Loving Danny

My friend Danny* called last Monday morning and said he was passing blood. He told me he had thrown up blood yesterday. I told him to catch the bus and I would meet him at the Emergency Room at the hospital.

Thirty minutes later, I show up - no Danny. Undaunted (Danny is always running late), I pull out my laptop and fire it up, hoping to get a bit of writing done while I wait. Three hours and two cups of hospital coffee later… No Danny.

Worried, I call some people who know him to see if they know where he is, but they have not seen him. We call the other hospitals, but he is not there either. We call the free clinic and we call the shelter he had called me from that morning, but no Danny. That night, I go to the soup kitchen and the shelter, but no sign of him in either place.

At some point, you realize you have done all you can, and I was at that point. He was either fine or he was passed out somewhere from loss of blood, but either way, there was nothing I could do about it. So, I went home. And worried.

The next day I heard a third-hand story about his being OK and some alleged confusion at the hospital…all of which sounded very fishy.  I was mad at being stood up and he was embarrassed at standing me up, so we avoided running into each other the rest of the week.

Yesterday morning, I saw Danny at our Sunday morning breakfast we do in the park. He tried to avoid me and do his ’stupid shuffle’ (he acts stupid as a defense mechanism when you corner him) but we have been friends too long for it to work on me.

I let him have it. Both barrels. I told him that he really ticked me off by standing me up. That I had been worried sick about him. That he caused me to waste a whole day worrying about his stupid self and… you get the idea.

And he took it, and said he did not understand why I had been worried.  I explained to him that, while I sometimes wish I did not, I love him and was worried about him, and you do not treat people who love you the way he treated me. He apologized, and we hugged, and we are OK. For now. Until next time.

Danny has a hard time understanding that I could love him for no reason other than I love him. In his world, relationships grow out of mutual need: I watch your back, you watch mine. That I would be his friend and expect nothing but his friendship back is a concept so foreign to him, he has no words for it.

Sadly, many of my Christian friends are in the same place Danny is. They want to know what my agenda is, what the results are, what change is occurring in these people’s lives, who is getting “saved”, etc. They just do not get it. I don’t love him so he will change. I love him because he is worth it.

For 52 years, Danny has been the victim of brokenness & abuse, hatred because of his blackness, received practically zero education, been in and out of the county jail and struggled with drug abuse. There is no quick fix here, and some days I wonder if there is any fix at all. I pray that love is powerful enough to overcome all of that and to give him some sort of future.  But even if  loving him doesn’t make a difference, loving him matters. And even if he doesn’t change, he is no longer alone. And neither am I.

*Names are changed to protect my friend’s privacy.

Comments 2

  1. John Martin wrote:

    You forgot to mention that when you fired up your laptop at the hospital, you also tweeted about your whereabouts and your musings about the quality of the coffee in an expedient vending machine, if I remember correctly. :-)

    Seriously, though, thanks for this update. I was wondering how that all turned out after seeing your tweet.

    Are you sure there’s room in your chest for your heart? I’m glad to have met you. See you Thursday.

    John

    Posted 23 Feb 2009 at 12:01 pm
  2. Chad wrote:

    Thanks for the update Hugh, when I saw you Sunday I knew something was up when you were talking to Danny. It is tough loving people of all types, sometimes it does just feel like it doesn’t make a difference.

    On Sunday, as I was there for a very short time, a man teared up when I had boots for him and said, “What you all do down here is great, I really appreciate it.” It was nice to hear those kind words, but I wished I would have said something back more encouraging than, “thank you, we love being down here.”

    My old sunday school teacher used to have us sing, “they will know we are Christians by our love, by our love, they will know we are Christians by our love.” I love that song…

    Posted 24 Feb 2009 at 6:43 am

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