Book Read Free

Even if I Am

Page 15

by Chasity Glass


  …

  I never liked needles or hospitals, and especially not needles at hospitals. I don’t even like watching Gladys get a shot from the vet; the technician grabs her leash, and I stay in the waiting room, feeling like a bad mother. With you, I did not have the luxury of being squeamish. The quality of love and reciprocity changed everything. I could watch them connect and disconnect the intravenous chemo. I could watch the needles pierce your skin, no problem. I saw it. I didn’t turn. I didn’t faint. I could even pull the sticky bandages off your hairy arm. My mom once told me that “God doesn’t give you anything you can’t handle.” I don’t know what God has to do with this, but it made me feel better when I pulled off your Band Aids and kissed your hurts.

  …

  You nicknamed him Dr. Apathy. His smile was detached. His hair was nonchalant, even his clothes were drab. I will grant that administering chemo to patients five days a week is not a job in which to invest much emotion, but every visit made us feel like a paycheck, not a patient. He even rescheduled one of your treatments to attend his daughter’s soccer game. His patients were fighting for their lives, and he was more concerned about missing a soccer game? Crook.

  His waiting room was so full that he set up your chemo in his office and plopped you on his couch. Babe, I still don’t know how you could sit in the waiting room and thumb through the books filling the shelves, American Cancer Society: Guide to Cancer Drugs, Second Edition; Everyone’s Guide to Cancer Therapy; The Cancer Book; Informed Decisions. I merely stared at the pictures of Dr. Apathy with his family vacationing, celebrating holidays, marking key moments of a healthy family. Enough photos to witness two beautiful daughters mature from babies, to high school, to college. The pictures annoyed me. Can you believe he had the nerve to answer his phone and make dinner plans with his wife? In front of us?

  Whether we liked him or not, we didn’t have a choice. He was your HMO. I couldn’t help but laugh at the ridiculousness of the whole damn thing.

  …

  “Let’s run away for your birthday,” I said. I wanted to be snuggling and asking you in person, not over the phone.

  “No, that’s okay. I was thinking of just going to dinner, inviting some friends. Plus, we have chemo on Tuesday.”

  “It’s not a question,” I said. “The boat leaves at ten a.m. and it’s a hour-long ride. We both have Monday off, so it’ll be a three-day weekend. I already packed snacks and your suitcase…”

  “Really, go away for my birthday? Where are we going?”

  “Catalina is the farthest I could get us out of the country…”

  Your laugh was loud. “I fucking love you.”

  “I love you more. Happy Birthday, baby.”

  Anthony and me in Catalina on his 31st birthday.

  Tuesday, January 24

  it is a happy birfday

  sitting down to write.

  it’s cold.

  i’m tired.

  not ideal conditions.

  my memory walks to the fridge and opens a beer.

  a place writers have found inspiration since writing began.

  but these are not those times.

  so instead, i walk to the stove and boil water.

  pour a cup of green tea.

  and sit down again.

  it was my birthday yesterday.

  31 years old.

  i’m comfortable with my age.

  confident with my life.

  but let’s be honest, not a sexy number.

  it’s odd, unbalanced, sharing none of the glory

  that it’s younger brother “21” wields.

  no, not sexy at all.

  my last few birthdays have been celebrated

  by traveling someplace new, and (usually) someplace far.

  however, as i’ve burned through all my vacation/sick days

  for what may be the next five years, this year would be different.

  chas and i continued my fledgling tradition

  by taking a ferry from long beach harbor

  to catalina island (all of one whole hour away).

  officially, we stepped off the mainland and therefore

  traveled “overseas” to what honestly feels like a faraway land.

  golf carts are the dominant mode of transportation.

  buffalo roam in force.

  old people are everywhere.

  (a great place for feeling young.)

  biggest changes i’ve made now that i’m 31:

  new e-mail address. (a whole different story.)

  use cnn.com for my news/info gathering. why?

  york did it, so it must be mature.

  and beer is now tea. (see above.)

  other than that, things are still very much the same.

  and it is a happy birthday.

  posted by Anthony Glass at 9:08 p.m.

  From: anthonyglass@gmail.com

  To: friends

  Sent: Monday, January 25, 9:25 p.m.

  Subject: true story

  1996.

  an impressionable young film student

  saunters across the campus of san diego state,

  and into the campus computer lab

  to start an “e-mail account.”

  user ID? hmmm…

  i could use my name?

  no way, too unoriginal.

  i’m a FILM student! be creative!

  well, i just saw this great french film: le samorai.

  it’s different…

  mysterious…

  whatever.

  i’ll come up with something better tomorrow.

  ten years later.

  my girlfriend and i watch the recently issued dvd release

  of the 1967 jean-pierre melville french gangster classic.

  she falls asleep in the first act.

  the plot twist makes no sense.

  credits roll.

  i am confused.

  it dawns on me that for ten years i have carried the moniker

  of a film that i don’t really understand,

  and only marginally enjoy.

  my girlfriend laughs.

  i’ve been planning on starting a gmail account for some time,

  and well, frankly, this seems like the perfect time.

  user ID?

  anthonyglass@gmail.com.

  write me anytime.

  p.s. i have the dvd if anyone wants to borrow it and explain the end to me.

  …

  “Do you feel that?” you asked.

  I placed my fingers under yours to examine your neck. “Where?”

  “Right here,” guiding my fingertips to the exact spot.

  “Move your fingers. Right there?”

  “Yeah?” I could feel the lump.

  “It’s hard. Like a little pea. What is it?”

  “It’s probably a swollen lymph node,” I said in my best nurse voice. “Do you feel okay?”

  “I feel a little tired, but not sick or anything.”

  “Do you think it’s a side effect from your chemo? Is it sore?”

  “Not really. We should tell Dr. Apathy on Tuesday.”

  “It’s probably nothing, but yeah let’s definitely tell him.”

  …

  Sunday, February 5

  sparks

  fuckin’ hell.

  i should be writing more often than this.

  it’s a fight.

  but sundays are a day of surrender.

  and sunday night, even more so.

  this week was an ordinary week.

  a good week.

  full of work, chas, friends, stuff,

  exercise. fuckin’ shit. raquetball?

  it is quite a moment at 30 years old

  (oh shit, 31 years old),

  to admit to yourself you’ve never been

  as out of shape in your life as you are now.

  fuckin’ hell.

  stretch.

  remember.

  body.

  strength.

/>   okay, so it’s superbowl sunday.

  10 p.m.

  the smoky aftermath is blowing by.

  jay and i sold our souls to costco, home depot, and albertson’s

  so that we could pull a barbecue out of our arse…

  and it was fucking worth it.

  completely.

  steaks. ahi. skewers. beer n’ guacamole. what was forgotten?

  it was a great group of people to balance the game,

  the food, and the mutherfucking commercials…

  commercials.

  when does one pee?

  miss the game or miss the culture?

  guilty confession #1:

  completely sold on the promos during the game,

  ended up watching “grey’s anatomy” after the game.

  tried to find the michael stipe and coldplay cover

  of “in the sun”

  they used in the episode — too bad. too new.

  listened to joseph arthur as we cleaned up the house.

  listening to coldplay now.

  feels like talking to an old friend.

  strange how that changes.

  what else?

  chemo continues.

  lymph nodes swell.

  yecht!

  posted by Anthony Glass at 9:43 p.m.

  …

  “Your eyes are absolutely beautiful.”

  “Ahh, shucks.” I blinked my eyelashes rapidly. You could still get me to blush.

  “So, Valentine’s Day. I kinda like the idea of wearing matching jumpsuits and going to the Olive Garden.”

  “Really?” I was surprised but absolutely loving the ridiculousness of it.

  “It’s so cheeseball it just might be perfect for us.” You loved it, too, but started offering more concrete plans. “Otherwise we could go to a fancy restaurant on the Westside and then maybe a movie.”

  “Lame,” I declared. You smiled at me.

  “Stay in bed and snugglespoonkisskissspoon?”

  I snorted when I laughed. “Hmmm. Not a bad idea, but we can add that to the jumpsuit plan?”

  “Let’s see… We could get in the truck, drive up the coast, and have a picnic in the Cruiser?”

  “That sounds beautiful, but let’s do that the day after.” I settled into the overstuffed couch, pulled the quilt over both our laps, and savored the moment.

  “Ooor, we could stay in the gray zone and not celebrate?”

  “No way!” I hit you with a pillow. “We have to celebrate. It’s our year anniversary.”

  “Whatever we decide to do,” you said, pulling me closer with the blanket, “I’m glad we are doing it together.”

  “Okay. Jumpsuits and Olive Garden. Sounds like we need to go shopping.”

  “Get over here and cuddle me.”

  From: stepfather

  To: anthonyglass@gmail.com

  To: chasityrae@gmail.com

  Sent: Tuesday, February 14, 11:50 a.m.

  Subject: Happy Valentine

  Hi, lovebirds. I hope you have a great Valentine’s Day. Your mother and I will have a quiet dinner at home, but we have been out a lot and it will feel good to have quiet time together. We are also looking forward to our week of meetings and skiing in Colorado. We have both been going in emergency gear for several weeks, and the sunshine and fresh air will be wonderful.

  We think of you often, and you are in our prayers every evening as we start dinner. My dream is that spring and then summer will come, your chemo will be over, and you both can join us in Maine for some time by the lake: swimming, sailing, water skiing, paddling the new kayaks, dinners on the deck, watching sunsets, fires some mornings to take off the chill, long walks, quiet conversation. Sounds pretty good, doesn’t it. Consider it a date. Meanwhile, here’s another tele-hug.

  We love you. I love you.

  Dad

  It’s just like the present to show up on Valentine’s Day. I want to write about Valentine’s Day, I do. I want to describe our matching red jumpsuits or the three-hour line at the Olive Garden. I want to write about the unlimited soup and salad, the overworked waitress, the coffee’s bitter aftertaste. I want to write that we never stopped kissing, never stopped laughing, never stop loving. Instead I suffer waves of overwhelming emotion that paralyze my ability to select words and simply tell the story, caught in the moment of Valentine’s Day. The faulty camera of my mind took a single picture of that scene, that day. It has become frozen within me. Stuck in that photograph, of me listening to a message you left on my voicemail, dressed in a red jumpsuit. Yet the news always comes unexpectedly, even when you’re waiting for it. Fear that eats away at your bones, screaming every step just to stay here in the present and enjoy Valentine’s Day. There was a pain in my heart and it was with me all day. I pressed save, and then listened to the message again before calling you back.

  chapter thirty-four

  don’t let it bring you down

  My first thought after we hugged in the stairwell was, “We fit together perfectly.” And, when I lay beside you for the first time, I told you that.

  I long to kidnap our first moments and bury them in the backyard, next to our veggie rainbow, just like we planned. I dreamt of capturing the scent of my birthday in a jar: the moon fell, my skin sleepy. Your hand went up my pajamas for the first time and unbuttoned me from the inside out. My stomach jumped at the touch of your cool fingers pressing my shoulders to lie back, my heart racing as you guided my body onto the bed. I remember wishing I had put away the unfolded laundry piled beneath us. Do you remember? How we couldn’t sleep that night? How your heart was beating so hard I didn’t have to be close to feel it? I remember our hands clenching tighter. Our bodies pressed closer and our breath became hotter. How exciting it was to fall in love with you, babe.

  I wished on the stars to take us away, anywhere, so I could live in that moment forever. It was all so easy then. Is this what happens to grownups? Are all of these moments just preparation for the reality of life and death, love and loss, hope and regret, cure and cancer? I wanted to go back to Shuggie Otis and Bette and Joan and noteworthy birthdays and trips to Mexico and stairwell rendezvous.

  From: anthonyglass@gmail.com

  To: chasityrae@gmail.com

  Sent: Thursday, February 16, 8:16 p.m.

  Subject: literal

  i’ve been looking through my music,

  trying to find something to send.

  forgive me if this is a smidge literal.

  my insides are fire. burning. exploding.

  my skin is cold, ice. trying to compensate.

  trying to find balance.

  breathing.

  this is fucking hard.

  and i haven’t even heard yet…

  when i was talking to my mom yesterday,

  i told her that i know it’s going to be a fight,

  it’s just a matter of knowing what i’m up against.

  i’m going to do this.

  if it burns my hair,

  if it has to come out my mouth, my ass,

  it’s coming out.

  i’m going to kick this thing in the fucking balls.

  hard.

  i was thinking recently about all the cheesy television dramas

  when somebody is in the hospital, on the verge of dying.

  the doctor always says to the family/friend/wife

  “he’s going to make it. he’s a fighter.”

  it crossed my mind, because i wondered

  if that was my fate, what would they say about me?

  “uh… he pussed out. sorry.”

  but right now, thinking about it.

  there’s no way.

  no fucking way.

  i’m fighting.

  whoever it’s with.

  "Don't Let It Bring You Down"

  Annie Lennox

  From: chasityrae@gmail.com

  To: anthonyglass@gmail.com

  Sent: Thursday, February 16, 8:32 p.m.

  Subject: Re: l
iteral

  you are gonna kick its ass

  double elbows and throw down…

  and it’s gonna run out of your body

  it’ll be so scared of your strength.

  I know this.

  I believe this.

  and sure there will be a fight,

  there will be moments

  it fights back,

  moments it hurts,

  and moments it intimidates

  and discourages any strength you have…

  but you will come back stronger.

  you might have to listen to “eye of the tiger”

  to muster the strength.

  but you will come back to fight,

  because there is NO stronger person than you!

  BRING IT ON!

  and while you watch those cheesy television dramas

  when somebody is in the hospital, on the verge of dying,

  and the doctor says to the family/friend/wife,

  “he’s going to make it, he’s a fighter,”

  our response will be…

  of course he’s gonna make it!

  …

  It wasn’t even three months since we set off on our idealistic trip into a cancer-free relationship around your troubled and transitioning body. Now, my heart was in tatters — stretched to bloated, then diminished and re-inflated so many times that it physically hurt.

  I didn’t think cancer would come back. I thought this year would be different. Perplexed and fearful, I tried to consider this my force-fed growth period. My steep learning curve to weathered maturity. It would only make our love stronger in the end. My mom told me once, “God never gives you anything you can’t…”

  Who am I kidding? Fuck. Cancer, again?

  From: anthonyglass@gmail.com

  To: chasityrae@gmail.com

  Sent: Friday, February 17, 1:10 p.m.

  Subject: Re: literal

  here’s the new stuff:

  avastin and cpt-11

  starting my quest for info.

  i love you.

  From: chasityrae@gmail.com

  To: anthonyglass@gmail.com

  Sent: Friday, February 17, 3:22 p.m.

  Subject: Re: literal

  sounds like quite the quest.

  try to take some time to relax, too.

  take nap.

  go for a walk.

  clear your head.

  if you need anything, call.

  I love you more.

  There’s a non-profit organization called the F*?! Cancer Foundation. They have these great t-shirts and charity dinners and a blog. The website is a bit too punk rock for my liking, but I was feeling angry. I think I passed the denial phase and moved straight into anger. I didn’t even know what the next phase of grief was, but I knew already, it was gonna suck. I read another cancer patient’s personal website. The empathy I felt for the stranger’s confusion and pain became the basis of an immediate bond. I half-considered reaching out, for your sake, or maybe mine — to write her a letter confirming her sentiments. There is also a jewelry designer named Susan who created these beautiful sterling silver bracelets that read “fuck cancer.” I kind of want one. They’re pretty, elegant even.

 

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