It was the third day, my husband, Joe,

had been in the intensive care unit following his fifth surgery for the removal of most of his remaining small intestine. The surgery took significantly longer than expected. Joe was older and weaker, and he wasn’t responding.

As I sat beside his bed, two nurses tried repeatedly to get him to cough, open his eyes, move a finger – anything to let them know he could hear them. He didn’t respond. I sat praying to God to please help Joe respond – any sign that he might survive.

Finally, one of the nurses turned to me and suggested that perhaps if she knew something personal about our family, she could try to stimulate his response with that knowledge. She said, “Maybe you, as his daughter, could help us with such information.”

I smiled and said, “I’ll be happy to give you personal information, and thank you for the compliment, but I’m his wife of forty-three years, not his daughter, and we’re about the same age.” The nurse looked at me and said, “The entire staff thought you were his daughter and had even commented how wonderful they thought it was that his daughter was with him all the time.”

As they were expressing how I looked so young, a little cough came from my husband, and we all turned to stare at him. He didn’t open his eyes, but loud and clear he said, “She dyes her hair!”

 

A middle-aged woman has a heart attack and is taken to the hospital.

While on the operating table, she has a near-d.eath experience. During that experience, she sees God and asks if this is it. God says NO and explains that she has another 30-40 years to live.

Upon her recovery she decides to just stay in the hospital and have a facelift, liposuction, breast augmentation, tummy tuck – you name it, she had it. She even has someone come in and change her hair color. She figures since she’s got another 30 or 40 years she might as well make the most of it.

She walks out of the hospital after the last operation when she is k. lled by an ambulance speeding up to the hospital.

She arrives in front of God and asks, “I thought you said I had another 30-40 years?”

“Oh, ” Said God. “I didn’t recognize you.”

 

Woman Suffering in Pain.

Her husband strokes her back and says,

“I’m sorry sweety, you have to go through this.”

She says, “Don’t worry. It’s not your fault.”

 

“What happened?” asked the hospital visitor to the heavily bandaged man sitting up in bed.

“Well, I went down to Margate at the weekend and decided to take a ride on the roller coaster. As we came up to the top of the highest loop, I noticed a little sign by the side of the track. I tried to read it but it was very small and I couldn’t make it out.

“I was so curious that I decided to go round again, but we went by so quickly that I couldn’t see what the sign said.

“By now, I was determined to read that sign so I went round a third time. As we reached the top, I stood up in the car to get a better view.”

“And did you manage to see what the sign said this time?” asked the visitor.

“Yes.”

“What did it say?”

“Don’t stand up in the car!”

Related Posts

I Mowed The Lawn For My Eighty Two Year Old Neighbor One Quiet Afternoon, And The Next Morning A Local Sheriff Knocked On My Door With A Message That Reshaped My View On Home Insurance

I used to believe that difficult seasons in life always come with a warning. Looking back now, I understand that they often arrive quietly, the way a…

Justice, Irony, and a Little Bit of Revenge..

Ina small courtroom, a woman stood before a judge after being found guilty of a minor traffic violation. When asked about her occupation, she calmly replied that…

I Was Fired and Walking Home—Then Two Helicopters Landed Looking for Me

The fluorescent lights of St. Jude’s Medical Center hummed with their usual headache-inducing flicker at two in the morning. Nurse Rachel Bennett had learned to ignore them…

My Son Stole Everything and Disappeared for 25 Years Until His Daughter Arrived With a Key and a Message

The doorbell rang on a Thursday morning and I almost did not answer it. At sixty-seven, I had learned that unexpected knocks rarely brought anything good. But…

He Called Me “Irrelevant” at My Father’s Funeral — I Smiled, Because I Knew What He Was About to Lose

My Husband Called Me “Irrelevant” at My Father’s Funeral — He Had No Idea What Was Coming That morning, everyone treated us like people who had already…

Choosing Myself at 75: A Quiet Ending and an Unexpected Lesson

After 50 years, I filed for divorce. The sentence still feels unreal when I say it out loud, like it belongs to someone braver, someone younger. For…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *