Monday, December 9, 2013

The Snow Queen's Blessing

It seems like forever since I last saw the first moments of a snowstorm. We don’t get much of it here and when I do see it, it has usually already been going for a while. After a trip to the grocery store and three unsuccessful attempts to find a new electronic cigarette to replace the one Daryll lost whilst fleeing a swarm of angry bees (no I’m not kidding), I abandoned the quest in favor of the comforts of my toasty little apartment. In a last-minute decision, I turned into the parking lot of the convenience store down the street from home just in case they had one. No luck. Then I stepped out into the silent cold night.

What I’m sure would normally be a black sky was instead a deep crimson-chocolate-dark from light pollution…and illuminated by the nearest street lamp came the soft and tender flutter of the very first snowflakes of the night. There is something magical and mysterious about this precious and rare moment. It’s another form of the infrequent “between-times” that I cherish in their sacredness. With delicate grace, they spiraled down stark against that red-black as if they were really moving faster but I could only see them in slow-motion. As if moving within a dream I made my way toward the car, hovering just above reality’s solid ground.


It is only a block or two from there to home, but linear time had ceased to exist on that strange little journey. They came like music. They came like magic. They came like a dance on the edge of consciousness and they increased in number and speed. Pulling into the parking lot, I stopped first in front of the mail boxes. Stepping out of the car, I could see the thin layer of it turning the black asphalt to gray and my feet stepped carefully as I fetched bills and medical information from a cold metal compartment. Returning to the car, I greeted a neighbor and then found myself snug in my favorite parking spot. Treading the tiny distance to the stairs leading up to my warm little dwelling of yellow light, I watched the dark and the gifts it was sending to rest on my hat and my coat. Just before turning away from her magic, the Snow Queen planted one singular frozen kiss on my lower lip…and in my heart I told her that I loved her too.


Friday, November 15, 2013

Reconstruct

Sometimes a girl's just got to say it to a camcorder when she just doesn't feel like typing. Things have been strange and I am always being caught off guard by the way things actually work. This is actually a good thing.





Monday, October 28, 2013

Happy Birthday



 After 30 hours of hard labor with my epidural only lasting a few hours in the middle of it, my baby still wasn't coming out. At this point I was beyond exhausted. My little bug was stubborn. sometime in the morning after said epidural stopped working and hours more of indescribable pain had me at the end of my threshold, I was wheeled into surgery. I could feel too much of what was happening and began to panic so I was put under for the rest of the cesarean. I woke to the distant sound of a baby crying mingled with busy voices and feet. I couldn't see anything yet, but Daryll's trembling voice broke through the fog, "Honey, we have a little girl!" Still confused and in pain, I knew one truth and I said it to a brightening room, "I have a daughter..." and the tears came. Like the Grinch, my heart grew three sizes that day. For two years, every ounce of pain I have ever felt in my life is the size of an ant compared to my love for her. Happy Birthday, my most sacred gift. Mommy loves you more than the sun and the moon and all the stars.


Wednesday, October 23, 2013

The Violet Phoenix



Even with its allergens, autumn is my favorite time of year. It has long been “my time”. It’s when mind, spirit, and senses come out of hibernation whilst all other things are preparing for dormancy. Even as the morning is wrapped in a sleepy mist I am celebrating the vibrancy within and as the leaves dance to the ground in their fiery hues I am thinking of the Phoenix rising again.

The Phoenix…Violet Phoenix. The name chosen for my precious daughter is more than just an interesting combination of words. Violet was my English grandmother’s name. She was a very strong woman and a rebel for her time. Violet is the color of the crown chakra. Violet is the color of the sacred flame. The Phoenix has been an important part of my life for many reasons. For as many times as my world has burned to ashes, I always manage to rise from the pain, rise above the past, and I am learning to rise above my own demons. Phoenix was my 19 year-old cat and most faithful companion until I was pregnant and it was time for her to leave me. Phoenix is new life after death. My daughter is the life that came to me as I was still in the throes of grief from the loss of my sweet little brother. Violet Phoenix…a powerful and personally spiritual name that I chose for the most precious thing in my world.

This coming Sunday is Violet’s birthday party. She’ll be two on Monday. My beautiful child is no longer a baby. It was only two nights ago that she managed to escape from her crib, signifying the time to move her over to her lower bunk bed. It’s been quite a lot of work to get her to stay in bed and stay asleep. Daryll had to go in and sleep snuggled up to her last night. Tonight will be my turn. It’s funny how advancement in child-rearing can sort of mimic the earlier times. It almost feels like the time after we moved her crib from our room to hers. It was new, strange, and a little scary for her. This is the same, only now she is able to get out of bed without an obstacle. She’s getting so big and she is very tall for her age. She is my cute-patoot, my leggy blonde, my Droolie Andrews, my monkey-face-pooh-bum-bear, Frogger, Faerie Liebchen. She is Violet; she is the brilliance that emerged from the darkness and she is my dearest love. She is also the best thing about my cancer because I have been able to be home with her since day one and have been able to watch her grow.

I know that at some point I will have to return to the job and school worlds and this precious time will end as all things do. But I am certain that I am close to ready. In the meantime, I continue to work at my jewelry business. I am now in two local stores. As it turns out, Celestial Awakenings took my wares after all. There are consignment contract papers and everything!
Since I’ve made the conscious decision to let go of fear, resentment, and the invisible chains that have bound me for so long, things are getting better. I am letting go of my negative thoughts surrounding money and struggle, opening myself to abundance, and banishing PTSD one shadowy tendril at a time. Is my life perfect bliss? Of course not! Does it need to be? My answer is no. There are ups and downs and I’m okay with that; it’s an adventure!


So much is changing, I can feel it. It’s taken a long time but it is never too late to realize that you can change your world just by changing the way you think. Even in the midst of the same prowling troubles, I am feeling lighter and I am very close to feeling like myself.




Friday, September 6, 2013

Letting Go



Another phase of metamorphosis. Another journey within my journey. At the moment, the sky is a cool grey and my coffee is a warm brown. At the moment, there is Sesame Street, Kate Bush, a feeling of peaceful joy, and a sense of quiet relief. My handmade creations are hanging on the wall above my computer, waiting for buyers to fall in love and claim them. To my left are a dozen roses that my husband surprised me with the other night. They are opening, sage is burning, and my youngest stepson is about to try Vegemite for the first time.

It’s quite amazing, really…how easy it is to let go of the anger, negativity, and fear that holds us captive. And it’s baffling how we make it so complicated. Less than a week ago I was still suffocating under the weight of that darkness and uncertainty. All it took was a healthy fight with my husband to clear the air, a couple of amazing and enlightening videos we watched together, and the mutual decision that we didn’t need all that negative energy anymore. Yes. That’s all it took. I know that a week is not a long time to say that my life has changed, but it has. It really has.
                      
Tuesday was quite a solidifier for this new sense of being; this new and renewed positive energy-flow. I’d had a really good therapy session which also opened my eyes to some new things and I was on my way to the store for some things we needed. As I came closer to the local metaphysical shop I had been dying to go into but was afraid to because we are always so broke, without thought or self-debate, I got into the turn lane and took a left into the parking lot. I had passed it so many times before. I had let fear of money stop me from exploring what I knew I would find to be fascinating. I looked at the back door of the shop, which is a lovely converted craftsman-style house, and wasn’t sure if that was the right entrance so I walked around to the front door. It was locked, but I saw someone inside so I knocked. I was let in by a beautiful woman who struck me with curiosity right away. She explained that people usually use the back entrance to which I laughed and apologized. As I immersed myself in the hum of a room full of beautiful stones, what would have typically been a feeling of social paranoia and self-doubt was instead a feeling of peace and vibrant freedom.

Immediately, a flow of conversation was started that felt so natural, so opposite of the intense self-consciousness and over-analysis I usually feel. Was it her? Was it the stones? Does it even matter which? The best thing is that I was open and allowing myself to take in the positive. I spent about two hours talking with this wonderful person. I looked at rocks and picked one out that felt good to hold. She showed me some books and I picked one out that seemed to be the most beneficial for my current circumstance. I found the white sage bundles and picked one out along with some incense and a purple candle. She had showed me a lot of amazing things, but my money fears were starting to creep in which we also discussed. It was a wonderful couple of hours, but I had things to do and so I paid for my things, and thanked my wonderful new acquaintance for everything. We even exchanged business cards and friended each other on Facebook. Before I left, she mentioned that the owners might be open to allowing me to put some of my jewelry there on consignment. This was funny to me because for once I wasn’t concentrating on jewelry sales. It does seem like a nice possibility however, so I’ve made a note to myself to follow through on it. If it doesn’t work out, I’m perfectly okay with that. It wasn’t the purpose of my visit anyway.

After running the rest of my errands, I came home and Daryll took the car to do something that I can’t remember. Violet had lunch and went down for a nap. I finished my own lunch and decided that some music and sage-burning were in order. Melechesh was the music for the moment so I turned it up, lit my sage bundle and suddenly I was dancing throughout the apartment in joyous circles, waving the sage as if it were a sorcerer’s wand. I felt light, free and open to all the good in the world. I felt like myself…my real self!

Yesterday was rent-day. As Daryll was out getting the money order for the office, our internet was suspended. We took care of both, which left us with only $14 to go the rest of the month. This is where the challenge still comes in. I know I need to let go of my negative attachment to money (or the lack thereof). I know that in order for it to flow better, I need to treat it with less importance. However, when you still have the car, insurance, and a cell phone bill, that you have no way of covering, how do you let it go? How do you release the worry? I called my mom as I always do, to let her know the situation. She has been helping us to keep our heads above water for almost the entire duration of my cancer experience and while she does it with love and understanding, it has been a source of great stress for all of us. While it did put me in a state of mild anxiety, requiring a dose of lorazepam, it still didn’t hit as hard as it normally does. It took extra work to focus on the continued feeling of positive energy but I made the decision to take it easy on myself. One day of lorazepam is better than every day, which I had been moving toward before things changed.


One evening of anxiety does not mean failure. It means I am human and that everyone gets these feelings from time to time. I still managed to have a pretty good night’s sleep and today I woke up more refreshed than I ever remember feeling. Things are good. It’s just a matter of remembering that. I have realized that I have been feeding the money-monster way too much and in turn, he has been feeding off my fear and stress. I know I have work to do in this area and I will keep going to therapy. Do I still have Post Traumatic Stress Disorder? Yes I do but I feel less intimidated by it now. I feel open to healing the wounds old and new. Instead of trying to shut it off and barely function, I’m diving in. I’m accepting the problems and the pain so that I might let it all go and free myself. It feels like tiny fishing hooks stuck into me with lines tying me to the negative things. It’s okay that everything hasn’t healed at once. Instead of painfully tearing them all out at once, I am choosing to carefully and lovingly remove the hooks a little at a time, accepting and appreciating the lessons they brought, and then letting them go. While I am uncertain of how long it will take, I’m not worried about it. Everyone has negative attachments to deal with. Everyone has bad days and foul moods. The difference lies in accepting it and letting it go. I am no longer interested in remaining stuck. I am no longer interested in negative attachments. It’s time to live…to really live. 




Monday, August 19, 2013

Distant



"To heal the wound,
you have to go into the dark night of the soul."
~Tori Amos

Three ibuprofen and one acetaminophen for discomfort. We were out of ibuprofen for a while there so it’s nice to have some now. I had just left Daryll to play with Violet as she got her bath. Her happy squeals and laughs became surprisingly distant for only being one room away with the doors open. Most of today was spent feeling as distant as the echoes of her sweet little voice. I was sucked into that strange dreamscape again. It’s been happening to me for years but lately it’s been much more frequent. As I’ve learned, it is a fairly typical symptom of PTSD.  I was skeptical about the diagnosis for a while but now I am seeing things in myself and I’m understanding more about how extensive it is. It’s as if it’s become so ingrained that it stretches through my whole body, running like skinny tendrils all alongside my veins. The nightmares, the disassociation with reality, the anxiety and self-esteem issues…the fascination with it all. It’s like I took a wrong turn somewhere as I was traveling toward the exit of my cancer-world and I have found myself in a dark wood filled with haze. A lot has changed since my journey through this place fifteen years ago. Maybe I simply forgot the way.

This really isn’t as bad as it sounds. As I said, I’m really quite fascinated by it. Of course there are some awful days and I’ve got a lot to work through. What amazes me is figuring out where certain parts of it stem from and how some of the coping mechanisms I’ve had my whole life have somehow become part of this greater thing. Very little of it if any is from the cancer. I find this somewhat hilarious for reasons I have trouble explaining. Some days I’m barely able to function, but I know that over all this is a good thing. This is an opportunity to banish old demons. Unfortunately this first requires hunting them down. I wish I had a falcon to guide me…or an Australian wedge-tailed eagle.


Making jewelry, spending time with my little family, and listening to music are my links to the “real” world…or at least the one I’m trying to get to. Violet and I went to the Portland Aquarium with a friend and her daughter a few days ago. It felt good to go on a little adventure. It was so cute to see her run around to the different tanks and play in the tide pool made from an old boat. She was more interested in splashing in the water with her hands than anything. She really enjoyed splashing in the stingray and shark tank…so much so that when I finally had to carry her away from it, she had her first public meltdown. That was quite an experience! Even so, it was a good day and I wouldn’t trade watching her get lost in her enthusiasm and wonder for anything. These are the things that make my life matter. This is how I know I’ll be alright.


Wednesday, August 14, 2013

Coming Home to Myself

Two things came to me this morning that have been so scarce for so long. This morning as I watched Violet eat her breakfast, I felt a peace and a power like my true self had come home...and she brought my poet with her.



Today
the trees outside
are tall
and silent.
Sentinels keeping watch
in cool and quiet
morning air.
Today
I sit at the kitchen table
looking back at them,
feeling a calm sort of vigilance.
Feeling cool
and at the ready.
Feeling the strength within.
Today
I am the silent warrior,
the guardian of my home,
my world,
my peace.
Tall like the trees,

unbreakable.


Tuesday, August 13, 2013

My Place in the Ocean

Slipping from this world
on a quiet bench
as unseeing
and unknowing shoppers
pass by like
ghostly holograms.
I feel safe
on my tiny mental island
as life and emotion
create my own
luminous ocean.

I was a mall employee in my early twenties when I wrote that. I had a long black trench coat, my portable CD player, and bus fare as I didn’t even have my license to drive, let alone own a car. Having survived cancer only a few years before, much of my outlook had improved greatly. I had also been getting into my art again. This made sense, since I worked in a frame shop. Even still, I was lost. I didn’t know where I wanted to be or what I wanted to do. I knew that I wanted to find my purpose and create a future for myself. I just didn’t know where to turn or how to go about it. I had tried some college and realized that I didn’t have it in me to stick with it…at least not at that time. It was during this period of my life that I named myself “The Girl on the In-Between”, possibly in a poem. I had spent my entire life feeling like I was never really anywhere and I couldn’t find a place where I fit.

After years of struggle and stress (most of it completely avoidable), I had finally made a decision to let go of the life I hated and quest for the life I wanted. I was in my thirties (still am, thanks), had found my husband, and I had become absolutely done with the uncertainties and stresses of not being in control of my life. I embarked on a new and invigorating journey back to school and I was most certainly ready this time. At some point the need to get out far outweighs the fear of the uncharted.

It was early in this journey that the real life-changes began. George died after his five year battle. When brain tumors want to take a person, it is without mercy in speed and devastation. The most intense grieving of my life put me into a strange, painful, beautiful and surreal parallel dimension. The whole world began to shift around me and I decided that since nothing is guaranteed for anyone, there was no reason not to free myself from the life I hated. After the next tragedy, I walked away from what was no longer worth rotting in. I started to make the changes instead of just letting life happen to me. There were still struggles but it didn’t feel so futile. The world started to crumble again and I had my beautiful daughter. Things began to go right again. Things were getting better…until cancer decided to kick me around for a second time.


Fortunately, I’ve almost mastered rolling with the punches and learning from every kick in the gut. I’ve learned that there’s just not enough time to find all the meanings, answers and reasons. Sometimes there are no reasons, so you’ve got to create your own meanings and answer your own questions. Even when the world seems to be swallowing you and you’re in pain and you can’t make yourself leave your apartment unless you have to, you are still more free than ever before when you start honestly seeking your own truth while others are waiting for someone else to tell them. It’s the biggest weight lifted. I still live on the in-between so I remember to keep learning so I don't get stuck somewhere again. These days, my “tiny mental island” has three flights of stairs, a purple door, some animals, and room for my little family...oh and internet access.

Pharon looks so fancy in jewelry!

Overalls, sprinklers, and a garden

She lives for the park!


I turn stress and anxiety into shiny things.

Thursday, July 18, 2013

Blood, Tears, and the Pain of Young Love

It was in high school. I think I was 16. I had a boyfriend at the time...my first. But there was a friend who my father didn't like. A boy who had a shitty family life. There was something about him, and it wasn't just because he was a black sheep. True, he was a bit of a troublemaker but back then, I had a way with finding the beauty in some troublemakers. Somehow they would come to trust me. One day I learned he had run away from home and no one knew where he was. I remember sitting in my English class crying my eyes out to a friend. He was so very dear to me and I'm pretty sure I loved him. A few days later he came walking up to my front yard. I saw him through the large picture window of our living room and before he could reach the front door, I flew out to greet him, almost falling into his arms. Apparently he heard that I had been crying over him, so he returned home. I was good to my boyfriend, but kept this boy as a close friend. I remember how we would spend hours on the phone and sometimes he'd play songs on his stereo and hold the phone to it so I could hear. One day I went to his house. His mother was sweet but I knew his father was a tyrant and I'm glad he was not there. As an apology for causing me pain, he played me this song. It was the first time hearing it for me. It made me fall in love with Danzig...and I think maybe with him. As much love as a teenage girl can feel for a boy anyway. When I had to move away from Utah, I remember seeing him. I remember standing outside his house in the dark as we held onto one another. I cried into his chest and he stroked my hair in a way that no one ever had. We did see each other again and after I had broken up with my boyfriend, he took his place. He traveled the miles to Oregon for a visit. I almost gave him my virginity at that time, but I wasn't ready and he was sweet about it. It was some time later, not too long, that I broke his heart. He had left his abusive home, made the trip again to see me with a suitcase in his hand. He said he was back to stay. He said he had come back for me. By this time, I had become terrified of my feelings. Love scared me back then, and I had a habit of running from it for a long time. I was cruel to him and I sent him away, informing him that I did not wish to see him. I had become so uncertain and so afraid....and then horribly guilty. When I broke his heart, I broke mine too. 

I don't know what happened to you. I don't know where you are. I know you will never see this, but I'm sorry. I am so sorry. I hope you are happy. I hope your life is wonderful and I hope that you forgive me. I am happy. I have a family. I stopped crying for you years ago, but every time I hear this song my heart does still bleed just a little bit.
 




Saturday, July 13, 2013

The Importance of Hardship and Sharing

Surgery went well and I am on a LOT of pain pills. Each day I feel a little better, even though I'm tired most of the time. I can only raise my left arm straight out in front, lower on the side, and above my head is out of the question. My physical therapist has ordered me to do nothing more vigorous than typing and beading, as far as my arms are concerned. Dr. Gabriel agrees with this, but he has also ordered me to get some exercise, such as going for short walks. The hardest part is not being able to pick up Violet. Instead, I sit on the floor and give her hugs and kisses. Sometimes she sits in my lap. There's still much to do as far as reconstruction is concerned, and I'm not just talking about my breasts.


Tuesday, July 2, 2013

Under Reconstruction


Well here it is. Tomorrow I go in for the surgery I've actually been excited about. Tomorrow breast reconstruction begins. I am positively giddy!!!

Saturday, June 22, 2013

Memories, Dreams, and Midsummer Magic



Breathing in
transparent daydream,
lungs expand
body fills with music
from my headphones.
Soul stretches
searching to feel
the expanse of my being
as it reaches out
to the inward universes
that make me whole
and alive.
Simple turn of my head,
and mental planets
shift
as deep breath winds
carry my vision
far from this plane
and into the unknown.
I am worlds colliding.


This is a strange time, indeed. I mean, two blogs in the same week? Something is definitely happening here. Throughout this whole journey, I have marveled at the sights, the lessons, connections made and lost. I know I am close to the border between the “real” world and my dreamscape but even with all the beautiful beacons I've met along the way, lighting this other world like twinkling stars...things only seem to be getting more strange, not less. This is not a bad thing, just unexpected. I entered this place with experience but my last visit left me feeling like I was just a visitor passing through. This time, I have gone deeper and the twists and turns have been many. This time it was more beautiful, more humbling, and more meaningful than before. This time the change runs deep and while I know crossing that border is inevitable, I can't help feeling like I am leaving something behind (aside from my discarded breasts and ovaries), and also taking a permanent souvenir with me.

The day began with Violet, as it always does. My beautiful faerie Liebchen calling from her crib to let us know that morning and breakfast were calling. I was actually up earlier than usual, so I was more alert to her needs. I picked her up, hugging and kissing her the way I always do...as if it could be my last chance to hold such a sacred gift. Daryll took over after some coaxing with sweet words, a happy little girl, and the promise of coffee. I didn't have time to do all the mommy things today. I had to be ready for what had long felt like a distant fantasy that would vanish in a puff of smoke at the slightest fluttering of sleepy eyelashes. It was finally time for my pre-opp appointment with my plastic surgeon. I made sure to look my best (or at least the best I could before 9am), selected some of my favorite jewelry out of the items for sale (a girl has to advertise, after all). It took a while to settle on the perfect necklace. I felt that the day called for just the right piece. Once I was ready and had fresh coffee in my “Australia-green” travel cup, I went down to the car...and then back up to grab the afore mentioned travel cup. Forgetfulness is pretty routine these days.

Summer Solstice, Midsummer, June 21st, our pale-green Taurus with the slight dent on the passenger's side (who knew rubber trashcans could DO that), music, clouds, and blue. The drive to PeaceHealth felt like flowing under water and in the sky at the same time. I barely made it to my appointment on time, but I made it! Entering the waiting room to Dr. Gabriel's office has always been intimidating. With its leather furniture, dim lighting, safe and tasteful art on the walls, and staff of beautiful women, I definitely feel the full weight of my socio-economic status as I walk in. Today it felt a little less ominous. Perhaps it was my awesome bluish-purple hair that I had managed to style almost perfectly, or maybe it was my shiny but tasteful jewelry. Perhaps after being as exposed as I've been, it just doesn’t hit as hard as it used to. Or maybe I'm just too excited about getting a hot new cancer-resistant rack to really care.

Dr. Gabriel was stuck in a procedure, and I opted to wait. I had filled out a novel's-worth of paperwork, after all. I chatted with his receptionist. She refilled my magic green cup, she offered me a place on the lobby for my business cards (insert sound of squee here), and after the good doctor had called to say it would be another thirty minutes, he almost immediately popped through the door with an amused grin on his face. Yeah, this guy is pretty cool. I was given prescriptions and instructions. He shook my hand warmly and said I was going to do great. On my way out I left a stack of cards next to some brochures and headed for the elevator and the way out. As I passed through the sliding-glass front entrance, I saw a middle aged woman with a gorgeous little round-headed baby girl. This was nothing unusual in itself as these buildings also house Violet's pediatrician's office. I noticed that woman and baby were focusing on something on the ground. As I moved closer and commented on the sheer adorableness of the baby, the woman looked at me and almost immediately asked me about my necklace. I told her about it and the Etsy. She said her daughter would be very interested, so I gave her a card. Then I turned my attention to what they had been looking at. It was the biggest beetle I had ever seen! It had yellow and rich brown stripes, and was approximately an inch and a half long. I was absolutely charmed by it and maybe it's my strange dreamy self, maybe it isn't, but a powerful feeling was beginning to awaken. Voicing concern over our little friend, the woman agreed with me and we devised a plan to ensure its safety. This vibrant creature was too precious to meet with the bottom of any shoe. A young man came to claim the baby and we were free to execute our rescue mission. Taking my card, she went to try and scoop the beetle up but decided she'd need another piece of paper or something to help guide the precious creature onto the card. Obviously the answer was another card, so I offered one to her. Perfect! Our little friend was lifted off the ground and moved to safety! Satisfied with our good deed, we talked for a moment about the importance of nature and how humanity has done a lousy job caring for the Earth. At some point during all of this I had told her the reason behind the jewelry store. She wished me luck, I thanked her, and we parted ways as courageous beetle-heroes.

As I drove home, that powerful feeling grew until I felt I might burst into beams of light. It brought with it something old and familiar. I remembered a part of myself that peaks through the cracks once in a while but hasn't fully emerged in years. I remembered myself. I remembered my real self. The magic that accompanied sky and music, and the synchronicity of all things sacred to me. I remembered the poet and the artist who moved freely through night and fell madly in love with the wind who had always felt like my dearest friend. I remembered myself and with that memory came a floodgate of emotions and I barely kept back tears of amazement. Perhaps if my surroundings had been more secure I'd have let them come. I parked, ascended the stairs to the apartment, went inside, and so much after that is fuzzy. I remember needing to read my old poetry and digging out my little diary where they are kept...all except the one I was looking for. However, reading some of the others created a longing for that piece to come back and bring the artist along with her. We could have tea or wine. We could create, laugh, cry and be.

The feeling began to quiet as I resumed my responsibilities to my family and my business. There was a surge of the old anxiety, but time spent with beads, my daughter's soft cheeks, and music made it bearable. I hung out with metal which helps me feel alive and then I ran to the strange wisdom of Tori Amos who taught me the most important things about being a woman. Even after that old near-forgotten place faded as easily as the gold of the sun fades its way to fiery red on the trees and sides of buildings and then vanishes altogether, I was glad for having that brief return of the magic that sustained me for so long before I had to learn to be strong in other ways.


The day closed with a visit from a dear friend, some wine, and a Midsummer offering to the faeries. I posted some new items in the store and tomorrow I'll likely be too busy to lose myself in my passions and dreams. I'm not bitter about it. I have Violet and her world of magic to marvel in. Still...there was something about today and I'm grateful.

Should I call him Ringo or Bailey?


Thursday, June 20, 2013

An Explosion of Events

The days are starting to blend together as of late and my head has been very foggy. Absentmindedness and forgetfulness have become a regular thing. I know that it's mostly due to medications, but it can be trying at times. The past week has been quite interesting and filled with some unbelievable events.

The facebook page for the Etsy store has been steadily increasing in popularity, though we're still below 200 likes. I'm hoping to achieve 2-5,000. That way more orders will trickle in and maybe my little family will be able to dig ourselves out of this mess.

Even though I know there are both physiological and psychological reasons for it, I'm still somewhat bewildered by this whole PTSD thing. Part of me feels like rebelling against it. I get angry with my spikes of anxiety and I want to make it go away. However, I'm trying to take a more Buddhist approach to things. After all, that sort of thinking is what got me through George's death, my breast cancer, and several other things. I believe in fully experiencing things, even when they hurt. I don't want to deny myself the potential to drink in all of life's lessons. So why am I fighting this? Perhaps it's that girl inside who still feels inadequate, unworthy, awkward and lost. Most days I don't hear a peep from her but sometimes, when I'm trying to reach a goal, or when I'm receiving large amounts of praise and encouragement she starts to whisper things. “You're a fraud, tricking people into thinking you are brave. You are in over your head with this jewelry thing, and you only annoy people when you give them your business cards. You'll never finish college and you'll never make it to Germany. Give up and stay hidden.” I've gotten much better at silencing her with good music, positive thinking, and just plain stubbornness but some days she is pretty relentless. However, I am not giving up. For now, I need medications to help me maintain but I refuse to spend my life relying on pills. I just need to remember that pills don't make me weak, and neither does the diagnosis. The insanity of the past three years and the beating my body has taken have caught up with me, and even the strong must take extra steps to make it through the storm. I have a good therapist, and talking to her helps tremendously. I'll keep doing what I need to do until the stress, anxiety and nightmares subside.

I can't remember whether it was last Thursday or Friday when I was doing my usual Facebook activities...I think it was Thursday...when I saw a post by one of the feminist groups I subscribe to, featuring a beautiful black and white photograph of a woman showing her mastectomy scars. She looked regal. She looked like hope, life and wisdom. She was beautiful. The post was about how Facebook has been removing these beautiful pictures for being “offensive”. I had known this for a while, and I knew about the same thing happening with breast feeding photos. It has always made me angry, but for some reason, seeing this particular post filled me with more than just anger. It filled me with rage and an intense need to make a statement of my own. So, with a fire behind my eyes and a battle cry in my heart, I went through all my cancer pictures on my computer and selected the one meant for an art project...the one my mother took just a couple of days after my bilateral mastectomy. Trembling with a combination of fear and exhilaration, I posted it on my Facebook page in protest of their blatant discrimination against women. It was scary at first. There I was for all to see. There I was more bare and exposed than I'd ever been. The fresh and bloody scars where my breasts and nipples once were, the drainage tubes filled with red fluid that were stitched into my skin, the bald head; it was the raw and brutal truth. It was my big “fuck you” to the misogynistic bastards who were trying to make women feel ashamed of what we deserve to wear with pride. Even though I knew that this image was upsetting and gory, I decided that it was worth the risk of being un-friended, deleted, or banned.

What happened was something I was not expecting or prepared for. Within the first hour or two after sharing my most vulnerable moment, a surge of love and admiration came flooding in. People I didn't even know were liking, sharing, and praising my picture. Hundreds of likes, dozens of shares, and words like “hero”, “beautiful”, “powerful” and “warrior” lit up my page. I cannot even begin to describe what I felt. It was beyond overwhelming. Of course there was that little voice whispering things like “attention whore”, “drama queen”, “fraud”...but it was drowned out by the massive wave of love shaking up my quiet little world. Messages of encouragement and thanks as well as friend requests in numbers I've never experienced lit up my screen and my life. It was the most empowering moment of my existence! This continued for two or three days then slowly started to quiet. Then I was informed that Facebook had changed their policy, allowing mastectomy and breastfeeding pictures...two days BEFORE my protest! For a moment I felt kind of stupid, but no one knew about it! It was news to just about everyone. So even if I didn't do anything to change the policy, it wasn't for naught. I have made a lot of new friends, and been thanked by other survivors for making them feel better. It was all like some sort of crazy, wonderful dream.

I spent the next few days concentrating on jewelry-making with my main focus on things men would wear. It was getting close to an event that I had been giddy and excited about. One of my favorite bands, Melechesh, was coming to town, and I had tickets! The significance of this for me was that I would once again get to see one of the nicest people I had ever met. A week or so after my mastectomy back in October, Daryll and I traveled three hours to Seattle to see Septicflesh and Melechesh. I was sore, doped up on pain medication, and excited as hell! An ADVENTURE!!! The show was great and afterward we waited out by the tour buses. I was hoping to say hi to Seth from Septicflesh, as he had been super cool to me on Facebook, and I had come to adore his beautiful (inside and out) girlfriend, Ioanna. I did get to meet Seth, and he was beyond sweet! Before he came out however, Melechesh's Ashmedi came strolling out, grooving to his own tune and obviously enjoying the night. I felt shy and awkward, mainly because I only had a pink scarf to cover my bald head and I felt so out of place. I decided that I'd ask Ashmedi for a picture together and he happily obliged, putting his arm around me and squeezing a little too tight. I warned him that I had just had surgery, and he asked why I didn't warn him beforehand. Then he stopped and looked at me with a curious and concerned look on his face asking what kind of surgery I'd had. So...I told him my tale. Next thing I knew, I was being bombarded with hugs and kisses! He was such a sweet person and his beautiful spirit just exploded from his being. I got the requested picture, and a day or two later, I sent him a message on Facebook thanking him for his kindness and support and he responded with that same kindness.

Some time after this, I got a message from him out of the blue, asking how I was doing and saying that he had been thinking about me. I was touched at his continued concern. I liked Melechesh before, but due to his wonderful soul, Ashmedi quickly became one of my favorite musicians and human beings. He made a girl who felt invisible most of her life feel visible. This time around, when I heard he was coming to the area, I wrote to him telling him that I was happy he was bringing his music to Portland (which is just across the river) and that I looked forward to attending. He responded with something happy and kind and I went about my strange and quiet little life. It was a few days after the Great Mastectomy Protest when I decided I wanted to do something nice for him. The only thing I had to offer was my beading skills (as I had nowhere near enough time or energy to draw a portrait). I thought about what materials would best suit him, and lapis lazuli was the first thing that spoke to me. Not only is it one of my favorites, it just seemed to be the perfect stone for him. Since I only had a small supply of decent-sized lapis beads, I made them the focal points, then added rough tiger's eye, hematite, and gorgeous deep-garnet. I tried it on Daryll to make sure it was big enough for a man's neck, and I set it aside in a safe place. The show was just a day or two away. My bestie and partner in jewelry Brianna suggested that I send him a message, letting him know that I had something for him. I was feeling a little self-conscious about my work, so it took me until the day of the show (which was yesterday) to send him a message. I didn't think he'd read it in time, but he did and was his usual kind and cordial self.

The show was amazing, as I anticipated. I heard some really great bands that I hadn't known of before. Daryll and my youngest stepson were with me and I was so excited! I got to talk to and hang out with a few cool musicians during breaks between bands. When Melechesh was about to come on, Zach chose to chill out by the wall where we could see each other and Daryll and I went right up to the stage where we could get an up-close view of the awesomeness to come. Their entrance was as epic as expected, and as the primal and beautiful music pulsed through our veins, the world transformed into a place that felt like home. Music has always been a place of healing for me, and metal is the most invigorating life-blood. I believe it was the first song in which Ashmedi looked at me and we smiled at one another. I wasn't sure if he recognized me, since I look so different now, and my mastectomy photo was still my profile picture. I believe it was at the beginning of the second or third song when I was hit with the most incredible, touching, and unbelievable act of support and kindness I think I've ever received. Ashmedi...yes, Ashmedi...dedicated a song to me. He used my full name, stated that I had overcome some difficult trials, and then the metal exploded! Being the bashful sort, I felt myself blush intensely whilst wearing a goofy grin and half-covering my face. He and quite a few people standing nearby looked directly at me trying not to die of surprise and disbelief, and shyness. Well, if he hadn't recognized me before he certainly did now! And of course to cause me to blush even further, during part of the song, he came over and played his guitar right over me. Ho.ly.crap. Of course, the rest of their performance was maddeningly bad-ass and as it ended, I found myself walking outside in a daze.

I made my way toward the tour bus, while Daryll and Zach moved the car, and I stood quietly behind a small gathering of fans and musicians, trying to avoid second-hand smoke without coming across like an asshole. Ashmedi stepped out of the bus and started talking to people. I didn't want to barge in on any conversations, so I leaned against a trailer and waited for my family to come back, while chatting with one of the other musicians I had met.. My phone went off with Daryll's ring tone and I let him know where I was. As I ended the conversation with “I love you”, Ashmedi walked right in front of me with an “I love you, too.” Ha ha! Seriously, this guy is fun and happiness wrapped in human skin! I either smiled or giggled and he hugged me tightly, letting me know how good it was to see me. He greeted some other people, while I kicked back in my spot. Then without warning one of his guitar players approached me, asking if I was Larissa. I said yes, and wasn't really surprised since my name had been spoken into a microphone and it seemed like the entire planet had seen me blush. Then he said that my friend Nath in England told him to say hi. Nath is one of my closest online friends, and I was rather shocked that his name would come up by a tour bus in Portland, Oregon. We talked a bit before he made the rounds and as I had to back away from some cigarette smoke while apologizing and explaining that it was doctor's orders Ash stood back with me, saying he hated cigarettes and he had never smoked. I smiled and told him not to start. Then I awkwardly told him that I had made him something and handed him a small ziplock bag with his necklace coiled up inside it. It was too dark to see it very well, so he asked me to come with him and we entered the tour bus. Yes, it was my first time EVER being invited onto a tour bus. He took the necklace from the bag, looked at it in the light and told me he liked it. He made mention of the lapis, and I confirmed that it was indeed lapis lazuli. He seemed especially happy about that part and I think I got another hug. We sat down on the surprisingly cushy seats and talked for a few minutes before Daryll called me again. I told him I was on the bus and I asked if it was okay for him and Zach to join us. Of course he said okay and we all sat around talking about a multitude of things. Zach was given a diet soda, I was given some whiskey in a styrofoam cup, and Daryll had a gin and tonic. We made sure not to drink too much to drive. The conversations were all over the place! I learned more things about Ashmedi, and he learned more things about me. We talked about cancer, survival and death. I told him that this had been my second bout with cancer and I told him about George. We talked about the importance of humor in dark situations while swapping a few more stories. Daryll and Zach made their way back outside so he could smoke. They ended up hanging out there the rest of the time while Daryll made friends with most of the other musicians. Apparently he impressed the hell out of them! Ash went into the back for a bit, and I sat with the impressive guitar player, while disco music filled the bus...it was Disco Tuesday, after all. I felt bad for not recognizing him (in my defense I was overwhelmed and I hadn't seen any pictures of him for a while). He mentioned being in one of the former lineups of Death, so I asked his name. Yes, I was hanging out with THE Ralph Santolla! DOH! Curse my Swiss cheese brain!!! So discussions of all kinds with several amazing musicians and a few other fans went on well into the night. I got a picture with Ashmedi. He was wearing the necklace, but in the photograph, his goatee is covering it. Eventually, we had to get Zach home. The poor kid was exhausted! He was such a trooper though and I am damn proud of him! I said my goodbyes, got some hugs in, passed out a few business cards (while feeling a little paranoid about coming across as tacky or annoying...shut up, negative inner-voice), and walked to the car on a sleepy, dizzy cloud. This will go down as one of the absolute best nights of my life!

Since Violet was spending the night at Brianna's, we got to sleep in as late as we wanted. Upon waking from more nightmares, I slowly shook them off, drank them away with water and then coffee...and a sliver of a lorazepam pill as Daryll and I kept looking at each other and marveling in near-disbelief at what had transpired. As it turns out, my dear Nath had a lot more to do with it all than I thought. I can't help but love the guy and all his cantankerous but sweet nature! Thank you Nath!!! The apartment was a horrifying mess, so we cleaned, and when we could stand to be away from Violet no more, Daryll went and picked her up. I hugged my giggly, chattery little girl and showered her with as many kisses as I could before she wiggled away from me.

I am choosing to accept that right now I need to take pills and it's okay not to like it. That will be part of the fuel I need to drive out my emotional demons. Yes things are hard. Yes things are scary. Yes we might get evicted or lose our car, but people survive those situations all the time. I hope with all my heart that we can find a way out of this before it comes to that but we can only do what we can do. I've been through a lot; more than some and less than others. It has most definitely taken its toll but I have managed to laugh and smile my way through most of it. Even now with the nightmares and anxiety, I still find time to laugh, smile, and enjoy every minute with my precious baby girl. I don't know how many people read this blog but to them, and to everyone who has helped me through all of this, thank you. There will never be enough words to describe my gratitude.



I regret not taking my scarf off since we had matching haircuts at the time.



Sittin' pretty on cushy tour bus seats.



The naked truth of breast cancer.

Sunday, June 9, 2013

A shift in Direction

There are so many things happening. There is so much I'm feeling. I've recently been diagnosed with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder and my thoughts on the subject are conflicted. Is this a real problem, or just the disease of the hour? Furthermore, does that even matter? I am struggling to function as of late, that's true...but is it really so bad? Reconstructive surgery begins in a few weeks. When that is over, the “real” world awaits. Cancer, as gruesome as it's been, has been the least of my worries. As far as cancer is concerned, I've got this. As far as my daughter is concerned, I know I have the drive to fight for the best life for her. As far as everything else is concerned...there is a heavy fog. I know what I need. I know what I want. I just don't know how much of me is left to make it real.  


Tuesday, June 4, 2013

One Month

One month from today...exactly. One month, and I will once again find myself under anesthetic and a knife, under observation and on narcotics. Once again, I face surgery. The difference is that for the first time, instead of taking something away, it will be about adding something. For the first time since this all began, I will be receiving instead of losing. Stage 1 of breast reconstruction. I'm not sure if it's really hit me yet. It's such a big thing! When I first came home wearing my mastectomy bra with its glorious C-cup prosthesis, I was on a cloud. Now, I am ready for a more permanent solution. I am ready to be able to wear things without having to worry about hiding my mastectomy bra. Spaghetti straps, bathing suits, plunging necklines...these will be mine again. Even better will be having perfect breasts that will remain so until I die.


I know it might seem hypocritical for a self-proclaimed feminist to be saying such things. However, until you've lost body parts, you have no idea. Am I opting for bigger than my original size? Hell, yes! Does that make me any less of a feminist? No! I was an A cup. So what? I had just become comfortable with my body type when this disease decided to turn my world upside down. I was trying to attend college with a newborn baby. This was difficult in itself. Then, breast cancer??? I won't lie. I thought long and hard about whether going up a cup or two would betray my feminist ideals. I wondered if I was doing it for me, or patriarchy. In the end I've decided this: Fuck it. I lived most of my life as an A cup, experimented with a C cup with my prosthetic breasts, and I've decided that as the expansion progresses, I will stop at the size that makes me most comfortable with my appearance. If it's bigger than my natural size, so be it. I'm not here to impress anybody. This time I get to do what's best for me, and I owe no one any apologies for it.