i waited for you in the park.
when you arrived,
you held me,
and your cold nose pressed against my neck.
you nuzzled me,
and our skin quickly
adapted to one another;
mine cooled, or yours warmed
i’m not sure.
i was happy and
excited about what we might become.
the sun and an early spring day
marked the passage of time
and life moving forward.
these were early days—before
waiting became an annoyance,
before illness,
when i didn’t understand what
holding my breath truly meant.
the anticipation of test results slowed time,
and hours in the treatment chair
felt like lifetimes.
after my first seizure,
when the illness forced my world apart,
time shifted.
you found me
coming to the emergency room
to gather the pieces.
fresh from outdoors,
from the chill of an early
chicago spring day,
remembering this:
your cold nose
pressing into my neck,
i can still feel it as time slowed.
and why can’t these moments
be eternity?
when two bodies
seek a common temperature,
can’t this search last forever?
Tag: cancer cure
The wind through an open door
At night, lying on my back, I stay awake and listen to the rattling of my lungs.
A wheeze, a strange resonating noise—like damp leaves—if mold had a sound, if abandoned rooms with winds spoke.
I insist I am okay.
I’ve always said, “I’m okay.”
From my youth, my father’s glare, to now, the groan of my lungs.
But I knew now I wasn’t; my body was revealing signs of sickness.
When had climbing a flight of stairs become a challenge?
Why was I losing weight?
Why did I wake up in the morning without the will to start the day?
The cravings of a young man—sexual longings, morning erections, and pleasuring myself in the stillness of the night—these were memories.
Someone my age shouldn’t be dealing with these issues, right?
I am a young man, strong and proud with rugged New England blood, generations of good health, and a life without doctors.
I kept telling myself, ‘Everything is okay.’
I kept repeating, “Everything will be okay.”
But it was never just an irritation in my throat.
The cough wasn’t just spring allergies.
“Hello,” I say.
“You are closer now.”
The wind through an open door has achieved form.
You have become a presence, a physical form I can’t ignore.
“Hello, Jeremiah.”
You’re in the hallway as a guest now, and you’ve even taken off your shoes.
How could I not welcome a guest?
A caller who had been inside, who had been within, was now at my door.
Cradling me as I sit on the shower floor, coughing blood into the drain.
Wrapping me in the steam of a scalding shower that never warms.
You are the fading winter, the arriving spring, and the buds on trees along West Thorndale.
You’re sitting next to me on the L.
The “What-ifs”

The weight carried,
the what-ifs upon bent backs –
(in) worry and (in) wondering,
“now? if not now, when?”
survivors hold this question;
they live in the moment
of continued burden.
how do I share the weight of gathered
memories?
how do I convey these worries?
I add them singly,
one by one,
layering them,
and bend my back to their weight,
asking,
“if not now, when?”





I observe the passage of time by the jar of dirt I keep in my closet.

Between September 2015 and December 2015, I worked as a volunteer fieldhand on Samsø, a small Danish island off the Jutland Peninsula. The island was flat and windswept and, due to the waning tourist season, becoming quieter and quieter. The sun set earlier each day; the island was turning in for the winter. In other words, it was an ideal place for an artist seeking solitude and a reprieve from the hecticness of the city from which I had just left.
On the morning before I left to catch the ferry back to the mainland, which would, in turn, take me back to Copenhagen and onward to Chicago, where I would spend my last semester of grad school, I walked out into a barren field and filled a glass jar with dirt. Though I had only spent three months there, the land had become very important to me, nurturing and fulfilling in a way that so few things had been.
I turned from the field, took the ferry back to the mainland, took the train back to Copenhagen, and took various flights back to the US before commencing what was supposed to be my final semester before completing my MFA.
The jar of dirt came with me.
I left Samsø in mid-December 2015 and was diagnosed in early April 2016.
From there, my health story winds through various surreal, horrifying, and alarming circumstances, culminating in two stem cell transplants, the 2nd of which ended in late August 2017. As such, I am fast approaching the 5-year mark of being in remission and cancer-free. Having experienced a recurrence six months AFTER my initial treatment, this is a remarkable milestone.
Five years.
I can’t wrap my mind around it. I can’t process it.
It is shocking to consider all that has come to pass since August 2017. It is beautiful to witness one’s strength and humbling and frightening to be continually reminded of one’s fragility.
But it all doesn’t add up to five years.
I measure time by the jar of dirt in my closet, the container that survived my rapid exodus from Chicago when I scrambled to return home to Maine for treatment. Dazed by the news of my diagnosis, the surgery, the multi-day stay in the hospital, and the concoction of medication in my system, I still made sure to grab the jar of soil off the shelf in my room. So while other things, such as clothing, books, etc., found their way to the dumpster behind my apartment, the jar of earth stayed close at hand.
This is time.
On Samsø, I stopped carrying a phone. Time lost a feeling of importance and urgency. Towards the end of my work-stay, we’d start work when it was barely light and end when dusk was well upon us. I started learning how much can be understood by the land and how the light fell on it. I realized that I was beginning to comprehend the seasonal shifts of the earth, just as I knew the passing of the day by the soil and how my hands and body felt with it.
This is time.
I observe the passage of time by the jar of dirt I keep in my closet. Sometimes I open the lid and inhale the dwindling scent that carries the history of seasons and crops with it. Now and then, I pour a small amount onto my palm and consider how lucky I am to have known time in two drastically different formats; the abstract form that tells the seasons to shift and the crops to grow and the concrete structure that allows me to understand the significance of this five-year anniversary.
Exist. Live.

Every year, on the 1st of April, I mention that this is the anniversary of my diagnosis. I talk about the irony of it, being that I was diagnosed on April Fool’s Day. (If you can’t see the incongruous nature of that situation, I’m not sure you’ll make it through life unscathed, my dear.) Today, however, I was thinking about other things, things beyond the absurdity of it all, which, to my pleasant surprise, brought about a giggle or two and not “what the fuck?” moments. You see, life is linear, in a roundabout way. Are you with me? I’ll try not to lose either of us, as I clarify.
We can wake up and go to bed and, in between, either exist or live. I was thinking about this as I stood on a small chunk of land poking out into the Bay of Biscay. Far out, somewhere, a storm was rolling and lurching – as they do. I arrived on foot, having walked from Santander. I knew a storm would come; storms always come; they’re linear – in a roundabout way. I didn’t consider the lightning storm. I was not expecting the hail nor the rapid drop in temperature after that. I thought that I had planned for things… We’re always looking, plotting, and considering ways to plan things. Yes, we’re always planning how to prepare. Things. Things. The linearity, the trajectory. Things. I wanted something to go accordingly. I wanted to exist, plan for hail, and prepare for post-graduate life. Things. Bring my gloves for the drop in temperature, and consider how to outline my resume to make a potential employer go, “He’s our guy!”
Existing. It’s existing.
To exist –
verb (used without object)
to have actual being; be:
The world exists, whether you like it or not.
This isn’t a survival story. Nope. I was freezing to death; I wasn’t lost in the depths of the wilderness. This is about sitting under a tree, stuffing my hands into my armpits to keep them warm while watching a storm pass over a gorgeous seascape. I was existing. I was waiting for linearity to run its course. Yep, I’m just sitting there and waiting it out. Linear. Point A – point B
Cancer and cancer survivorship is not linear. You can stuff your pack with all the shit you can think of, and something will come up, and what was once progression is kicked back to point A. It’s linearity in a roundabout way because it’s progression until it’s not. It’s growth until it’s not. It’s freedom until it’s not.
What truly breaks the cycle is opting to live and not simply exist, being and not endlessly planning to be, enjoying being rather than planning on it. I only realized this…today. However, I don’t know exactly. Sometime between waking up and knowing it was my diagnosis anniversary and accepting the fact that I was actually going to stuff my hands into my armpits because my gloves were sitting on the table at my Airbnb.
To live –
Verb (used without object), lived [livd], liv·ing.
To have life, as an organism; be alive; be capable of vital functions:
All things that live.
Falling in love with yourself again is a continuously evolving relationship that will always be fulfilling

As a cancer survivor, it takes time to love the body you felt betrayed you.
Then, however, you begin to see how hard it worked to save you.
Falling in love with yourself again is a continuously evolving relationship that will always be fulfilling!
The Wordsmith

I fancy myself a bit of a writer, a wordsmith. I never had the confidence I do now to write. I was always worried about my grammar and punctuation. More than anything, I was worried about opening up and spilling it all out, letting the floodgates open and setting for a deluge of emotions, feelings, and thoughts that would potentially leave me exposed to criticism or judgment. After diagnosis, I stopped caring. The last thing I would concern myself with was grammar. Next in line, or perhaps going hand in hand with grammar, were the thoughts of others. I was already emotionally raw on so many other levels; I might as well leave it all wide open.
Today I met with my oncologist, and, as I expected, it was decided to “keep an eye” on things. The recent MRI showed hemosiderin deposition in the brain, which isn’t as bad as it sounds. These deposits transpire after bleeding has happened, which can occur after any traumatic injury to the brain. The bleeding leaves behind stains and, in time, is broken down by the body and left behind as iron deposits. This is my basic understanding. There is some question as to whether or not this could be residual neoplasm, leftover cancer cells. This raised the question in my mind as to whether or not this is why my tumor markers are rising ever so slightly. But, as stated, we’re just going to keep an eye on it.
keep an eye on it. keep an eye on it. keep an eye on it. keep an eye on it. keep an eye on it. keep an eye on it. keep an eye on it. keep an eye on it. keep an eye on it. keep an eye on it. keep an eye on it.
This is when the longing to be a wordsmith falls away.
The old and young. Young and old. What a madhouse here. No rhyme or reason at the cancer clinic. I sometimes want to ask, in a clandestine whisper, ‘Hey you, ya you! whatcha in for?’ ’cause that’s what it’s like. I’ve never been in jail, but I can imagine what it is. I’ve been in a different kind of prison for four years, or has it been longer? I can’t remember. That’s the problem with these days that blend into months and then merge into years; they all look and feel the same. It’s worse in treatment. It’s always worse in treatment. Even today, a beautiful day, and I swear it was May, yet I wrote March 24 on my intake paperwork. “So, doc, ain’t I done good?” I ask as he studies my file and randomly looks up at me. “I’ve been good, I swear! I’m free to go, right?” I want something. I am seeking something; everyone is seeking something in treatment or after treatment. Craving the words, “You’re good!” Oh yes, they call us survivors; what a strange name. I’ll know what this something is, what it’ll be once I get my claws sunk into it. “Well, why don’t we keep an eye on it.”
I schedule a follow-up, bloodwork and scans for a later date. But it wasn’t me. I planned them for my body to be aware of my physical being and its course. But emotionally and psychologically, cancer is no longer.
To be clear, emotionally and psychologically, cancer no longer has me.
Follow-up scheduled: COMPLY (Y/N) Y
Current objective: to be and enjoy being? COMPLY (Y/N) Y
Worrying Overridden: COMPLY (Y/N) Y
Outer Stability Seeking: COMPLY (Y/N) N
Inner Stability Seeking: COMPLY (Y/N) Y
(Physical) Cancer Status: Tracking/Monitoring
(Emotional/psychological) Cancer Status: NED (No Evidence of Disease)
My 1st MRI
My first brain MRI was in Chicago after being rushed to the ER. I woke from a seizure stuck inside a device that hummed and rattled with a disembodied voice telling me not to move. As I recall, it wasn’t a pleasant voice. However, in defense of the tech overseeing the procedure, I struggled to free myself. In my defense, however, who the fuck wouldn’t? I was reentering the world from a seizure; I didn’t know who I was or where or, for that matter, what I was. I was there, semi-conscious, with my head stuck inside an unknown object that seemed to be pulsating. “Jeremiah, don’t move! If you do, we’ll have to start the procedure again!” So, I stopped moving; instead, I just cried.

What I remember, even more than the terrifying sounds, the somewhat annoyed tech, and the tears, was my thirst. My god, the craving for water was so intense. My tongue was leather-like in my mouth. When thirst surpasses fear, a new level of a primordial being emerges. That is the creature that remained on that MRI/scan bed, the being who rested motionless and withdrew inward. I do not know any other word to describe the sensation better, but “withdraw” is most suitable. It was as though Jeremiah split into two halves, the person being tested/scanned and the one full of desperation. In between these was where I ended up and withdrew, holing up in a chasm. I remember resting my hands by my side as if I were a windup toy that had just ended its cycle. I’ve always wondered what the MRI tech thought. Did they see me slip into that place, that point between two worlds, the chasm I mentioned?
The “scanxiety” is everpresent; how could it not be? However, I understand that my genuine fear is detaching. I am concerned about stopping as I did before within that gap between the two halves amidst those two worlds. The horror of a potential recurrence is no longer as intense as it was, even with the tumor markers that are trending upwards ever-so-slightly. If it ever does return, I’ll deal with it. I dealt with it when initially diagnosed and again with the recurrence. After numerous hypnosis sessions, it is evident that my worry of withdrawing, psychologically and emotionally disengaging, far surpasses my concern of a recurrence.
As I have discovered, and most already know, cancer can be managed and treated in numerous ways. The withdrawing, the derealization I speak of, isn’t controlled or cured in such a targeted manner. I feel more detached with each MRI. Amid each procedure, the tech, be it for an MRI, CT, etc., needn’t tell me to “stop moving!” as I keep finding my way back to that middle ground, to the chasm.
In dreams
I’m unsure when it started, but I have felt tenderness and a dull ache in my testicle for the last few days. Naturally, this has set off every alarm in my mind; every possible worry and concern has crept back into the light. After four years, I would have assumed that the fear of a recurrence would have lessened, but it has come raging back with this feeling.
The other night, I dreamt that I was back in the treatment chair, and the nurses were trying to fit in an IV. Each nurse attempted dozens of times to no avail. Finally, the nurse, who, in waking life, I see every time I go for labs, said, “Jeremiah, I’m sorry, but we can’t fit the IV. We’ll try again tomorrow.” Then, I shifted dreams, but I am unsure what followed.
In my unconscious mind, these worries are ever-present; they have always been. It isn’t just with this feeling and sensation. My dreams regularly reveal so much; every emotional state, good or bad, is magnified tenfold within my dreamscapes.
I dream journal. I try to do so every day. I have stopped writing out the dreams in a descriptive manner. I don’t set out to write short stories-like entries when I awake with one still fresh in my mind. Instead, I pull imagery from them. I snag tidbits of information, perhaps the color of an object or a particular look I receive. However, with the dreams that revolve around cancer, I am tangled up in internal sensations and feelings more than anything external. Something in the dream mentioned above, which has occurred in various iterations for years, prevents me from being treated. I want to hang on, stay within the dream, and ride it to the end. Would it make sense once I got there, wherever there is? What answers would I receive? Would it make sense – would any of this make sense?

Patience (the ancient tree)
I have dreamt dozens of times that cancer has returned. Not testicular cancer, not necessarily, just cancer in general.
The other night, I awoke, and, having fallen asleep on my arm, it was numb from the shoulder down. This, too, has happened numerous times, but I am always so shocked and horrified that I sit straight up in bed each time, flop my numb arm over my lap, and await as it comes back, as it awakes as well. I hold my breath. In the middle of the night, I sit in the dark, cradling my arm and waiting. When I feel the gentle tingling sensation return, the soft pins, and needles that signify it has awoken, I lie back, relieved. It is then, and only then, that I realize (the) cancer hasn’t returned. Another lesion hasn’t formed in my brain. I don’t need brain surgery.
Incidents such as this are not uncommon. This is but one example…
This fear lurks; I feel as though sometimes it is stalking me. Other times I know that, at this moment, I am cancer-free, it is out of my system and a thing of the past. I am torn between these two worlds of quaking fear and joyful bliss.
I recently had a conversation about this very feeling, about how I feel that I am often shadowed by cancer, that it is pursuing me. I was unaware of its presence upon initial diagnosis. When struck by the recurrence, I was completely oblivious as with the first time. So much so that when my oncologist told me it had returned, I was in denial. Naturally, anyone would be dismissed, as this is the last thing one wants to hear after being treated once. When I was informed, I felt 100%; my body felt so strong and healthy. I wouldn’t believe it – I couldn’t accept that it had returned. Regardless, it had, and both times it snuck up on me and pounced. I blinked, and it was upon me; claws sunk deep, and I was helpless.
I suppose this is just something that lingers. How long is uncertain. Perhaps it will always shadow me. I hope it will do so in such a way that it is not hunting me, or for that matter, haunting me, but a reminder of what has come to pass.
Patience! I need more patience with myself as I move along this path.

i cannot tell
which is more patient
the tree
like gnarled old fingers
sun-beached and
long since passed
or the days and nights
which move around it
we witness the blue sky
so rich and clear
and mistake our need
we forget tolerance
we say
“get out of the way
you old tree
I want to see the blue sky”
but the tree
is the gentle one
by day
it marks the earth
with the movement
of the sun
across the sky
not rushing it
letting it be
moment by moment
and at night
it stands
almost sentry-like
keeping watch
waiting
it never says
“you are gray today
bring back
your blue sky”
if it is unable
to mark the earth
as a sundial would
it just waits
gnarled and old
like it was yesterday
as it will be tomorrow