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Friday, September 27, 2013

Day 1: so never mind our plan making, we’ll start living!


Transplant: done did. 

Well, it wasn’t exactly triumph as I pictured it. That is, triumph: verb. 1) to wear a party hat like a newborn 2) listen to hardcore as stem cells surge toward your body 3) to be a badass. Instead of that, in true cancer pants fashion: out of the blue marched an immensely fun series of anxiety attacks. It began pretty promptly after they told me around 3pm that the transplant wouldn’t be until 9pm—I had been planning on around 5 or 6. So this was a long time to wait. I thought I had been doing fine, I felt ok. Earlier I had watched You’ve Got Mail (ie. the most perfect film, why can’t I LIVE IN THIS FILM--the stark difference of situation in which I find myself perhaps got to me.) To be told that I had to wait even longer for this pretty scary thing to happen to me, while also anticipating how anticlimactic the actual event would be—started brewing something, apparently. So to slow my pacing and calm my labored breathing and crying spurts, they gave me a full dose of Ativan. Then I slept for a few hours, and remained drowsy with more Benadryl through the entirety of the thing. Talk about things being other than what you expect… however, I did manage to listen to Torches Together by mewithoutYou.

Thank you to all who wished me well and a happy new birthday etc. etc. etc! I’m sorry if I didn’t respond to your phone call or text message or whatnot, I spent a lot of yesterday in a drug-induced haze… I love you still. Thank you for understanding.

I'm feeling a lot better today, besides a few episodes of intense nausea. But all in all, I don't feel that different, which, I don't know what I was expecting. Now we start counting, waiting.

Here's a reenactment photo to quench your at-least-I-look-better-than-that thirst:


you can see my family put up party decorations, winner.


Why burn poor and lonely
under a bowl or under a lampshade,
or on the shelf beside the bed where at night
you lay turning like a door on its hinges?
First on your left side, then on your right side,
then on your left side again?
Why burn poor and lonely?

Tell all the stones we’re gonna make a building.
We’ll be cut into shape and set into place—
or if you’d rather be a window, I’ll gladly be the frame:
reflecting any kind words, we’ll let in all their blame…
and ruin our reputation all the same.
So never mind our plan making, we’ll start living:
anyway, aren’t you unbearably sad?

Then why burn so poor and lonely?
We’ll be like torches! We’ll be like torches!
We’ll be like torches! We’ll be torches together—
Torches together!
We’ll be like torches! We’ll be like torches!
With whatever respect our tattered dignity demands,
torches together, hand in hand. 

Wednesday, September 25, 2013

Day -1: hXc

Today is the day of rest between getting chemo (all done! forever?! I hope so) and when I get the magic/stem cell transplant. I don't have an exact time yet for my new birthday (party!) tomorrow, we're still waiting to hear what time the cells fly in from Europe. Isn't that insane? Did you know that after this, my blood type will change (unless mystery man also happens to be A positive--who knows, it's possible) and ALSO, I will have y-chromosomes in my blood! I will now be able to get away with all sorts of high-profile crimes, because my blood traces will point to a man. GOODY. At least that's one thing I don't have to worry about now.

I'm sitting here in my room, drinking my coffee which is very affected taste-wise (gracias, chemo), but the ritual is not lost on me. I feel more energized than I have the past few days put together. I had a hard time sleeping last night so they gave me some druggies to calm me down, but I'm bouncing back with a force here, I can't sit still for too long...

Tomorrow, tomorrow, and tomorrow: Day 0.
A big day? Yep. and how we gonna celebrate, you ask?

Here's the Now on to Being a Badass playlist:

underoath "In Regards to Myself"
Defeater "Blood in My Veins"
Norma Jean "Memphis Will Be Laid to Waste"
Blind Guardian "Precious Jerusalem"
Life in Your Way "Reach the End"
mewithoutYou "Torches Together"

This will be playing for the 15-20 minutes it will take for the cells to enter my body, fists in the air.

I'm bringing it ALL back. BLOODxBROTHERS

headbang with me. TORCHES TOGETHER



and for those who are interested, my new address here at the hospital! 
Mail is so fun, and it gets me through.

Bekah Jordan
7B-33
Brigham and Women's Hospital 
75 Francis Street
Boston, MA 02115



Friday, September 20, 2013

aaand, we're live


Checked back into the Brig today. After enjoying my last cappuccino for a long while at Atomic, I packed up my two little bags and headed in. To pump up the drive (which was lacking pump, let me tell you. It was really hard to come back here.), we put in an ancient mix CD that I recently found, only to discover the joys of the boys of Backstreet and Nsync. The crooning/squealing chorale of gentlemen and their identical 90’s beats made so many of the fears go Baby Bye Bye Bye.

I got another Hickman line placed on the other side of my chest so I officially feel like a marionette, and I am now sitting in my new digs here on 7B. This is my favorite room so far I think: it’s pretty large, and though I haven’t experienced the morning sun yet, the afternoon rays and sunset were pretty lovely. I have a much better view of the smokestacks from my window this time. Also, there’s a bit of color on one wall in here, a sage-y green, which isn’t too bad. AND, the clincher: the toilet is magically lower, and I can semi-touch the ground when I pee.

I wasn’t able to bring as many things with me this time; especially by way of decoration; as the items allowed in the room are stricter this time around. Everything needs to be wiped down (made very clean), and fewer things are better. I’m still waiting to hear if I’ll even be able to make my own coffee, which is a real mental and physical ritual for me at this point… so I’m hoping for the best here. But it’s pretty strict. Example: I brought all my clothes freshly washed and in clean plastic bags, only to have them rejected because they need to be in ZIPLOCK bags. So I am relegated to this delightful excuse of a Johnny—which, by the way, WHO DESIGNED THESE?!? Your ass/back will WITHOUT FAIL be hanging out no matter what you do. Why isn’t it just a bathrobe? A ROBE with ties the match up? How can this be too much to ask?

But here we go, starting chemo tomorrow (and by tomorrow, we mean, 12am tomorrow, a few hours away tomorrow, no time like the present tomorrow.). I’ll be on a tight regiment, I can’t remember the details of the thing fully right now, but it’s pretty constant chemo for four days straight. Then I’ll get a day off to rest/barf/dance (as the spirit leads). Then my Re-Birthday is next Thursday, September 26, 2013. It’ll be a short transfusion/transplant: 15 magical minutes of stem cells swimming into my body, accompanied by a 15-magical-minute metal/hardcore playlist (thanks for that great idea today, guys!). I always wished I was born in the fall, and now I get my wish. Two birthdays, kids: twice the parties, twice the cake. All you lame single birthday people out there won’t know what you’re missing. Just a $100,000+ drug-induced haircut and the whatnot percentage chance of death…

But we’re staying positive. We’re staying positive from here on out.

I have to say, this is getting harder for me. Recently, more days than not have been heavy. Something is amiss. I’m trying to stay optimistic, but it’s wearing on me, fear is really creeping in. It’s hard to see life after this. Sometimes I can’t see anything. And the here and now isn’t too comforting either, I feel different. It’s elusive for me to explain. I’m afraid my brain is changing, like my personality shifted when I wasn’t looking, or, I have been looking but it’s happening before my eyes, uncontrollably. The way in which I experience myself right now is so different than how I ever have experienced myself before. I feel too serious to be me. Monotonous, dull, confused, self-centered, tunnel-visioned, uncertain. I have a hard time making decisions, even simple ones. My imagination and spontaneity is stunted, my wonder at the world is small and dry. The desire for that wonder and awe and love is still there, but even that feels sad and dehydrated. I’m like a boring version of myself. I don’t like being with me right now, so I can’t imagine what other people experience. I want to apologize. But even that doesn't feel right.

I’m having a hard time explaining it, how I feel, to people when they ask. I guess I don’t even know how I feel. I think about death a lot. Like, a lot. I want to enjoy and love my life and experience everything and live every day, and not care about what’s coming. But I find myself unmotivated, slow, like I don’t want to get involved if I’m just going to die. It’s a protection thing maybe. I’m trying to protect myself as well as other people from my own death. But it’s so casual the way I think and talk about death these days. And that too is depressing, the informal nature of it all. But that’s the way it is. Death happens. And it happens. And everyone else gets to or has to move on, and you miss out on what would have been the rest of your life.

And I’m afraid of dying. But even more so: I’m sad about dying. I don’t want to die, because I want to love and experience things and people. I’m not done, damnit. And it seems unfair that death is staring me in the face right now, an old man with soft grey skin and a forlorn expression, wagging a long finger. It’s close, it feels so close. And I hate that. I hate it, it’s changing me, and I don’t think it’s for the better. I don’t like it. I don’t like myself right now.

My sister and I talked about the inevitable evolution of this feeling. Of course the mental stress of the past few months is completely unprecedented. I try to imagine that I’m not me; but rather I am listening to someone else tell me the situation. I say to this person, of course, this is inevitable, this is normal, this is an expected reaction to all that’s happening around you, with this lifestyle change forced upon you, with death hovering so close by. Of course it makes sense that simple decisions feel out of reach. Imagining your own death every day is not far-fetched. You are a real person, with emotions and impressionable moods and physical limitations. All of those things are being strained right now, and you are not in a healthy state to be fully yourself.

Maybe that makes it somewhat more tolerable. But all it really does is acknowledge the inevitability of the drab feeling, and it doesn’t do much in the alleviating department. It doesn’t make it easier to be with me, as I struggle to keep my energy going, or try not to slip into my head, mulling over and about my impending mortality or the possibility that I may die very soon. It’s hard to be fully present in the now. Even though I desperately want to be fully present and experiencing the world in the fullest way that I can, because that is how I want to be living. For some reason it seems barred to me right now.

It’s not this way all the time. There are glimpses. I am not always feeling this way. I see beauty. I have indeed laughed until I’ve cried and maybe even peed a little just in this past week. Some moments with certain people have freed me. But the amount of time spent feeling this way has drastically increased over the past few weeks. And I’ve watched myself become self-conscious and moody, quiet, darker, heavier, sadder.

Perhaps I’m prolonging this by writing it all down; perhaps I am making it worse. But I can’t deny it, I feel different. And like I said at the beginning of this blog, and how I’m trying to go through this, my life: to begin where I am. To allow myself to be exactly where I am, no moods or thoughts excluded. To let everything happen to you: beauty and terror. This thing was never going to be a joyride. I knew that. I wish I could bebop and dance my way through this the whole way, but sadness has its place too. As does terror. It’s a real experience, part of the Truth, and I guess some times are spent living there. I just hope that in acknowledging them, they too come into the light and can be made free.

Monday, September 2, 2013

doable things

So, I thought I would be able to get out of here today. Yesterday my ANC count was 337(!) and they were fairly confident that today I'd be over 500. But alas, my counts dipped overnight and we're back to under 250. Hopefully I will be able to go home tomorrow, but it's at least one more day in the box. I've packed up the room almost entirely, so it's a bit more like a cell now. But I'm keeping my head, because the end of (first round) captivity is near. And now at least I can uphold my one-David-Sedaris-book-per-hospital-visit rule.

To get psyched for my short vacation from the hospital, I've been working on a list of doable things.

go to Walden Pond
walk every day
get a massage
go to a show, preferably at least Mary Zimmerman's the Jungle Book
visit Portland and Tandem Coffee Roasters
dance my heart out at Murphy's
sip bourbon in the backyard
run around
eat a good deli pickle
barely look at my computer
go to deCordova museum
wear a dress
sleep outside
go to the farmer's market
clean and install my headboard
walk in the woods
coffee dates
sit at a fire
brunch with mimosas
see everyone
see the stars
hold hands
eat salad
find a carnival, ride a ride
eat a Marty's donut
go to a yard sale
picnic on the beach
a strong dark beer
touch the ocean
Todd Farm flea market
pancakes

not necessarily in that order, but that'd be fine too.