Remembering Dr. Baker

TAT

Songs and stories to discover your purpose through suffering.

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Remembering Dr. Baker

            Will happy haunting suffice for this week? “The Promise and the Lawsuit, Part One” demands at least two follow-up installments. The same thing goes for “The Dialogues of Solly and TAT.” However, today I hope to go short and light. In view of the recent attacks on Israel by Hamas, and the greater misery yet to come in the Middle East, I want to think about happier things. Perhaps you do, too. I don’t feel like staring into some abyss of misery—even if there’s healing to be found at the bottom—not if I don’t have to.
            My second reason for staying short and light is more mundane: I must become quicker with producing this regular correspondence. If ever I hope to plunk my revised fantasy novels into the hands of agents, I must devote most of my efforts elsewhere. So thank you for adapting with me as I shorten these missives. Your encouragement is ever appreciated. Please continue to comment as often as possible, every week if you like, and refer like-minded friends. The growth of this platform with readers who enjoy my style and content is critical to my gaining the attention of literary agents.

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            Can you name one person, now deceased, who left a monumental impact on you? Maybe there were several. Do you remember their laughing, or the way they moved? Are they still with you, haunting you in their own pleasant way? Perhaps you went to their funeral service, and you still remember specific details. They died, as sure as you visited their gravesite, and yet they live on inside of you.
            When I moved back from Oklahoma to Michigan in 1998, to begin practicing medicine, Dr. Ron Baker was younger than I am now. He was in his early 50’s, and amazingly fit. He could bench press 250 pounds; he often ran half-marathons.
            Dr. Baker told jokes to me and to all the office staff—terrible jokes—but we knew why he did it. It was never to draw attention to himself, but always to cheer up everyone else.
            He cared enough to speak the truth to me, in a loving way. At least twice, when I was harsh and demanding toward my nurse, he pulled me aside, and exhorted me to consider my words and be kinder. Then he put his hand on my shoulder and prayed for me; he essentially knocked me on the helmet, swatted me on the butt, and sent me back into the game.
            In those days I was a distance runner, with a voracious appetite. One day I forgot my lunch, and I still had a gigantic workday ahead. There was no time to go somewhere for food. Dr. Baker figured out my dilemma. “That’s no problem,” he said instantly. “You can have half of my sandwich!” Then he rummaged through the refrigerator, pulled out several strange African dishes, and split every portion of his one-person lunch with me.
            That’s what you do when a friend has no meal.
            Dr. Baker was an avid outdoorsman. He grew up as a missionary kid in Sierra Leone, speaking flawless Mendi and hunting everything that moved—whether by hook, or by spear, or by sling, or by bow. He could identify the type of monkey in the forest half a mile ahead by its smell alone.
            “How can you do that?” I asked him.
            “It’s not that difficult. They stink!”
            Dr. Baker took his kids and grandkids on deep excursions into nature to teach them all how to hunt and fish. “There’s only two kinds of fishing,” he said. “Good fishing, and excellent fishing! Just like hunting.”
            Prior to his death, Dr. Baker made a videorecording for his loved ones, especially those from Sierra Leone. He spoke in perfect Mendi as he described what he was seeing, looking back from the other side of the Great Water of death. He was not just speaking in another tongue, but he was thinking in it—for he struggled to translate his own words back into English. He described for us all his lifelong heavenly hope, of a wonderful, glorious land, free of sorrow, free of pain.
            Many Africans from Sierra Leone attended Dr. Baker’s funeral. They testified about his life, his medical help, his character. Then they filled the church sanctuary with their singing, all in Mendi.

*          *          *

            I often remember Dr. Baker when I sit down at my computer to peck away at some new composition. Many writers say, “Every composition begins as a s****y first draft, so don’t worry about it. Just write.”
            If Dr. Baker had been a writer, he would have said it this way: “There’s only two kinds of writing. Good writing, and excellent writing! Just like hunting and fishing. Let’s go fish!”

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16 responses to “Remembering Dr. Baker”

  1. Wow! What an insight into Dr. Baker’s life. I knew about his time there and love for the people and country of Sierra Leon. This is your tribute to him. Maybe, consider writing an article for a magazine and then jumping it up into a book. Just a thought. Thanks for sharing!

    • Thanks, DJ. After I complete this epic fantasy series–for which the opening trilogy is just the beginning–I hope to write at least one medically focused memoire. I’ll make sure to include Dr. Baker in that volume.

  2. THIS!! Oh TAT reading this warmed my heart! I can vividly picture Dr B, without hesitation, reaching into that red cooler that Bonnie called his “organ donation” cooler (😂) for the sandwich to share with you. He had a way of teaching us all a servant’s life lessons by example-being his kind & humble self.
    I have always admired the gift he had of genuinely connecting with people with his warm, gentle spirit.
    He would never take the full credit for something amazing he had accomplished or a charitable deed like sharing his lunch with a friend who had none. He would just smile and say “To God all the glory!”

    • Thanks Wendy. Ron hand delivered the love of God to everyone he touched, including you and me. If we remember how he did it, then perhaps we can do the same.

      • A vivid image you give, TAT: “hand delivered the love of God to everyone he touched.” Although I didn’t know Dr. Baker, what you and others have written is a reminder of his lasting legacy, one that encourages me to keep abiding in what is of most importance.

        • Ron was the very definition of a good man. I doubt I’ve ever said that about any one person–that he or she embodied the very concept of “goodness.” But Ron did. And I hope to become like him in that way.

  3. I hope no one ever identifies me an half mile away by my smell. Unless it is an aroma of God I suppose. Ron certainly had that. He can lead the hunting and fishing trips in the new heaven and new earth to come.

    • I’m not sure if there is hunting in heaven, not if it’s a land without death. Maybe there’s fishing, and every fish is unique, but it’s all catch-and-release.

    • Thanks, Angela. A great attitude on fishing days with no fish turns an otherwise disappointing event into a delight. Dr. Ron Baker knew how to do that. I wish everyone had at least one person in their life like that–a person with perspective–a person worth emulating. Humble role models, like Ron Baker, have almost always seen a great deal of life, suffered much, and persevered. They are not boastful about what wisdom they have gathered, but quickly acknowledge their own failings, saying things like, “Good judgment comes from experience, and experience comes from bad judgment!”

  4. Thanks for sharing this with me during our last discussion. I too share that same philosophy through my faith and choices I made and make in life.

  5. Thank you Dr Thompson for sharing your website with me today. Dr Baker’s story touched my heart deeply. He was my doctor for many years whom I trusted and loved. He was the only doctor who ever prayed for me and that is very special. You were the one who told me of Dr Baker’s passing, which saddened me. Thank you for filling the gap. May God continue to bless your ministry.

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