost aborted me. She told me this a
couple years ago. It was before my Dad and she married. They had a similar
situation, and Mama was pregnant out of wedlock.
The difference is my Dad didn’t try to talk her out of keeping the baby,
well me. Her parents, my grandparents, pressured them some, and they considered
doing it, but finally made a decision that allowed me to live. How could I kill
my own child when my parents faced the same situation, and gave me an
opportunity to live? As much as I thought about it, as close as I came to doing
it, I just couldn’t.”
Valerie’s counseling process was considered short-term counseling, as was
the therapeutic intervention I offered to all my clients. It was designed to
last 8-10 weeks, though I’d met with a few clients for as long as a year, and
others came in sporadically over the course of several years. In the scheme of
things, our sessions were a bit different than those I usually conducted, as
other than providing her information, (which at times I asked her to write down
in the notebook all my clients kept) I allowed Valerie to bring those issues to
the process which she considered most pertinent any particular week. This sort
of intervention seemed to work out well in the case of clients who found themselves
“in the midst of a muddle.”
After three months had elapsed, and Valerie had told both her parents and
Sandover U. about her pregnancy, we both concurred that she’d done enough in
the context of counseling. By this time, Valerie had been dismissed from
Sandover, and an off-campus girlfriend was allowing her to room with her for a
few weeks. She told me she’d remain in touch, as she had opportunity, but the
next few months seemed very uncertain. She would be returning home in a couple
of weeks. Her parents had agreed to take her in. They had been verbally
demonstrative about her pregnancy, until she told them about her diagnosis a
few days after the first revelation. Her mother paused, the phone was “dead
air” for a moment, and then her mother began to sob, and Valerie finally hung
up the phone since her mom seemed unable to continue. Her father called her
later that evening, and it was obvious he had also been crying. It was at this
point that her parents’ demeanor changed altogether. They couldn’t do enough
for her. They couldn’t love or care enough for her.
“Come home, Valerie. Please come home. We’ll beat this thing together. We
can help you make a decision about keeping the baby, or giving him up for
adoption.”
Before my young client went home, my wife and I took the opportunity to buy
her dinner at a nearby steakhouse. (As I previously inferred in this volume, I
don’t conduct my therapeutic intervention and relationship as clinical
counselors were prone to do.) Valerie was in the second trimester by this time,
and her swollen belly seemed to contradict her thin frame. As I said goodbye to
her that day, (and as I write these words, I can still sense the emotions of
that moment) she wrapped her arms around me, and held on the longest time. I
admit, I was a bit embarrassed at this development; right here in front of God,
my wife, and everyone. But I wasn’t prone to deprive Valerie of her rightful
expression of joy and the closure recent weeks had accomplished. She was
blessed… and she knew it. I was blessed to have had the opportunity to
intervene in the life of this precious young woman. I whispered a couple
sentences in her ear, (and what I said that day, my readers, is none of your
business) and kissed her on the forehead.
I never saw or heard from Valerie again. I can’t really account for that. I
have never regretted having had the privilege of intervening in her life. I had
little doubt that, as long as God gave her breath, she would make a difference
in lives and live out her own life the best she could, under the circumstances.
But as the years sifted into the proverbial hourglass of time, I thought about
Valerie several times a month. I might as well have forgotten my own mother or
sister.
One Spring day, it was perhaps seven years after I finished my work with
Valerie, I was at a local garden center buying some perennials. I ran into Ms.
Blair, the R.N., who had referred Valerie to the counseling center. We hadn’t
seen one another for quite some time, as she and her husband had decided to
attend church in a nearby city, and I had lost touch. It was providential that
we met that day.
Ms. Blair saw me first, and hurried up to me. Rather than wearing the
common expression which accompanies a greeting, she looked pensive, as if
dreading the news she was about to divulge. “Bill, how are you and your wife?”
I responded that I was quite well, “thank you.” What she told me next shocked
me to the depths of my very soul. “I have news from Valerie. Well, not from
Valerie exactly,.. but of Valerie. I received a call from her sister a couple
months ago. She and her parents had moved to South Florida. She named her son,
Christopher. He was born HIV Negative,… and has remained negative.” When she
said this, something inside of me smiled. I couldn’t have been happier had
Michael Anthony (of classic TV fame) walked up, and told me he had an envelope
for me with a million dollars in it. Her story continued.
“It seems Valerie met a nice guy, a Christian man, at a singles event at
her church. They immediately hit it off. After a short time, she divulged her
HIV Positive status to Jim. It shook him up for a short time, but they talked
it through, as he knew he loved her, and they continued to see each other.
About a year after they met, they married.”
“Jim loved and treated Christopher like his own son, though he had two
other children from a previous marriage. Evidently Valerie had very good taste
in men, as after a great deal of training, and several promotions, Jim became
City Manager for a very large city in South Florida. Bill, I’m sorry to tell
you that after a couple years of marriage, Valerie began to develop skin
infections, and experienced a bad cough, and she was diagnosed with full-blown
AIDS.
In spite of the medication she had been administered for so long, she grew
weaker. She died two years ago.
I’m so sorry. I know you cared immensely. Her sister told me Valerie often
spoke of your kindness to her, and how grateful she was that you came into her
life when you did.”
Well, my readers, I was overwhelmed with grief. I could not have felt more
momentary sorrow than if someone had told me my own daughter has died. As I
near the completion of this chapter, and recount this portion of my story,
tears well in my eyes.
As Ms. Blair finished, her voice broke, “Her family surrounded Valerie, as
she lay in the hospice room, and she died peacefully. Her sister told me that
just before she passed, she took Jim’s hand, and the hand of her son, and
joined them together. Jim recently adopted Christopher, and Chris took his last
name. Though the boy has had a hard time, after the death of his mother, he is
doing well now. He is healthy and happy.”
I thanked Ms. Blair for providing me her update. I never dreamed when I
drove to the garden center that day that I would receive such momentous news.
Over the following months I experienced my own private grief, as a result of
Valerie’s passing. I would have liked to have spoken to her a few times over
the course of those hidden years, at least hidden to me, and I would have liked
to have spent a few moments with her on that day she left us.
I have no doubt Valerie is in a better place now, and I can only rejoice
that her son is in the care of a good man. And I suppose he must be approaching
manhood now. Christopher might well have remained a theory, a figment, a
non-entity. But I rejoice that a young man moves, and breathes, and lives
today, as a result of a mother’s willingness to spare his life, and this counselor’s good fortune to intervene in the
life of a precious young lady, who deserved a long and prosperous journey, who
left us far too early, but who bequeathed something rich and tangible of
herself to this world,
… the life of her dear son.
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If you would like to see the titles and access hundreds of my blogs from 2015 and 2016, do the following:
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By
William McDonald, PhD. Excerpt from "(Mc)Donald's Daily Diary" Vol. 18. Copyright 2010
If you would like to see the titles and access hundreds of my blogs from 2015 and 2016, do the following:
Click on 2015 in the index to the right of this blog. When my December 31st blog, "The Shot Must Choose You" appears, click on the title. All my 2015 blog titles will come up in the right margin
Click on 2016 in the index to the right of this blog. When my December 31st blog, "Children of a Lesser God" appears, click on the title. All my 2016 blog titles will come up in the right margin
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