I don’t care much for today’s WEGO Health Challenge that aks if my health condition were an animal what would it be? It reminds me of those frivolous team-building activities often employed to “break the ice” at professional retreats or new employee orientations. We’ve all been there, and I know I am not the only one who silently groans when a well-meaning facilitator announces, “We’re gonna’ start with a quick icebreaker. Go stand next to someone you don’t know. . . . ” or some version of that scenario.
The ensuing game will require a level of cooperation and politeness, with us showing our best sides as we reveal little known facts about ourselves, or the ever popular “two truths and a lie.” Playing along, we will make something up about what kind of car, animal, vacation destination most represents our richly varied personalities or which historical figure we would invite to dinner or what we would buy if we had all the money in the world. I understand the purpose, but in this case, the “ice” is breast cancer, and we have been skating around on it for too long, spinning on its euphemisms and platitudes, treating it like an allegory. Time for real talk about breast cancer.
Along with a low tolerance for bullshit, a diagnosis of breast cancer exposed within me a fortitude that surprised me and just enough good humor to assuage the unbelievably insensitive words and actions of people I had expected to be kinder. Being playful about breast cancer by comparing it to an animal, real or imagined, rubs me the wrong way.
I suppose if I played along, the animals crossing my mind would be the kind we associate with unwelcome guests – a snake crawling on its belly imperceptible in the desert grass, a cunning chameleon, a rodent scuttling along the boards in the attic, a cockroach in the corner of the shower. Each one unwelcome, a thief in the night who slips through an unlocked window while you slumber, barely disturbing the contents of your home, but nonetheless leaving you feeling violated and unsettled, unable to pinpoint what was stolen from you. Uncertain.
In life before breast cancer, I rarely felt such unease, but like Rip Van Winkle, I am no longer as sure of what awaits when I wander down once-familiar roads. The fast and furious flurry of appointment-making and data-collection at the beginning of the journey has been replaced by something akin to the routine of one who has been forced into exile. Banished by breast cancer to a new country, where ironically, I often feel like an unwelcome guest myself, a stranger in a strange land, wondering if an ice-breaker might be in order.
In the resumption of normal activity, the rules of engagement change. Nominally normal, this life interrupted forces me to make room for new experiences and customs, new words that have the power to transport me directly into and far away from fear. When cancer crept in, fear and uncertainty moved in too and show no sign of leaving. It reminds me of those times when our house is a mess and friends show up on our doorstep, unannounced, but overstay their welcome anyway, infuriating us by missing all the dropped hints and not-so-subtle signs that it really is time to be going. Wearily polite, we just resign ourselves to doing the mannerly thing and wait for them to leave rather than ask them to go.
If I were playing the ice-breaker game today, I might share two truths and a lie. The lie? Cancer is a gift. The truths would flow from poetry such as this by the inimitable Ted Kooser:
(from Delights & Shadows, Copper Canyon Press, Port Townsend, WA 2004)
Marie said:
Wonderful writing as always x
Editor said:
Well, thank you, dear! I’m behind, because of my trip to DC, so now I’m feeling the pressure 🙂
pinkunderbelly said:
I also thought the comparison of cancer to an animal was hokey, and your description of the forced team-building is so apt. I’m always left thinking after reading your posts; your writing is so good! I love the poem, too. This was a great way to start my day!
Editor said:
Hokey!! Perfect word, Nancy!
I’m always left thinking after your posts too! In fact, your blog is one of the first I ever read. I left a comment there over a year ago and that is how Marie and I found each other, which led to a whole host of online associations that have become so important to me. So THANK YOU!!
Victoria said:
Yeah, I don’t like this one either. But you met the challenge with a great post.
I was fearful of many things before I was diagnosed (divorce, deportation, career suicide and stuff like that) but those things now take a backseat to a whole new set of fears. I was at the clinique Monday for tests and I surprised at how good it felt to be there and see familiar places and to talk with people. As I face the “bilan” on Friday at the consultation with my oncologist, I fear really bad news – the kind that says it’s back and it’s worse. Again, that’s living in the wreckage of the future. Gotta get a grip. The garden is good for this.
Editor said:
Oh Victoria, I will be thinking of you on Friday. I can’t tell you how many times I have used your “living in the wreckage of the future” in conversations with friends recently. So many of us do that, don’t we?
I am so glad you can flee to the garden.
Victoria said:
Thank you, Yvonne, I really appreciate it. Here’s another one for you that I heard today that you might enjoy: “Fear is the butterflies in your stomach. The trick is to make them all fly in formation.”
And some photos of the garden: http://thefranco-americanflophouse.blogspot.fr/2013/04/whats-up-in-flophouse-garden.html
Lot of peonies. 🙂
Editor said:
Oh, I love that quote, Victoria. A trick indeed!
Your garden is beautiful – may it calm your restless mind today.
Victoria said:
Thank you, Yvonne, for the kind words about the garden. Yes, it is a place of serenity.
Just for info my test results today came back OK – nothing was detected and my oncologist was grinning (she’s a really cool lady). Next checkup is in 6 months. In the meantime they are still going to run me through a PET scan next week to be absolutely sure they didn’t miss anything. Thank God for French healthcare. 🙂
Feeling good today and the sun is shining. Time to go walk the garden. Take good care, Yvonne.
Renn said:
Yvonne, you have such a lyrical way of writing, I read every word!
More than one of the WEGO “challenges” has been hokey this year, which makes it hard to comply… but I try and bend it my own way (as you did above) so I don’t buckle under the weight of goofiness. Despite the forced nature of the challenge, it’s got me writing more again, which is the whole point! Looking forward to more.
xo
Editor said:
Such a lovely compliment, Renn. Thank you.
Yeah, there is an abundance of hokiness this year, but I’m figuring my way around it 🙂 I love that you’re writing more again too.
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