So, in response to a challenge, I dumped a bucket of cold
water on my head. I also donated $100 to
ALS Canada ( http://www.als.ca/ ) .
It’s kind of a fad right now… Everyone from Lady Gaga to Sesame Street’s
Cookie Monster has posted videos of the downpours.
In the past couple of weeks, $15,000,000 has been raised in
the U.S and in the past 4 days, over $130,000 has be raised in Canada with over
3,000 new registered donors.
There are also several folk who disdain this new “fad”. Celebrity Comedian Ricky Gervais wryly
tweeted “Dear Celebrities, OK now that’s enough. Please stop pouring lovely
fresh water over your heads” – Africa. He’s got a point… And yet, I think it’s a good campaign.
I have been minister/companion to a small handful of people as they struggled with ALS. I have been there for the last breath of two
and presided over funerals for another 4.
ALS, or Lou Gehrig’s disease sucks. It is a progressive neuromuscular
disease that kills nerve cells and leaves victims paralyzed. Rarely
have I felt so impotent, as when I have watch once lively and vibrant people
disappear into the living prison of a body that no longer responding to their
commands. I have seen the wit and
intelligence behind their eyes and wished that I could somehow reach inside and
let them free… but only death has been able to do that.
So, for me, the bucket challenge has been a small way for me
to actively share my grief and do a small bit of good. The money donated/raised matters a great deal
– but for me, it was also a brief memorial to lovely people who slipped away
from my grasp.
I believe that part of the genesis of the “Ice Bucket
Challenge” was to share with others a brief fleeting moment of what those with ALS
experience… for a few seconds as the ice and water cascaded down my body, I felt
a paralyzing numbness that is a unique feeling for me, but a ubiquitous
experience for those with ALS. If we
seize on this moment, we can talk with each other about the experience and
perhaps find a small window that leads to greater understanding of what our
love ones are experiencing as the disease takes hold. The conversation and engagement matter… If the shocking cold were to only make people
go to the website and discover that between 2 and 3 Canadians die every day as
a result of ALS; if it would inspire people to go deeper into the website and
discover the ways that they can support research and patients… then, it just
may be worth all that water.
For now, I’m content that the ALS society of Canada is very
happy with the response to the Ice Bucket Challenge; I’m content to have talked
to 5 different people about ALS in the past two days; I’m content that several of the youth in my
community have been inspired (it was one
of them that challenged me)… and I’m content that so many people are recognizing
the ALS society as an organization worthy of financial and volunteer support.
Or maybe, I’m just all wet….
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