Sunday, May 9, 2010

Day 5: Mother's Day


This is definitely not the mothers day I was expecting. We spent the morning at the breast cancer walk in Beverly with 10,000 other people and I found myself wondering how many of these women were like me. I’m glad we went, but it was yet another surreal experience for me to cap off the week. I still look completely normal so I felt a little invisible in a strange way. But maybe that’s good-- I don’t want to be one of these “honored” women, you know? In memory of, in honor of, all those women on those signs would like that to be someone else. Well, that’s not true—they’d like it to be nobody else. Anyhow mothers day has been as good as it could be in light of the circumstances—beautiful sun, homemade cards from Lenny, and Gabe remembered to get me a bunch of presents. But I forgot to get my mom anything for mothers day this year, and it doesn’t seem too special to get out of all the childcare and domestic duties for a day when I’ve been ignoring those things for days now.

I can’t wait until this visit with the surgeon on Tuesday morning. I feel like I’m losing my mind. I’ve lost more weight, hopefully because it’s hard to eat and I’ve been taking two walks every day rather than the alternative reason. I have a 15 page questionnaire I need to fill out before the surgeon’s visit and they ask you these questions about whether you sleep adequately, have stomach problems, have an appetite. I’m assuming they mean BEFORE you were diagnosed with cancer? Because until that appointment happens, I am just crawling out of my skin. I can’t sit still and I want to distract myself all the time.

See, I don’t think I’m reacting to this the way you’re “supposed” to react. I don’t feel a business-like “let’s take care of this,” nor a “bring on the fight!” attitude coming on anytime soon. I’m not in denial, because that’s been taken out of the equation. Every moment of every day I’m aware of this cancer. I go about my day and do some normal things, but I get weepy and terrified at various intervals. Other women who’ve gone through this say it’s hard to breathe. I can breathe all right, but it hurts. It’s like I can feel everything happening in my body, every twinge is amplified, and I’m aware of things like walking, breathing, swallowing.

So is this normal? I would say not—cancer is, by definition, not normal. Abnormal cells, abnormal life, at least for a while. But as I said before, the world keeps spinning. Last night my mom babysat so Gabe and I could go out. We went to my friend’s wedding, which I had planned on going to by myself because we couldn’t find a sitter. But I couldn’t handle going alone. The thing that gave me the courage to go (I haven’t been around many people at all since last Tuesday) was that due to my current 115 pounds, I could fit into this skintight black dress. Where the hell else am I going to wear that? So we went to the wedding ceremony, and I told Gabe I didn’t want to stay for the reception because I didn’t want to have to talk to people.

I don’t think I’ve ever cried at a wedding before this one. It’s not because weddings aren’t sentimental, or that I’m not thrilled for people, but just because I don’t cry. I cried for a few minutes at my own wedding when my brother read the poem he wrote for us, and that was a surprise. Gabe cried the entire time, basically start to finish. Anyway last night was so hard for me. The only other person I knew at the wedding survived a different type of cancer 8 years ago, and she sat next to me and it was great to see her looking so great. And I was happy for the couple and the ceremony was beautiful, and yet I kept having these thoughts like “I’ve only been married 5 ½ years!” or “don’t say till death do us part” and all this other morbid shit. I think you’re not supposed to admit to having those thoughts. People tell you not to, to cut it out. But come on. There’s no way around it until you know what you’re dealing with.

Afterwards we got some middle eastern food, and I think I picked the perfect restaurant. It was very casual, and there we were in our wedding clothes, but no one else was there. So when I started crying in the middle of the chicken shwarma and Gabe had to come across the table to console me, there was no one there to notice. After that, we went to see Iron Man. You would think this would be a perfect mindless distraction, and for someone who loves mindless action movies, it was—for the most part. But you know how when you’re pregnant, every show on TV is about horrible things happening to pregnant women or babies? Here I am at Iron Man, staring at the screen through all the scenes where he talks about the poison in his body, his worries about celebrating his last birthday, or relying on science to save his life. For the first time since last Tuesday I really started to think about this enemy in my body, this alien I have refused to touch or let anyone else touch. But it IS me, it’s my body turning on me, and how does that happen? Where’s that new element to fix me? On the other hand, I was feeling good that my dress was just as tight as Scarlett Johannsen’s and while I don’t have that figure, I was pulling it off for a change. Not that I’d wear mine to WORK, but still. Besides, for a while anyway, I’m still a natural redhead (can someone explain to me why Gwyneth Paltrow starts off the movie as a redhead and then turns blonde as soon as Scarlett’s redhead character comes on the scene?).

I’ve talked to a few other breast cancer survivors this weekend, and that ‘s been a mixed bag. I think what’s helpful for me is the practical advice: don’t listen to people who tell you that losing your hair is no big deal, get chemo on a Thursday so you feel better by Monday, do radiation closer to home if you have a choice, and, interestingly—don’t talk about it if you don’t feel the need. I just don’t know if I’m going to be a support group person. I remember a woman I knew who went to group therapy for years due to an armed robbery (she wasn’t hurt). OK, I’ve been the victim of armed robbery twice, once at gunpoint, once from a bunch of kids with bats while I was with my 7 month old daughter. The second one was much scarier since my kid was involved. But we were fine, so therapy? No thanks. I think therapy and support groups are great, if they can help you move on with something rather than stay with it. Sometimes my biggest fear is that I will stay caught up in this thing, thinking about it all the time. I like talking to people who have survived cancer when I have some other reason to like those people, you know? It’s like making friends with people who have kids that are your kids’ age. It makes sense, and you have that in common and you can talk about it. But god help me if I try to be friends with all kinds of parents of babies and preschoolers. I’m a cranky old lady on the inside, remember.

Stoicism is underrated. People talk about strength, courage, etc., with breast cancer. But what the hell are you supposed to do? You’re not going to keel over right now, so you have to do what needs to be done. Is that bravery though, or just realism? Remember Heath Ledger’s character in Brokeback Mountain? As an aside, did anyone actually read that story before the movie came out? It’s one of the only depressing-ass Annie Proulx stories I like. It is hardly about the cowboys’ relationship at all. It’s really about isolation—the isolated landscape, the inability for Ennis not just to admit he’s gay (in the story I felt like that was the least of his issues) but really to talk to anybody. And yet that’s what I liked about him. Ah, to live in a society where we could just keep shit to ourselves and not talk about ourselves all the time. And yet what am I doing? Writing this damn blog. I get as sick of myself as I get of other people.

On that note, one of the things that has helped distract me is to pay attention to how different people react to this news of mine, and what that tells me not about their relationships to me but about people in general. It’s easy on a day to day basis to feel that your closest friends are by definition your oldest ones, or the people you see the most often, or the people you can talk to most easily. But in a situation like this, closeness is almost irrelevant. What matters is how different people can do different things and fill in the painful gaps you can’t deal with yourself.

For example, until Friday I had not talked to anyone on the phone except my doctors, mom, brother, and oddly enough my ex-boyfriend whom I haven’t seen in two years. I spent the first five minutes on the phone with him convincing him this wasn’t a scare—I’m not going to find out this is a cyst, this is the real deal. Holy shit, right? But it was great to talk to him, after all this time. He said some things to me and wrote some things to me that remind me of an older, maybe more basic version of myself that I forget about with all this motherhood stuff. But I hadn’t been able to talk to anyone else.

So on Friday I was home by myself with the kids, off of work. I was home “working,” on Wednesday but the kids weren’t with me and I had a million phone calls to make to doctors, my HR department, my boss, etc. If I broke down sobbing there was no one to see me. My mom came over in the afternoon, so I was only alone for a while. I felt better on Thursday. Then it all came crashing down on me.

Lenny was playing in her room all morning and Augie took a nice 2 hour nap. But I was just breaking down all the time and I couldn’t stand the thought of Lenny seeing me like that. She could probably deal, but I didn’t I didn’t want to have to make her feel better about my reaction. Is that selfish? I called Gabe and asked him if he thought it would be horrible for me to see if our neighbors were home so I could dump Lenny over there and lose my shit for a while. I didn’t want to make that phone call. He told me to do it. So I did, and I realized I didn’t know how to have this conversation. We’ve been friends with these people for years but this situation is kind of outside the scope of conversations we’d have. He said “so how are you guys doing!” and I thought, huh, does he not know? I asked him and he said he did but couldn’t talk to me about it. Honesty! I appreciated that. So I just asked him straight out—I know you’re busy and you have all these people coming over but I am losing it and I don’t want Lenny around me so can I bring her over? Uh sure, bring her right over. No problem.

I got the baby in the stroller and headed over there. I realized on the way over I forgot to feed Lenny lunch, and I didn’t even care. How’s that for a good mom? So I dropped her off and there were these kids there she didn’t know. She was sobbing. I handed the baby to my neighbor, picked Lenny up, couldn’t figure out what to do. He’s looking around like what the hell is happening here, and I realized, this situation is so crazy and awkward and I’m asking a lot. My daughter is miserable, she’s hungry and she’s the only girl, this leaves my neighbor with 4 kids to watch, but you know what? I had to do it. I left, gave my cell phone number, walked out the door and started sobbing as soon as I got to the sidewalk. At that point I knew I made the right decision, but it was hard for me. When I picked Lenny up my girlfriend was there, nervously talking about normal things the whole time while I sat there in a daze, and I realized again how hard this is for people. But I also realized that I could phone in that favor and people would do what they could do, and that would mean different things. And at some point I’ll need it all.

I’m writing about this situation because it was the first time since I found out I had cancer that I asked—in person—for help from someone outside of my family. I had emailed my other neighbors and asked for help taking Lenny to school for a few days and emailed back and forth with some old friends about getting together soon. But I hadn’t confronted any cracking voices, denial, nervousness, etc. Our next door neighbor did come over to borrow something last week and I told him it was ok to talk to me. But this time on Friday I had to admit to my own breakdown to someone who didn’t know what to say to me. And after making that first call I knew I could ask again. So I called another neighbor, a friend whom I haven’t known that long but who I thought could talk to me without breaking down, and could talk to me about me having cancer. I needed that.

I know that some people are very emotional because they love me, or because that’s just how they are. And it doesn’t mean that people who aren’t emotional don’t love me, it just means they’re different. But I can’t handle emotions right now. So that measured conversation was important to me. And sometime I will need that emotional friend, or the friend I’ve known since I was 7, or that person who will act like they don’t know anything different about me, or someone else.

It makes me realize that we set up a lot of boundaries with people based on what we think friendship is about. Is the person the same age? Gender? Same family situation? Do you have a lot in common? Does he make you laugh? Can you talk to her about your deepest fears? Do you remember the same songs? I mean, does any of that shit really matter? I think the question is, does that person care about you or like you, or did they at one time and they can remember what that was like? And is it really any of your business why that is?

So for those who have or will have ignored me, reached out to me, called me to say you love me, avoided saying you love me because it’s too painful, talked to me about cancer, talked to me about anything but cancer, watched me cry, held me, watched my kids, run errands for me, distracted me—thank you, and I get it. I would never judge people based on their reaction; I have no idea how I would react to such unexpected news. But I would do something, which is what you have done for me. I really hope I never have to return any of these favors because I hope everyone I care about is happy and healthy all the time. But you know I will. In the meantime, Happy Mother’s Day.

7 comments:

  1. Wonderful photo - you look fabulous!
    Please keep "writing this damn blog."
    Love you.

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  3. Awesome dress - you look amazing and exactly like you did in high school (what's up with that?!)! Just want to let you know that I have never read a blog before yours, and I quite enjoy it. Not for the reason that you are writing it, of course, or for the pain
    that the cancer is causing you in so many ways. But, for your sincerity and because I can hear you saying these words like you were here, just talking. Does that make sense? Please feel like you can call on me for anything (including running out to Beverly if you need an emergency break to be by yourself-away from kids). I'm a stay at home mom (so I'm around), after all, and you are my friend and I will drop everything to help you out if/when you're in need.

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  4. Luke called me today to share your news, so I just wanted you to know that I am here following along and thinking of you. If there's anything I can do, please let me know. I really mean that - I'm on the south side all the time and even if I'm not when you need something, I will certainly drop anything to get there for you.

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  5. Katy, wish I was closer to help out but I am not. So I will be praying for you and your family.

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  6. Dear Katy,
    I was just reading your breast feeding post when I clicked on your blog. I am so, so sorry to hear about your cancer. My heart is truly aching, and I am finding myself in the category of the emotional people with a knot in my throat and tears. You have always meant a lot to me, and you were always a wonderful friend.
    It is wonderful that you can be so honest and real about your thoughts and feelings. It helps. There is a roller coaster of emotions that cancer puts people through, and you really have to let yourself express anything and everything.
    I'm up on the north side of Chicago, but it would be great to get together with you sometime. I will do whatever I can to help out with whatever you might need. My Liam is 4 and Alexis just turned a year so I'm sure the kids would have a good time.
    You will be in my thoughts and prayers. Please don't hesitate to let me know if there is anything that I can do. Take care, Sweety. I'll be in touch.
    Lots of Love,
    Avila

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  7. my thoughts are with you and your family. you are a fighter and i know you can beat this.

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