Wednesday, October 9, 2019

Indelible


Jenny here.

By the time I post this, it will be THE day.  For now, as I write, I am anxiously counting down the hours until midnight.  Like so many nights in the last 5 years, I am trying to be patient and focused, but I am also longing to just see his face again.  

The days have certainly changed over the last half decade with him.  From long shifts at work followed immediately by long watches at the hospital as he slept, staring at him, my heart racing to the steady beat of the monitors, my whole goal of each day was just to make it back to him…These days racing home to a guy, often in front of dual computer monitors, awake, studying away.  A mere 7 months until he graduates and we celebrate our 20th anniversary.

But midnight tonight marks the 5th anniversary of the stem cell transplant that took; Day +1826.  Probably day +1800 of holding my breath (I’ve breathed a few times along the way, but just a few).  We will have our *hopeful* last oncology appointment next week, more a formality this year than a major event.  For us though, this visit will mean hellos and goodbyes and the end of a crazy chapter.

This time of year I wander through a range of feelings, hearing lyrics from my favorite Leonard Cohen ballad about broken hallelujah’s, each day getting closer to this date.  I put my Fight the Big Fight Spotify playlist on and listen, in order, paying respect to all the emotions.  Recently, the word that has been on my heart, on repeat, about where we stand at this moment --Indelible.

As much as I have tried to wash the marks of sleepless nights, anxiety, grief, loss, and so many other things away, this isn’t a job that can be accomplished, it’s bone deep.  Not just in the science marrow kind of way, but in how it’s forever created a new Wil.  A new Jenny.  And a new marriage.  A new life that is barely recognizable at times. A life I both cherish and admonish, sometimes during the same day. Standing on this side of things, I have started to wear these indelible marks with pride, with admiration, and as the true sign of all my human-ness in this life.  It's powerful  Humbling.  But I would still categorize my relationship to this cancer thing as #complicated.

You all have watched the cancer specific changes.  Cried when he was kept alive by blood transfusions.  Prayed he would not end up with an infection when he had no bodily defenses.  Supported.  Yelled Fuck Cancer. Sent legos.  It’s unfortunate that the more treacherous part of the healing was post hospital and post clinic days when life quieted for him, and opened up a new world of sorrow for me to wade through alone, when I could no longer write about the feelings that didn’t match the victory march I felt pressured to lead. 

The last few years have truly been difficult in so many ways, so deeply personal that I sheltered them away from most people.  Yet, this period, would be the most helpful to others on a similar path; The uncharted aftermath seems to be the forgotten part of the stories I hear in general.  Even though it’s those miles that tell the tale of how someone makes it out of the canyon, against impossible inclines, we barely hear the echo of their existence, satisfied to see them at the top eventually.

2018 ended with us wondering what we were even doing anymore, not so much individually, but together.  While our commitment had never changed, some of the reasons for staying together had faded through patient/caregiver roles and trying to move back to a partnership.  Attempting to find ourselves, getting so lost along the unknown trail, we couldn’t quite envision goals and dreams together anymore.  We started having the hard conversation that if we couldn’t figure it out, we had no idea if forever meant together.  We were a strong team going into cancer, we slayed treatment and every complication, but when the dust started to settle, we realized it was no longer about getting back to our life…we had to build an entirely new existence and we knew each other so deeply, so raw, we didn’t even know how to make the new life work with all the new found vulnerability. 

Side note:  I joke that you don't really know your spouse until you've helped them with an enema.  There is so little mystery left after major medical issues.  Somehow you still need a little magic to keep things going. 

2019 started out with us deciding to focus on ourselves while we also re-entered courtship with each other.  I fed my soul on a steady diet of concerts and trips, of loud music in the car and kitchen, dancing in the living room.  Wil focused on school and his new part time job.  We started to find the bottoms of our souls again and worked to fill them up.  We ate lots of tacos with friends.  Moved to a new space.  Started taking guitar lessons. 

At some point we got our groove back.  And I know I am speaking for only me in this post, but I think we fell in love with each other again too.  And finally started figuring out this life 3.0.  Past treatment.  Past the canyon of doubt after treatment.  Past looking at each other like strangers. To the very north rim, the less traveled but, more beautiful overlook. 

Side note:  I don’t think we ever stopped loving each other, but love and being love and being in love are 3 different states of being to me.  The trifecta?  Damn near impossible with most people, but it’s what I feel when I am with him now.  And how I am starting to fall in love with life again too.

So tonight, it seems only appropriate that we enter into the last day of Yom Kippur, Day of Atonement, and holiest day of the year in Judaism.  While we do not observe ourselves, the lessons of these holy days from my time working at a Jewish school are still etched in my mind.   A day where there is fasting, introspection, prayer, rest--followed by celebration, shouting, and dance.  Through the solemnness of observance there is the “undercurrent of joy; it is the joy of being immersed in the spirituality of the day and expresses confidence that G‑d will accept our repentance, forgive our sins, and seal our verdict for a year of life, health and happiness.” (www.chabad.org). 

Cognitively, I have understood this before.  This year, I feel its message at my core. Tomorrow we will rest.  Reflect.  Love.  And shout about all the marks we will continue to carry with us.  

Year 5.  Time hasn't flown, but it's still hard to believe.  

There are no guarantees about anything.   There never were, and never will be.  But I can’t wait to leave this desk so I can see his face…again…for as long as I can.  Apparently, our love, his face, both indelible too.

Much love. 

(And if you are one of the few who have followed all along, even into the canyon, a special thank you for your healing, all seeing, love).
unforgettable · haunting · memorable · not/never to be forgottenantonyms:


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