Gettin’ My Groove Back

hardest step
via Pinterest

Starting a new habit is hard.  Breaking a habit? Not so hard. I hated the idea of not running for six weeks after my mastectomy, mostly because I knew it knocked out my chances for the spring half marathon I’d been looking forward to.  But once I knew that race was out of the question, I got used to the sleeping in.  When my six week mandatory stint as a couch potato was over, I was really enjoying that extra time in bed.  I went for a run when I could still sleep in, when it was fun, when it was convenient. Once school let out, though, there aren’t many convenient times to run that don’t involve getting moving early.  I keep rationalizing the sleeping in part– sleeping is still pretty uncomfortable, so isn’t every bit of sleep super valuable?  Knowing that I have another surgery coming up– another mandatory break from running– makes lacing up even harder.  I’ve had the best intentions the last couple of weeks, but busy mornings with camps for the kiddos was just the added excuse I needed.  And so this weekend, I decided the excuses, the rationalizations, the good intentions were all over. It may be hard to get up and out the door, and I’ll probably just really have my groove back when I head back in to surgery, but I’m just going to have to get over it.  So Sunday, my favorite morning for a run, I took the hardest step.  That first one, out the door.  And I’ll just have to keep taking that step over and over, until I’ve really got my groove back.

Summer fun

photo 1

Since I managed to score a haircut appointment at the very last minute, I didn’t want to worry with finding childcare for the kiddos.  Plus, I was going to pick up Turner from camp early as it was, taking him back home would mean he’d need to miss even more camp.  So after I picked him up, we headed to Georgetown, and we made it there so quickly!  Not only that, I found a parking spot right away.  I figured we might walk past this super fun water feature and they could run through once.  But we ended up with almost twenty minutes to kill, so they didn’t stay as dry as I’d hoped.  Not dry at all, really.  But they were about to sit through an hour long haircut, and they needed to have their fun too.

photo 2 They were soaked by the time we found our way to the salon.  Thankfully, Heather quickly grabbed them a stack of towels, so they dried off a bit and took a seat on a few towels to read their new library books while Dragan worked his magic on my little locks.

Haircut number two

new hair

I know you were all waiting with bated breath for a picture of the hair…  I asked for short, and I got it!  He also gave me some tips– apparently I will need to use the blow dryer a bit and some of my long hair product to help fight those pesky chemo curls.  (He said they will probably calm down within a year or so.)  Hopefully it’s short enough that I won’t be going crazy dying for a cut in five weeks, when I’ll apparently need to have it cut again.  This short hair thing is not as easy as I’d always thought!

Haircut day!

hair collage

I know you’re all wondering why I haven’t talked about my hair in over a week.  No?  As it turns out, my hair is currently driving me a little bonkers, so you’re going to have to hear about it yet again.  I have these crazy curls– not quite super tight curls, but definitely more than “texture.”  So if I’m not careful, that is, if I don’t over do the product and re-wet it every hour or two, I end up with a fuzzy, round head.  Not a pretty sight.  I’m used to working on my hair, though, so I decided to try out some of my old long hair tricks last week.  On the left, my attempt at a standard blow out.  Really tough to do with short hair– hard to get the brush to grab onto anything to pull it straight.  The result: straighter and more directional, but still pretty fluffy.  On the right, I tried the flat iron.  Also very tough.  (I may have burned myself a couple of times.)  The result: just about every hair on the top of my head stuck straight up, so that didn’t cut down of the fluffy problem either.  Remarkably, I don’t hate these two photos nearly as much as I hated the hair styles in person.  I can’t figure out what’s up with that.  Regardless, I’m not happy with my hair right now.  I figured there was no way I’d get in to see Dragan before I had to break down and cut my own hair, but I was thrilled when I called this week and he had a cancellation for this afternoon!  Of course, I’ve always left a lot to his discretion, but I’m telling him that I’m not trying to grow it out and I want a short ‘do, hopefully one that can last more than a couple of weeks!  Stay tuned for more on the hair drama.  (To see a picture even sooner, follow me on Facebook and Twitter— I’ll probably put something up there right away!)

Again, thankful

kiddos hollowaynov2012

I’ve written about being thankful before, but once again tonight, I am feeling so very thankful.  I talked tonight to a sweet friend– she has a good friend whose four year old is in the hospital, fighting cancer.  As we chatted, I kept thinking of these beautiful faces.  Of what it would be like to watch them, in the hospital, fighting for their lives.  I am so very thankful that I was the one to have cancer. I’m thankful that I’ve come this through quickly and as strong as ever.  Stronger than ever, really.  But mostly, I’m thankful that these precious children are healthy, happy, goofy, strong.  (Even when Sally asked them to be serious, Turner could hardly hold a straight face!  Emma Clare, ever the model, gave a great blue steel look!)  So tonight I pray.  A prayer of strength for a mother facing her worst nightmare, a prayer of healing for her sweet little one.  And a prayer of thanksgiving for these two healthy goofballs.

Summer fun trumps surgery

photo

It’s summer time, and that means swim lessons, VBS, and fun with friends.  Last week, it meant all three, all before noon.  Busy times!  Turner and I managed to squeeze in some fun with my phone while Emma Clare was in swim lessons.  We thought I should show off my new hairstyle, flipped up in the front.  Big news, huh?

If it weren’t for all the summer fun (and heat and humidity), I could be going in for surgery this week.  It’s been six weeks since I last saw the plastic surgeon, and so my skin has healed enough for me to have my final surgery.  I’m definitely ready– this phase of the reconstruction, while not painful, is certainly uncomfortable.  Plus, I’m so eager just to be finished.  I’ll still have another minor procedure or two after that, but for the most part, that surgery signals the beginning of the end of all of this.  Unfortunately, that surgery also signifies the beginning of four weeks in compression gear, not so friendly for a hot, sticky DC August.  Or trips to the pool with my two new swimmers.

And so I’ll wait until school starts before I head back to the familiar turf of the outpatient surgery center at Virginia Hospital Center.  But I’m not waiting long, because I’m ready.  Ready to be finished with all this.

Lipstick: Fuchsia Flash by Smashbox

There’s no crying in cancer

sweet kiss

Not surprisingly, when I asked my surgeon to repeat herself and heard the words “invasive breast cancer” for the second time, I began to feel tears well up in my eyes. Clay had gone to the bus stop to pick up the kids, so I had a few minutes to myself. And I cried. Some. But I knew they were coming home, and I didn’t want to be a mess when the kids walked in. Since I’d had a minor surgery that morning, I knew they’d be worried about me and would want to give me a hug. I was so glad to have a few minutes to gain my composure. There were a few tears when I told Clay, then we talked about the next steps. Not the next year. Just the next week and the next months of treatment. From that time on, there were very few tears. From me, anyway.

I remember the first time I had a young friend diagnosed with breast cancer. Oh, how I cried. We weren’t really close friends, more acquaintances, frankly. But her daughter was close to Emma Clare’s age, and I was probably a bit over dramatic. I immediately began thinking of all the things I wanted to tell Emma Clare, to teach her, to do with her. And I cried that this friend might not get to do all those things with her daughter. I cried for her, but really I cried for myself.

But by the time I had to start telling people that I had cancer, I’d had time to process the information. I’d had time to cry my tears and find my composure. It’s funny, but no one tells you that once you’re diagnosed with cancer, you’re likely to be hugging a lot of crying people and comforting them. They haven’t had the time to process, and they can’t do a thing about it. They’re stuck with the emotional impact and utter helplessness. Sure, I was affected on an emotional level. I’m not a robot. But I had things to do, appointments to make and show up for, schedules to organize. I didn’t really have time to sit and cry.

Honestly, after that first day, I only really remember crying three times. Once, I was just so tired, I wasn’t sleeping well, and it was more about the fatigue. I cried when we told the kids. There’s something about a five year old’s first reaction being, “So, you’re going to die?” that will bring tears to a momma’s eyes. I had decided to be very honest with them, but that wasn’t a thought I was going to let them entertain, so I quickly answered with, “Oh, no,” before telling them what my treatment would likely entail. Besides the kids, most people were far to afraid to ask anything so honest, and we stuck to logistics for the most part. I had that down cold, no hint of emotion there. But I remember one day really early on, before I’d even talked with the oncologist, Sally had come with me to an appointment and we only had time to grab a quick lunch before she had to head back to her kiddos. We ate at Chick-fil-A, I can remember which table. And I remember her words, half question, half statement. “But it’s treatable.” My friend wanted to know if I would die. And the quick answer I found to reassure my kiddos just wouldn’t come. I fought tears as I cobbled together every positive statement I could think of. We found it early, it seems small, I’m young and healthy… A few tears, a deep breath, and then I moved on with the conversation. Not because there’s anything wrong with crying. But because I just had to.

From scientist to writer

When I was in third grade, I asked for, and received, a microscope for Christmas.  After receiving that microscope, I decided that I wanted to be a scientist.  I like to think of myself as persistent, but stubborn might be a better word.  I wrote an autobiography in the third grade, declaring that I’d like to be a scientist, and after that day, I didn’t question that decision once until I was a few years into my PhD program. I was looking back through old photos to find one of myself in high school, and was surprised to come across this one I’d forgotten.

scientist in training

That’s me, senior year in high school, at my kitchen table.  Dissecting a rat.  There are no more words.

In high school, I was definitely a bit of a math and science nerd.  Maybe a bit of a nerd all around?  I really liked those classes, I didn’t love history, and I really didn’t like English.  Really, it was mostly the writing part I didn’t like, I’m pretty crazy about grammar.  (It gives me great pride when my children use the word “well” as an adverb instead of incorrectly using the word “good” as so many do.)  But the writing, oh, the writing.  I didn’t enjoy it, and in a class whose grade depended largely on writing, I got my first quarterly grade of a “B.”  I remember being outraged by that B, and so irritated that my GPA might suffer for it– I was’t going to be a writer.  I was going to be a scientist.  I wouldn’t believe anyone who tried to reason with me at the time, but of course I had no idea how much a scientist’s success depends on their writing skills.  And while I’m very thankful for the perspective of my scientific training, these days I’m more writer than scientist.

I’m trying to think back on it and decide why I didn’t like the writing.  Of course, there was the incident of the D-minus that I “earned” on a paper because though there were only three in the entire paper, I used two passive verbs in the same paragraph.  That could sour any overachiever.  But mostly, I remember struggling to find a topic, an opinion, a voice.  Maybe I’m a bit of a late bloomer on the writing front.  But I guess I’m a little glad that those teachers hammered in all the lessons when they did, so that now that I have found my topic, my voice, I can express it.  Deep down, I still think of myself as a scientist.  But now I’m a scientist who loves writing.

The indignity of it all

Yes, they're fake My real ones tried to kill me Tee ShirtsSource

After giving birth to Emma Clare, I decided that the process of pregnancy and childbirth pretty much strips a woman of her dignity.  The sheer volume of people who need to check on something (usually involving stirrups) is crazy.  Then having a small child who knows no boundaries– who feels like a closed bathroom door is an open invitation– surely that would strip away what dignity is left.  Nope, enter the second pregnancy which required taking said toddler to the aforementioned visits involving stirrups.  Gone yet?  Nope, there’s more.  A few more doctor visits and procedures related to the way those kiddos ravaged my body chipped away just a little more dignity.

But breast cancer?  Surely there can be nothing left.  I can’t even begin to count the number of people I’ve had to flash in the course of all my appointments.  Let’s see– there’s a breast surgeon and her nurse– wait two breast surgeons, the oncologist, the nurse practitioner, the two plastic surgeons I saw and their physicians’ assistants, the three or four people involved in the mammograms, the radiologist who did the ultrasound and his nurse, the doctor and nurse in the second biopsy, the two different MRI techs, and I can’t even begin to imagine how many people involved with the surgery and post-surgery care.  And for everyone post-surgery– the nurses, the plastic surgeon, the physical therapist– they all saw my scars.  So did the woman at Nordstrom, Akeelah (love her!), who helped me try on a post-surgical bra while my drains were still in place.  (Kudos to her– she was so gentle and didn’t bat an eye.)  They’ve all been kind, and I can tell that helping me preserve my dignity has been important to them, but there’s only so much they can do about it.  There’s no chance to get all self-conscious.  It’s all survival mode.  Strip down like there’s nothing strange about it and take care of business. Don’t get me wrong, I’m not complaining.  There’s something freeing to be above being embarrassed.  Seriously, if you have a question to ask, I guarantee you’re more embarrassed about it than I am.

Thankfully, a lot of my friends in the survivor community feel pretty much like I do.  We realize that the whole experience stripped away our dignity, but for the most part, we don’t care, and we are thankful that it stripped away our embarrassment, too.  I’m so thankful for those women who will answer all my crazy questions about what I can expect, whether what I’m feeling is normal.  But I’ve met some women who didn’t want their dignity taken, and held on with everything they could.  And I think that’s ok, too.  There are some parts to breast cancer that are mandatory if you hope to survive.  The chemo, the surgery, the radiation– if your doctor says you have to, then you have to.  But how everyone deals with it is different, and some women just don’t want to answer all those questions.  (So ask me, not them!)

My family went through a lot during this whole process, too, but they didn’t have to give up their privacy, their dignity.  You can’t embarrass me, but there are some things that I probably won’t go into detail about here– where it can live online for all posterity–  mostly for their sake.  Already, less than a year from diagnosis, I’ve talked to several newly diagnosed women, sharing my experiences, giving recommendations for doctors, bras, and of course, passing along a lipgloss or two. I’ve found it reassuring to be able to talk to women who are a little ahead of me in this journey, and I consider it a privilege to offer the same reassurance to others.  There’s nothing I won’t share with one of those women, really any woman.  (Guys, well there’s a line.  You know where it is as much as I do, so let’s just not cross it, ok?)  But for the record, and for all posterity, yes, they’re fake.  My real ones tried to kill me.

An Ever Present Reminder

prayer card

I’ve already told you about Uncle Bruce’s prayer, but his sweet wife was praying for me, too.  As were so many at their small church.  I know this was not the only church where I was on a prayer list, but their church went one step further than most.  I’ve received a card like this one every week since last October (and they’re still coming)!  After Wednesday night’s prayer meeting, they all sign a card for each person on the prayer list.  Really, a rather simple gesture, but such a sweet reminder.  It was truly a pleasure to be able to visit the church when we were there a couple of weeks ago and meet many of the people whose names I’ve seen on a card each week.  Also a pleasure– I was able to meet them over a church luncheon complete with fried chicken, blueberry pie, and sweet tea!