When a former student grabs my hands in the Bellevue College
Writing Lab and begs me to come to church with her because she is CERTAIN that
this will cure my cancer, I am touched.
I hold her hands tightly, look into her face and thank her for her care
and her concern – her distress, her need to help me, to do something, echos
deeply in her eyes.
When people came to me in tears, anxious and upset about the
news of my diagnosis, I felt honored, cared for. And I didn’t feel responsible for their
feelings or burdened by them.
But this is now.
Before my first cancer diagnosis, I was always quick to offer
unsolicited advice, solve problems that were not mine to solve. I didn’t see myself and others as being on
different journeys. I saw us all on the
same path…with myself in a slightly better position on that path, so therefore
something to offer everyone else. My
insight. My path.
But it’s not my experience with cancer that helped me cure
this. It was my journey exploring my own
Whiteness. Learning about how my
attitudes and behaviors linked back to my cultural privilege allowed me to
learn to see people and be more present with myself. Learning that my place on the pathway has
much more to do with the systems and networks that allow me to move to good
places than any kind of personal achievement, insight or behaviorhelped me stop
preaching and learn to listen. And now I
am a better teacher.
When a peer parent gives me a book about her Christian God
or another talks about her famous healer friend or a colleague tells me about
mushrooms that can offer a miracle cure, I used to be annoyed. Maybe it’s because that concern and distress
wasn’t so deeply apparent in their eyes.
They looked confident and assured.
Annoyingly knowing about something they know nothing about – MY journey.
So I’m still working on this privilege thing and my ease
with self-centeredness.
It took me awhile to teach myself to think of all of the
things people share as being artifacts of their own journey with mortality and
loss. And that changed everything. The book of inspiring Psalms becomes documentation
of a friend’s chosen path for her journey and learning. The healer is a door into a peer parent’s
deepest struggles with life and meaning.
The mushrooms, evidence of a colleague’s need to control her mortality
through a food path to pure living.
Looking back on my blogs over the last year, I realized even
the rants about pet peeves over irritating behavior are really deeply about
me. These are things I do and have
done. These are aspects of my culture
and my identity that pop out at me now and irritate me. Things I need to work on.
I am the culturally Christian woman who feels chosen and
somehow uniquely blessed. I am the evangelist
who chose food as a means to cure my parents lifestyle addictions after their
first heart attacks 25 years ago, to inspire my daughter with a sometimes
unhealthy attention to food and exercise, and to control my own mortality.
I remember when my mother planted an herb garden for me in
my backyard. She cleaned out a wooden planter, grey with
weather and age, on the edge of my cracked and mossy patio. Her herbs grew big and bold, overwhelming
the entire box of plants and melting into the “natural” landscape of our yard,
overgrown bushes, big old trees and a patch of brown crewcut lawn that has
been more weeds than grass for years.
For over ten years now this little garden has supplied the fresh flavor
I love so much in my meals and it seems to survive all abuse I can throw at
it. I’ve always hated gardening. The yard was always too big, too out of
control, too much work to even think about.
I would never be able to make it the manicured, mindfully constructed,
neighbor impressing yard I thought I needed. I love this overgrown herb garden in my messy
yard. It was the first time that I realized that gardening
is not about controlling life, but nurturing it.
I am seeing a therapeutic masseuse to help deal with a
strangely swelling right buttocks. My masseuse and I share a lot in these
sessions. There is something about
laying naked with another person’s healing hands on you that creates an
immediate intimacy, a comfort in vulnerability. For each thing I share, she shares back
something equally vulnerable and personal.
She creates a story of her own journey next to mine. It creates a space
for two full people.
She is currently working with three stage IV cancer patients. She talked about how vibrant and special each
of these patients is, how connected and caring, --and how unfair it seems.
Death isn’t unfair.
And having cancer can be a great way to go, considering other
options. Many of us get to experience
health and some amazingly intimate, happy time with our loved ones.
As humans, our risk of mortality is 100%, she agreed. But with all of the work she has done with
health, connecting the body, the mind, the heart – and growth. She felt it so unfair that people who had
attained such an inspiring place of growth and connection would have to leave
us when they still had so much more to share.
Individually, I don’t make a big difference in the
world. I have my shining moments and
some brilliance to aspects of my identity, but overall, I’m pretty averagely
flawed at most of what I do. My only
impact is in how I connect with others and how they go on and connect.
Maybe the purpose of all of that health, that internal
growth and connective mind/body/soul work isn’t about controlling mortality. Maybe health about something else than
avoiding death.
P.S. A mere hour after writing this post on an airplane headed for a long vacation in France I received news that my tumor markers have gone down yet again! Way to blow a moment. LOL.
Living with health AND your mortality pushed back a wee bit is pretty nice.
1 comment:
Hi Suzy. I'm so glad to read that you and your family are enjoying another wonderful journey together. I've been reading Marilynne Robinson lately, another very wise soul. She's Christian unlike me, but her nurturing comes from a much more universal place. Best wishes and love from all of the Trents.
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