The Big Party

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The morning I received the diagnosis, I asked about two events I had planned. One was a trip to Chicago April 13-17 to be a visiting poet at Joliet Junior College, where I used to teach, and to have a “book release party” at my brother’s house in Chicago. The second was to speak at a conference in mid-June at St. Mary’s Notre Dame. The doctor said not to cancel and we’d see how the side effects go. Then he stressed the desire for me to live as normally as possible during the treatment.

Well, I haven’t lived that normally, but it’s been pretty good. I know the routine: treatment on Tuesday, “pretreat-fueled” energy on Wednesday, a slowdown on Thursday afternoon and on the couch mostly on Friday. By Saturday I go into work again for a few hours, get some exercise in, and Sunday and Monday are mostly normal. Repeat.

My white blood cell count (WBC) is struggling, so I did have an off week, which actually worked to my advantage for the Chicago trip. I had a week of no treatment, two “easy” weeks, and just today am back for the beginning of Round 3, the Carboplatin and Taxol, a week with probably more fatigue.

Also for my white blood cells, I did a round of Granix (5 daily shots) which drove my WBC up from 0.7 to 10.0 before travel. I still took no chances, traveled with a mask, gloves, and a decontamination kit to wipe down my seat and the seats around me. Travel was fine.

12592388_10208125709374256_1443903379431950770_n-112974455_10208145633632350_6874578486586667450_nAnd I felt great! Whisked off to Frankfort with my parents and their park-like home. I left brown Minnesota and arrived where the grass had already been mowed twice and the birds had all made it to the feeder out back. Trees in bloom and ephemerals all up.

My niece joined us for Wednesday and she and I went out to a nearby field to fly her drone. Sadly, no footage was recorded, even when it landed on someone’s roof and we had to enlist the home-owner to help us get it down. After she beat me at two games of Battleship (including one solid pod of ships I should have figured out earlier), I took my daily nap. My brother came for dinner and it was nice just to visit and reassure e12998653_10153614556140975_541713435882005818_nveryone that, really, I’m doing fine.

Poetry day at JJC I also had good energy and was able to do two classes, lunch, and a reading. There was another poet, the fantastic Pamela Miller of Chicago, who helped share the load. It was so nice to be in a classroom and see old colleagues. The biggest surprise and treat was seeing Michael Hainzinger, a new faculty member in the department. He was my student back in 2000, in my Nonwestern Literature in Translation course. That year Nobel prize-winning Nigerian playwright Wole Soyinka spoke at the Field Museum and Mike was the one student who wanted to go. We rode together and he had us wait afterward so he could get his program signed. Seldom have I had a student that enthusiastic. He went on to teach English in Taiwan and now teaches ESL at the college. (I love to visit schools and colleges, and I’m very good with students, so if you can bring me somewhere in fall/winter 2016 or 2017: susanmsink@gmail.com.)

13051603_10154072730949501_4331254168283081937_nBut the real event, the major event, was the book release party in Chicago. I had bought two dresses for this trip, and wore the bold one (albeit with a bolero sweater) for the party. I also wore a layered turban/scarf ensemble. I’d gone with the more modest dress and the wig to Joliet, which was kind of a day off from “cancer girl.” The wig is a nice break and does add normalcy.

some audienceThe party was at my brother’s house in Chicago, and what I thought would be about 12-15 people turned to 35-40 post-diagnosis. Friends came from as far as Madison, Wisconsin. My first best friend Marla was there from the south suburbs. Grinnell alumni/ae showed up in force (truth be told, they would have come without the cancer). A childhood friend who lives in Annapolis and travels a lot arranged to be there and visit her parents at the same time. Two college roommates. A guy I’d never met who is a Facebook friend and has multiple mutual friends. Writer friends. Good friends from when I lived in Chicago. Two JJC creative writing alums/former students. My sister-in-law’s parents from the burbs. Lots and lots of hugs.

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Grinnell group!

Grinnell group!

It was a grand, grand party. I loved reading to such a receptive crowd, including some who didn’t know they liked poetry (always a plus to win over new converts).

with Sarah Jolie, signing books

with Sarah Jolie, signing books

It was very, very good to have something like this to look forward to. I recommend not canceling plans during chemo, just getting a plan in place. We already have a good plan in place for June.

Lots of thanks go out to my mom, who threw a great party and took care of me marvelously, chopping veggies and making one of my favorite meals, chicken cacciatore.

And, hey, H is for Harry is a great book of poems. Even if you aren’t particularly sold on poetry– really, it is not hard. The best way (for me) is to order it directly from my books page. It is well worth your $15.90 with shipping.

I’m happy to autograph (to you or send me a request with name: susanmsink@gmail.com.

H is for Harry front cover

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Telling

12936480_10208092812231848_289473435593329585_nOne of the interesting things about the cancer is figuring out the “need to tell.” Who do I need to tell? Who do I want to tell? Knowing my hair was about to fall out made me feel the need to tell more people, I think, since I didn’t want them to suddenly see me bald and think i was “keeping something” from them. I told a friend I ran into at the food co-op, though I might not have seen her again for weeks or months. But cancer wasn’t a secret. And I didn’t want her to be shocked down the line. And of course, finding out, she was grateful to know, and offered to bring food!

For a couple weeks I kept telling, and I kept second-guessing if that was the right thing to do. The oddest was at work. I work at a retreat house and I know a lot of the groups who rent our space pretty well. I mean, I set things up for them and see them when they arrive. We mostly communicate online, but they come regularly, sometimes multiple times each year. So I felt I needed to tell Katie, although my hair had not yet fallen out, and she wouldn’t be back for months, and everything had gone well. I was worried that there might be gaps down the line– communication not as quick, a student worker contacting her instead of me. In any event, when she arrived on a cold day in early March, I told her: “I have cancer.” She hugged me.

Her mother had breast cancer, and we talked about it. I felt a little awkward, like I’d burdened her with this news, but she was fine. She said she was glad to know and the group would include me in prayers that weekend.

And then at some point, I didn’t need to tell. People know, or they find out when they see me. They react or they don’t react. They ask questions or they don’t ask questions. It’s all perfectly fine with me. And some days, like this past Thursday, I can put on my wig and do a poetry reading and two class visits and we don’t have to talk about cancer at all!

There are a lot of this kind of “blows” that we incorporate into our identity– divorce, illness, abuse, widowhood– loss and wounds of various kinds. For a while they seem to define us utterly– we have to turn that face to the world. We have to claim it and muddle around until we figure out what it means. And then it is just one of the things we are: survivor. It’s part of that resilience conversation, but also more. It’s character, and complexity, and fulness of life experience that gives us other gifts: solidarity, compassion, and maybe most of all the ability to receive the care and compassion of others.

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Good Girls

Remember the Billy Joel song “Only the Good Die Young?” I thought that song was a total scandal. How could he say what I somewhere deep thought was true– what scared me most?

But it wasn’t there because of Catholicism. I got that lesson from literature.

Clare Danes as Beth in "Little Women" 1994

Clare Danes as Beth in “Little Women” 1994

Specifically, Little Women. Our mother read us a chapter a night from a variety of books. I remember three in particular: The Five Little Peppers, James and the Giant Peach, and Little Women. I adored the latter, with Jo the writer. I, too, had a sister I considered beautiful and artistic, like Amy. And we loved Beth best of all, because we all wanted to be pure and good. So when she goes off to take care of the Hummels we admire her and fear the worst. And the worst happens: she dies of scarlet fever. That was a rough night for the Sink women– we all sobbed when Beth died.

Elizabeth Taylor as Helen Burns in the film "Jane Eyre"

Elizabeth Taylor as Helen Burns in the film “Jane Eyre” (1943)

I’d have glimpses of this kind of thing later. “Beware the cough.” Home sick from school, I picked up my beautiful, long, serious Scholastic paperback of Jane Eyre. I was so excited. But in no time at all we were in Lowood School and her best friend, Helen Burns, a beautiful, intelligent, virtuous girl, was coughing. Not good. Sure enough, she died a few pages later. I closed the book and never picked it up again. I gasped (along with the whole audience) at the Music Box Theater in Chicago in 1984 at a double feature of Jane Eyre and Wuthering Heights to see an 8- or 9-year-old  Elizabeth Taylor come on screen in an uncredited role as Helen Burns. A vision of saintly beauty.

John William Waterhouse "Gather Ye Rosebuds" 1909

John William Waterhouse “Gather Ye Rosebuds” 1909

Of course, this trope from Billy Joel comes to us as early as the 17th century. Robert Herrick wrote in his poem “To the Virgins, to make much of time“: “Gather ye rosebuds, while ye may/Old Time is still a-flying./ And this same flower that smiles today/ To-morrow will be dying.”  Robin Williams iDead Poets Society teaches it as “carpe diem.” Seize the day. Live while you’re young. Someday we all die, and we don’t know when. It’s a cavalier poem, a seduction poem. It pits virtue/religion against living in the world– acting on desire and embracing romantic experience. In Herrick’s poem, the speaker wants marriage. By the 1980s, there’s no sense of a lifelong promise, or even true love. Joel’s narrator wants to be “first” of her sexual conquests. But what she gets in return is liberation from the “burden” of a life behind a “stained glass curtain” that “never lets in the sun.”

But both the fever and consumption of Beth and Helen, and the cavalier seduction of Billy Joel and Robert Herrick, have as their message that goodness is death. For girls. And so I have always wanted to be good, but there was a goodness out there I feared. And still, oddly, I struggle with this image. (Both Beth and Helen are based on Alcott and Bronte’s actual sisters who died young. But one can suspect some hagiography in the portrayal, or their own thrall with the virgin/saint dilemma.) I’m not that girl who takes to bed with a serious illness– “when death brushes by.” As the chemotherapy goes forward, I know more and more the rhythm of the schedule and what I can do, and when I can do it.

I have my moments of fear, particularly when I can “feel” the cancer in my lung. I don’t like what’s going on in my lung at all– and I want it out of there via chemo, not a tricky and complicated operation that will make the hysterectomy look like a piece of cake. I fear the after-effects of the surgery more than the chemo. Another book I’ve closed and shelved recently is Susan Gubar’s Memoir of a Debulked Woman. She was clearly bringing bad news about the cost of the treatment on a body. I’m focused on healing.

And now and then Beth comes through my mind. And I want to not be that good. I want to misbehave, not be gracious, just do what I want and not be a good citizen, not mindful of others’ feelings. I want to yell at my husband and complain about the stupidest things. I am not selfless like Helen and Beth, that is true. And I have loved three men long and well, in and out of wedlock. I have carpe’d the diem in many ways. In fact, many of the poems in my book H is for Harry celebrate that seizing. In New York City, in Northern California, in Chicago, in Reno, in Los Angeles. By bicycle, by seduction, by reading, in nature, in Catholicism, in music, in language itself and what it makes. In life.

No, I have not been that good girl. And so I will live. Of course.

 

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Living with the Painting

Sophia Heymans "February" painting with misterAnd at night, a snowy painting. I set up my mister with essential oils on the same desk as the painting. It glows at night and illumines the painting. And there is my home.

The detail of the painting is endlessly rewarding. I love the giant cottonwoods that line our driveway, and I love them in the painting. I love the wetlands to the south of our house, and I love them in the painting. I love the oak next to the large painting– in life and in the painting.

The cottonwoods are old and starting to blow off in large chunks. They will come down in the next year or two. This landscape, like life, is always changing.

Sophia Heymans February detail house

Already gone is the white pick-up truck, sold for a larger and slightly newer truck. That truck was a source of amusement for us, a 1988 Isuzu with four different-sized tires and a sticker in the back window: “Somos Michuacanos.” Steve’s daughters called it “the Mexican truck.”

It has been a long winter, reaching into spring. People around me talk about the weather, and sometimes I think: “How is it supposed to be?” Life has gotten so strange, so out of the ordinary, with attention to the rhythms of weekly chemotherapy. Monday I work, Tuesday I have treatment, Wednesday I am active, Thursday and Friday I rest and recover, waiting for Saturday, when my energy returns, and I work and pick up activity again. This week there were five days of shots to get my white blood cell count up again, changing the rhythm and raising some anxieties over new side effects that thankfully didn’t develop.

Every night, though, there is my home. I have had a mixed experience with this home– with feeling at home here. I moved here nearly eight years ago, but it was my husband’s home for twenty years before that, and he raised three children here. It is in form, style, and appearance not very accommodating to me (and my belongings). I appreciate it, but it is not a house I would have chosen. I fit somewhat uncomfortably, here.

Sophia Heymans February detail commons

 

But at night, in the painting, I am home. There is something about being inside and looking at the outside, and seeing so much of it. It is like counting blessings to call out its features:
tree nursery, wetland, garden,
house, Mexican truck, ski trail,
prairie, barn, Steve’s footpath,
garage, porch, cottonwoods, ash,
pond, electric lines, commons, oak,
sky,
field,
trees,
snow
snow
snow….

 

For more work by Sophia Heymans, click here.

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Sister

I have been truly blessed to have my sister Kathy with me this week, from Monday until today. We were close as kids, but have spent very little time together over the past 20 years. She’s been in Washington State raising and homeschooling five children, running businesses with her husband, building houses and all manner of things. She came out for my wedding 7 1/2 years ago, and 4 years ago we had a family reunion at her house.

When the diagnosis came down, though, any distance between us disappeared. And the first time we talked on the phone, what struck me most was her laugh. We have very similar laughs, or maybe it is just that we laugh in the same way at the same things. We are quick to laugh. And, boy, have I missed her laugh. We both remarked on it this visit, brushing our teeth at the dual sinks in the bathroom before bed, how good it was to hear the other laugh, and how much we have always been dedicated to making the other laugh.

Great joy, having a sister. Being a sister. And yet, how long would it have taken us to be together like this, one on one, over an extended period of time, without the cancer? I think it is probably very common in families that spread out over the country to only see each other in groups. There are events and reunions and even just family vacations where everyone is together. It is fun; it is good; it is important and maintains the relationships. But this week was something different. Here we are middle aged women who can be together like no other friends. Great joy.

3 legged kathy and meShe remembered this photo, which I found in an album. It’s of the two of us in a 3-legged race at some picnic, probably a church picnic. We both remember the race so vividly– even our younger brother remembers it– because there were a lot of kids in this race but they all collapsed very quickly after the starting line. She and I counted off: 1-2-1-2-1-2 and were able, despite our quite disparate heights– to run right down the field. We won so handily, it was hilarious. Kathy and I are very different, have lived very different lives, and yet we are always bound like this, and when we need to be, we are in sync.

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The Mental Game

calendar clip artCancer and chemotherapy are as much a mental game as a physical one. That might be stating the obvious. To me, though, it’s been endlessly revealing.

There is the mental game of: “How did I get this? and Could we have caught it earlier?” I was angry at first, mostly at a nurse practitioner who I realize would have had to be heroic to demand a scan when an ultrasound for a pain in my side turned out to show nothing. I still had the pain, but it went away in two weeks, after I stopped drinking fermented drinks. I had suspected it was from a bad scoby for kombucha, but now I suspect it was something else. The truth is, if she wanted a more in depth scan, I might have even resisted. Probably not, because I really did want to know what was going on, but maybe. Still, there was nothing about me, or about the pain, that suggested ovarian cancer.

A friend sent me a message and asked if I use talcum powder. There’s some television ad for a class action suit to tie talcum to ovarian cancer. My friend was worried about her use of talcum powder. I could assure her I have not used it since I was an infant. Not the cause. Not for me.

Things you fear come home– is there asbestos in the “popcorn” my husband scraped off all our ceilings? (No.) Is there something in our well water that we should have had tested but haven’t? (No.) Was it exposure to Round Up or other herbicides we have around? (No.)

With this one, as so many cancers, we just don’t know why the cells took the turn they did. Overall good health, and symptoms that are most associated with peri-menopause at age 50, might have hidden it. Asked about all the symptoms, I answer “no,” or “maybe.” Bloating? maybe. Loss of energy? I did stop doing the high-intensity workouts I’d been doing, but mostly they were just making me crabby! (Here I invoke my dad’s motto: “better flabby than crabby.”) I’ve never been known for my high energy. Loving sleep and a good nap is nothing new. If anything, my diminishing estrogen meant I had fewer menstrual cramps, less menstrual pain. I did have two migraines, and one in the summer that was more of a day of flu-like symptoms and nausea that I think was actually a type of migraine. But they came after I’d missed a few periods and were always followed by a period and “release.” And it was just the few times. Should my NP have been vigilant about that? Would that have rung a bell for anyone? I doubt it.

IV Fluid

The talismans are part of the mental game. Last week I couldn’t have treatment because my white blood cell (WBC) count was too low. It was .7 and normal is 3.5-12. I’d been watching it go down, but since there’s nothing you can really do directly through diet to bring it up, I had to just trust it to take care of itself. I was seriously upset when I couldn’t have treatment. So disappointed. I didn’t even want to write it on the weekly update. My nurse was kind of alarmed– “most people are so happy when they get to miss a treatment,” she said.

“Not me,” I said. “I need this chemo. I’m killing cancer.”

She talked me down and tried to cheer me up with the news that my Chem 8 panel was “phenomenal.” Great kidney function, perfect liver function, glucose level very good for a chemo patient, sodium low, potassium good, all the numbers really good.

I adjusted pretty well once I got home. For one thing, it was clear I wasn’t chemo free. It was still working. My sinuses were still painfully drying out all the time, my tongue was still tingling and metallic. Taste was still dulled or off. I was still pooping rocks. I was tired on my two regular days, Thursday and Friday, and Wednesday, too, missing the pre-treatment Benadryl and steroids that prop me up most weeks. But I got a break from the heartburn medicine and the sleep aids and still have had good effect with just prunes and lots of fiber. I had more energy to cook, and by the end of the week to go on a bike ride and do a little workout at home (no weights, modified options). Which is good, because on the physical side I’m seeing the muscle loss that comes with chemo– I read about this in my cancer kitchen cookbook but saw it first in the mirror. Oh great. And I smeared a lot of frankincense on my abdomen this week. If I’d had cannibas oil, I’d have used that, too.

And then there is the heart of the mental game. I had to face in myself that in the past when I’ve seen the bald women, the gaunt women, the puffy women, the women in treatment, in church and in town, I’ve thought: “That woman is dying.” I haven’t known or understood anything about cancer or its treatment, hadn’t heard the stories of survival, the years called out: “10, 15, 25 years ago.” It’s the cruelty of the hair loss that it so alters you, and the steroids and other things make your face puffy, the chemo can give you a metallic sheen. And your immune system is compromised– I’ll be wearing a mask through the airport and on the plane next week. And people will look at me and think I’m dying. And they will wonder what is so special and important that I’m risking flying.

But I don’t think that anymore. I can’t. Because I am not dying. I am healing. And that has been the message in so many letters and cards and e-mailsbald selfie mirror. I open them up and read them with one eye, I admit, fearing the words they might use. But the words are invariably, “wishing you health and healing, peace and love.” “Thought of you and your healing.” People have been sending recipes and poems. I absolutely love it.

When I saw last week another woman at church arriving in a tell-tale hat, I thought: “Look how strong and confident she looks! She seems to be doing well.” Later I wonder if I’m kidding myself and she just has hair loss for some other reason. She didn’t give me the telltale look of a “member of the tribe.” When I look in the mirror, I see that I have some color in my cheeks. I feel how easy it is to walk and get places and be places. I cook and am starting some seedlings. I visit the chickens and bring them treats. I am on top of things at work. Things happen more slowly and with breaks, but that is fine. Time is also strangely slowed down. So I can be slower and set manageable goals each day.

And the chemo, too, a break. (I do obsessively tell myself and others that most breast cancer patients go once in three weeks, and that my dose-dense regimen means this will happen.) On Sunday night my taste buds were well enough for pizza. A real celebration, I’ll tell you. Not chocolate, just canned peaches for dessert, but OK. And yes, an aftertaste about 30 minutes later, but I can remember how good it tasted. And I could know the chemo was still there, too, working away. Killing the cancer. And 13 more weeks to get it all.

 

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Making Dinner

red pepper chicken breast
This is usually the time of year I’m closing down the freezer. By this time we’ve usually managed to eat the sauces, vegetables, zucchini bread, and fruit that I put away in August and September. This winter, though, I didn’t turn to the freezer as much. I had a lot of potatoes, for one thing, and onions, and so many jars of tomatoes. I didn’t make as much chili, which is where I usually use my corn stash.

But we’ve been feasting on pasta sauce this winter. And tonight I had a hankering to cook, so made fresh pasta, my favorite chicken breasts stuffed with red pepper sauce and gruyere, and the end of the frozen spicy tomato sauce.

My taste buds are compromised, but there is just something pleasing about making food, and the aesthetics of putting together a dish. Tonight I watched an episode of Netflix’s Chef’s Table witcrunchy lasagna massimoh Massimo Bottura of Modena, Italy. It’s a great program because it really goes into depth of what is behind the food and the history of the restaurant (in this case Osteria Francescana). He has a very artistic approach to dishes, and his aim is to deconstruct / reconstruct traditional Italian cooking. Among the scandals of his restaurant (to the locals) is a dish called “six tortellini.” He wanted people to slow down and experience the tortellini, not slurp them up by the spoonful (10 to a spoon!) with broth.

The dish that caught my eye, though, was based on the burnt, crunchy corner of the lasagna. He claims this slice is the best corner, the best bit of grandma’s lasagna. I did have a love of that crunchy corner on my mother’s delicious lasagna. (Does that photo look like lasagna to you?)

IMG_0517I feel the same about this chicken dish. To make it I filet and pound flat the chicken breast, then smear it with pepper sauce and grated gruyere. You could use roasted peppers straight with gruyere or any sharp cheese. Inevitably, though, when you pan fry the chicken, some will ooze out. And it flavors the chicken breast and gives off a burnt tangy scent. It just wouldn’t be the same if you tied it up neatly and it all stayed inside.

homemade fettucineAnd so I guess I learn that I am also just a plain old aesthete. When it comes to food, there are more senses than taste to engage. The satisfaction of pasta going through the blades and separating with the flour on the counter, the scent of the sauce oozing, all of it is part of the experience.

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Groceries

wire-shopping-cart-140LToday was the first day I walked the world as a cancer patient. For me, the hair has been gone for a week and I’ve been to work and the post office and even the coffee shop, and I haven’t felt awkward at all. Comments on my hat, a little more attention, but not too odd. Today something was different, possibly wearing a turban instead of a fancy hat.

You read/hear that people will be very kind to you at this time. That is true.

I met a friend at the local coffee shop for lunch. The place was packed and I knew several people. But two of them, who I went up and said hello to, didn’t recognize me. One was a quite elderly woman who I haven’t seen for a year, and she knew my “circumstance” and so lit up when I told her who I was. The other was a woman I just met three weeks ago, but I look different now.

post office signAt the post office, what had maybe been unclear on Friday was quite clear today. I mail books there for work and for myself all the time. I dug out some change and was a penny short. “Don’t worry about it,” she said. “Close enough.” I have never heard those words at the post office.

But the grocery store was when it happened. I’ve been looking for Dee Dee, the cashier I know best, to tell her. But she’s been gone a few weeks. Today the cashier was an older, retired man who I’ve also seen many times. When he saw me he did a double take, and then closed in. “How are you doing?” he asked.

“I’m OK,” I said. “It’s going OK. The chemo.” I know what he is asking, but what do I say?

“May I ask, what kind of cancer?” he asked.

“Ovarian,” I said. “Did someone in your family have cancer?”

“My wife had stage 4 cancer twice,” he said.

“How far apart?”

“First ten years ago, then five years later.” While he rang up my groceries he told me her story, about the genetic testing, her treatments. We said how good CentraCare is. The baggers bagged and people joined the line with their groceries.

He handed me my receipt and took my hand. “Peace be with her,” he said. “Peace, Jesus, peace, and strength.” It was a lovely prayer. Before he let go my hand he said, “I look forward to seeing you again soon.”

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Freeze and Thaw

image from: http://schmidling.com/maplesyrup.htm

image from: http://schmidling.com/maplesyrup.htm

It’s maple syrup season here in Central Minnesota. The monks at Saint John’s Abbey have a very large operation, and it’s been a good year. The first year I lived here, I participated actively in the operation, tapping trees, harvesting sap, hanging out at the evaporator and helping to bottle the syrup. Every year for the past decade I’ve made it out to the woods, and last year we had a great walk on Holy Saturday with my parents, who were visiting, in good weather. But this year I’ve just followed the progress in the e-mail updates, calling for volunteers to collect sap and reporting on the gallons made.

In my imagination, though, the maple operation has taken on a different tone. It’s made me think of other poems, part 1 of William Carlos Williams’s “Spring and All” in particular. Williams was a doctor, but much has been made, in English classes and elsewhere, of the specificity of “by the road to the contagious hospital” as a setting for an uncertain spring poem, one that takes place before bloom– at the moment the very first spring comes out of the dead season of winter.

In that spirit, I’ve been working on a poem of my own. It will hopefully develop, and needs a different title, but here it is, a chemotherapy-tinged poem.

 

Freeze and Thaw

They enter the new world naked,
cold, uncertain of all
save that they enter. All about them
the cold, familiar wind—
            From “Spring and All” by William Carlos Williams

The maples are hung with IV bags.
Too many patients, two thousand,
marching the brown hills. The woods are ill.

At the clinic, 36 rooms for infusions,
each the same: a patient, a nurse, an IV.
We look metallic. We look poisoned.

I’m thinking of poetry—Williams
on his way to the contagious hospital,
Eliot’s sky etherized on a table.

Am I to become a Modernist now?
Eschewing nature, or feeling cold
instead of the stirrings of spring?

Maple syrup requires thaw by day
and freeze every night to make
the sap run. Usually it is enlivening,

but now, too much intrusion,
too much plastic and something stolen,
something scarred, despite custom-made stiles.

Gunmetal gray sky. Ironwood trees. Copper marsh.
I want to lift it up. I want to run clear.
I call a code. Code. Code. Uncertain how to go.

 

 

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Talismans

bamboo
It’s certainly human nature, when much is out of one’s control, to become superstitious. Facing cancer, I’m surprised and also not surprised by my level of superstition– or maybe closer to what Joan Didion calls “magical thinking.”

For example, a friend sent me this lovely bamboo plant. It had seven stalks, which is an auspicious number for health. I started panicking when I realized that one of the stalks was not going to make it– probably just didn’t have enough roots when it arrived. Surely it was a bad thing to have SIX bamboo stalks. The whole symbolism got thrown out the window. Finally, yesterday, I pulled myself out of this and threw away the dead stalk, and now all I can see is how gloriously alive this bamboo plant is. And the nature of bamboo is to regenerate, so soon I’ll cut off a shoot, root that out, and then I’ll have seven again.

I’ve been recommended all sorts of things to help treat the cancer. There is an Indian cure, an Asian cure. Turmeric. For ovarian cancer specifically, two people right away told me about Frankincense. I bought some frankincense essential oil and was misting it (until the mister broke) but now rub it along my abdomen, where the cancer is. I really like the scent. Some people eat or put frankincense under their tongue, but the nutritionist recommended against that. There are other formulations and probiotics recommended as well. It could make a person crazy. This is an exercise in letting go of control, and fear,

There’s also cannabis, or specifically cannabis oil, which (in addition to chemotherapy) cured someone’s lung cancer. I have not watched the Youtube on that one.
saint peregrineAnd there are beads, and crosses, and St. Peregrine, the patron saint of cancer. Cancer in his leg disappeared the day before he was to have the leg amputated. A friend sent me the cutest little St. Peregrine, which I have hung on my backpack zipper from his handy clasp.

And there are foods that kill cancer cells. Turmeric, and broccoli, blueberries– antioxidants and oxalic acid, but not too many leafy greens. Raw better than cooked, smoothies good, wheatgrass juice, etc. Protein is important.
Mostly, I am trying to ignore all this. I am trying to be OK with how little control I have and continue to eat good food, get rest, and deal with the side effects from the chemotherapy. That has brought a lot of other things into my life– over-the-counter things that people deal with all the time: painfully dry sinuses, heartburn, dry skin, constipation, sleeplessness… I asked Steve to bring up an antacid the other morning, and he came up with my prescriptions. “Nope, just the one that says ‘heartburn relief’ on it, like anyone can buy.”otc meds

This is the “bad week,” the two-drug week. But it’s not like the last round, when I was nauseous. And I know that this round of symptoms will subside, too, as my body rebalances and adjusts. The one thing I’d most like to affect, my white blood cell count, I absolutely have no dietary control over (though the protein supposedly helps).

And the most important thing is to just move forward with the treatment plan, keep my mind mostly clear of all the background noise surrounding cancer, and we’ll rebuild this body once the treatment is accomplished.

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