Letter-c Day 28

“And you’ve got me thinkin’
We should be drinkin’ alone together
Drownin’ the pain is better
With somebody else who got problems
We ain’t gonna solve ’em
But misery loves company
Tonight all I need is a stranger
Lips with a whiskey chaser”~ Carrie Underwood
I know with all that is happening, drinking is the last thing I should be thinking about. It hasn’t been a crutch for me in a long time. I stopped drinking years ago when I picked up a gun and tried to kill myself. That got me a stay in the Psyche ward and quality time with a shrink. It was a turning point in my life at the time, one I really needed. The scar on my head is a constant reminder how close I came to missing so many positive opportunities in my life.
“There are wounds that never show on the body that are deeper and more hurtful than anything that bleeds.”~Laurell K. Hamilton
I started drinking socially again in 2003, a glass of wine here and there. Occasionally, a mixed drink but never a steady event.  On Wednesday nights, I looked forward to having a drink, sometimes two with my writing friends.  I was tempted more than once to hide in the bottle after my grandson died. I didn’t want to feel at all. But in my mind, I saw my hand holding that pistol again and that image was enough to keep me sober.
Since the doctor called I’ve wanted a drink more than anything. Today isn’t the first day I’ve walked over to the liquor stand we have with a selection of wine and hard liquor. I have choices…lots of choices. Today I walked outside and picked a handful of mint to muddle…and downloaded a recipe. What difference will one drink or a dozen really make in the grand scheme? What’s wrong with having a crutch occasionally? Don’t answer, I’m not in a mood for a lecture either.  I need to be numb.
“Whenever you read a cancer booklet or website or whatever, they always list depression among the side effects of cancer. But, in fact, depression is not a side effect of cancer. Depression is a side effect of dying.”― John Green. Reality check.. cancer thinks it can kill but it hasn’t won yet and it won’t this time.
The hell with it.  I’m drinking a mojito. I may even have a second one. I’m tired of rules today. What did following life’s rules really do for me, for my family. My grandson had a helmet and a chest protector on riding his dirt bike, neither piece of equipment saved his life. I want to be there for my son on the anniversary but I’m scared that I won’t be strong enough. The iron woman is strong but she gets tired, too!
I wrote a poem for you, Johnny because writing how I was feeling wasn’t happening. It’s hard to write when you’re eyes are blurred with tears.  Good thing your Grandma doesn’t bother with makeup I would scare everyone.
I made your Grandpa banana walnut cake because he’s as stressed as I am with all that is happening. It’s bad enough having this letter-c hovering, trying to pay bills with all the covid-19 crap impacting his insurance business. Insurance did involve meeting people face to face, now its a scrambling nightmare as it transitions to over the phone and online. And if that isn’t enough stress, the insurance companies are dragging their asses to pay commissions as well. Heaven forbid a CEO not have his big bank account.  Your Dad and Debbie helped us with the mortgage. I really didn’t want to ask but sometimes pride can also be your worse enemy too.
I know we need to sell this house and move into something cheaper. The hard part for me is this stone fortress is the only place I’ve truly felt safe. I never worry about the roof collapsing or the water flooding the basement or the water freezing like I always had to in the old place.

Letter-c Day 27

There are things to be happy about when it comes to the diagnostics involved thus far. I don’t have the protons found in the later stages of pancreatic cancer. The MRI didn’t show a mass in the pancreas. What is still on the table are the malignant cells found in the entrance of the pancreas and the bile duct. That is why he chose to address it first as pancreatic but with the next diagnostic the goal is to narrow the area. I have an in-person appointment with him to discuss the process, the goals and how we go forward. Pancreatic cancer has a much higher success rate unfortunately than bile duct cancer so everything done now matters when it comes to my longevity.

Once that is appointment is done, I want a second opinion with another doctor so I have done diligence. I respect my doctor’s conservative approach but I also know being conservative in my previous cancers wasn’t successful so I need to be my strongest advocate.  My goal is to be a centenarian so I need to cover every angle and to dot all my i’s and cross all my t’s as my favorite teacher, Mrs. Swenson always reminded us.

That poor woman, I drove her crazy because I refused to capitalize my first name. I always wrote lyn and then capitalized my last name. I felt I was just  me, the true value lies in my family name, the heritage of our existence. I’m sixty four and I still don’t capitalize my first name. I am who I am. A capital will not make me any different.

Mrs. Swenson she inspired my love of reading. She read out loud to every afternoon. Her voice carried us away into the classics every afternoon. My favorite stories were the Prince and the Pauper and the Secret Garden. She opened my mind to the possibilities of becoming a writer. Our assignment was to rewrite our favorite part. It was incredibly exciting to have that kind of power on the page as a ten year old. I was given permission to change a story that was published by an adult anyway I wanted. We talked about what we wrote and why we wanted the story to change in this way. Thinking back, we learned so much about editing,self-expression and using our imagination to improve a story. I’ve re-read both books and rewrote my own story line numerous times over the years. I should create some found poetry with each of them and see where my mind goes.

I had my nerve block done this morning for my migraines. I have crazy pressure following the injections and the only way I can reach a comfortable space is to lie down for a couple hours once I get back home.  Something about lying flat helps, at least for me it does. The afternoon disappeared on me and before I knew it was time for my writing group and then finally get to my blog entry. My emotions are still all over the place and I tire easier than I want to admit. Maybe saving my energy for when I will need it most will be beneficial but unfortunately rest seems to allude me. Another doctor question? I know sleep is highly over-rated but I do need it.

I’m much to young to feel this damn old as Garth Brooks would say.

This ol’ highway’s getting longer
Seems there ain’t no end in sight
To sleep would be best, but I just can’t afford to rest

I’m much too young to feel this damn old
All my cards are on the table with no ace left in the hole
I’m much too young to feel this damn old

Lord, I’m much too young to feel this damn old

 

Letter-c Day 25

I heard the chimes late last night or early morning when I had laid back down. Were you visiting Johnny?  I would like to believe it was you. It’s almost been a year since you died. Your parents are still struggling. I thought your Dad was doing better than your Mom but I’m not sure anymore. He’s drinking again and been sarcastic now a couple times to me. I don’t know if its because we’re closer to your one year anniversary or it’s because I have cancer. It’s always been a challenge to understand your Dad.

I had the MRI yesterday, it was uncomfortable and noisy. I hate having anything close to my face. This tube was narrower than some I’ve been inside. Lucky me, they had issues with the music set-up so I got to hear nothing but the rapping of the machine. The headphones didn’t mute the noise enough to stop my migraine from spiking. I puked before I even left their facility. As soon as we got home, I took another pain pill and had a cup of squash soup and a turkey sandwich. Unfortunately,  I ended up with re flux. It was so annoying while trying to participate with my writing group. Thankfully, they couldn’t hear me burping  or see my discomfort until the Prilosec did its thing because we were watching the movie, Invisible Man over Zoom together. The writing and portrayal of the woman’s struggle to free herself from an abusive relationship was excellent. So many of the things she felt hit a chord with me. If you haven’t seen it, I recommend you do.

By the time I hit the sack, it was sheer exhaustion but I didn’t get to sleep through the night because my body decided it needed to upchuck all the nasty bile.

Thus far this morning, my coffee and a Poptart are staying down. I’m reluctant to eat anything else. Yeah, I am one of them who still loves Poptarts. My grandfather, Jonah , used to tell me that my love of Lucky Charms, Poptarts, Dill Pickles and Cheese would diminish as an adult because out taste buds change. Nope, I still enjoy them. Of my four favorites, cheese is the most challenging right now. Grandpa used to say eating all that cheese is going to bind you up. I have just the opposite because of the dairy, it rapidly goes through me now without the gall bladder. Fried food, fatty foods and dairy products, all require me to be very near a bathroom. Probably more than you wanted to know about a stranger but if you’re battling the letter-c this information is helpful because the meal navigation is important if one wants to have some normalcy in their lives.

It’s partly sunny here today, it’s only 75 degrees. I have some weeding and maybe if needed re -saturate the cotton balls with cinnamon and peppermint oil. Thus far the chipmunks have avoided the plants where I put the cotton balls. Woohoo!  Score 1 for me, 0 for the chipmunk. All the seedlings now that they’re not being dug up look pretty good. I can’t wait to pick cherry tomatoes and cucumbers off the vine.

It’s been years since I crocheted a shirt. I decided to work on that and the mandala in the evening. The shirt is easier to lug around than the mandala is. My nerve block is on Wednesday so it’s a perfect to go project. Busy hands keep me calm.

We’re having fish tacos for dinner tonight. I’m looking forward to dining on the deck with Vic and playing a couple games of cribbage. These temperatures are perfect for outside dining especially when the sun is hitting full stream on the stone siding. Once it gets up into the eighties and nineties, the stone makes it too hot to enjoy dinner on the deck.

Remember, the last time we were together, Johnny, we played cribbage on the hotel bed. You were so excited to beat us both. I can still see your beaming smile when you told your Dad, you won. I miss you hon. I chose Melissa Etheridge because you’re on my mind today.

“I would dial the numbers
Just to listen to your breath
I would stand inside my hell
And hold the hand of death
You don’t know how far I’d go
To ease this precious ache
You don’t know how much I’d give

Or how much I can take
Just to reach you
Just to reach you
Oh to reach you” ~ Melissa Etheridge

 

 

 

 

 

Letter-c Day 24

If I asked you to get a fast car, so we could just go anywhere… anywhere where the letter-c can’t go, would you? That’s what I had for fifteen years until twenty six days ago. Two days of just my immediate family knowing before I shared with my close friends and began blogging my way through my feelings. The temptation to simply flee is strong but it won’t make the letter-c go away. It was so much easier as a child… running and climbing trees with reckless abandon without responsibility looming.

I remember thinking that when I was a grown-up I would do anything I want when I want.  No more curfews for me, no more doing chores and especially no more drunk adults screaming like banshees. Curfews and drunk banshees are gone. Chores I actually don’t mind. The hardest part of my childhood desire has been doing anything I wanted. I’ve explored different outlets, found joy in the majority of them and sadness in others. What I didn’t understand as a child, timing is everything. If only… I had that young dreamers energy again.

I said yesterday that Cisneros’ House on Mango Street influenced to try a vignette like hers about hair. Well,  here it is:

Turning the Pages  Vignette 1

Hair

 My father’s hair was blacker than a nighttime sky without a star, yet sometimes it shone like it had its own galaxy hidden, especially when a blue hue appeared within his curls. My mother’s auburn hair was sprayed stiff and sticky with a daily coating of shellac. It was always stiff and scratched my face, so I avoided any close contact with it. The toxic smell kept us at a distance well before social distancing became a norm.

My father’s insistence that his daughter’s hair was long and his son’s hair short determined our appearances in our family. My sister Lori’s dark thick hair waved like the ocean curling across the sand in the night. Her hair bounced lively, showing the golden streaks the sun teased out of the darkness when she walked. My brother Rick’s sandy straight hair always stood up in the back like a submarine periscope. To his dismay, our mother fussed about the way it refused to collapse and would yell at the barber. My poor brother was humiliated every time she took him. He used to beg to go inside alone.  My sister Lisa’s thin blonde hair hung down her back like streams of sunshine coming through a window. My mother would always brag to her friends how angelic she looked with her golden glow. Her ego became as inflated as a hot air balloon with all of our mother’s attention. My sister, Shirley’s hair, was almost as dark as my father’s and as thick as Lori’s but never had a strand out of place. Her hair never seemed to rebel regardless of the weather. She flaunted her perfect hair like a beauty pageant queen, but it was never enough to get our mother’s attention.  My brother, Randy’s hair, was golden ringlets always made me think of butterscotch lifesavers the way they appeared to be lighter than darker on the edges. Those ringlets became his badge as he slid into his lifestyle. At the time, I envied each of my sibling’s hair because it had personality, whereas mine hung like a limp dishrag on a towel bar. My long red hair didn’t shine or even wave.  Why did I end up with a mass of red hair that lacked fiery inspiration?  In a moment of frustration or maybe teenage resistance, I cut it off right at the elastic where it was reined in at the top of my head in a ponytail.  I felt joy losing the stringy strands. My rash act was the beginning of my rebellion to be me.   Who knew that bold act of courage would open the door to years of exploring different hairstyles and experiencing heartbreaking times with no hair from chemo  I learned my hair doesn’t define what’s inside me, it occasionally compliments it. 

Amusingly, after chemo, my hair grew back wavy and is just as unruly as my brother Rick’s.  Yay, of all them he’s the one I’m glad we look alike. ©

I chose Fast Car by Tracy Chapman today. My appointment for the MRI is today at 4:00 pm.  Part of me still has the urge to flee and the other part just wants to get there and back so it’s done. It has loomed over me long enough. I understand needing all the diagnostic information to determine the course of action…but it feels like we’re moving at a tortoise pace. That impatient child in me isn’t really gone, she just tires quicker than she wants to admit.

“You got a fast car
I want a ticket to anywhere
Maybe we make a deal
Maybe together we can get somewhere

Anyplace is better
Starting from zero got nothing to lose” ~ Tracy Chapman

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Letter-c Day 23

Turn the page, I just want to be through this journey and on to the next one. I thought 2019 was horrific with Johnny getting killed and wanted 2020 to begin. I got what I asked for, it is a new year but not the one I hoped for either.  My thoughts wander the way they always do, as I try to focus on the positive… when and then what if… not this time. The thoughts are as fractured as the mug I didn’t mean to break.

In a feeble attempt to pick my mood up I danced last night with Bianco Brown’s the Git Up playing on U-Tube only to realize I am directionally challenged more than I once was. Damn it why can’t I remember which way is left and which is right. He’d sing go left and I’d go right. I’ve always had two left feet when it comes to dancing, don’t know why I expected last night to be any different. But at least I went from crying to laughing at myself.

I finished reading Sandra Cisneros’ The House on Mango Street. It’s a compilation of vignettes or snippets of the people in her life as a child. Through her eyes, we saw the different influences a young Latino girl faced. I enjoyed the abruptness of the book with each vignette not being more than two or three pages long. Some were even just a single page but the details described made you feel like you knew them too. I loved the one about each of her family’s hair texture. Cisneros simply titled the vignette Hairs. Her papa’s hair was like a broom, her hair was lazy, Carlo’s hair was thick, Nenny’s hair was smooth, Kiki’s hair was like fur but her Mama’s was like rosettes. Mama pinned her hair into pin curls everyday but her hair didn’t smell like roses instead it made her think of freshly baked bread. I loved each little tidbit she attached with the description. I thought about my own hair what would people say. In my childhood my hair hung straight like a limp dishrag not a wave any where. After chemo with my breast my hair returned wavy and coarser than it had been. Looking in the mirror right now I see hair that refuses to submit. Yup, that’s me.

I decided that writing 500 words was do able so I did while the house was so quiet as the sun rose on this day.

As I turned the pages this morning finishing the book, I thought about all of my own vignettes and how I could present them. I sat at looking at a new word document trying to decide what to call it the first thought came to mind was Turn the Page. Then I recalled Bob Seger did a song called Turn the Page and Metallica did an awesome cover as well. The saxophone intro is incredible.  I genuinely enjoy both versions.  Both are here in case you’re not familiar with them.

“Here I am, on the road again
There I am, up on the stage
Here I go, playin’ star again
There I go, turn the page”

The chorus fits the situation I’m in as well.  This c journey has me on a new road, I’m definitely in a stage and playing star again although I didn’t choose either place or role but I will turn the page.

 

 

 

Letter-c Day 22

It’s now 8 days shy of a month since that face time call and the dang letter-c reappeared in my world. Twenty two days of not sleeping peacefully through the night. Twenty two days of feeling the walls closing in around me.  Grrrr.

We did the early morning senior run to the grocery store, finally the store shelves are beginning to look normal again. Part of me says stock up now because this virus will be back for round two but the other part of me says don’t become one of those who went into full on hoarder mode.

The garden is looking amazing thus far. The seedlings I started in the house are double their size. Now, to keep the chipmunk out of the mix. I was reading that chipmunks are not fond of cinnamon oil and peppermint oil. I’m going to place cotton balls soaked with it near a couple of my plants and see if that discourages the digging he/she is determined to do. It looks like we’re going to have a few comfortable days ahead of us in the 70’s. I hate having the ac on.  I love hearing the birds chatter and the sound of leaves rustling that the ac drowns out.

I finished Langston Hughes  Not Without Laughter. I enjoyed the writing style and visual imagery that moved the story forward. I can’t even begin to comprehend life during that time frame as he shared.  The social injustices of the time sickened me as I read.  Maya Angelou said, “Prejudice is a burden that confuses the past, threatens the future, and renders the present inaccessible.” I believe it is still occurring maybe not as bad as in Hughes time but a lot of the brutality and inequality when it comes to career and income haven’t ended. Why is it unless we see prejudice and injustice with our own eyes we continue  in a state of denial ? The stories in books are dismissed as fiction because it’s easier to dismiss it than to accept the responsibility that all of us are part of the problem. Like the ostrich with its head buried in the sand, see nothing, know nothing. I didn’t intend to go off on another rant. I feel so frustrated because I feel like I am not doing enough.

Anyway, I enjoyed the book immensely and will be updating my reading list and reviewing on Goodreads. I highly recommend reading his work. His poetry is amazing if you haven’t had the opportunity to read it.

Dreams © Langston Hughes

“Hold fast to dreams

for if dreams die

Life is a broken-winged bird

that cannot fly

Hold fast to dreams

for when dreams die

Life is a barren field

frozen with snow

https://poets.org/poems/langston-hughes

His poetry inspired me along with Poe, Plath, Yeats, Whitman, Donne, Eliot, Wilde, Thomas, Bronte, Thoreau, Homer, Shelly and Bukowski. I love how each of them mastered a story or a message within verse.

A Wolf Moon© Lyn Crain
Shimmers across a darkened sky
that halo around it does not bode well.
All the signs are hard to deny
soon stormy weather, or maybe a white spell.
Those gusty raw winds chill to the bone.
Small animals scurry to cover
before the wolves catch them alone.
Palpable fear seems to hover,
the fittest survive, the weak will die.
The laws of nature are not fair,
some will struggle to defy
while others give in to despair.
Maybe some day someone will find my writing as inspiring to them. Like Hughes reminds us all we can’t let our dreams die.
My song choice today is by Kevin Sharpe, who by the way also battled cancer as a teen but unfortunately died at 43 from complications because of the chemo and radiation he underwent because of ongoing complications from past stomach surgeries and digestive issues.”  His book , Tragedy’s Gift is a powerful read. The Song Nobody Knows discusses the pain felt when a relationship ends and the lengths one goes to keep it secret from others prying eyes by pretending nothing is wrong. My relationship hasn’t ended but I feel like I’m walking a similar path by trying to keep a happy face on for everyone else.

Sometimes I just get tired like today. The four walls close in around me… nobody knows.

 

I keep thinking about the days when the letter-c was just a memory.

 

Letter-c Day 21

Today, talking with a friend about my first cancer forty years ago. She said you have so much experience that others may find it helpful reading how you addressed your experiences . I hope by writing about my experiences with the letter-c does make a difference.

I had stage 4 cervical cancer. I was also very much pregnant with youngest daughter. The doctor recommended an abortion and followed by the radical hysterectomy.. I support every woman’s right to have an abortion. But with that said, an abortion wasn’t happening. I wanted to carry my baby to term. I saw several doctors before making the  switch to a doctor who genuinely listened to what mattered to me. We proceeded on a different course that would allow me to carry my baby while monitoring the cancer closely. It did spread to my uterus by the time my daughter was born but my life wasn’t in jeopardy because he closely monitored me. My daugher was healthy and beautiful . The radical hysterectomy took place after her birth followed by chemo. until it was determined I was cancer free.

The reason I’m bringing this up is to help individuals who have been recently diagnosed. It is so important that you are proactive in your care. Be up front with your doctor about the things that matter most to you. Cancer is intimidating but simply taking whatever course of treatment without asking for more than one opinion isn’t the best solution. Ask questions. Ask what trials are available? Be your own best advocate. “It is a waste of time not to do the most effective, useful, or important thing you can do.”― Mokokoma Mokhonoana

When I think back that if I had simply followed the first doctor’s recommendation I wouldn’t have my daughter today. Life doesn’t end with cancer you just adapt. Find the doctor who listens and adapts with you. “Life is short, and it’s up to you to make it sweet.”~ Sarah L. (Sadie) Delany

My initial conversation with my doctor this time was while you’re determining what treatment keep in mind that coffee is non-negotiable. He started with objections as doctors like to do but I nipped it right in the bud with my reply there are simple things that I cherish and look forward to daily. My coffee matters to me. He acknowledged my request and is putting a plan together. Now maybe to some people that seems ludicrous but I’m 64 years old and I’ve drank coffee since I was young. My parents gave up trying to make me drink milk and let me have coffee. I have good blood pressure and no heart issues so leave my coffee alone.

I carry a photograph of my husband, my children, my grandchildren, my friends in my mind. They are the reasons why cancer can’t and won’t destroy me.  Which brings me to the song I chose today Photograph by Ed Sheeran.

“Loving can hurt, loving can hurt sometimes
But it’s the only thing that I know
When it gets hard, you know it can get hard sometimes
It is the only thing that makes us feel alive:.”

Love can heal, loving can mend your soul

We keep these photographs of love
We made these memories for ourselves” ~Ed Sheeran

I enjoyed spending time in the garage with my friend socially distanced watching the rain come down and talking for hours. I’m grateful to have another awesome photograph to carry in my head for when I need it. Thank you Jeanne for today.

“One clear moment, one of trance
One missed step, one perfect dance
One missed shot, one and only chance
Life is all…but one fleeting glance.”~― Sanober Khan

Letter-c Day 20

“If you want to conquer the anxiety of life, live in the moment, live in the breath.” ~ Amit Ray

This message has been expressed in so many different ways but… yeah, there is always a but when it comes to actually doing it. It’s easier said than done.  I do reasonably well during the day at living in the moment, not focusing on the letter-c. However, it’s the night time. I fall asleep than the demons come alive and I’m awake. I long for the grace of silence, not the disturbance of the shadow of the letter-c. Damn you cancer.

I know I’m not alone in this because some one I know who’s also a cancer survivor recently and is still doing the six month check-ups has the same anxiety come night time. Cancer no matter what form it is has the same devastating emotional impact on the person battling it now, or in remission, or past the five year benchmark the lingering fear under the surface remains… cancer may not kill you this time but it can try again. “Reality is the leading cause of stress amongst those in touch with it.” ― Jane Wagner

My husband, Vic, said to me this morning after reading the quote I shared by Oscar Wilde, “You didn’t use the wrong fork. You didn’t do anything wrong. Cancer did. It chose the wrong woman to do battle with. You got this.”  His words reminded me of a lyric in a song I love… Tennessee Whiskey.

One because I do enjoy good bourbon. I love the smooth warmth that flows through your body as it slides down. In that moment, that’s how Vic made me feel. He knew what needed to be said. I’m so lucky to have him with me on this journey.  Sometimes no matter what stress is happening in your life, it doesn’t have to be cancer just having that one person who knows when and what to say in the moment makes all the difference in the world. There’s nothing more powerful than to love and to be loved.

“You’re as smooth as Tennessee whiskey
You’re as sweet as strawberry wine
You’re as warm as a glass of brandy
And honey, I stay stoned on your love all the time

I’ve looked for love in all the same old places
Found the bottom of a bottle always dry
But when you poured out your heart I didn’t waste it
‘Cause there’s nothing like your love to get me high” ~Chris Stapleton.

I just want it to begin so we can move onto other things but what will that be. Our country is ravaged with more and more covid-19 cases and it is only going to increase as more and more people let down their guard. We saw it with the opening of the beaches as Memorial Day weekend happened. People partied and left trash everywhere exposing others to risk.

Followed by the cruel murder of George Floyd and people took to the streets enraged by the actions of the police. I couldn’t believe how many people complained about the people gathering to protest but didn’t give a rats ass about the socializing that took place on the holiday weekend.It’s okay to ignore the stay at home orders and go hang out on the beach but its not okay to protest because of injustices committed by law enforcement.

My friend and I were talking about the current Black Lives Matter movement and I said the reason this situation is still happening is because of our need to have loopholes. We’re on this course of sorrow because the only knots that were tied were ones of hate. It will never resolve until hate ends and the likely hood of that is slim because social injustice generates money.

Thankfully, these protests have inspired action in the right direction but will the ball be dropped once again like it was in the 60’s early 70’s. I saw so many injustices as youth and then as a teen during the civil rights movement I never imagined that our country would sink to such shameful level as it has.

Apologies are simply words, back it up with laws that guarantee equality for all and get rid of the damn loopholes that exist in our society once and for all. King said it best, “I have a dream” in his famous speech. I need to believe that dreams aren’t just for the dreamers.

With all the many different levels of emotional stress happening right now that unfortunately I find it challenging to want to be any moment. Maybe cancer is a blessing after all because it has changed my focus. I’m writing more everyday. Some pieces are dark but not all. This one I wrote today, I haven’t decided what to name it nor am I am sure it’s finished. It’s a work in progress but then isn’t everything in life.

 as memories fade

mired by melancholy

like a mourning dove

bereft of of all joy

life gave ominous reminders

that pain is normal

and what remains

 is the comfort

knowing death awaits. ©Lyn Crain

 

Letter-c Day 19

Sleep eluded me because my internal alarm clock since I got the diagnosis woke me at 2:00 am again. Cancer concerns are disruptive to all normalcy.   I admit the moon was beautiful glowing in the window across Yeatsie’s body sprawled across the carpet.  He’s my sixteen year old blue tabby. For the life of me, I have no idea why the vet says he’s a blue tabby.  I just know he’s an enjoyable member of our family.

My thoughts returned to a conversation earlier in the day about death. For me death isn’t scary because I’ve already done it once, in a crazy accident in 2007. The warm white beckoned me to go forward. It was so peaceful there I was so tempted but I wondered where Vic was and then I had the sharpest pain ever in my chest with an EMT looming above me as I woke up in an ambulance. My sternum had been broken along with three broken ribs. Needless to say breathing was brutal for a while. I never felt fear. Though I’m glad it wasn’t my time to go.

I’ve thought about death a lot since then. Death happens to us all. It’s the natural progression. What isn’t acceptable to me is suffering before we pass. I’m a firm believer in compassionate suicide. Everyone should die with dignity. It’s sad to me that as a society, we don’t bat an eye putting our pets down so they don’t suffer but insist that our loved ones or even ourselves do suffer.

What brought about the conversation was my previous round with cancer. The chemo made me so sick, I longed for death. I just wanted it to end. I told Vic, that if if cancer recurred I would never do chemo again. I lost weight, my hair, my sense of taste and smell and was exhausted all the time. Fifteen years ago they didn’t have as many options as they do now so hopefully things won’t take me back to that darkness again.

Then, I thought about all the dreams I have still. I want to be married to Vic longer than I was with my first husband. We’re coming up on our 12th wedding anniversary on Halloween, we’re only 18 years shy of that goal.  There are so many places, I hope to see with Vic. Writing that I want to publish. Grandchildren, my children, and my fur babies I adore and want to see their lives evolve.  There’s so many things I want to do with them. I want to finish my mandala afghan and maybe create a second one. I have always wanted to live to one hundred. Imagine being able to say, I’m a centenarian. “This year, the number of centenarians has increased to a new high of around 533,000 worldwide. The United Nations expect that number to rise to approximately 573,000 by 2020. The U.S. has the highest absolute number of centenarians in the world with 72,000 living in the country. Jul 26, 2019″ ~ https://www.statista.com  To me our dreams have validity, regardless of where we’re from.

“You are never too old to set another goal or to dream a new dream.”
– C.S. Lewis

I know many of you can relate to the things that matter most to me.  Life is meant to be lived.  Which brings me to my song choice for today by Etta James, Something’s Got a Hold on Me. Just thinking about my goals, my dreams and what motivates me the most definitely brings joy to my step that dang letter c can’t touch. I won’t let it.

Like Etta, I get a good feeling…. a feeling I’ve never had before.
“Let me tell you now … I got a feeling, I feel so strange…. Everything about me seems to have changed.. Step by step, I got a brand new walk… I even sound sweeter when I talk Oh, something’s got a hold on me right now, child (oh, it must be love) ”