I brought the cigarette between my lips, pausing for a second- a second so quick no one could notice I breathed outward, before inhaling deeply. I clenched my teeth, refusing to cough. I will not cough. He wouldn't cough. He smoked like it was as easy as breathing. He would place the cigarette against his mouth any second now, inhale, hold, exhale, laugh, inhale, hold, exhale, say something about how my sunglasses have finger prints on them, inhale, hold, exhale, offer me one. I'd say no. I always said no.
I brought the thin white paper to my face, and just held it.
A few girls walked by me, and I felt their steady gaze on the hand by my face. On the cigarette. I inhaled deeply. Do not cough. Do not cough. Jane I swear to god, do not fucking cough.
They were out of site.
I hurled over, choking up my lungs.
"God!" I slammed my hands against the wall I was now leaning against. The rough red bricks scraped my hand, I cursed while pinching the still burning cigarette.
"Is this what you wanted?!" I shouted at the wall. I could see him. His head would be tilting ever so slightly. His mouth would be slightly upturned. The black leather jacket would be crinkled as he would place his hands in his jean pockets. He'd pull out his pack. He's pull out his lighter. He'd bring both to his mouth. And then he'd pause for a second. A second no one could see. But I saw it. I saw it every time. I saw his hesitation.
"Your hesitation should have lasted longer." I spat at the wall, "You should have thrown out your pack. Taken up some activity. For God's sake--!" A sob choked my throat, "Kept your nerves calm some other way." I flicked the built up ash off the tip of the cigarette and leaned against the wall, slowly sliding down into sitting position.
I stared at the cigarette.
"Is this what you wanted?" I flicked off more ash, "This was your plan wasn't it. You do this with a lot of people. You don't have to though. You could stop this. Stop hurting people." More ash.
I didn't expect it to respond.
"You do realize that's an inanimate object, right?" For a second-- only a second-- I freaked out because I thought it was talking to me. To be fair though, I hadn't slept in the past month. But I calmed down when I realized that one, the voice was right. It was an inanimate object. Two, the voice was female. And I know this may be gender biased, but I thought a cigarette would sound kind of like a raspy old man.
I looked up, only to see a pair of green eyes and a quite noticeable chest that was being enclosed by a tank top.
I blinked.
She was brave.
She sat down next to me.
"Cancer?" Her voice did sound kind of raspy.
I didn't look at her dark red hair pulled into a very high pony tail. Or her vibrant green, spider-like nails. Or her stiletto scarlet pumps. And I didn't even notice her very short jean skirt. I brought the cigarette to my mouth, paused, inhaled. Don't cough, Jane. I swear to- well, you already know who.
"You do know you aren't technically aloud to smoke in this area, right? If you want to smoke outside a hospital, there are designated areas." Her bright pink lips popped a perfect bubble with minty gum.
I inhaled.
"You might not want to talk, but I had to speak to ya." Pop.
Inhale.
"You can't smoke here." Pop.
Inhale.
"You may not believe this, but I'm a doctor here. You can't smoke here." Chew. Chew. Chew.
I looked at her. Her green eyes seemed so bright, and that's when I noticed the laugh lines by her eyes.
"Come on." She stood up with ease, and offered me her hand. "Come on, sweets." She tugged my free hand up.
We were walking around the hospital. My limbs felt heavy. I don't like smoking. It makes my body feel gross.
We stopped suddenly.
"Here. You can smoke here." She smiled. Her laugh lines were emphasized.
"Thanks." I mumbled. Inhale.
"She speaks," She said as she rose her eyebrows in awe, "What other words do ya know?" Pop.
"Fuck." Inhale.
She let out a harsh, surprised laugh, "That was unexpected. And crude."
"Aren't you worried about second-hand smoke damage to your lungs?" I asked apathetically. Inhale.
"Sweets, I'm a doctor and I've been smoking since I was ten. I know the risks. I know how addicting it is. I'm a walking oxymoron. A doctor who smokes." She laughed more heartily. I heard the raspy again.
And for a second, while her profile was laughing, I saw him laughing. He didn't have laugh lines though. But I guess he always seemed permanently young. He was supposed to stay young with me.
"So it took you a bit to speak, I'm guessing you're the same with laughing." Her pink lips grinned.
Inhale. Flick.
She exhaled slowly; calmly.
We didn't speak for a while. My cigarette was almost out.
He would be putting it under his shoe, grinding it out. He would be pulling out another one. Pack, lighter, mouth, pause, inhale.
His hands eventually began shaking.
His hair was starting to thin.
By the time we found out, it was too late.
"Why did you say Cancer?" I asked while trying to cover my cough.
She answered while looking ahead, "You'd be surprised, but working in a hospital you see a lot of Cancer patients." Her smile was dripping with sarcasm. But she still seemed happy. Then she turned to me, "I saw you practically vomit. You haven't been smoking long. I'd say you started the past twenty-four hours. And I realize I'm supposed to respect patients privacy, but I was Wesley's doctor."
My throat closed when she said his name.
"Wesley had been smoking for a very long time."
"Don't."
"But just because he died that was, doesn't mean you should." Pop.
Inhale.
"I'm surprised you don't recognize me." She said while chewing, chewing, chewing.
I rose an eyebrow. I think I'd remember her bright pink lips and vibrant green nails. Especially her doctoral dressing habits.
Inhale.
"Let me introduce myself to you again Ms. McKinley." She lobbed her wad of gum into the trash can, pulled a tissue from her pocket to wipe off her lipstick, released her hair from the pony tail and folding her hands carefully in front of her. Her posture suddenly changed, and her voice grew serious. In my sleep deprived state, her name rushed back to me.
"Doctor Hansen." We said in unison.
I groaned, "For--"
"God's sake. I know." She pulled a slender tube from her pocket, and she tugged the cap off revealing a thick bubble gum pink lipstick-- one that was well used. She laughed, "Hey, currently I'm on a break. Losing a patient is hard, and we had to sort out paper work."
I clenched my teeth.
"Oh I'm sorry, did I offend you?" She suddenly sounded angry.
"Yes-"
"Oh, sorry, I didn't realize you could taste my words with nicotine staining your tongue."
I blinked, too shocked to say anything.
"Ms. McKinley, you don't have to take up his dirty habit." She put a new stick of gum in her mouth.
I looked at the cigarette.
"There wasn't anything we could do for Wesley, Ms. McKinley. But you still have so much potential." I brought the last bit of cigarette to my lips and paused.
"He wouldn't want you to go down this path."
I laughed, "He was always offering me them. He wanted me to be like him." I frowned, "I finally am."
"Jane." Our eyes met, "Do you honestly believe he would have asked you if he knew you would have said yes?" We were silent for a moment. The ask was building up. "Well," she sighed, "My break is almost over. Think about what you want, Jane."
And she clicked away in her red pumps.
Click
Click
Click.
I stared at the burning cigarette.
And then I felt it slip out of my fingers.
And I watched the ashes crumble against the cement.
And I brought my sneaker over it.
And I crunched it.
Dr. Hansen stopped at the door and looked at me.
And she smiled.
My mind had a tendency to create stories and over analyze things. I call it my wonderland.
Showing posts with label cancer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cancer. Show all posts
Friday, 13 March 2015
A Cigarette
Thursday, 25 September 2014
To a Pessimist
Her ashy
ringlets bobbed as she skipped her tiny legs across the sidewalk. Her little hands gripped the cottony rose
bag that held her school kits. As she
made her way by each brown house with the same muddy windows and deceased
grass, she hummed the new nursery rhyme she learned in school. She stepped on cue to each syllable,
giggling when she came across the tricky beat scheme. Her bright emerald eyes scanned the sky,
chasing the birds that glided through the air.
She gazed at the planes that carried hundreds of people, hoping each one
of them felt like a bird.
Her thoughts walked home with her, until
she reached the large wooden door with a brittle wreathe that hung melancholy. But her humming didn’t cease as she stepped
through the door. She slid off her
small black dress shoes, tucking them safely by the door. She turned, taking in the dust filled
cabinets and sheet of cat hair bunched throughout the laminate floor. Although she barely blinked as she hobbled
into the kitchen. Pots and filthy dishes
filled the sink and counter tops, mold brewed in a stale pot of tea, broken
glass was dotting the floor and the fridge was bare. All except for a rotten apple.
Her feet danced over the glass as she
pulled down an old box of cereal, popping a few dry pieces in her slim
lips. She spun into the living room,
holding her box of cereal affectionately as she sighed into the fraying, worn
couch. She sat there for a bit, listening
to the dead clock that hung on the wall.
The big hand stuck on three. She
imagined the clock ticking joyously, greeting her with every click. She crunched the cereal melodically, humming
as she kicked her feet. Her eyes
scraped the pattern on the curtains before her.
The damaged material wasn’t as pink as it used to be, instead a creamy
yellow filled the shades. She placed the
box on the floor of the couch and leapt to the stereo. She adjusted the antenna, flipping it to the
current eighties mix. She twirled and
jumped, sang and belted her heart out to Michael Jackson. But as she jumped against the ground, the
stereo silenced. Her cheeks flushed as
she attempted to fix it, but she simply pulled out her homework when it became
clear that the technology was fried.
Slight creaking sounded from the wooden
staircase, and she pulled herself to her feet as she padded to the base of the
stairs. A woman who looked older than
she was placed her frail hands against the railing. Her sunken green eyes met the little girl’s,
and a shaky smile formed on her mouth.
“Lynn dear, how was your day?” Her legs shook as she stepped down, but she
pulled the child into a weak hug. Lynn
smiled widely, pulling the woman’s hand to lead her excitingly into the living
room.
“Oh, mama I learned a new song today! And little Jimmy—the one down the road, he
tore my music sheet into confetti.” The
woman’s smile grew sad, but Lynn continued, “But don’t worry, mama. I used the confetti to throw into the
air. Everyone was having so much fun
with the tiny bits of paper that they tore theirs up too.” Her tiny lungs exhaled, waiting for the
woman’s response.
Her bony legs moved to the couch, as she
sat down the couch sunk with her. She
patted the cushion next to her, “Lynn that was terrible what that boy did. He ruined your song and didn’t apologize for
it.”
“But he did-“
“How could you know he meant it? No one means anything now a day. They’re all just a bunch of liars.” The woman pulled her fingers lovingly through
Lynn’s curls.
Lynn chuckled as she poked the woman’s
ribs. Her mother frowned
thoughtfully. They sat there with Lynn’s
head in her lap as the woman stared at the ragged curtains. Finally her mother spoke.
“Sweetie, I spoke to the doctor’s
today.”
Lynn jumped up with joy, twirling off the
couch. Her mother’s lips didn’t twitch
though.
“They told me I’m getting worse. We are going to have to find you a foster
home soon.” Lynn tilted her head.
“But did they tell you when you’d be at
your worst?” As her mother shook her
head Lynn gripped her hand affectionately, “It’s okay then mama, because we
still have time.” Her mother dropped
her head, the room filled with echoed sobs.
But Lynn still gripped her hand tightly, “Mama.” She spoke firmly, “I know you’re dying. I know we won’t be together for much longer,
but with the time we do have… we can
make everything special.” Her eyes
glowed as her mother raised her head to look at Lynn. Her face was solemn. The wrinkles creased around her eyes and
mouth as she parted her cracked lips. Lynn’s mother took in her daughter. She furrowed her eyebrows as Lynn watched her
curiously. Usually when her mother
spoke, she couldn’t stop listing off everything negative. She expected her mother to say something
about there not being a point to do anything if she was about to die
anyways. But instead, her mother lifted
herself slowly off the couch, her legs shaking with all the effort. She shuffled down the hallway, her feet never
fully leaving the cold ground. Finally,
she reached the door. With all her
strength she pulled the door open. She
lifted the wreath carefully, allowing no more pines to break off. As she turned back into the house, her eyes
caught Lynn’s. Lynn watched her mother
move more than she had in the past six months.
She watched her mother limp into the kitchen, open the garbage bin and
place the wreath in it thoughtfully.
And then she smiled at Lynn. Ever so slightly.
Labels:
affection,
anger,
cancer,
child,
depression,
desperate,
disturbing,
dying,
endless,
familial love,
family,
kid,
kind,
kindness,
loss,
love,
mother,
optimism,
sad,
short story
Monday, 1 September 2014
It was April 27th of this year when I knew I had cancer.
I didn't go to the doctor, or feel a lump or anything. But the day was just so... different. Lethargic. Painful to think. As though my body couldn't focus on anything except the creeping agony that I couldn't feel yet.
And all I remember doing that day was blinking.
How every time I closed my eyes, it felt as though a lifetime surged through me, creating, well...me.
I didn't go to the doctor right away.
I scanned my body, did all the feeling tests. Which was weird, because I had never felt my body so much before. It was like disturbing sacred land. I was trying to comprehend why I was suddenly so panicked when no one in my family had cancer.
There was no reason to be frightened.
"I'm overreacting."
Was what I kept saying every time I didn't feel a lump.
"There's nothing wrong."
Was what I tried saying when I forced myself to breathe.
I never found anything.
But the doctors I went to did.
They found it in my ovaries.
They told me I wouldn't have blood-related kids.
They told me they were sorry.
They told me about the surgeries.
About the Chemo.
About the pain.
About the life altering chaos I was about to go through.
And when they walked out of the door, they muttered to each other, "She's barely twenty. Her loss must be difficult."
And all I thought was how dare they.
How dare they try to even comprehend the thought of being unable to carry something that was going to mean the world to them. Because that new life would be my world.
But in a moment, it was gone.
And I had never, ever in my entire life feel so ripped off.
So angry.
So betrayed.
I didn't pray that night.
I showered.
And cried.
And tumbled into my unkempt bed.
And I slept.
Chemo was expensive. I was in college, far away from family. They were supportive, sad.
But I felt anger.
Resentment to them.
Because they pitied me.
I felt like kicked dog on the side of an abandoned road.
And I wanted to scream at them.
That they didn't understand.
But they asked me what made me go seek help. I told them I didn't feel right.
"Was it a lump?" They would ask.
"Did it hurt when you weren't menstruating?" They would prod.
"Did something show you something was wrong?" They would pick.
And I gave them the same answer.
I felt different.
I went for a check up.
I got the news.
I wanted to die.
Not from Cancer. But that fucking thing can go kiss my ass. It should be easy as it's kissed my ovaries.
I wanted to die in a different way. By a car accident, heart attack, falling asleep and never waking up.
But now I'm going to die.
I caught it a while ago, so they can only slow the cancer. Not stop it.
"Three years max." The doctors said mournfully. As though I had already died.
I felt dead inside, so I guess that's the same thing.
I stopped doing things I enjoyed.
I used to ride my bike by the ocean every day. Twice.
I didn't have the strength to anymore.
I used to photograph people at their happiest.
I threw my camera against my bedroom wall.
I tore shelves down in my room.
I stabbed scissors into the wall.
I never went more than one day without crying.
I always cried until I fell asleep.
That was what I was like for a year.
It felt excruciating.
I lost my hair. I used to wear a wig because I felt embarrassed, but I stopped and started wearing a toque.
I missed my hair a lot. It wasn't very long, I was always called a lesbian for having a pixie cut.
But I loved it.
It was a subtle mouse brown that somehow managed to make me look like a rock star every day without doing anything to it.
I didn't have to shave my legs or anything anymore though.
That didn't suck.
It sucked because it reminded me that I was dying.
And my insides were screwed.
But I went to the doctor almost every day for two and a half years.
At this point, I was on edge daily.
Not angry, just anxious.
Like, I knew I was going to die any day now.
But I didn't.
In three years I was still alive.
And I felt so much hope well inside of me that I thought I was going to burst.
I think I did burst actually.
In tears.
The doctors didn't know what to say.
I still didn't have any hair, but I strutted with my bald head high.
I felt amazing.
I even fell in love.
He was amazing.
He knew what I was going through, but stayed with me.
He wanted us to get married, have children--
Which he knew we would have to adopt.
But he didn't care.
We were in love.
We travelled all around Europe.
We moved to Paris.
I became fluent in french.
We had an apartment.
We walked down the river ways.
We were in a book.
But, my book ended five years after I had been diagnosed with Cancer.
I was twenty four when I died holding my husband's hand.
I was twenty four when I had so much cancer in me, that I could have killed twenty other people.
I was twenty four when my little girl had to kiss her mother goodbye.
I was twenty four when my life ended.
I didn't go to the doctor, or feel a lump or anything. But the day was just so... different. Lethargic. Painful to think. As though my body couldn't focus on anything except the creeping agony that I couldn't feel yet.
And all I remember doing that day was blinking.
How every time I closed my eyes, it felt as though a lifetime surged through me, creating, well...me.
I didn't go to the doctor right away.
I scanned my body, did all the feeling tests. Which was weird, because I had never felt my body so much before. It was like disturbing sacred land. I was trying to comprehend why I was suddenly so panicked when no one in my family had cancer.
There was no reason to be frightened.
"I'm overreacting."
Was what I kept saying every time I didn't feel a lump.
"There's nothing wrong."
Was what I tried saying when I forced myself to breathe.
I never found anything.
But the doctors I went to did.
They found it in my ovaries.
They told me I wouldn't have blood-related kids.
They told me they were sorry.
They told me about the surgeries.
About the Chemo.
About the pain.
About the life altering chaos I was about to go through.
And when they walked out of the door, they muttered to each other, "She's barely twenty. Her loss must be difficult."
And all I thought was how dare they.
How dare they try to even comprehend the thought of being unable to carry something that was going to mean the world to them. Because that new life would be my world.
But in a moment, it was gone.
And I had never, ever in my entire life feel so ripped off.
So angry.
So betrayed.
I didn't pray that night.
I showered.
And cried.
And tumbled into my unkempt bed.
And I slept.
Chemo was expensive. I was in college, far away from family. They were supportive, sad.
But I felt anger.
Resentment to them.
Because they pitied me.
I felt like kicked dog on the side of an abandoned road.
And I wanted to scream at them.
That they didn't understand.
But they asked me what made me go seek help. I told them I didn't feel right.
"Was it a lump?" They would ask.
"Did it hurt when you weren't menstruating?" They would prod.
"Did something show you something was wrong?" They would pick.
And I gave them the same answer.
I felt different.
I went for a check up.
I got the news.
I wanted to die.
Not from Cancer. But that fucking thing can go kiss my ass. It should be easy as it's kissed my ovaries.
I wanted to die in a different way. By a car accident, heart attack, falling asleep and never waking up.
But now I'm going to die.
I caught it a while ago, so they can only slow the cancer. Not stop it.
"Three years max." The doctors said mournfully. As though I had already died.
I felt dead inside, so I guess that's the same thing.
I stopped doing things I enjoyed.
I used to ride my bike by the ocean every day. Twice.
I didn't have the strength to anymore.
I used to photograph people at their happiest.
I threw my camera against my bedroom wall.
I tore shelves down in my room.
I stabbed scissors into the wall.
I never went more than one day without crying.
I always cried until I fell asleep.
That was what I was like for a year.
It felt excruciating.
I lost my hair. I used to wear a wig because I felt embarrassed, but I stopped and started wearing a toque.
I missed my hair a lot. It wasn't very long, I was always called a lesbian for having a pixie cut.
But I loved it.
It was a subtle mouse brown that somehow managed to make me look like a rock star every day without doing anything to it.
I didn't have to shave my legs or anything anymore though.
That didn't suck.
It sucked because it reminded me that I was dying.
And my insides were screwed.
But I went to the doctor almost every day for two and a half years.
At this point, I was on edge daily.
Not angry, just anxious.
Like, I knew I was going to die any day now.
But I didn't.
In three years I was still alive.
And I felt so much hope well inside of me that I thought I was going to burst.
I think I did burst actually.
In tears.
The doctors didn't know what to say.
I still didn't have any hair, but I strutted with my bald head high.
I felt amazing.
I even fell in love.
He was amazing.
He knew what I was going through, but stayed with me.
He wanted us to get married, have children--
Which he knew we would have to adopt.
But he didn't care.
We were in love.
We travelled all around Europe.
We moved to Paris.
I became fluent in french.
We had an apartment.
We walked down the river ways.
We were in a book.
But, my book ended five years after I had been diagnosed with Cancer.
I was twenty four when I died holding my husband's hand.
I was twenty four when I had so much cancer in me, that I could have killed twenty other people.
I was twenty four when my little girl had to kiss her mother goodbye.
I was twenty four when my life ended.
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