Stories From Childhood, Part 4: Wayne

Standing and looking out the living room window, I could see the mountains. And in between the here and there was a small house, sitting alone. My grandfather’s house. I did not know him. If I met him in the street, I would not smile and say hello, for he was a stranger to me.

My mother- how she loved him! In later years, she told me how she visited him in the hospital as he lay ill with whatever stole his life from him, and us. They had a wonderful conversation, then he asked, “Now what did you say your name was?” When she told him, he turned his face to the wall and did not say another word. That was the last time she saw him. Her Daddy. His name was Wayne.

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Stories From Childhood, Part 3: Best Friend

She lived just a short distance away and her parents were old. She had a sister who was already an adult. Her teen-aged brother had long hair and played the drums. She slept without underwear and used the term “BM”, both of which were a mystery to me. At dinner, she was made to finish a tall glass of store bought milk; she took hers with ice. We created many theatrical dramas together, most set to the song “Que Sera”. We spent hours rehearsing in her garage. Her parents traveled the world I guess and brought back porcelain dolls in plexiglass cases. She was even allowed to watch Sesame Street. Her mom drove her to elementary school in “town” rather than have her attend our small school just a few miles away. I think her family was rich because they had orange shag carpet.

I sometimes spent the night at her house. She did not stay at mine.

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Stories From Childhood, Part 2: Neighbors

Our closest neighbors were liars. “Don’t talk to them. Don’t play with John and Connie”, mom said. The family on the corner had all girls. I liked to hang out there and watch the mother put intricate braids in her daughters’ hair. One time I found a tick burrowing in the oldest girls’ foot. The mother screamed and threw a balled-up pair of socks. She was folding laundry.

The quiet man down the road- the one with no wife and two kids, got in his car one day, started the engine but never left the garage. Not alive anyway.

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Birthday Pain

Birthdays are like a personal New Year for me and I become more reflective than usual. That’s a warning by the way.

This morning, after a night of futile attempts to find a comfortable position in my very comfortable bed, the thing I’m reflecting on is pain. Physical pain. Over the last 3 years, and especially since last month’s surgery, it has become a constant, and my brain is determined to figure it out, chart it, put it on the 1 to 10 scale and, most of all, fix it. I’m learning, however, that it’s not that simple.

In February, I had a routine appointment with my oncologist. (Wait, did I just say that? A “routine” appointment with an oncologist?!) The nurse, after taking my vitals, asked me to rate my pain. I said “it’s a 3”. She told me she didn’t have a 3 on her (computerized) chart; I’d have to pick an EVEN number. I replied “Okay, it’s a 3”, mostly because it’s true but also because I abhor how computers come between care providers and patients, dammit!. Then, as if I were suddenly a child, she turned the computer screen to face me so I could see the line of bubbles filled with EVEN numbers. Sure enough, no 3. Ah, of course, this makes everything so much easier!

I’m learning (and certainly I’m not the only one) that such a pain scale is fairly ludicrous. I know it has its place, and I think that place is comparing my pain today with my pain yesterday and so on and so forth. Still though, it’s not that simple.

For example, today I’m in a lot more pain that I was yesterday. If yesterday’s level was a 3 (which is where I usually hang out), does that mean- because I’m in “a lot more pain”- I’m at a 6? Now, I don’t know why, but venturing above a 5 seems almost brazen. I mean, I can still walk and carry on a decent conversation, unload the dishwasher even. Sure, it was enough to prevent me from getting any amount of decent sleep, but a 6? I’m sure you can see how this works.

Then the questions start (more questions, I mean): Is it because I took a walk yesterday? Did I push myself too hard in my (very gentle) yoga practice? Or any other rendition of “did I cause this… is it my fault?”. And then, the mother of all questions: is it bad enough to take a Dilautid? Around and around this conversation goes in my head. I have a tendency to over-analyze, I know. I did warn you.

A few weeks after my recent surgery, I listened while my husband explained, to one of my doctors, his perspective of my pain. All I could think was “Wow.” and “Really?”. For one thing, I thought I was better at adapting or managing- call it pretending if you want, but whatever it is, he evidently sees right through it.

Of course we have many descriptors for pain, but those don’t necessarily simplify things any more than the 1 to 10 scale. The word headache, for example, means something very different if you have a migraine or meningitis, than the sensation you might get from reading too long without your glasses. Stomachache is another such word with a thousand possible meanings. If this particular word- or anything similar- crosses my lips, my husband goes into high alert and asks a bunch of questions I’d rather not answer. See? Complicated. Does it burn or does it throb? Is it a stabbing pain or a dull ache? Localized or diffuse?

My pain happens to be of “unknown etiology.” Great. What makes this significant is, if the cause is a mystery, so is the treatment. Is it scar tissue? Radiation damage? (The latter always gets my vote.) Or some of both? Maybe there’s nerve damage.

The fact that bothers me most, I think, is that no one else seems to be as concerned about it as I am. (It’s possible this it true for most people with chronic pain, I’m just guessing.) I don’t mean my husband or my sister or my daughter, I’m talking about doctors- you know, the ones whose job it is to do something about it!

(And- for the record, “doing something about it” does NOT mean lecturing me on the dangers of pain medication, repeatedly referring to my pain as “benign”, or making statements like “you seem to think medicine has failed you” – translation: “we made your cancer go away, you should be kissing our feet and oozing with gratitude, not moaning about something like pain-that-interferes-with-your-everyday-life for gosh sakes!”. NOT helpful. I’m learning that there’s a lot of shaming that goes on around chronic pain, which is also not helpful.)

Did I mention I hate asking for help? Actually, “hate” is too strong a word. In reality, I have gotten much better at asking for help, once. Meaning, one time, or the first time. But asking again… yeah, I’m not so good at that. I’ve always disliked repeating myself.

In a few days, we will drive 3 hours to see my surgeon for my 6 week post surgery follow-up. I will need, once again, to set aside pretense (oh how I want to be the perfect patient!) and, dare I say, pride? Because I so despise being the needy one. The tears come as I write these truths: my body is broken. I am in pain. I cannot do all that I used to, all that I want to. I need help.

I will tell the truth. I will take the risk. I will ask for help. I will keep asking for help. This is my this year’s birthday gift to me.

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Stories From Childhood, Part 1: The House

Note: The following is the first of a handful of childhood memories I have written about. None are complex, yet there is a deeper truth within each.

I left The House 40 years ago. I did not go back. In my mind I have always had a very clear picture of The House as it sat, parallel to the road. Recently I asked my husband to drive me by The House. I did not want to go alone. The House is not parallel to the road. I asked him to go back. “Turn around,” I said, “drive more slowly.”

I think they must have moved it. I know The House was parallel to the road. Maybe I’ll ask my sister.

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Really Real

A few years ago I chose to enter a residential program in order to access help for deep depression that just wouldn’t budge. At the end of each week, on Friday afternoon when therapy and groups and classes are over for the day, a ceremony takes place as residents who have completed their stay prepare to return to “real life”. Everyone in the group (between 35 to 40 people), has the opportunity to say something to the individuals who are leaving. It’s a touching time, filled with heartfelt best wishes and affirmations.

Eventually it was my turn to transition back to the real world. I remember only one thing that was said to me: Eric said he appreciated that I was “really real”.

And yet.

I just finished telling a friend that I’ve found myself returning to my default mode of swallowing my truth, my opinions, my thoughts, my feelings, because I fear hurting others or rocking the proverbial boat. Plus there’s always the chance that if I show up with all of me I’ll be rejected.

In other words, these days, I’m not being really real- at least not the way I want to be.

Because while defaulting back to this old way of being (nice, quiet, “good”) seems easier, the truth is I pay for it in really big ways. When I don’t “use my voice”, the discomfort of having something to say and not saying it doesn’t just disappear. It builds up inside of me. It turns into resentment and loneliness. It hurts my soul because I am, in a very real sense, invalidating my own truth.

My therapist has asked me repeatedly why it’s ok for me to hurt myself in order to avoid the possibility of hurting others. I don’t have a good answer for that. I don’t think there is a good answer for that.

It’s an old pattern, formed in childhood, hard to break. I’ve repeated it in my marriage, with my children, and with my friends. Almost as if there’s a constant directive running in my head “be good, be nice, be quiet…be good, be nice, be quiet.”

The ugly side is, I teach others to do the opposite of this. I believe in doing the opposite of this. I know what to do, I just find it almost impossible to actually do it. It takes an enormous amount of intention to change decades of doing life in a particular way. Enormous. And much of my intention has been going to other things lately. I’m tired.

I firmly believe that awareness is the first step to change. (I may be plagiarizing that from someone.) I’m aware. Now it’s up to me to choose what to do with my awareness: rock the boat or stay quiet? Be nice or be Really Real?

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Quote for today

How could the end be happy? How could the world go back to the way it was when so much bad had happened? But in the end, it’s only a passing thing, this shadow. Even darkness must pass. A new day will come. And when the sun shines it will shine out the clearer.

J.R.R. Tolkein (from The Two Towers)

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