Mr. Gillespie
Author: Angela Sturgill
Source: Chicken Soup for the Soul
When I was in seventh grade, I was a candy striper at
a local hospital in my town. I volunteered about thirty to
forty hours a week during the summer. Most of the time I
spent there was with Mr. Gillespie. He never had any
visitors, and nobody seemed to care about his condition.
I spent many days there holding his hand and talking to him,
helping with anything that needed to be done. He became a
close friend of mine, even though he responded with only an
occasional squeeze of my hand. Mr. Gillespie was in a
coma.
I left for a week to vacation with my parents, and
when I came back, Mr. Gillespie was gone. I didn't have
the nerve to ask any of the nurses where he was, for fear
they might tell me he had died. So with many questions
unanswered, I continued to volunteer there through my
eighth-grade year.
Several years later, when I was a junior in high
school, I was at the gas station when I noticed a familiar
face. When I realized who it was, my eyes filled with
tears. He was alive! I got up the nerve to ask him if his
name was Mr. Gillespie, and if he had been in a coma about
five years ago. With an uncertain look on his face, he
replied yes. I explained how I knew him, and that I had
spent many hours talking with him in the hospital. His
eyes welled up with tears, and he gave me the warmest hug I
had ever received.
He began to tell me how, as he lay there comatose, he
could hear me talking to him and could feel me holding his
hand the whole time. He thought it was an angel, not a
person, who was there with him. Mr. Gillespie firmly
believed that it was my voice and touch that had kept him
alive.
Then he told me about his life and what happened to
him to put him in the coma. We both cried for a while and
exchanged a hug, said our good-byes and went our separate
ways.
Although I haven't seen him since, he fills my heart
with joy every day. I know that I made a difference
between his life and his death. More important, he has
made a tremendous difference in my life. I will never
forget him and what he did for me: he made me an angel.
Reviews:
**** [Oct 03, 2003] by Xma
I agree with the author.. when we can change someone from bad to good, it will be something valuable and unforgetable in our life.. like being an angel... ^_^