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| Niece Tabitha & Gillian Zed, Kailua Photo @hoff96734 |
I don’t want to recount the blow-by-blow on my injury because
it won’t help anyone- especially me- to relive all the truly agonizing steps
towards being able to have enough concentration to even attempt to blog. I started this post at the six month mark. It's now been ten months.
I was so smug, thinking a decade behind me surviving breast cancer, made me exempt
from further health challenges. I agreed completely with an old friend who wrote recently, saying they felt I had ‘been through enough.’ But I ignored a
gnawing backache for years. YEARS. In my late 50’s I physically flipped houses,
moved furniture, painted walls and did landscaping, all the while choosing to
work through the discomfort thinking it was temporary. In fact, it was the canary dying
in the coal mine. I brushed the little yellow feathered body aside. There was
more than one.
So, on a Monday morning, weeks after turning 58, trying to get up from bed, I screamed for my husband and said something I have never said in my adult life: “Take me to the ER.”
Support following a traumatic life experience looks like different things to folks. Similar to the ‘love
languages’, care and concern can manifest in a variety of ways. I learned this to my joy, as well as deep disappointment when realizing that, although in my
new community for several years, I did not have a true friend. Not. A. One. No one
beat a path to my door with a casserole. I got a few texts. A funny card,
mailed from a client, (after I'd run into her husband three months in, while wearing a back brace, with cane,) was a bright spot. I asked someone considered
a good pal of three years, to come hang out a few days post op because I had
run out of family to keep me company, and she came for a few hours, but I didn’t hear from her
again. Not. A. Word.
This revelation resulted in a great deal of self-reflection,
wondering if I was, in fact, that undesirable as a friend? Or had I not
contributed any energy towards these imaginary relationships, and this acrid desert of kindness, the
result? I reviewed my actions. No, fuck that. I was present for these people. I listened
to their family dramas. I helped them professionally for no monetary gain. I'd initiated social outings, given gifts. And, I tolerated their
bullshit. It was not enough social currency apparently: I’d wasted that
investment in several people.
That was another blow to my balance, beyond the shattered-into-pieces-disc
between L4 and L5. I struggled for solid footing.
But there were shining lights at the end of my seemingly
endless road to recovery. After losing my dear friend Terri almost five years ago, her sister JC and I have become very close. We’ve managed to usually spend
the painful anniversary of Terri’s passing together, with me venturing
to Seattle. But in 2019, I offered JC a ‘wine country weekend’ and she bought a plane
ticket. We were going to
spend time smoking weed, eating good food and laughing till we cry. But
three days before, about to go into emergency spine surgery, all I
could think of was how I fucked up our weekend. My husband called to waive
her off, but, no, she was coming anyway.
| Sonoma Valley Sunshine |
JC did not get the promised wine tasting or
farm-to-table-dinner, Sonoma-Valley experience and there were no complaints. (We'll
make good on that, girl, I promise.) We still managed a few Terri laughs, and
she let me read her the opening chapter of my first novel that I'm determined to
write in spite of life's detours.
When I had to tell my family about having breast cancer, 11
years ago, everyone jumped in to offer help. But I knew I couldn’t take my
mum’s nervous concern daily or interrupt everyone’s busy life with ease. But my
niece, Tabitha, 20 years younger than me and a good friend, was who I needed to
help. My sister bought her plane tickets and over the course of not one but two
surgeries, she up-rooted her life (then in San Diego,) and came, missing work
and income to be my nurse. After this recent mess, when I told my
older daughter F. about JC coming anyway to take care of me, she humorously replied, “Well, that
saved Tabitha a trip.”
Tabitha continues to be a rock of support for me. It was her that I called, hysterically sobbing, the night before the back operation, anxiety, and pain meds, pounding through me. Seeking escape from the fear of a major surgery, and all that came with it, trying to find an option I knew was not there, babbling on, she calmly offered: 'Sometimes science is the answer, the best choice. Trust it.'
Tabitha continues to be a rock of support for me. It was her that I called, hysterically sobbing, the night before the back operation, anxiety, and pain meds, pounding through me. Seeking escape from the fear of a major surgery, and all that came with it, trying to find an option I knew was not there, babbling on, she calmly offered: 'Sometimes science is the answer, the best choice. Trust it.'

It was the second weekend home, I was physically uncomfortable and struggling with my new reality and lack of mobility, when F. and her partner H. came to visit. This was the first non-holiday related visit to our house made by these very-busy-almost-30-professional-women, who drove over an hour in Bay Area traffic, to come sit on the couch and watch me do nothing. It meant everything to me. They had not made other plans “for later”, they did not linger on their phones, they were present and sweet and doting.
They fucking showed up.
F. told me she had called her younger sister, now unseen by
us for about 10 years, to inform her of my brush with mortality, and ‘Thanks
for telling me,’ was the response. I heard nothing from her. It was the same silence after
my husband informed her I had lost Terri, someone she knew. That -painfully - revealed the depth of her contempt for me. I
easily can drift into self-blame for being the awful mother she is so certain I was. But, at some point, you have to look forward, not back, or there is no movement at all. It strengthens her hate and resolve to remain aloof from us, but in reality, only
deprives her of the unconditional love and support that family offers. The value of that has become clearer to me with every health hurdle.
(And if I was such a failure at parenthood, why did F. turn out so awesome? One out of two ain’t bad? Is that parenting today?)
(And if I was such a failure at parenthood, why did F. turn out so awesome? One out of two ain’t bad? Is that parenting today?)
| Oahu Blooms |
I asked the surgeon early on if it was possible for me to
take a plane trip six weeks post op, a long planned trip to my beloved Hawaii,
this time just a week to celebrate my great-nephew’s graduation from high
school. The doctor was cautiously optimistic and I managed to go, even though I
probably should not have. My husband flew with me and spent the weekend, arranging a first class (horizontal) ride home for me. I wore a brace, used a cane and was perpetually exhausted. But I stayed with my sister and her hubby, in a swank rental at the end of a quiet road, and they treated me like gold. I felt like a Five Star spa guest as they handled food, chores, outings, and made sure I was comfortable at every turn. It was touching, appreciated, and also so necessary in order for me NOT to over due it- and undo all that expensive doctor work. Family.
Middle age is sometimes poetically referred to as life's Second Act. I was fully prepared, entering stage left, with my revitalized character, re-written as a patient and compassionate human following the wizardly transformation of cancer and reevaluation of my life's priorities. Formerly a power bitch in the deadline tight world of marketing and advertising, I'd just started to learn the rhythm and pace of my creative retirement gig: re-designing homes and curating people's crap. I loved the physicality, the 'before and after' accomplishment of that work. But, no, the (physical) reviews were in! My part was being cut entirely now. I had no more lines. My only hope for getting back on the boards of life was, in fact, to re-audition with a completely new set of talents. Honestly, I have no idea what those are.
Writing, always my first love, is now subject to my random, volatile, levels of anxiety, comfort, inspiration, and yes, health. It's become a manic enterprise: there are hours of flowing, meaningful words, and then the blank page and dearth of ideas. (In other words: writing.) I don't allow myself self-pity in any way. Believe me, I know I'm beyond lucky. Dodged a bullet. Again. I have my leg under me. And I deeply appreciate my improbable life as a spoiled 'wine country housewife' (albeit, sans the wine,) that puts no monetary stress on me, and allows even my most complicated neuroses to be indulged, or at least accepted. Today, as we watch our parents age, and the little ones become young adults, I fully understand that family is also one of my blessings. That won't-put-you-through-BS-when-they-know-you-REALLY-need-them quality, the emotional short hand of a lifetime shared.
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| Sunrise at Lanikai Beach, Oahu |
My lucky stars have brought me back to Hawaii for some time near the ocean, far from town, quiet and peaceful. To reflect. To hopefully write. But this time, most importantly to heal.
Now, as I navigate the challenges of this surprise Third Act, I stare at the sea and follow the moon, ready for their messages. I continue circling this book I'm undertaking, often sneaking up on it, to sit and crank out pages before the self-doubt and editing that cripples the creative, begins. I often ponder: does it matters at all, if I continue with this work, especially now that it seems to be the only game I have left?
Like a passionate lover, too good to be true, I want to abandon the words, first, before they leave me. But I've reached that place where I know, beyond a shadow of the moon, that now, I must press on. My future in this tentative theatrical planetary production is dependent on my willing, conscious, participation. If I don't string the words together and write them down now, tell my story, no one else will. I won't have any more lines in the play. And what then?
Exit, stage right.

