As the week got underway, the fevers continued, along with bouts of chills that cause him to shake and inspire a desperate helplessness in me that makes it hard to breathe.
Often when Mike is inpatient I feel torn between the hospital and home. I hate leaving him and I hate not giving my full presence to the kids, hearing about their days and making them dinner. I really hate not knowing what's in the fridge, what laundry needs to be done, who has a field trip form languishing at the bottom of their backpack. Being out of touch with the daily workings of my family is unsettling, disorienting.
But this time I didn't feel conflicted. Mike was suffering and wanted me. I wanted him too. The kids were well cared for. No hand wringing required.
I've slept here the last two nights, able to talk with all the rounding docs and know who his nurses are. That mitigates the helplessness, having a firsthand sense of his hospital world.
Something has shifted with this new chapter in Mike's treatment. It's the first time we've really confronted the possibility of his death together with any sustained attention. He began having symptoms after this new chemo began that suggested to us that his cancer might be progressing - despite the treatment - and we know from experience how aggressive this cursed disease is. How to be hopeful while confronting the very real possibility that all of this will end in tragedy rather than cure?
Well. That's not hard really. I don't think I am capable of *not* hoping. But now there is a new ragged awareness freighting my hope with sorrow. We've cried a lot. We've talked about the kids, what I would do, making sure I know my way around finances and passwords and tax documents. Then we've cried some more. And we talk a lot about love and faith.
This opening of a new grief has cemented in me something I've been coming to know throughout the course of this illness and all Mike's battles with it: I love him, completely. Our marriage gets better - anchored by more love, more honesty, more trust, more faith, more forgiveness - every day. I know now what a precious gift we've been given and I feel much more confident about tending it, taking responsibility for it, being there to receive it fully. Not everyone has the good fortune to live into a great love like this. (Not everyone gets to know that is what they are doing!)
So those paradoxically painful moments, acknowledging with Mike the magnitude of our love, open and strengthen my heart, helping me to bear the pain of this moment.
But you can't really get into it too much in the throes of fever. These last days on 8 Lime have provided many distractions from that big overarching grief that takes courage to turn towards: I get to be mad about meds not arriving on time, or help make his bed, or talk to doctors about symptom management. There is, oddly enough, relief in that.
But also? Also, you guys, I would like to tell you about another distraction I've discovered. It's called online shopping. You can swipe through sales on your phone. Amazing. So far I've purchased one pair of pants - when battling cancer a nice pair of gauchos for spring can really make all the difference - but it's hard to stop there. Geez. My mom and sister are helping me acquire a new coat. The links are flying. Group online shopping is the best! Those two are dedicated to shoring up the precarious state of my soul - and keeping me warm and stylish too.
And then sometimes I sit and feel sorry for myself. I fret over my thinning hair (I had a check up last week during which every complaint I asked about was met with an apologetic shrug, kind smile, and the words "it's the stress" by my doctor). Thinning hair? Me? But it's true. Apparently all my weird recent body developments can be chalked up to stress, something I can presently do little to alter. Sometimes it's so damn discouraging. I feel like a wreck on the inside and the outside.
A grateful heart is quite nice - and I know it is just so beautiful that I can see the good in the midst of suffering - but hang on. Just hang on a minute. Let it be known that I am also a crying, self-pitying wreck who flees to the Uniqlo website and recently sent a loyal friend out to buy Rogaine. It can all be so mundane and disappointing and not uplifting too. Downlifting. Downsliding. A real fucking drag.
I only have the strength to hold the emotional and spiritual enormity of it all for short periods. The rest of the time I'm just doing my decidedly imperfect distractible anxiety-fueled best.
On the way home the other night to see the kids I prayed out loud. Driving through downtown Lancaster, I appealed to God: Come ON. God, just come ON. Just please. God, I am starting to get mad at you. Can you please come on and heal my husband? His suffering is enough. Come on.
A grateful heart is quite nice - and I know it is just so beautiful that I can see the good in the midst of suffering - but hang on. Just hang on a minute. Let it be known that I am also a crying, self-pitying wreck who flees to the Uniqlo website and recently sent a loyal friend out to buy Rogaine. It can all be so mundane and disappointing and not uplifting too. Downlifting. Downsliding. A real fucking drag.
I only have the strength to hold the emotional and spiritual enormity of it all for short periods. The rest of the time I'm just doing my decidedly imperfect distractible anxiety-fueled best.
On the way home the other night to see the kids I prayed out loud. Driving through downtown Lancaster, I appealed to God: Come ON. God, just come ON. Just please. God, I am starting to get mad at you. Can you please come on and heal my husband? His suffering is enough. Come on.
It's been a few hours since I wrote the above. Mike's counts have recovered. He was able to eat some lunch. So far, no fever.
Maybe he's turning a corner.
Come on, God.