I’ve been thinking a lot about this time last year, the brief lull between chemo and radiation. It isn’t usually the “big picture” stuff that sticks with you.. It’s random details and facts pieced together a little haphazardly, somewhat like a dream you’re just waking up from. The one where you ask, “Did that really happen?” Yes, yes, it did.
Thursday, June 24, 2021
the little things
Monday, May 31, 2021
year in review
A year ago, my family and friends surprised me with a drive-by parade as I was finishing up chemo (the next day). It was truly a milestone, one of the most important in my life, and serves as a reminder, as milestones do, of what I'm capable of.
Friday, January 29, 2021
the mammogram
Friday, December 11, 2020
his faithfulness
A year ago, I had surgery to have
my tumor removed. It was two weeks before Christmas. I was 23 weeks
pregnant.
I remember the gnawing anxiety
that morning, going through the motions – the ride to the hospital, checking in
and the IV, being transported all over the hospital. The first stop was
Breast Health, then Nuclear Medicine, then back to pre-op to talk to Anesthesia
and have OB check me. I was scared to be put to sleep, more than I ever
was. I said a prayer for baby, and as I did many times before, asked him
to stay with me.
When I awoke, the first sensation
I had was the doppler on my belly checking for the fetal heart rate. And
then I let myself rest.
This morning, as I snuggled
with Eli, I held him close, reminded of that day. I brushed my fingers across his rosy cheeks and his button nose, and swept his hair back across his
forehead, a gesture I learned that would comfort him when he was a
newborn. I marveled at him, our sweet, incredible baby boy, the rainbow
after our loss only two years ago, and then pulled him as close as he would let
me to give him kisses. Once again I said a prayer of thanks to our
awesome God for being with me that day and always, for staying even
though I didn't realize then it was Him I was asking, for working that miracle
so close to Christmas, for showing me again and again what faith feels like.
Every now and then, that anxiety
comes back... that feeling of helplessness, the fear that Eli was impacted by
my surgery or treatments, or having to come early. But then he looks at
me, his eyes so bright and his smile so wide, and the unbidden thoughts start
to recede and the dread subsides. Instead, I try to think of this day,
because it was a day I had to trust, and believe, and be so ever thankful.
Thursday, November 26, 2020
back to basics
Eli, we hear others discuss next year and how much they want things to feel “normal” again. But I cannot forget this year, the year that has become a meme, the year that has been blamed and shamed and shrugged off like an anomaly. Instead, it is the year that you found your way to us through what seemed like insurmountable odds, our double rainbow who literally stuck with me through my hardest days (a surgery! and chemo! while pregnant! – I will never stop marveling at that), our sweet, sweet miracle. We have clung to you as you have become our beacon of hope, our shining light – it’s in your bright smile, your gentle touch, it is in the way that you need us. Thank you, baby, for being a happy boy, for reminding us of the most basic things – love of family, joy for each new day, wonder for the little things, and hope for a better tomorrow.
Friday, September 11, 2020
quarantine life
It’s been a crazy 6+ months. I say this because our little family has gone through quite a lot. And aside from our daughter witnessing my breast cancer journey firsthand, and gaining a brother pretty much at the same time, I’ve noticed that the pandemic has affected her in other ways as well:
- She flips out every time we ask her to wash her hands... again.
- We no longer hug/kiss our relatives as greetings or goodbyes.
- She’s immediately defensive when I start questioning her playground habits: “But we wiped everything down and I used hand sanitizer!”
- Although she has no issues wearing her mask, she constantly questions why others aren't.
- She’s learned to live in the car, so if she needs the restroom then it means in the trunk, in the travel potty.
- She asks, “Remember when we went to that restaurant/park/festival/museum/concert?” like it was a lifetime ago.
- When she wants to do something but we can’t, her response is, “I just wish this whole germ thing was over.”