I haven’t written
in this blog for quite a while. I am
sorry.
In fact,
there are many other “normal” things in my life I haven’t done for quite a bit,
and there is a good reason for that.
Actually, it
is a BAD reason. A horrible, anger inducing reason: my sister Annette has been diagnosed with
brain cancer. Glioblastoma to be
precise. I hate saying (even typing
it). I hate the reality of it. I hate the severity of it. I hate the look in people’s eyes when they
hear it. I hate that John McCain just
died of it. I hate SO MUCH about it.
Annette a couple of years ago, caught mid-jump :) |
But it has
happened. Our family is, of course,
reeling. She is young, only 57 years
old. She is otherwise healthy. She has 2 grown kids and 4 adorable
grandkids. She has SO MUCH TO LIVE
FOR. She had surgery to remove the tumor
(after several days in the hospital post-diagnosis waiting for the swelling to
go down and the surgical team to be assembled) on July 30th. Many fretful, stressful days later, the final
pathology report finally came back and told us what we had all feared: it was
glioblastoma 4, an aggressive form of brain cancer. The surgeon did a great job with the
operation – got all he could see with a microscope. She starts radiation and chemo this week (how
sucky is that, that for this form of cancer patients have to do both forms of
treatment simultaneously). Our family is
doing what we always do: SUPPORTING ONE
ANOTHER, LOVING ONE ANOTHER, AND EMBRACING THE GOOD MOMENTS (that do show
up, though interspersed with the sucky ones…).
Annette minutes before being wheeled in brain surgery. I told her she looked like a big BAKED POTATO. |
I am not the
type of person to ask for help. I am
guessing many of us would say that phrase, “I don’t ask for help”. Seriously, I am the person who GIVES help, I don’t
ASK for it. And I don’t say that to
brag, because when I look at that part of my character now I see that it is a
serious flaw, not something to brag about. Not being willing/able to ask for help means not
being able to connect with others, not offering them the opportunity to do for
me what I so love to do for others – TO HELP.
And look, I am not looking for life lessons right
now. At this point I am looking to keep
my head above water, to be able to function enough to continue my professional
life so I can keep my job (and therefore continue to pay our mortgage), and to
spend time with people I love. But damn it if life lessons don’t keep
seeking me out…
So yes, this
experience may teach me more about being vulnerable enough to ask for help.
But I refuse
to label that a “good thing”, because I am not going to say “good things” come
out of this horrible disease. (Though I will
admit that learning to ask for help is something that I needed.)
In keeping with
that, if I can find the head space to write and take photos, this Kindness
Activist blog should be cranking out the KINDNESS stories soon, because kind people
are coming out of the woodwork to help my sister and our whole family during
this ordeal.
So, let’s
meet the first Kindness Activist to be featured here because of dumb stupid unfair
stinky glioblastoma (angry much??): LEAH!!
Leah and Evan on their visit to Florida (he loved the ocean) |
Leah is a
woman I met a few years ago when I offered up our basement apartment for sign
language interpreting students from my alma mater to stay in while studying at Gallaudet
(a renowned university for Deaf students located in Washington DC). She and her friend Lauren stayed with us for
a couple of weeks and we became friends.
Fast forward
to now – Leah is a successful interpreter, awesome mom to her son who just started
second grade (he was just a toddler when she was brave enough to come across
the country to further her education), and an all-around great person. She and I keep in touch via Facebook, see each
other once in a while in person for coffee in Omaha, and she and her son came
and splashed around in the ocean with us in Florida for a few glorious days,
too.
Back to my
sister Annette: she was encouraged by
her physical therapy team to write a blog to talk about her cancer. The premise was that writing it would give
her something to look back on when bad days rolled around, and that by reading
past entries, she would see that, actually, she has come quite far since this
all started and be motivated to continue to push forward. I am not sure that the therapy team meant for
her to share her blog publicly, but once she had the idea to do that in
her head she would not be stopped.
Annette with her kids and grandkids the evening before surgery |
She is
writing and sharing an amazing blog which she has titled “Let’s Kick Some Mass”. She has been so brave and authentic – sharing
her thoughts and feelings about this whole experience. When she started the blog, she couldn’t move
her left side much. It had been grossly
affected by the swelling in her brain and the surgery. She was also quite medicated sometimes. Those things would have made it very
difficult to TYPE, so she and I began the process of writing her blog TOGETHER. Wait, that is wrong, SHE WROTE IT, I simply
transcribed it. She and I sat in silence. When she talked, I typed. She would ask me to read aloud what she had
composed – over and over and over. Each blog
entry took a couple of hours. We shed
tears. We laughed (sometime laughing so
hard, we shed more tears). But the
process was: she was the author. All
thoughts, all words, everything was HERS, I was just the fingers on the keyboard. I loved our time working on her blog together. It was quiet, magical, and special. I felt (still feel) very honored that she
allowed me to support her on such an important and personal task.
Then she
began to get healthier. “Lefty” (as we
called her weak left side) started getting stronger. She got better at walking. Took less meds. She was becoming more independent again, as
she had always been.
She tried to
compose her blog entry on own using her phone a couple of times, but it was
super difficult. One problem is that she
got her new phone the day she got sick. This whole illness came on so suddenly – one day
all 3 sisters were in Florida kayaking, three days later she was in the ER with
strange symptoms that turned out to be a mass in her brain. So, the phone was brand new and she had not
had time to figure out how to use it.
Plus, she was writing very complex, emotional, difficult things, and a phone
was not conducive to that kind of work.
Also, I (her
typing fingers) had to leave town. As
much as I wanted to stay in Omaha, we had a vacation home in Florida that we
left at the drop of a hat when she got sick, and we had to go back and close
that up. Plus, we had to drive our car
back to DC and be there in time for my sweetheart to start teaching this
semester. So, I booked an airline ticket
to go home and get some loose ends tied up, then return to my family in Omaha. But
that meant being away for two weeks, and surely she would need to blog while I was
gone.
Team Nettie party at the hospital - shortly after pathology came back. The fight was ON! |
So, I got
brave and decided to ask for help. I posted
this on my Facebook wall (hiding Annette and her kids from the post, I am not
sure if that was because I wanted to surprise her if it all worked out, save
her from disappointment if it didn’t work out, or because I was embarrassed to
ask for help…)”
“Omaha area friends - does anyone
have an extra laptop that they no longer use?? My sister has been writing a
blog about her glioblastoma and we have been using my computer to compose it.
But I have to pop home for a couple of weeks, and it would be lovely if she had
a laptop she could use. Writing long stories (and her stories ARE LONG
:) ) on a cell phone just doesn't cut it. She would be
thrilled with any brand/type - Apple, PC, it doesn't have to be fancy, just
functional. If you have one laying around collecting dust, we will be happy to
come pick it up anytime!! Recycle the old fashioned way - by giving to a
friend!! Thanks for considering. #NotUsedToAskingForHelpButTryingToDoItMore”
Not 30
minutes went by after posting before the first offer of a laptop or iPad popped
in. Then another. Then another.
4 people offered to let her
use and/or keep the equipment they had. I
was so inspired by the outpouring of help!
In the end,
we got Leah’s laptop. It was just
missing the plug, which was easily replaced at Best Buy. It is a beautiful,
shiny, well-functioning computer and is PERFECT
for Annette. I put a photo of us 3
sisters on the beach on the home screen and got it set up with her “favorites”
online, which of COURSE includes her blog!!
Tada - her new laptop! (And yes, she looks THIS AMAZING just 3 weeks after major brain surgery) |
Because it is a laptop, she can carry it anywhere to work on her blog |
Leah, your laptop
offers her independence. It gives her a
way to look at the photos she loves in a much larger format. It lets her express herself – her happiness,
her fears. And it will allow her
friends, family, and strangers she has never even met to follow this journey.
THANK YOU FOR
BEING A KINDNESS ACTIVIST Leah. Your
generosity means a ton to our family.
If YOU would
like to be inspired and informed, please read Annette’s blog. She is doing an outstanding job writing
it. You can see it here: Let's Kick Some Mass
P.S.- I will
be asking for help more often. I am
learning.
P.P.S. –
There are loads more Kindness Activists that have appeared during this
difficult time. I hope to find time to
recognize many of them here. Those entries
will not be as long, since I have laid the groundwork with this post and filled
you in on what is happening.
Bonus photo: sunrise sisters. Birthday celebration on the beach in Florida just 5 days before her diagnosis.
Bonus photo: sunrise sisters. Birthday celebration on the beach in Florida just 5 days before her diagnosis.
I only know how excruciating it is to fight for someone with a horrible cancer diagnosis because of losing my Dad that way.
ReplyDeleteBut I'm not you and you are on this journey now and I am so touched by this post. The genuine vulnerability and anger and the precious time spent as a scribe to your amazing sister's posts. Scribing her feelings that were amazingly genuine and vulnerable and hilarious and fearless and at other times scared. And now your post being the same, vulnerable and genuine and fearless and MAD that your sister has to have this to fight. You express yourself so beautifully. It must run in the family. Your post and you are an inspiration! I cried through the whole beautiful and painful post. Also, having been through losing your Mom to another awful cancer I know makes this that much more damn unfair and painful. I am amazed at you and Annette and your whole family involved. You all are our inspiration. I love you so much and will do anything I can to help if you need me. Im so proud to be your friend you amazing human!