National Cancer Survivor Day

The middle-ground

Cancer is a sort of middle-ground between what was and will eventually be. This middle ground is unstable and forever shifting and changing — often daily. As unstable as it is, it also acts as an anchor. With a diagnosis and subsequent treatment, with life revolving around clinics and tests, trying to grapple with the “new normal” post-cancer, as well as the shift in perspective of life when the dust settles, patients seek refuge on this ground.

This middle ground, however, cannot hold, nor is it meant to.

To acknowledge that one is in remission is to become aware that the steps, however frightening, must be taken to move away from the middle ground to step forward. I have kept myself there in this gray area.

I can stay here forever. There is safety here. I’ll live here. I’ll build a life here.

This middle ground, however, cannot hold, nor is it meant to.

As horrifying as they were the circumstances in France rattled parts of me, they forced me to bear witness to the events that had taken place over the years. I was unprepared to handle the deluge of emotions from observing this. The events snapped me into such intense awareness of all that had come to pass, each and every brutal moment of my journey. The emotional scars became apparent. The physical scars radiated, and I could not look away from either or turn my attention elsewhere. My emotional being couldn’t hold out any longer; I was shedding layers, and the feeling of emotional nudity was unbearable. I was losing the self I had been constructing; who was Jeremiah now? This identity was slipping, try as I might I couldn’t hold it. Everything came to a grinding halt; I was literally and figuratively unable to take another step. Brain surgery had to occur during active treatment; there was no question about the procedure. When everything started to rise to the surface, when the layers were dropping away, the physical and psychological acknowledgment of this particular scar was the trigger that sent me into a tailspin. 

I have been able to meditate on some of the imagery and hallucinations I experienced during my breakdown. There are some images that, until now, have remained mysterious or so tangled in metaphor that I couldn’t decipher them. One in particular was pulling a hair-like substance from my chest. This unnerved me, and I wasn’t ready to interpret it. I had been building an identity around cancer; it engulfed my entire life for so long that I took on that persona, that of a patient. ‘I have cancer’, I’d say to myself, or I speak about it as though it was current, that I still had it, that I was still in the place of treatment. Neither is true. This gesture of pulling this substance from my chest is so clear to me now, so obvious. I was trying to extract this identity, this version of myself that has since passed. The transient persona that I had outgrown yet was fiercely holding onto. From within me, from my core, I was trying to haul this out, to unburden myself of it. Not to rid myself of the memories, good or bad, nor the lessons learned, as there are numerous — a lifetime’s worth! I was trying to purge myself of all that didn’t serve me, holding me back from stepping off the crumbling middle ground.

I had to return to France; Golinhac was calling me. All this came about there; all that dormant within me rose fully to my attention — glaringly so! In return, I would leave the remanence of this deteriorating middle ground and my meticulously crafted persona. I’d keep the new awareness and lessons from the incidences experienced there and feel a sense of certainty in stepping away.

I put a ticket on my charge card and began packing. Just a few weeks after I left France, a complete emotional and psychological mess, I was going back.

Everyone expressed their concerns. They were worried that I was still very vulnerable and returning so soon, in a fragile emotional and psychological state, would be very unwise. Why, after such a short period of time, would I want to return to the site of my breakdown? To the place where, just a few weeks ago, I was admitted to the emergency room after being found screaming and howling in the middle of a footpath just outside of Golinhac. These questions started building in my mind, too. Why would I want to do this? The entire way to Boston, which on the bus felt like an eternity, I was wondering what on earth I was doing. What was I hoping for? I didn’t know the answer to anything. Even during my layover in Lisbon, I still wondered and questioned everything.

I admitted to a dear friend who has been an incredible support this entire time and someone I feel safe confiding in,

“I don’t know what I’m searching for.”

“I don’t either,” she replied.

This is the uncertainty that keeps a cancer survivor remaining in the middle ground. Not only the uncertainty of life, as explained, but that of oneself, the question of who one is — who is this Jeremiah? How has he arrived here?

I don’t need an identity here. I can stay here forever. There is safety here. I’ll live here. I’ll build a life here.

This middle ground, however, cannot hold, nor is it meant to.

I walked east out of Golinhac with ever-increasing anxiety. I had to stop and gather myself to go on a few times. At one point, I even considered returning home, admitting it was too soon for such an undertaking. But I was still drawn onward and slowed considerably, taking deep, slow breaths with each step. I stopped at a certain point, put down my pack, and started emulating the gesture of pulling the hair substance from my chest. Gently, slowly, without the frantic haste of my hallucination, I mimicked the action, one hand then the other in a rhythmic fashion as though softly pulling one long, continuous thread from my chest. The action became ritualized in its repetition, fluidity, and symbolism, bringing a deep sense of peace. I envisioned dismantling the persona that had been constructed around cancer, the identity that no longer served me. Bit by bit, as if pulling a single thread that unweaves a tapestry, I unraveled an identity. I simultaneously entwined a new Jeremiah, no longer the patient, yet holding the memories and lessons – the same thread yet a different weave pattern. 

I stood still in the silence of the location and continued taking long, slow breaths. Dusk arrived, and with it, a chill. I retrieved my pack and walked westward back towards Golinhac.  

The peace I felt there has remained. Returning to France, which consisted only of four full days, left me feeling as though I had undergone years of psychotherapy. It isn’t so much that I am thankful for the breakdown itself, as it was terrifying, rather, that I am thankful for that which it revealed to me and the metamorphic shifts that have since followed. 

This is not to say that I have stepped entirely from the teetering middle ground, but I have one foot firmly planted on the other side.

I can build an identity here, one that is linked to (the) cancer via memories and life lessons and not one that is torn between two worlds, two worlds that ultimately hinder the desperately needed stability required for reconstruction.

Lost

Over a decade ago, when life seemed easier in many ways, partly due to blissful naivety, I left Paris en route to Munich. There, I met with German buddies to make our way on another adventure around the British Isles. Though I had been there a few times prior, I hadn’t traveled by car, and I knew this would add a whole new dimension to our journey. The British Isles, namely Scotland, are my ancestors’ land(s). I was keen on getting off the beaten track, so to speak, and really explore.

The year prior, or perhaps two years prior, we met up in Zurich, where I studied then, and set out to explore Italy. Both journeys were full of spontaneity and, naturally, considering our ages, delicious German beers. Heavy drinking aside, each journey graced us with limitless possibilities. Cliche, perhaps, but we each grew throughout our adventures. Of course, this is only in hindsight, as always, and one looks back on such voyages with a sigh and a smile, retracing not only the steps that we took then but the steps that lead each of us to our current places here and now.

There were many laughs along the way, which weren’t due to the beer; in some two or three cases, it took up more space than our luggage. We encountered some caravan-dwelling folks in Calais who seemed to live in a clown car of sorts, as each time we turned around, there was another… and another… and another. Each one disembarked until their numbers were excellent, and we soon realized that their intentions were not as friendly as we had assumed… blessed naivety. When we needed, which was often, we slept on beaches when the weather was “nice,” an” hud” led under the car, an old Mercedes (which is probably still going vital to this day) when the weather took a fowl turn. One of their friends, studying at Oxford, invited us to stay in his dorm room, which made up for the nights sleeping under the car. We cooked white rice over a camp stove and added ketchup to flavor it… a delectable meal, even if the rice was crunchy. We crossed over the Irish Sea on a late-night ferry from Holyhead. The ferry seemed almost empty at this godforsaken hour, and we sprawled out in the passenger lounge on hard plastic seats to catch a little rest. Rest evaded me as the rocking of the ferry made me queasy.

Somewhere well south of Dublin, we were driving along a double-lane highway which, seemingly instantaneously, turned into a sort of country lane just wide enough for two cars to pass. From there, it tapered off into a single lane, then a dirt road, and then a path that, I presume, was made for a tractor or other such piece of equipment. I am not sure if it ended together in pure Irish countryside or not… Had the roadmap been used more regularly, it would have consisted of major roadways, highways, etc. Still, this little dirt track wasn’t wasn’t make matters more interesting; our dual language road map was perfect for a German- or English-speaking traveler wishing to stay on the main autoroutes. Still, it was not helpful in our current situation. All the signs we could see, some just propped up on rock walls, others, which seemed to point in a random direction and undoubtedly acted more as weathervanes, swiveling this way and that even in the gentlest of breezes, were in Irish (Gaelic).

In the middle of seemingly nowhere, we came upon a small cottage. It was an idyllic, postcard-worthy scene. After a brief discussion, it was decided that, since English was my native tongue, I would speak with whoever was there — if anyone at all. After knocking on the door, I paused momentarily to admire the houses. I also wondered how one might live here in what seemed to be the middle of nowhere. When I was about to leave, the door opened, and an older woman greeted me. I can’t imagine how I looked, considering we had been sleeping under a car and consuming white rice with ketchup-washed-down beer for the better part of 2 weeks. But she didn’t seem to notice or care. I presume she had been watching from a window, studying the car with German plates and the three bedraggled boys.

“Good afternoon,” I said, “I’m sorry to bother you, but we’re lost.”

She smiled warmly.

It wasn’t until later that I began considering my comment and her potential interpretation. Here we were in what I called the “middle of nowhere”, but to”her it was home.

Lost
Past and past participle of loss.
Adjective: lost
Denoting something that has been taken away or cannot be recovered, e.g., a lost opportunity.

It isn’t that this opportunity is lost forever; it is simply that such tidbits of wisdom only arrive when one is ready to receive them. The opportunity will repeat itself in various ways and forms until the knowledge is seen and accepted.

This journey of illness and recovery is an opportunity, right? Occasionally, I get glimpses of this, and a blissful warmth runs over me. Then I slip backward and become bitter at seeing something that has caused so much pain and suffering as a chance to learn and grow. Couldn’t I have learned this differently?

I awoke to a text from a dear friend of mine. She has been a source of endless support, care, and love during these years of both illness and recovery. She spoke about the destination and used the analogy of building a stone path and how I’m looking far ahead to some distant point. In turn, the stones I’m laying down to build the path are being overlooked in my haste, in my desire to arrive at some terminus just out of my reach. The task is daunting, too. Building a path that stretches for miles and miles leaves me angry and thus depleted. I realized the stone path I had been laying could barely be considered a path. It’s a twisting and winding mess leading here and there, running wildly in every direction, chasing every possibility, seeking out any and every venue in hopes that one thing, that anything, will relieve me, nourish me, heal me…

I have been wondering about this notion of being lost, of being somewhere neither here nor there and struggling desperately to find the way — any way, for that matter. How might it be if, by chance, I stopped desperately trying to find a way? Or, rather, as it seems, I’m after one in particular. What if I stopped giving a damn about the stone path all together? What if I stopped giving a damn about direction? If I just sat here, then what?  To me, the construction of a path is a sign of strength and courage, forging boldly ahead in the face of it all. Even if I see the path as rambling madness running off in every which way, I still view it as such. What if I ceased the exhausting construction of this path? What if I just let it be? What if I just was?

Osho, an Indian spiritual guru and philosopher, said, “Be — don’t try to become.” I have spent far too much becoming. Becoming healthy. Becoming happy after such turmoil. Becoming whole again. Becoming. Becoming. Becoming. All of these are so close, just out of reach — just there.

If I become this, then I’ll have that. What a very strange equation.

This is the opportunity, the tidbit of wisdom that has arrived. Perhaps it has come a few times, and I simply wasn’t ready to be open to receiving it.

The warm smile from the older lady in Ireland was reassuring and comforting. Now, after so many years and countless experiences, I wonder if she was smiling because she knew I wasn’t lost then and that, in actuality, there is no such thing as being lost at all.

Blissful Relief

Tumor markers were drawn last week, a few days prior to my MRI. After receiving the results I was a little concerned as there was an elevation in one (of three) tumor marker levels. I was riding the wave of positive news regarding my MRI results, so didn’t want to fixate too much on the blood work. Long story short, the labs are fine! The rise in one of the markers, which is slightly above the normal range, is totally normal (according to my oncologist) and has a tendency to fluctuate.
I can rest easy now – and I certainly am. After the news regarding my MRI and blood work I am completely drained, yet blissfully happy!

“Living one day at a time…”

image

Epilepsy monitoring

After weeks, perhaps months, of trying to decide whether or not to undergo the epilepsy monitoring, I elected to take the needed steps and proceed. Even after registering and meeting the doctor and team of techs I was still ready. Then, however, something shifted and I didn’t feel prepared (emotionally/psychologically) anymore — I even started to wonder if I ever was. Perhaps it was the hospital setting and the rising anxiety that these institutions produce. Or the clinical smell that permeates my unconscious mind, leaving me with a sick feeling in my gut. Or the veggie burger I ate that tasted exactly like the one I would consume at Mass General. Maybe it was the person in the next room who was moaning and crying while amid a seizure and/or experiencing post-seizure horror that caused a terrifying delirium, which is inexplicable. Maybe it was a combination of all these elements, but I decided to postpone the study… in fact, I was almost desperate to leave the hospital as fast as possible.

The process post-study didn’t sound as easy as I hoped. Afterward, Post data collection, I would undergo several neurological tests, i.e., language, cognitive function, etc., to ensure the safety of potential surgical resection. Then, a team of neurologists and neurosurgeons would get together and review ALL the information and decide if I was even a candidate for surgical intervention. This testing/deliberation could take 4-6 months. Though I knew it wouldn’t be so cut-and-dry (no pun intended), I certainly didn’t think it would take that long.

For the time being, I decided to take baby steps. I left the hospital with what’s called an ambulatory EEG. This allowed me to return home to continue resting and healing — both of which are desperately needed after years of treatment and the emotional, psychological, and physical stress this entire ordeal caused. Before leaving the hospital, a dozen diodes were glued to my scalp. These are then connected to a small box that gathers information 24/7. I was also given a camcorder meant to be left on while I’m sleeping, sitting reading, writing, playing guitar, cooking in the kitchen, etc. — basically any place I might be for several minutes. The intention is to capture any possible seizure-like activity via brain waves and on film.
Perhaps this monitoring will shed some light on certain elements and reveal potential seizure activity.

Baby steps. Slow and steady…

I’m trying to race through all these tests, not just those related to the seizures, but every single test (blood labs, CT scans, MRIs, etc.), desperately hoping to return… but to where I know not. There is some kernel of normalcy out there — there must be, right? Although I am trying to find it in the past, I know, beyond a shadow of a doubt, that this normalcy I seek, this peace of mind and, dare I say, acceptance, is found right here and now.

I just haven’t gotten there; I haven’t arrived. Acceptance of what is, that ability to live (more) presently, is just beyond my grasp. I know I could easily take hold it, maybe lean just a little farther out, bravely extending, trusting myself in doing so, but I’m held back. The bitterness and anger pull me the other way, back into the known. I am seeking normalcy in this place, in the past, but all that remains some visions and daydreams lead to the bitterness and anger felt presently. I often wonder, when in a moment of clarity, how much I polish those memories to better serve my current state of anger, sadness, etc. This is where the emotional and psychological exhaustion, or at least the majority, stems from; the continuous construction of a palatial past to which a return is impossible.  

A Return

black and white photo of the woods in the winter

PTSD

I’m not going to die…

Measuring time

I measure time in interesting ways now. A row of trees (“green giants”) were planted in my backyard roughly two years ago. As they grow, like most trees, they send these vertical shoots (for lack of a better word) straight up, and then those, in turn, begin to fill out with horizon branches. They have not only sent up their shoots, but they have also begun to fill out. This is the intention of such trees; they are used as a natural wall. They are close to becoming impenetrable.

I think about when my dear friend visited. They put cream on my hands; it was a lovely gesture and made me feel safe and secure. When they came to visit, we went to get gelato. My hair fell out. They noticed it on my pillow but didn’t want to say anything, but I knew. When I left Chicago, I took their suitcase. It had a little Travelocity gnome on the handle. When I returned home to Maine, I left the suitcase in my room and lived out of it. Not that I couldn’t settle into my room in my mother’s house; I just didn’t think I’d be here long enough to have to. It wasn’t naivety, just wishful thinking and the assumption this would be over and done with by mid-summer. The suitcase was there, just resting in my doorway. I would wash my clothing and put them back in the suitcase, folding the pants and shirts neatly so they would fit. The little gnome smiled up at me, bidding me to take off, to go boldly out there, wherever there was. Slowly I unpacked, however. I washed my clothing, folded it, and began to fill my drawers. Then the suitcase was put in our basement, the little gnome still there, hanging off the top. That was over two years ago.

I want a 9-5 job. I want to go out on the weekends. I want to point the finger at someone or something. I ate organic food for the majority of my life. I was a vegetarian, didn’t touch GMOs, and tried to eat locally when possible. I drank green tea and coffee — but only organic, of course. I was raised on a farm in Vermont — I was an earth-loving flower child before earth-loving flower children became trendy and commercialized. I meditate regularly and exercise 4+ days a week. So why am I still fighting this this fucking disease?

Yes, that’s right, fuck. Fuck this, fuck that… fuck!

There’s shame in all this, too. As with my diet and lifestyle, how on earth did I get cancer, considering how I  tried to be diligent (almost militant!) about the choices I was making? Or is that guilt? I am not sure I fully understand the two: shame and guilt. Do I feel ashamed when I let out the pain and anger from this ongoing battle? Or is that guilt? Do I feel guilty that I feel as though I am burdening someone with it all this? Or is that a shame?

We have a tendency to glorify these people who go through cancer with some sort of sage or guru or saintly-like bravery and stoicism. The talks and books, the inspirational speeches, and blah blah blah. But that person who marches through it all doesn’t exist. Yes, they do, but I can guarantee they cracked, broke down, and screamed. Yes, the inspirational speeches are full of beautiful sentiments about this or that, about how cancer was “the little friend I needed.” The majority, though, I’m assuming, are like me in the sense that they can’t right themselves long enough to step away from the looming shadow that is cancer.

My oncologist said I should get a job. I’m not sure if that was a joke or not.
My other oncologist said, when I had ongoing back pain recently and asked for an MRI (it turned out to be an inflamed disk), “that’s the trouble with doing scans, it seems you always find something wrong.” Excuse me? Fuck you.

Those green giants have indeed filled in. They have made a lovely wall. Inside that wall, on my side, there are plants, flowers, and endless beauty for the eyes to behold. I will admit my gardens are beautiful. Our gardens are beautiful. I spent endless summers crafting them when I was at home from school or had free time from work, etc. When I lacked stamina due to treatment and willpower, my mother took over and put her unique touch on them. But I’m not there, not fully present on our side. I am standing with my friend’s suitcase, with the little gnome on the handle, ready to travel, trying desperately to get beyond the wall of green giants. I am certain that on the other side is a 9-5 job, weekend drinks, and conversations that don’t feel like a burden to others. On the other side, hand massages are simply hand massages and not about squelching intense fear that transcends words.