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Elizabeth Edwards' Resilience

Making the Most of Each Day

Elizabeth Edwards (Frederick M. Brown/Getty Images)
Elizabeth Edwards (Frederick M. Brown/Getty Images)

We all have challenges and struggles in our lives. But how we live with them or through them is what defines the kind of person that we are. I believe that we have something to learn from everyone we encounter and everything we experience. Finding that lesson can be tricky, but when we view the world around us as bits of information to help improve our lives and our characters, it helps us connect to others in a way that we would otherwise dismiss.

A few days ago I read an article about how Elizabeth Edwards, the estranged wife of Vice-Presidential nominee John Edwards, had stopped her cancer treatment. The article stated that the doctors had told her that there was no point in further treatments, that they were speaking in terms of weeks and not months left for her, and that all that could have been done had been done.

And then late last night, as I checked my computer just one last time before going to sleep, I saw the headline that Elizabeth Edwards had passed away, surrounded by her loved ones, in her home. Maybe 24 hours or so from the first report that she had stopped her treatments. She did not have months left, she did not have weeks left, she maybe had a day.

As I read this article, I found myself crying. There was something so powerfully overwhelming about being told fairly definitively that you only had such a limited amount of time left in this world. And yet, in a strange way, I felt she was fortunate to have been given the advance notice. After all, none of us know how much time we have left. Yet most of us live like it is endless. We procrastinate because we can. We will spend more time with our kids on the weekend, we will get started on that project we have wanted to do for years, tomorrow. We will make sure next week to call our elderly relatives or check up on a friend. Today we are too busy with too many things to take care of all those important things that we will get to as soon as we have time.

Yet Elizabeth Edwards didn’t have that luxury, and from everything I have read about her, she recognized the importance in every minute that she had and tried to use it for the best. This was not a woman who had it easy. Not only did she suffer from an uncurable illness, she had suffered through the utter humiliation of her husband’s infidelity in the public eye and had lost a child in a car accident. And yet she always held her head up high. This woman had so many reasons to be angry, to be bitter and to spend her time feeling sorry for herself and her misfortunes. Yet she didn’t. She understood she didn’t have much time left, and she knew that she wasn’t about to waste it.

What impressed me most about her was her focus. It seems that her positive attitude and optimistic outlook was due to her recognizing that there were always others in a worse situation, and using that to appreciate what she had, and not what she didn’t have. She would speak about how even though she was suffering, she had an incredible support system of friends and family. She spoke about how she refused to focus on dying, because by doing that she was letting her illness win. Rather, she would live each day in a way that would impact others. And even when she was asked what she saw when she looked at her estranged husband, rather than answering with resentment or anger for the pain he caused her, she responded, “I see the father of my children.” And she continued that because she would not always be here for her children, she needed to ensure that he was empowered by her to be the primary parent and give them the love and support that they needed.

In Jewish law there is the concept of giving maaser, which is 10% of one’s income to charity. What is most interesting about this law is that the giving of this money is not a kindness, it is not in and of itself a charity, it is our obligation. There is the underlying understanding that 10% of what we make does not belong to us in the first place, therefore it is not ours to keep. When we give this 10% it is because it belongs to those who are helped by it.

So what happens when we are the ones in need of that charity? When we don’t have enough money to make ends meet? Do we still have to give that 10%? So the Lubavitcher Rebbe spoke about the importance of this law. And he explained that the power in giving this money was to acknowledge and recognize that even when we are struggling or even suffering, that others have even less than we have. When we can recognize that we might not be able to pay our mortgage, but we have a roof still over our heads, and someone out there is sleeping on a park bench, then we can appreciate what we have and not just focus on what we don’t have. More so, the Rebbe explained that by being careful with ensuring that we always give this 10%, it will actually be a spiritual impetus that will help us with our own financial situation. For when we put our focus on another, we then make the room for someone else to focus on us and help our needs.

Elizabeth Edwards did not have an easy life. But she had a meaningful one. And both in her life and even in her death she taught the power of a positive attitude, of recognizing the goodness in our lives and in focusing on what we can do and not just what we need. I have no doubt that her loss will leave a hole in the lives of all those who knew her and loved her, and yet the lessons she taught will provide the strength and direction for them to move forward. I for one, a complete stranger, hope to be able to tap into some of the lessons she taught. For she truly exemplified the meaning of the verse in Psalms: “Remind me that my days are numbered,” (39:4).

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By Sara Esther Crispe   More articles...  |   RSS Listing of Newest Articles by this Author
Sara Esther Crispe, a writer, inspirational speaker and mother of four, is the editor of TheJewishWoman.org and writes the popular weekly blog, Musing for Meaning. To book Sara Esther for a speaking engagement, please click here.

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Reader Comments
Latest Comments:
Posted: Dec 14, 2010
Strength and Beauty
Great article. My mother passed away in October from cancer and she too opted to stop the chemo as she had not long to live. For two months she showed amazing strength and never complained about the pain or her loss of dignity as her body lost control. She gained great strength from the word of G-d.
I miss her very much and yet I gain solace in the fact that she lived her life admirably to the very end.
Posted By Sandy Hudson, Barrie, Canada

Posted: Dec 14, 2010
our days are numbered
Sometimes I an left with a numbness, that comes from the concept our days are numbered, because there is such beauty, such dignity, such love in people like Elizabeth Edwards, Why did she have to die?

She took with grace a death sentence, turning it into paragraphs, creating poetry out of what remained, and we feel her still. She lives on. And will. Beloved beyond her family.

When I traverse my days, by foot, by car, however I am transported, I feel sometimes I am inscribing numbers with my feet, my car wheels, my every movement. Let them be Chai. L'chayim, to celebrate life!

As for four in fourteen, this day I am writing to Chabad, for me all fourteens remind me of February 14, for Valentines and that Day.
Why not make every day such a day, bringing with us wherever we go, a bundle of such joy. To do it for love.

We can even die for love. Why not? Others have.
Posted By ruth housman, marshfield hills, ma

Posted: Dec 13, 2010
Elizabeth
Thank you, dear Elizabeth, for your beautiful example. May you rest in peace and may your children be comforted by the love that you showed them.

You were the type of woman everyone wants as a Mother and the type of Mother women should strive to be.

You made the earth a better place to be by your presence. You have deeply touched my soul.

Rest in Peace dearheart.
Posted By Chana Moriah, Long Beach, Ca/USA

Posted: Dec 12, 2010
lesson
I too was fascinated by Elizabeth Edwards.
After losing her 16 yr old son, she wanted to keep his memory alive.
Her son during his short lifetime, noticed that teachers awarded higher grads to papers that were neatly typed /printed rather than hand-written and he also noticed that some of the poorer students did not have a computer in their homes and therefore did not have the opportunity to earn the higher grades.
After his death, in the memory of their son. his parents opened a technology center. Kids were able to use for free all the technology provided the Edwards, such as computers, scanners and printers...
I read this a while ago so dont remember the exact name of the center.
Posted By Rebecca Backman

Posted: Dec 12, 2010
The Funeral
As I watched CNN covering the prayer service, I found out much about Elizabeth from a Jewish perspective. How much time she spent at the cemetary caring for the gravesites of her departed loved ones. Although as Jews we consider that a mitzvah, the amount of time and energy Elizabeth spent there was somewhat excessive compulsive. She had so much stress that she could not release it. She did not spend much time in her Church to rid herself of the stress and that can cause serious internal disease as it had for Elizabeth. Thank g-d for making me Jewish and understanding how we release our stress during the mourning period and allow our Rabbi's to guide our emotional health. The Jewish rituals in death and dying are life's true lessons. I am so sorry that we could not help Elizabeth with these issues that caused her so much stress.
Posted By SusanKaplanWalder, Baltimore, Md

Posted: Dec 11, 2010
Elizabeth Edwards & Sara Esther
Another great piece by Sara Esther Crispe ~ thank you for this insightful and inspiring article.
I admired Elizabeth Edwards very much, and I appreciate being reminded of those great qualities she possessed, but even moreso, framed within the profound wisdom of Jewish teaching and how I may implement that wisdom in my own life.
I pray I may be such a great and graceful lady, so filled with a love for life, and such a blessing to all those who know me.
Posted By D'vorah Wodraska, St. Louis, MO

Posted: Dec 11, 2010
Thank you
Thank you for this word. My brothers wife passed away today and reading this inspirational word makes me feel that all is not lost. Because like Mrs Edward she also lived a life of doing good to others and serving our maker. May the Good G-d have mercy on her soul.
Posted By Theo, Duluth, GA

Posted: Dec 10, 2010
Thank you
Sara--_Thank you. Once again you have gotten to the core of an issue and touched my heart. You really know how to elucidate on an event and make it even more meaningful.
Posted By Anonymous

Posted: Dec 10, 2010
Thank you!
I needed that boost of inspiration, to realize my blessings. Thanks for sharing this wonderful woman's life and legacy with me.
Posted By ZS

Posted: Dec 10, 2010
Elizabeth Edwards
Absolutely gorgeous insights about how we face life's tests & the real power of choice. Our behavior has impact & consequences that reach far beyond the self. It will be a privilege & blessing for everyone who reads your words b/c it will open the heart and fuel the thoughts with integrity and gratitude! THANK YOU!
Posted By seena elbaum, bala cynwyd, pa/usa



 


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