Peggy's Paper Dolls
Brian scanned the walls of the same corridor that had
become so familiar to him over the past few years. As he
entered through door number thirty-two, a tremendous wave
of emotion swept over him, and he had to fight not to
drown in it. His sister's face lit up with a vibrant
smile and that special twinkle in her eyes, as it always
did whenever she saw him.
Peggy was seven years old. She charmed everyone that knew
her with her undying enthusiasm. She would talk non-stop
to a listening ear, and she seldom cried. Peggy was dying
of cancer.
Brian was at the hospital constantly, knowing that his
little sister had only a short time to live. His average
life as a sixteen-year old had taken a traumatic turn for
the worst upon the diagnosis. He loved his sister more than
anything, and found himself becoming enraged that she, such
a sweet and innocent girl, should be inflicted with such a
horrible disease.
Brimming with creativity, Peggy amazed Brian. She had a
collection of paper dolls that she had made. All sixty-two
were tacked behind her bed. Brian would ask her about the
dolls, but she would always just smile, and say happily
that they were her friends. He would be saddened by the
fact that Peggy could not have the normal life of a seven-
year-old, and make her own friends. It would only dishearten
him more to watch her play with the other sick children.
Each day that passed was like a ticking time bomb for Brian.
Peggy grew physically weaker by the day, but her spirit
remained strong. Each one of her smiles pierced his heart.
She would ask him why he looked so sad, for he found it
difficult to smile, though he pretended that everything
was all right. When he wasn't at the hospital, he would
spend most of his time at home, alone in his room. There
were times when he would bang his head uncontrollably
against the wall until it hurt. He would cry, shamelessly,
and throw mad fits for no reason. His life was falling apart,
almost as if it was him that was dying.
It was two weeks after Peggy's eighth birthday that she
passed away. Though expected, it broke Brian's heart. No
amount of anticipation could have prepared him for the
silence that was Peggy's passing.
As Brian forced himself to walk through door number thirty-
two in the cancer ward one last time, he almost expected to
see Peggy sitting on her bed. He prayed that he would see
her face light up, just like it always had. It was only the
emptiness and coldness of the bed that greeted him, though.
He wanted to scream and smash the table lamp on the floor.
He wanted to do anything to escape from the silence. Silence
was a foreign entity with Peggy around, but she was gone,
and its presence was so thick that it suffocated him.
Then he saw the tiny paper dolls smiling back at him from
the wall. Brian found a shoe box to put them in, unable to
throw them away. One by one he removed them from the wall,
seeing for the first time the inscriptions on the back of
each: Terrah, Ivy, Nicole, Amy, Justin, Chris...and on and
on. There was one name that stuck in his mind: Jesse. Jesse
had been Peggy's first and best friend at the hospital.
Jesse had died about one year ago. Then Brian began to
recognize more names, and he realized why they seemed so
familiar.
Peggy's paper dolls were all the children that had died
since she had arrived. When Brian finally pulled the sixty-
second doll off the wall with a quivering hand, he realized
that there was one that had not been there before. It was
purple, Peggy's favourite colour, with a wide crayon smile.
As Brian turned the doll over and read the back, he was snapped out
of his state of denial, realizing for the first
time that his sister was not coming back. Tears flooded his
eyes as the name, scrawled in crayon, "Peggy", screamed at
him.
She had known.
In his head he could hear the sweet voice that he had known
for so long, but for the first time, he understood her. All
the time he had been inconspicuous, pretending that
everything would turn out all right, for her benefit. (Or
maybe it was for his own sake?). All along, she knew that
she was going to die, yet not once did she say that it wasn't fair.
As the memories of Peggy reeled through Brian's head, he
realized that he could not remember a time when she had been
truly unhappy. Peggy, only a child, had accepted her disease
and death as a part of her life. She faced most people's
worst fear with courage, and the determination to make each
day that she lived worthwhile. The dolls were a means of
remembrance and symbols of life. Instead of mourning the ones
that she had loved, she remembered all the joy that they had
brought her. Viewing life through Peggy's eyes, Brian saw
that she didn't want to be known as the girl that died of
cancer, but as the girl that shone like the sun. From his
perspective, each day had escorted his sister one step
closer to death. Through Peggy's eyes, each day of her life
gave her one more day to shine.
Wrapped up in his own sense of loss, Brian had let her
illness eat away at his own mentality. Instead of being a
big brother, he had given up, and now it was too late. He
could have shared her life with her, if he'd only realized.
Brian looked down at the small paper doll in his hand
through salty tears, and he realized that it was not too
late. He could still follow in her footsteps, and learn how
to seek out the best in any situation. Suddenly he felt the
odd sensation of a smile. Though choked with sobs and
heartache, it paved the path for more smiles in his life,
that he may never have had the courage to find had it not
been for Peggy's attitude. He had never realized that he
knew so little about his sister, but most importantly, that
he would learn so much from her, the bravest girl on earth.
From that day on, Brian learned not to dwell upon life's
downsides, but to search for the positives that were
sometimes hidden in the shadows of his fears.
So often do people live for the future and for what "will
be", that they forget and take for granted "what is". Peggy
understood that the present was a gift. Every day, she
would open her gift to discover all of the splendor and
happiness that it had to offer. To realize the value of the present
is only half of the battle. It is having the
courage and the determination to live within it that wins
it.
Peggy was gone, but her memory, her heart, and all that was
expressed through one child's paper dolls remained.
--
Casey-Jo Timson, age 18 Ontario, Canada http://inspirationalstories.com
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