Showing posts with label co-survivor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label co-survivor. Show all posts

Saturday, January 9, 2016

Not my ribbon continued.

My husband’s brain is eating itself. It’s slowly chipping away at the insulation keeping his neurons functioning sweetly and his brain humming. Most days, it is, a side from a memory lapse or four and his hours long naps, it’s easy to forget. But then, there are days like today.


I’m not home. Hank and I are off teaching each other how to train humans and dogs. Each skill we master feeds us.


Honey is there, and Bubbles and Squeak are whistling in their cage, as they undoubtedly dig into a glorious green salad. I am here. He’s there.


Yesterday, his vision greyed out. Today, it is still grey. The on-call neurologist thinks it’s likely some sort of brain issue not an eye issue. Steroids won’t help.


It’s another nail in the coffin of who Dan was. No more dreams of flying, maybe no more driving, maybe no more woodworking or tinkering. How does one even go about facing that type of loss. How does one go on when everything you are is stripped down and you are laid bare?


My cancers were different. I either made it, or after a period of increasing disability, I didn’t. My husband’s disorder is like a daily death...slowly, inexplicably, and inexorably, he becomes someone we don’t recognize.


How do you move on? How do I even help? All I can say is, “I’m sorry.” “We’ll get through this.” Cold comfort. I can’t give him back his dreams of flying. From here, I can’t even help him find new dreams.

It’s like we live at the bottom of a well. The rope that lowers the pail just broke. Trapped, we wait. We'll think of something, right?


Sunday, August 2, 2015

Another Ribbon Confirmed, self empathy, and new beginnings.

It's been ten years since my first diagnosis. Well, 10 years and three months. Between here and there, the time is endless. My siblings put together a crazy plan to take D and me on a ten day trip somewhere. This has meant tracking down passports, arranging doggy baby sitting, and planning a once in the life time trip. As part of it, they asked me to find pictures of us. 


This is a normal request. Like most couples, we have an endless number of selfies and couple photos. You know the ones. D and me kissing on a bridge. D and me hugging on a beach. D and me and the dogs packing for an adventure. 

I dutifully went back ten years...pulling up pictures of an old me and an old him living our old lives. Me bald. Me fat. Me thin. Me with long hair. Me with short hair. Me bald. D not changing. His arms wrapped around me. His eyes soft and sweet. His laugh frozen on his lips. 

And then they stop. 

5 years ago, it's like someone came through with an exacto knife and sliced him out of my outward life. That is when this started. This being the start of the end of life as we knew it then. Multiple Sclerosis silently stole in through our window and silently snuck back out with my husband's, my best friend's, my love's energy and vitality. 

He sleeps most of the time now. We're working with doctors. We're going to support groups. It's summer. We can start building back up what we have lost and given up. Back home in Austin, our family and friends lift us up and shelter us without asking. He can't work, but gratefully, his disability kicks in this month. It's not a lot...but it definitely helps. 

There's this great video where Brene Brown talks about Empthy. I may have posted it before. It's beautifully illustrated with a bear, a cat/fox thing, and a goat. Anyway, in it. she talks about how empathetic statements rarely begin with "at least." 

She says empathy is a matter of meeting someone where they are at, being vulnerable with them, and sharing that emotional experience with them. This video changed my life in my relationship with others. 

Today, in a fit of rage and fear spilling out of me, in my head I said, "At least, he isn't dead. There are people who are dead you know." 

It stopped my mental storm cold. How can I be empathetic with others. if I can't be empathetic with myself. So I got into my head, and I turned into that giant bear, and I swept my little fox/cat/coyote self into my arms, and I said, "thank you for sharing with me, self. This is really hard."  

It didn't matter if the storm lifted. It didn't matter whether or not blue skies were up ahead. Even by myself, I am not alone. This is really hard, and there are lots of people surrounding us to make it a little better by just being here with us. 

PS D and I had the great fortune to be able to move home to Texas. I've been looking for work and found a job at the American Cancer Society. Per ACS social media policy, you will now see "The postings on this site are my own and do not necessarily represent the views of the
American Cancer Society” around my blog.




Sunday, December 7, 2014

Another ribbon...

We're sitting in another doctor's exam room. Wan fluorescent lights flicker. My pulse quickens as I hear familiar words. Neuropathy, loss of balance, not cancer, fatigue, not cancer.

My hand cannot reach for his. I'm rooted to the chair...a chasm opening between me and the exam table. The neurologist takes D's history, and I am left, my breath screaming in my lungs and my pulse ramming in my veins.

It's weird being on the other side of things. It's weird to feel the helplessness. When it was me, when I was the one on the table, it was somehow both easier and harder. I took some comfort knowing even if I didn't make it, he would.

MRIs, spinal taps, 12 vials of blood, and the endless waiting. All of it so familiar and unfamiliar. The doctors' offices, the bills, the missed work. We are haunted by what we cannot name.

I get home from work, and our house feels empty. Our dogs quietly lick my fingers. The only thing I hear is the rhythmic sound of his breath whispering in a dark room.  How many times has it been my breath he listened to?

It's hard not to be angry right now. The "what a couple" jokes made privately sound hollow and pained from other mouths. I'm not mad at him. I'm mad at life.

So we wait, breath by breath. We wait, hoping/hating the answer that will likely come, to add another ribbon to our collection. What a pair we make. 

Friday, January 31, 2014

This post contains swear words and strong emotions

1 in 3 of us will develop cancer in our life times. Our bodies will try to kill ourselves in a process as ancient as life itself. A cell will divide and divide long past its sell by date, and we will sit in that room and wait, all nervous fingers and breath, for words that can't be taken back.

Fuck cancer. Fuck it. I fucking hate cancer. It's a thief that comes in the night to steal what is most precious. It steals what is sacred, loved, and cherished. I fucking hate cancer.

When I was a kid, my mom would correct us. Anytime we said, "I hate so and so." She'd say, "do you want them to die? If you don't, you don't hate them."  I didn't get that then. Now, I do. I want cancer to die a fast, quick death. I want to have that giant party that George Lucas threw at the end of the remastered episode VI.

It's been a rough and scary week, and I've welcomed too many people to the survivorship club. I'm sad they are joining, but I'm glad I'm here to give steady hugs and endless time to listen.

Most days, my cancers and I have an uneasy truce. They leave their echoes in my body, and I don't attack them ferociously with my mind. Shots were fired. The truce hangs by a thread.

Cancer is a force of nature. It's hard for me to stay mad at it for long. It's like a tornado, hurricane, or drought. It just is, and here I am standing in the desert, shaking my fist at the sky, screaming for rain until my throat aches from heat and air. 

So if you're reading this, and you know that full body betrayal, that cellular treason, you aren't alone. It's OK to be pissed off, and it's ok to scream and cry. Cancer fucking sucks, but it can't steal the you-ness of you. I'm going to tell you something that stills my racing heart and eases my knotted gut:  cancer can cause my death, but it can't kill my soul, my love, or my peace.

Know that you are so loved, no matter what happens.





Saturday, November 23, 2013

Good byes

A late fall hike
I wouldn't have gotten my job without her. She was my student. My boss assigned me to her as she had an ABA background, and my boss felt I would be a better fit for me. If she hadn't been my student, I wouldn't be where I am at now, and I wouldn't have been at my amazing work during my last cancer.

Now, she is leaving. Her husband's taken a job on another coast where houses are as palatial as the summer's soaring temperatures. It was easier when we were leaving this place together. Now she gets on the plane, and I stay here. I've never been the friend who's been left behind. I've always been the one to do the leaving.

I'm so happy she is going. She can work with her degree there. If she chooses not to work, she can stay home with her kiddos. Mostly, I am happy for her.

Good byes are hard though. I feel like I've said them to her 5 million times since I found out she was leaving for sure. I can't really express how much I miss her and how grateful I am to her for who she is and how she lives.

She is one of my rocks; a co-survivor who walked my second cancer with me. Much as Rose and Sunshine's mom walked with me through my first journey, Rainbow's mom was there as I struggled this last time.  She arranged meals, took me to lunch, and kept me sane.

She taught me grace. She reawakened my thirst for faith, and she enlarged my heart to make room for tolerance. There's someone in her new place waiting for these lessons, and I wish them all the best.  They were hard. They painfully bent, twisted, and stretched me into someone I had forgotten I was.

S, fly where you are needed and know that you are perfectly suited to whatever task you face. I will miss you, but I'm glad you are going away.

A token




Friday, November 8, 2013

This is when the world changes.

So happy to be back to normal
My first diagnosis seems ages ago. We were far from both our families, but D's family was at least two thousand miles closer. In those hurried days after the words were first spoken, his mother arrived to support and help us. When they told me I might be infertile. She cried and I did not. Now I get why she cried. I get that grief.

While she was visiting, D's dad took care of his sister, E. Charming Princess. E. Charming Princess has called herself E. Charming Princess since she was a little kid. E. has down syndrome and autism. She doesn't use a lot of words to communicate. When her mom was north, E. told her dad something like, "Nurse Miss Miller Mom. Eleanor Amanda. Hospital. Take care of her." Her words halting as she used her limited vocabulary to describe an unusual and painful situation.

A year later, D and I had moved back to Oregon. I needed health insurance, and his dad graciously let me work at his clinic. One infusion day, no one could pick up E except D and I. So E came to the infusion room. She watched, in fascination, as "nurse barbie" took my weight, blood pressure, and temperature. She held my hand and said, "brave," as the nurse cleaned the port on my chest. She watched as the nurse inserted the giant needle just above my heart. All of it, E took in. She seemed unconcerned, but interested.

Amanda tries to figure out what E says...
That night, cuddled in her bed, her father tucked her in, and he asked her,"E, what'd you do today?" E paused. Her hands stilled from her writing. Her head turned toward him, and she looked up from her work. "Eleanor Amanda. Shot. Heart. Medicine." E's eyes filled with tears. "Eleanor Amanda is getting medicine, E. She's getting medicine to get better.”

People underestimate E all of the time. They think because she doesn't use words to communicate fluidly that she is somehow less than others. She is incapable of employment, success, etc. She will be a child forever. These perceptions are incorrect. E sees everything. She knows everything. She needs support, but she gets it.

My cancer was hard on everyone. Everyone was at a loss for words. The treatments from the outside made me a ghost of myself. No one ever talked about it as eloquently as E. The port sat right above my heart. The chemo dripped into my arteries and veins. These are scary things. I think E is really the only one who processed how scary it was at the time.

E and D at horseback riding.
This week was D's first week back supporting E. It was a week of sharky grins, bubbling laughter, and spontaneous words. She asked me, "schedule" in words instead of sign for the first time in years. Her joy at having her brother home feeds me. It's a window opening as the door of our other plan shuts for now.

Right now, I'm looking for windows everywhere. E was the first window I found. New windows are opening all around us.  The world is filled with endless possibilities. All D and I have to do is breathe and pick which windows to fly out of.



Saturday, October 26, 2013

Calling on the power of "lasagna"
















It's been a rough week at the house. I picked D up from his truck, so excited. The five weeks he's been gone has been rough on both of us. I passed the time by taking care of the dogs, hanging out with friends, and taking massive doses of antibiotics. He passed the time by driving thousands of miles, thinking about how hard it is to be gone, and navigating a morass of new policies, procedures, and politics. I think I had it easier. 

Re-entry has been hard.  His story is his story, and maybe one day he will tell it to you, but for now, all I can say is I've been making tea, cooking favorite dishes, and feeling helpless in the wake of a tsunami of emotion that I didn't expect. 5 weeks is too long to be gone, and I can't imagine how my friend in a military family holds down the fort for months at a time.

Veggie Lasagna
A few years ago, one of my good friend's kids experienced a great, incomprehensible loss. The spouse had died, and my friend traveled thousands of miles to be with her adult child. In the face of the grief and the loss, my friend felt helpless, and she did the only thing that she knew to do. She made lasagna.


Layer by layer, she built the dish, and she told me, as she built it, it became something other than lasagna. She became something beyond herself. She made "the lasagna," the archetype of comfort, as did she became, "the mother."  She became the vessel for all the power of those two words. All the comfort, all the hugs, all the love, couldn't fix that loss. The only thing that she could do was be with her child.

Our house is having a "lasagna moment." Instead of lasagna, its early thanksgiving dishes (mushroom gravy, roasted tofu, stuffing, and mashed potatoes), apple pancakes, spaghetti and vegan sausages, tofu scramble, home fries, pineapple upside down cake, mushroom Cornish pasties, and chocolate cupcakes with coconut whip cream.

I can't make this better. I can't make this easier. I can only write love letters with the tools I have left. I can only be there as things get scarier and scarier.

D. This is the bottom, darling. There's no place to go, but up. I love you, my sweet, and I'll love you forever.