Guest guest Posted May 15, 2004 Report Share Posted May 15, 2004 I had never read this though I'm sure many of you possibly have. It is an older reprint from Reader's Digest I am told. Thought you might enjoy it also. My Silent Keeper My brother, Harter, was born in Hollywood on Dec 9, 1956, a month before his due date. Doctors told my parents only that because he was premature, it would take some time for Mike to catch up. However, six months after Mike's birth, a nurse noticed his slow mental`and physical development. It was more than a minor disability, she told my parents. He was retarded, and he also had cerebral palsy. Overwhelmed, my mom and dad went to the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn., in the spring of 1957, looking for the kind of medical miracle they believed the clinic's doctors performed. But they could do nothing for Mike, nor could they ever fully explain why he never lost his baby teeth, never grew taller than about 30 inches and never weighed more than 28 lbs. They did estimate, however, that he would not live to see his 12th birthday. In May 1958 I was born in Austin, Minn., a blue-collar town framed by cornfields, I was healthy and grew up to be big and fast. As a boy I learned to feed and clothe Mike. As a teenager, I babysat for my " big brother " and learned the proper dosage of medicine to prevent the seizures that caused him to stiffen and tremble. In my favorite photo we are on the steps of our new home, wearing red baseball hats and toothy smiles. I am standing next to Mike, and between us are Midge, a pomeraian, and Happy Hank, a basset hound. Animals understood Mike. If other kids pulled or dogs tails or ears, they would move out of range or snap, but never with Mike. And if the dogs thought he was in danger, they always came to his defense. Mike found special things he loved to hold and play with: a yellow rose, a small flag, a pinwheel, wind chimes. The ideal for Mike was to sit near the window with a bowl of M & M's, sunshine streaming across his face. Many people said he would never walk or talk, and should be institutionalized. He never did learn to walk, but he did learn to talk-not flawlessly or even in complete sentences, but he had the basics down. If he was hungry, thirsty, happy or sad, we knew. Cake. Cookies. Candy bar. water-water cry. He knew names too. I was Kagun, not . But that changed with a beard I grew during the summer before college. Family members said it was ugly. The name stuck. " Look who's home. Who's that? " they'd say to Mike. " Ugly, " he would respond, and squeal with delight. All of which-to-me-was normal, for he was the only brother I knew. The only time I thought of the diffrences between us was when others pointed them out. A stare in a restaurant, a pointed finger on the street, a comment by another kid in the schoolyard, or the rubber- necking gawks of strangers at the county fair. His effect on some people was special, however. Big, tough men crumbled when he smiled, giggled and winked at them. One in particular, a bear of a man who had been on the wrong side of the law more than once, always asked after him. He'd often give mom a few dollars and tell her, " get something for the little guy, will you? " For anyone who took the time, Mike softened them like butter in the afternoon sun. My circle of friends widened when I entered high school. One day mom asked if my new friends would have a problem seeing Mike for the first time. " If they dont accept Mike, they dont accept me and they aren't welcome, " I said. And if I didnt think of him as diffrent, I never thought about him dying either. That changed on a warm fall night in 1975. I had made my first varsity football start. We won, 7-6, and after the game I celebrated with my friends at the local hangout. The phone rang and I was paged. " No need to worry, everything is okay, dont rush home, " said my mom, " but Mike had a seizure and is in the hospital. " With this first seizure, Mike's life was begining to fade. His immune system was defenseless. His seizures intensified and became more frequent. His bones would break with little cause. His lungs often filled with fluid. As his arms grew weak and his life flickered, Mike lost the strenght to lift a rose, and the resistance to sit by an open window. Like the flowers he loved, Mike was to fragile to stand a frost. As his health faded and college took me away, Mike would show his disapproval of my absence by ignoring me and pouting when I returned. My greatest sin was growing up and moving out. Maybe it was then that HE realized there was a diffrence between us. Toward the end of his life, the promise of Spring was near, but Mike would not make it through yet another hospital stay. A bout with pneumonia quietly squeezed life from him. Mike slipped in and out of a coma on March 15,1983-Dad's 50th birthday. As though he knew the importance of the date, he battled for one more day. Harter- Just 26 years old died at sunrise the next day in my mothers arms, Dad nearby, surrounded by those he loved. I put a few things in Mike's casket to be buried with him.My favorite picture of us with our dogs, a bag of M & M's, a stuffed animal and a radio. We never Had those great, soul-searching talks that other brothers have about women, religion, work, parents and Vietnam. We never played catch, talked about our dreams or double dated for homecoming or prom. I would get older, maybe one day marry and have kids, but Mike would be an everlasting innocent. It has been 13 years since he died, but each year, in some way, I find new meaning in my life as a result of Mike. He taught me compassion and strenght. He taught me respect for those less fortunate than myself. And he taught me an appreciation of the beauty in the simplest things. Children who come into the world with mental or physical handicaps are considered by some to be abnormal. Others mat regard them as the select children of God. Mike was one of those. Physically and mentally, I was my brothers keeper. Spiritually, Mike was and still is my kepper - a nearly silent, soulful guardian angel. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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