Hugs are Important

Are you remembering to hug your elderly friends and relatives? When are you practicing therapeutic touch?

By Fred Smith

One of my favorites is the subject of therapeutic touch. I've been working on it now for several years. I got interested in it because the president of Sloan-Kettering said to the AMA one day: "my father was a country doctor. He carried a little black valise. We know today there was not one thing in there that would heal anybody, but people got well, because my daddy put his hand on them and said, 'you're gonna get well." And so there's a whole nursing association in New York City today practicing the area of therapeutic touch.

I did an interview for the University of Nebraska by telephone. It's an interesting new technique, Some of these classes will call a writer or a speaker and put him on conference call for an hour to answer questions from the class. In preparation they sent me the school magazine. There was a poem by Donna Swanson. It has to do with touch and I want to include it, at least part of it. When my mother was 80 years old (she lived to be 93) she was beginning to get very wrinkled and she was getting very stooped. It's said that the old people miss the tactile relationships with others because nobody wants to touch them. I realized that I had quit touching my mother. Recognizing this, I started hugging her again and and it made a big difference. Let me share this poem with you. It has special meaning for me, because I could be very happy that I had relearned to touch my mother.

Picture Minnie sitting in a big chair and pondering.

Minnie remembers

By Donna Swanson

God, my hands are old,

I've never said that out loud before

But they are.

When did these slender, graceful

Hands become gnarled, shrunken

Claws?

When, god?

How long has it been since

Someone

Touched me?

Twenty years?

Twenty years I've been a widow.

Respected.

Smiled at.

But never touched.

Never held so close that loneliness

Was blotted out.

I remember how my mother used to hold me, god.

Oh god. I'm so lonely!

I remember the first boy who ever

Kissed me.

I remember hank and the babies. . .

Out of the fumbling, awkward

Attempts of new lovers came the

Babies.

And, god, hank didn't seem to

Mind if my body thickened and

Faded a little.

He still loved it

And touched it.

And the children hugged me a lot. Oh god, I'm lonely!

God , why didn't we raise the kids

To be silly and affectionate

As well as dignified and proper.

They do their duty.

They come to my room

To pay their respects.

But they don't touch me.

They call me mom, or mother

Or grandma.

I was in Barkley, Kentucky, at a laymen's meeting and a frumpy little woman, almost square, stood at the back and waited for me to get through talking to other people. In speaking you always watch that. . .if somebody stands around they've got something special to say. And so she walked up to me— she wasn't over 5 feet tall——and looked up at me and said, "would you hug me?" I said, "you know I will." I reached out and gave her a great big hug. As she waddled off I said to myself, "How long has that hug got to last?" I knew the answer ---- a long time.