Posts Tagged ‘support’

Pinned to the Mat

11.07.2011

On the day of my diagnosis, Cancer pinned me to the mat.

Death stood near and started his slow count to 10.

Through my blog, I gathered a crowd around me to watch. I was bottom/down, and I wasn’t going to let this bastard win.

Would I come back up? Or would this be the end of me?

Chemo. Surgery. Radiation. Herceptin infusions. Those were my moves for fighting back.

Each one brought its own injuries.

The crowd gathered around, cheering me on to persevere and triumph.

Every time I was pinned in another headlock, Death would mockingly resume his count.

1, 2, 3, …

I won’t see my children grow.

… 4, 5, 6, …

I can’t leave my husband alone.

… 7, 8, 9, …

I’m too young to die!

And up I would come, elbow-to-elbow with my evil opponent, Cancer.

The crowd would roar.

* * *

But that match is over. Death has moved on for now.

I am left patching injuries, healing wounds, regaining strength.

There is less to see. Convalescence does not make for a good spectator sport.

The drama is gone, as I make slow march back to some version of my life as I once knew it.

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Posted in Survivorship, Treatment | 12 Comments »

Filling up on happy

09.18.2011

I have always had a healthy carpe diem streak in me. I like to let loose and have fun.

Less than two months before my diagnosis, I had a conference in Amsterdam. In addition to attending scholarly talks and meeting with colleagues, I enjoyed the city with friends.

The boat ride pictured below was particularly memorable. Cruising through the canals with a bottle of wine is so lovely.

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I had cancer in this picture. I had no idea.

 

 

 

 

 

I am gearing up for surgery on Thursday. I am, in the words of my middle child, getting ready to be pulled under by the cancer sea once again.

Only this time, I have had some warning. I have some of my health and fitness back again. Instead of the shock of diagnosis with the uncertainty of the treatment, I know I’m going in for some pain, but I will get something on the other end.

I’ve managed the prospect of more suffering by trying to use a principle of opposites:
I’m filling up on Happy.

In fact, I’ve been on a bit of a carpe diem bender.

My family & I took off for a long weekend at the beach.

After we went away this summer, the kids told us how much they love the sea,

so we found away to go back.

 

A week later, I had a work trip to Rome. Once again, in between official duties, I found opportunities to have some fun.

Can you see the Coliseum in the background?

I ate yummy food and saw beautiful art.

That granita was amazing.

Then, as if that weren’t enough, I went back to Holland to give a talk at a university.

Of course, I managed to fit in some fun.


Look! I’m back in the same boat!

 

As a final hurrah this past weekend, the girls and I went to a Taylor Swift concert. She is their musical idol.

Watching my daughters grinning from ear to ear, singing every word as they watched her show, filled my mother’s heart with loving joy.

Could it get any better?

Actually, yes.

Two seats away from my eldest sat Martina McBride. She is a hero for many of us cancer survivors.
She wrote an amazing song called “I’m gonna love you through it” that seriously could be written for me.

I went up to her and let her know how much her song meant to me. She was incredibly gracious.

Meeting Martina reminded me that I can get loved through this part, too.
When my body is hurting in the coming weeks, I will be able to close my eyes and bring up lots of great moments.

Trust me. I’m having fun, but I will never, ever say that cancer is a gift.

Life, on the other hand, with all it has to offer, most certainly is.

———–

If you haven’t seen Martina McBride’s video, get out your hanky and watch it now:

 

“♪ Cancer don’t discriminate or care that you’re just 38 with three kids who need you in their lives.. ♪.”

 

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Posted in Survivorship | 48 Comments »

Our Language, Our Selves

08.14.2011

Twenty five years ago, I began a friendship that broadened my world. A French exchange student stayed with us in our home. I enjoyed showing her my 15 year old’s version of America for the summer. Soon afterward, I got to take a tour of her 18 year old’s version of France.

I spent two summers abroad with her family. My French became strong enough for me to enter the advanced French literature seminar in college.

But I haven’t been to France in over two decades.

J’ai beaucoup perdu.

This past weekend, a little bit of France came to me. I had another lovely visit with my French friend (that’s how she signed her letters back in the day and continues to sign her emails now).

Only this time, she brought her family.

I didn’t know what it would be like to try to summon up all that dormant vocabulary and grammar, especially after the number chemo did to my brain.

I’ll be honest, it felt a bit rough at first. Lots of misconjugated verbs and comment dit-on‘s.

My friend and I can weave in and out of all sort of versions of Franglais, but her two girls and husband counted on me for some French conversation. Not to mention my own family. My husband speaks fairly functional French but the kids needed to be let in on the action. I found myself playing the role of translator quite a bit.

But then, I crossed over to actually producing thoughts in French, to hearing myself what the song and rhythm of the language should be without having to overthink each utterance. Every time a synapse connected and a word came back –– pop!–– I wanted to do a fist pump.

Becoming plural — having a we to talk about –– was not the only significant change to my language in the past 20 years. As teenagers we spoke in singular tenses — je et tu — but now we are very, very plural.

In part, the gaps in my vocabulary reflected the changes in the world –– I needed words for “email,” “going online,” “googling.”

But the missing words also reflected changes in my own life. I need much more medical vocabulary now that I am a 40 year old cancer survivor than I did as a 20 year old college student with a Eurail pass and a backpack.

I have picked up some of the vocabulary from reading the blog Maison du Cancer and by tweeting with the amazing French survivors that we often refer to as les Cathies, Catherine Cerisey and Catherine Malhouitre. So I knew radiothérapie, chimiothérapie. But I needed some help describing consultations with le chirurgien. That word is a mouthful.

All of these words rushing forward, all of these blanks to fill in: it made me remember, once again, how deeply our language is connected to who we are.

Why, for example, is there no good French translation for “silly” but English is so impoverished when it comes to food that we need to borrow French words like gourmet and the even better gourmand?

There are whole swaths of experience that can be kept at bay when we have no words to describe them.

Which is, in part, why I blog. We share our stories and put words to the otherwise indescribable experiences cancer brings to us.

When we tell our stories, they are no longer invisible. We learn from each other and invent the words and images we need to feel seen.

Our stories become a part of a collective strength, and then we are no longer alone.

 

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Posted in Survivorship | 10 Comments »

Shifting Time

06.24.2011

During treatment, we are thrust into an uninvited, relentless Present Tense. We put aside our plans and obligations and focus on our health. We take leaves from jobs, renegotiate our commitments, garner support from people who care about us.

The future becomes necessarily more tentative. You may not be there to meet it. Or maybe you will, but who knows in what condition. How will I feel next week? Tomorrow? An hour from now?

When you are healthy, it is easy to plan your life with some confidence. When you are ill, there is hesitation, particularly if you are used to being dependable.

Time changes shape. Horizons shorten. The Present Tense of crisis is fueled by adrenaline, colored by anxiety. There is so much to worry about. Health. Money. Health. The inevitable dramas with family and friends.

Health.

As if cancer was not enough strain, imagine throwing young children into that mix. Their needs are perpetual. They are, by design, dependent. This is their childhood.

Despite the insistent, unwelcomed Present, a mother makes an effort to create a semblance of normalcy and joy.

But the strain is always there. A child, naturally, wonders about the future. “When I get bigger…”A mother pulls back, reluctant to imagine a time that she may be robbed of sharing.

My family has been in this state of crisis. Like a person huddles over an injury to protect it from the world, we have been doubled over in the wake of my cancer. We have been wounded. The primary injury has been tended to, but the peripheral problems have only been uncovered, including this unrelenting sense of crisis.

In addition to the physical devastation of treatment, patients and their families must also contend with a new financial reality. On average, American cancer survivors pay $5,000 more a  year in medical expenses than people who have not had cancer. That takes a lot of options off the table for the typical middle class family. Vacations go. Summer camp, music lessons ––  winnowed down. That certainly has been our experience.

Last week, we got a reprieve. We participated in a beach retreat with a new non-profit called Little Pink Houses of Hope (LPHOH). Founder Jeanine Patten-Coble, herself a breast cancer survivor, recognized that women are not the only ones impacted by breast cancer. An entire family is affected.

LPHOH gave my family use of a beach house, donated by a couple in Kill Devil Hills, North Carolina. LPHOH hosted several families last week. All of us arrived at these homes, stocked with groceries, armed with gift certificates to local merchants and restaurants. Jeanine told us that her goal was to keep our wallets closed for the whole week. Just hearing those words brought our stress down a few notches.

Jeanine and the other “volunstars” provided us with a schedule of optional activities, from kayaking to jewelery making, all designed to give families quality time together. They wanted us to feel comfortable and cared for. Our challenge was to open ourselves up to receive.

It took us a few days before we realized just how tightly wound we were. You don’t realize you are hunched over until somebody lays a hand on you and reminds you how it feels to stand up straight. Midweek, the tight knot we were started to loosen a bit. We breathed more deeply. We smiled more easily.

We shifted into the pleasant Present Tense of a lovely vacation. The no-watches-needed Present Tense of an afternoon by the ocean . The wake-up-and-see kind, as you lazily peek back at the sun through the curtains and anticipate another adventure.

I was able to go on a Ferris wheel at a fair with my children, teaching them how to be brave.

I played in the waves with my son, sharing the awesomeness of the ocean.

I collected seashells with my girls, seeing beauty around us.

My husband sang as he kayaked down a river, while his punctured boat slowly sank, requiring the occasional bail out. A perfect metaphor for life with cancer, to be sure.

As we left the cocoon of the retreat, we came back restored, finding more joy in each other and our lives, together. Our time seems lighter, even in the ordinariness of our daily lives.

Along with seashells and sandy shoes, we have brought home a bit of the pleasant Present.

 

 

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Posted in Survivorship, Treatment, Wellness | 16 Comments »

A Downhill Connection

05.13.2011

Yesterday, I ran on a shady paved trail through the park. The 5.8 mile path is a refuge in the heat, which was climbing toward 90˚.

I like running the same route week after week. Partly, I am a creature of habit. Also, running the same trail allows me to monitor my progress. I check in with my body. How fatigued am I? What pace can I go? How do I contend with this hill? How strong do I feel when I’m finished? I note all of these things and feel the runs getting easier, which is good for my confidence.

At the top of a big hill near the halfway point, I felt the fatigue setting in. The heat was draining me and I was sweating profusely.

Running helps me practice patience and compassion with myself, so I don’t tell myself to push on much of the time. I stopped to walk for a couple of minutes. After catching my breath, I felt much stronger and continued on my way.

It was time for a big descent. In the recent past, I have kept my pace steady, even on downhills. I don’t know what has been holding me back –– a fear of the speed, a fear of falling. I just haven’t been up to it.

With my renewed energy, I decided to let myself fly. It was a joy. I also felt hopeful that I might pick up some of the time I lost walking and make a good overall pace for this run.

As I rounded the curve, I saw a woman climbing over a wall separating my path with one of the many unpaved trails in the park.

She looked lost. She was about my age, dressed in running garb.

Pace be damned, I thought, letting go of the time I was making up. I stopped to see if she was okay.

She asked me how to find a certain trail. I told her that I am only familiar with the paved routes.

“We are about one mile from the exit,” I said. “If you want to run with me the rest of the way, I can drive you to your car.”

“Okay,” she smiled. “I think I’ll take you up on it. I’ve been running for about an hour and a half. I promise I don’t have a knife stashed anywhere.”

She continued with me on my flight down the hill. I took one of my earbuds out so I could converse.

“Are you training for anything?” I asked.

“No, I just like to run a lot,” she told me. “Are you?”

“I finished cancer treatment at the end of last year, so I’ve been doing half marathons like mad.”

She was unfazed.

“That’s great. What kind of cancer did you have?”

I told her.

“I had Hodgkins when I was pregnant with my fourth child. She’s 12 now.”

“I knew you were a cancer survivor! You didn’t blink when I told you. Usually people get really quiet and awkward.”

We ran the rest of the way down the hill, chatting about treatment, side-effects, fatigue, and children. I took her to her car, as I promised. She did not have a hidden knife, as she promised.

I realized, once again, what a unique bond survivors share. It’s as if we can enter the middle of a conversation and not have to provide all the explanation that other people require to make sense of our experience.

This is why our online community is so powerful. We are what my fellow blogger Feisty Blue Gecko aptly calls stranger-friends. We often understand each other in ways that our closest intimates cannot.

I hope to cross paths with my new stranger-friend some time soon.

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Posted in Survivorship | 19 Comments »