She looked at me, grinning. 'Frances pretended to be you at theatre club today.'
I immediately cringed, thinking of all the things she might indirectly vent about, with great dramatic expression. Did she try to enforce spinach on anyone? Expound on the merits of a phoneless adolescence? Try to make someone do a chore?
'No, nothing bad! She was just...acting like you.' Giggle, giggle.
Oh boy.
Later Frances told me the assignment was to choose someone she knew well and walk in that person's style. Embody them. My mom was running the club and she knew who Frances was right away. Apparently, she/I touched everyone's arms while effusing about the beautiful weather and how much she/I absolutely loved going on a family hike and isn't this the perfect day for a hike?
Frances told me that she'd been sincerely proud of herself. She thought she nailed it.
Arm touching! Again I am accused of being an arm toucher. The first time was by Mike (who I thought coined the phrase, but maybe it's a thing) after an event with the nonprofit I then worked for. We were at a Barnes and Noble somewhere in Manhattan. I was probably 21. Apparently after the program he sat back, waiting for me to finish up, watching me touch every damn arm in the place while I smiled and chatted away.
(I imagine a mixture of attendant feelings - bemusement, fondness, fear, a smidge of dismay - blossoming alongside Mike's dawning realization that night. Oh dear lord, thought he, I've fallen in love with an arm toucher.)
(Perhaps it was not unlike what I experienced when we moved from New York to Philadelphia, Mike's urban center of gravity growing up, where I soon had to confront the surprising fact that I was going to marry a sports fan.)
Well. I never have been good at concealing the true internal state of affairs. In elementary school I cried easily (oh how I hated that, feeling so exposed). I've been known to ask near strangers to borrow a tampon. I dance at the wrong times and in the wrong places (ask my children, who are beset by embarrassment on a daily basis). I fondly wiped stray lipstick off a teacher's tooth I was saying hello to at my children's school recently. I like her so much, but really, do I know her that well? Well enough to put my pointer finger in her mouth?
And gee, come to think of it, I've been writing about my life on the internet for many years. Boundaries? Never heard of 'em.
But lately (see aforementioned lipstick-wiping incident) I think I've been more - to put it mildly - porous than usual. I hug everyone. I tell anyone who innocently asks me something along the lines of how are you the date of Mike's next Keytruda dose and the details of Beatrice's latest tantrum.
Over the past couple of years I've had to explain our family's situation to countless strangers and acquaintances - new teachers, customer service reps, potential tenants, doctors, coworkers. At first I couldn't do it without crying, sweating, or forgetting to breathe. I hated anticipating the other person's response. I would end up trying to manage my own and the other person's feelings, as they had no idea they were stumbling into a story about rare diseases and family struggle.
But now, six hundred tellings later, it's easy. I might even like it.
Our experience with an aggressive and relatively little known disease - and all the havoc it has wrecked with jobs, homes, and our general ability to anticipate anything about the future near and far - has only made the part of me that eschews boundaries and invites intimacy more robust. I've necessarily become more transparent than ever before, more unable to persist in maintaining the myth of my own independence. Knowing one's interdependence - emphasis on the dependence part - is humbling. We've needed so much help over the past 19 months. I can't not be aware of a certain new intensity fueling my habitual arm touching.
At least that's how it feels sometimes - a bit desperate. Probably tomorrow I'll read an article in the New York Times putting forth an evolutionary biology type explanation for the common female practice of arm touching. Surely some researchers have identified a complex interpersonal neurobiological phenomena that happens between the owner of a big strong arm and the toucher of that arm (who is probably really good at eye contact and effusing about hikes) that promotes her safety, thus protecting her from marauding saber tooth tigers and enabling her to pass on her arm touching genes.
Yes! The arm touching adaptation. Thank goodness my forebears worked that one out, because I've come to rely on it as my survival strategy. Though my tiger is NK/T Cell lymphoma, and I am apparently attempting to kill it with charm.
I don't have a specialized medical degree, or endless funds, or a live in nanny, or magic powers. I have so little power of any kind in all this. So I need our doctors to love us, and invest completely in Mike. I need our neighbors to help with the kids. I need teachers to shower them with acceptance and attention. I need my friends to be there and help me carry my burdens, to distract me with everyday worries and pleasures.
I need everyone to not get fed up with the sheer length of time we've been consumed by Mike's health, with the endless march of insurance fights and treatments and trips to see specialists. (Oh please, stick with us through this long slog whose end I cannot see.)
In short: we need a lot of love, kindness, and patience. The crazy thing is, everyone seems willing and able to give us those things. In abundance!
Yet still I persist in hugging everyone in sight. No lipstick-smudged tooth is safe around me. I don't think there's much to be done about it. So dear ones, I ask yet another thing of your generous hearts. Please indulge me - and endure my affections and tendency to overshare. Forgive me for playing with your kid's hair, for saying more than you expected, for giving your arm an extra squeeze, for asking about something personal, for getting excited about your new shoes. It's my way of saying thank you, I love you, your kindness means a lot, please be there for me tomorrow too.
