for sick
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When someone has a serious illness, friends and relatives often struggle with how to help. Sometimes, they stay away because they don't know what to do or say.
It's important to continue to show those who are sick you care. Here are some examples:
1. Upon discovering that someone is sick, send a brief card or a note. Rather than allowing a silence to isolate the sick if you cannot visit quickly, send a note, even a brief one, to provide a sense of contact. Almost every hospital room I’ve visited has cards displayed proudly where the sick person can see them; they are a reminder that people do care.
2. Alert the sick person’s rabbi. Although a visit from a rabbi is often appreciated, many people forget to notify the synagogue when someone is ill. Before doing so, be sure to consider whether the patient will be upset by having his or her illness made public.
3. Plan to visit the sick. The physical presence of caring people can banish loneliness and provide tangible evidence of a concerned community. A close friend or family member should visit immediately. If the hospitalization will be protracted, others should wait a day or two before visiting. For shorter stays, it is certainly appropriate to visit sooner.
4. Don’t plan on a long visit. Hospital patients have a busy schedule, and sick people often tire easily. It is better to visit briefly but repeatedly than to visit once for a long time. When the patient tires, leave courteously with a promise to return another time.
5. Schedule your visit appropriately. The Talmud counsels not to visit the sick early in the morning or late at night. Most hospitals have visiting hours in order to enable doctors and nurses to perform their tasks unencumbered. Be sure to respect such restrictions.
6. Before visiting the patient, phone ahead to let him or her know you are coming. This simple gesture creates the anticipation of a visit, giving the sick person that much more pleasure. Calling in advance also puts the patient in charge. Being sick often results in a forced passivity. When you phone and ask if it is all right to visit, the patient is able to exercise some control.
7. Prepare for a visit carefully and thoughtfully.
· Don’t wear perfume or after-shave lotion. Illness often makes people more sensitive to smell, and artificial odors can be disturbing to the person who is sick.
· Don’t bring bad news. Try to restrict topics to those that will make the patient feel good.
· Select one or two topics for discussion. Preparing yourself in this way can help you feel ready to sit and talk.
· Bring the patient a small, practical gift. A newspaper or magazine can reinforce a sense of connection to the outside world and leaves tangible evidence of the visit.
8. Before entering the patient’s room, be sure to knock and ask for permission to enter. This is another way to allow the patient to feel in control.
9. If there are already many visitors, wait outside until a few people leave. Trying to juggle a room full of friends can be exhausting. If you cannot wait, then say, “I see that you are well cared for now. I wanted you to know I’ll be thinking of you, and I’ll come back when there are fewer people.” Let the patient know when to expect the next visit, and then be sure to visit again.
10. When visiting, help with concrete tasks. After getting the sick person’s consent, help by making the bed, watering plants, straightening up the room, or any other chore that helps the sick person or makes the surroundings look well attended.
11. Don’t feel you have nothing to talk about. At the heart of our discomfort with visiting the sick is a sense that we won’t have anything to say. The following specific guidelines might help.
· Be alert to objects in the room that might prompt a pleasant discussion.
· Don’t criticize the hospital, the doctors, the food, or the medical procedures. Criticizing a patient’s care may diminish his or her confidence in it. If the patient is frustrated, then listen sympathetically without committing yourself to agreeing.
· Don’t evaluate a procedure or the veracity of a medical prognosis. At the same time, the patient may want someone who will listen openly, and not brush aside the patient’s feelings of hopelessness or despair.
· Don’t defend God, religion, or nature. Being sick is a legitimate cause for anger, and expressing that anger is the quickest way to be able to move beyond it. We can best help by listening sympathetically and by saying, “It must be very difficult to go through what you are going through. It really isn’t fair. I’d be angry too if I were you.”
12. Don’t be afraid to sit in silence. As with any situation where we are trying to bring comfort and friendship to someone who is suffering, the primary statement we can make is not through any words we speak but through our presence.
13. Listen. Besides demonstrating our involvement by offering our physical presence, we can do so by allowing the sick to speak of their concerns. In fact, this is the main service we can offer. If people who are sick want to speak about their illness — or about something else, then listen. All of us have a need to be heard most of all when we feel strained or ill.
14. Offer your hand. Don’t hesitate to touch the person. There is no more immediate way to demonstrate that you will not abandon a person to illness than by reaching out and placing your hand on the patient’s shoulder or by taking the person’s hand in your own. The calm, love, and stability that touch provides is without equal.
15. Offer to pray with the patient. Of all the events in a person’s life, illness is one that calls for the assurance of holiness and connectedness that Jewish tradition can provide so well. A willingness to observe Shabbat or other holiday and, more especially, a willingness to pray together can establish a living link to the Jewish community and to God. The rabbis of the Talmud often made a point of praying in the presence of the sick, some even claiming that a visit that did not include a prayer did not constitute bikkur holim (visiting the sick).
· Prayer can be informal. A simple wish of refu’ah sh’leimah (“complete healing”) or “God be with you” can bring a level of comfort that ordinary conversation cannot. Jewish tradition offers a brief prayer linking the experience of the individual to the broader community: “May God show compassion to you, together with all the other sick of the people Israel.”
· If possible, visit before Shabbat or a holiday, and bring some item that will allow the patient to celebrate that holiday. Linking your visits to the Jewish holidays is an effective way to combat the disorienting quality of being sick and reconnect the suffering individual to what other Jews are experiencing beyond the walls of the sickroom.
· Read a psalm together. This simple gesture can add tremendous depth to your visit. Psalm 23 (“Adonai is my shepherd”), or Psalm 121 or 130, can be a source of great comfort. By using their words of our forebears, we affirm a community of belonging that transcends illness, sorrow, and pain.
16. Offer to make two specifically Jewish gestures:
· Attend a synagogue worship service and [to] have a mi she-berakh recited after the Torah reading. Mi she-berakh (literally, “may the One who blessed”) is a prayer for the sick. Find out the patient’s Jewish name and those of his or her parents. By asking for a mi she-berakh to be recited, you ensure that the community is informed of the illness, that more people will pray for that individual, and that the sick person has the comfort of knowing that a congregation of Jews cares.
· Make a contribution to a synagogue or a charitable cause in honor of the sick person. In Jewish tradition, tzedakah (a charitable contribution) is a highly cherished form of demonstrating respect and concern.
17. Visit nursing home residents, long-time hospital patients, and elderly shut-ins. Many people suffer from chronic illnesses for such a long time that we often stop remembering that they need our care. The rules of bikkur holim apply to these people too.
May the One who blessed our ancestors —
Patriarchs Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, Moshe, Aharon, Dovid and Shlomo —
bless and heal the one who is ill:
FIRST NAME son/daughter of MOTHER'S NAME .
May the Holy Blessed One
overflow with compassion upon him/her,
to restore him/her,
to heal him/her,
to strengthen him/her,
to enliven him/her.
The One will send him/her, speedily,
a complete healing —
healing of the soul and healing of the body —
along with all the ill among the people of Israel,
soon, speedily, without delay,
and let us all say: Amen!
Last Name | Hebrew Name | Provided by | Submited | Expires |
---|---|---|---|---|
Beron | Nechama Bracha bas Yehiela | Angela Khvilovsky | May 10, 2024 | May 5, 2025 | Etus | Rita bas Genya | Irina Tokarskiy | June 30, 2024 | June 30, 2025 | Etus | Rita bas Genya | Irina Tokarskiy | July 30, 2024 | July 30, 2025 | Etus | Rita bas Genya | Irina Tokarskiy | December 1, 2024 | December 1, 2025 | Freydina | Rochel bas Shaina Reizel | David Freydin | November 19, 2024 | December 19, 2024 | Golod | Daniel ben Shayna Malka | Gina Fridberg | July 1, 2024 | December 28, 2024 | Golod | Daniel ben Shayna Malka | Gina Fridberg | October 6, 2024 | January 14, 2025 | Katz | Moshe Dovid ben Raizel | Adina Dimarsky | May 9, 2024 | May 9, 2025 | Khvilovsky | Sofa Shifra Chaya bas Bronya | Angela Khvilovsky | May 10, 2024 | May 5, 2025 | Koivogui | Michoel ben Natasha | Eliezer Dimarsky | September 27, 2024 | January 5, 2025 | Litwak | Chaya Mushka bas Raizel | Adina Dimarsky | May 18, 2024 | May 18, 2025 | Slonim | Vitaliy ben Chava | Irina Tokarskiy | June 30, 2024 | June 30, 2025 | Tokarskiy | Esfir bas Genya | Irina Tokarskiy | June 30, 2024 | June 30, 2025 | Tokarskiy | Esfiir bas Genya | Irina Tokarskiy | July 30, 2024 | July 28, 2025 | Vinokurov | Stella Tehila bas Alla | Angela Khvilovsky | May 10, 2024 | May 5, 2025 |