Even if I Am

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Even if I Am Page 20

by Chasity Glass


  The room’s energy shifted as she asked general health questions. You were chatty and flirty, your parents beaming. All of us crowding the tiny exam room. It now seemed bigger with her in it. She had that way about her. She made us feel lighter and thoughtful, we concentrated on her every word. We were impressed with her thorough review of your surgery and treatment. She found discrepancies in the notes and formed opinions about previous treatment regimens. Things we needed to hear to confirm our perspectives of previously crappy care. She checked your blood pressure, heartbeat, temperature, made notes then asked to see the swollen lymph node. It had grown from the size of a pea to a tomato in only three weeks’ time. You could see it when she moved your gown to the side; you no longer had to feel for it.

  “When did it get so big?” Your mother whispered to me.

  With a blink of an eye Dr. Heinz Lenz came in, much like that of the animated Tasmanian Devil. In a flurry of wind and handshakes he introduced himself. He went right up to you. Grabbed your knees and looked you directly in the eyes. Close. A close talker. You shifted, awkwardly inching back.

  “Let’s do this. Let’s beat this cancer,” he said.

  He had all of us on our feet, cheering. Your stepfather beaming with relief.

  …

  Friday, April 14

  it gets better

  enough bad news.

  it’s time for some good.

  granted, it has to be looked at carefully,

  like those weird images they used to sell on campus,

  where if you stare at it long enough, or from the right angle

  you see a hidden image of the space shuttle or something…

  right.

  so here it is: superman is alive.

  he is living and breathing and living in los angeles.

  admittedly, he does come in the odd package

  of an overly excited,

  relatively short, middle-aged german oncologist

  at USC’s norris cancer treatment center.

  his name is dr. heinz lenz, and he is my hero.

  going into the appointment, i felt a sense of dread.

  i was ready to be underwhelmed by someone like “apathy,”

  and given some half-hearted experimental trial

  with a shrug of the shoulders and a pat on the back.

  instead, i was given hope.

  and it was a welcome change.

  he was intense.

  he was passionate.

  he was almost impossible to keep up with,

  and i think he’s completely fucking nuts.

  i’m in.

  i go back to USC next week for some tests

  and will begin treatments shortly thereafter.

  superman, let’s fly.

  posted by Anthony Glass at 11:22 p.m.

  chapter forty

  theme song from the x-files

  Most of my co-patient routine involved hospital reception areas. Blood Draw was the worst wait. Small and crammed, with a window and a woman peering through, staring, kinda like the nurse’s station in high school. I use to skip class faking sick and lie on the cot until the period was over. I figured that’s what you did after the nurse called your name and you’d disappear behind a door. Jealous you got to skip third-period Blood Draw.

  I read one of the dozen brochures lined against the reception wall. Today’s glossy choice: Loving Someone with Advanced Cancer. A brochure condensed into a fifteen-minute skim-through. You appeared just as I turned the last page. You had a cotton ball taped to your arm and a piece of paper complete with numbers and markers and counts that only Superman could decode.

  Sipping the last sludgy inch of the hospital coffee gave me the kick I needed as we headed to the Outpatient Clinic and the last stop of our day. This part of the building wasn’t much different from the rest. It still had the uniform gray-, green-, and tan-striped carpet, same rows of chairs covered in patterned cloth. The same plants and lamps and smell of Purell mixed with piss, bleach and sickness, creating the usual hospital odor that stuck to your clothes and in your hair. Yet, this side of the hospital was slightly different. It was open. There were couches that matched the chairs. Gossip magazines and trades, news, sports, even novels to read. Meals were eaten in these chairs. I snacked on vending machine treats. The lobby was large and triangle shaped. The tip was the hallway to Superman and his staff. One side of the triangle was a window overlooking construction of a new cancer research center. There was fresh coffee and tea in another corner, and a flat screen featuring daytime television in the other. We’d spend hours in this room waiting, or at least what felt like hours. We’d sit. And sit. And sit. I’d read first chapters or finish books. I’d stretch out on the couch, head in your lap and nap. We’d take turns napping. The lobby could easily seat fifty. In the lobby, women snuggled close to their spouses for comfort, children played on the floor as mother and father talked seriously. A girl about twenty seemed to have the same routine we did, sat in her wheelchair, nodding a hello for the third time that day. Whole stories played out on the faces of each patient, family member, and friend. I wanted to hear their stories, but I kept to myself. You did, too.

  “Anthony Glass.”

  Taline would call a name to the reception crowd. The room went silent as we all watched the patient stand, then walk to the tip of the triangle. Once beyond the doors, activity continued. We all knew what happened behind those doors. You’d get next week’s chemo schedule and the test results from your last scan.

  She would greet you, discuss the week’s progress, new ailments, problems. She’d poke and prod, listen and light ears, nose, mouth. After a few minutes Superman would fly in, his hopefully optimistic, charismatic self with such energy and excitement that he had us loving him wholeheartedly. Much like an uncle, the kind who kept a clutter of dusty sports memorabilia on his shelves. Only Superman’s weren’t dusty or sporty; they were plastic organs.

  With Superman and his staff we knew we had the best care possible. We couldn’t lose. “This new chemo has a foolish side effect. Acne. But it’s good!” he declared jovially, in his thick German accent. “Statistics show if you are getting pimples it’s working!”

  …

  Sunday, May 7

  31 going on 13

  do you remember your first pimple?

  i do.

  i had just started seventh grade,

  my first year of junior high school,

  and along with my newly acquired braces,

  glasses, and lack of self-esteem

  came my very first pimple.

  like many symptoms of puberty,

  it comes with a hidden sense of pride

  in feeling like you’re growing up,

  and now experiencing things you’ve

  only heard about through others.

  however, that sense of pride is usually

  eclipsed within seconds by the greater concern of:

  “okay… so what the fuck am i going to do

  about this thing on my face?”

  thirty-one years of age now.

  older. wiser. stronger.

  and over the last five months of chemo,

  i’ve experienced some unpleasant side effects:

  diarrhea, nausea, farts, fatigue, penile enlargement…

  (yeah, okay. fine…)

  but on monday, i started a new type of chemo (erbitux)

  which brings a new, and somewhat nostalgic side effect

  back into the fold: acne.

  fun, right?

  but not only that, the oncologists want me to break out.

  if my body exhibits a strong reaction of acne,

  then it means that i’m responding to the erbitux

  and that the chemo is actually doing its job

  of turning me back into a thirteen year old…

  hooray.

  so here we are,

  almost a week into it,

  and my forehead looks like it’s

  slowly
morphing into that of a klingon.

  and i’m happy.

  sort of.

  except now, again, i have to wonder,

  “what the fuck am i going to do

  about this shit all over my face…”

  Posted by Anthony Glass 7:38 a.m.

  …

  Waiting for the elevator to open, Taline passed hurrying to her next appointment. She smiled at us, then suddenly stopped and turned around. “Anthony?”

  “Hi, Taline. How are you?”

  “How long has your skin looked like this?” She didn’t have time for hello.

  “A few days now. Exciting right? Who knew getting zits could be this exciting.” We both smiled.

  “Where are you headed now?”

  “We just got done with Blood Draw. Time for chemo.”

  “I think you need to see the doctor first. He needs to examine your skin.”

  We were both beaming, proud that the doctor would want to see the progress of your skin. You reached for my hand.

  “Really? We’re not scheduled to see — ”

  Her response interrupts, “Anthony, whenever your symptoms are this severe, you need to call us.” The entire sentence full of impatience and efficiency. She looked worried.

  I stayed composed, though my heart stumbled.

  …

  Wednesday, May 17

  under my skin

  mmmkay…

  hmmm.

  yes, i see.

  so, perhaps “acne” was a bit of an understatement.

  my face, my neck, my ears, my chest, my back

  have been blanketed with a lovely corvette red

  rash-like coating and “countless” tiny fucking pimples.

  no, junior high was never quite like this.

  let’s… yes, let’s say its a little more like

  an episode of the x-files. a bad episode.

  after a week of trying every over-the-counter

  cream/lotion/elixir/salve/bathtreatment/magicalspell

  that we could come up with, chas and i found ourselves

  back on the oncologist’s office on monday

  ready to get another dose of erbitux.

  taline, the nurse practitioner for my oncologist

  passed me in the hallway, took one long look,

  smiled, and said “you’re not getting chemo today.”

  whisked into the crazy german’s office,

  he and she both took turns marveling at the extent

  of my freakish skin, especially the area on my back

  where i had been treated with radiation,

  and consequently had no rash or acne.

  “fascinating!” he shouted through his thick accent.

  this is interesting stuff.

  seems they might write something up about it.

  publish it.

  funny how things turn out, right?

  we’ve gone from junior high

  to x-files

  to science experiment.

  the good news is i got a prescription

  for some antibiotics and pimple cream.

  it’s been two days, and i think i can notice improvement…

  or maybe that’s just more side effects.

  posted by Anthony Glass at 1:43 p.m.

  …

  “Why are you laughing?”

  “To think, we were actually celebrating these zits.”

  I didn’t want to tell you I had a memory of good things before us — that’s what made me laugh. About a time when I drank Kool-Aid mixed with whiskey and smoked weed rolled with pieces of brown paper bag. Even in it’s teen complications, and erratic hormones, I got zits, but life was good. It’s not that life wasn’t good now; that’s not what I’m saying. Life was just simpler then. When I got a pimple I applied cheap Clearasil in hopes that it would be gone before Friday’s sweetheart dance. I certainly never celebrated a zit. This was different. Babe, your pimples weren’t pimples. They were cures. They were miracles working. They were little mountains of more time given. We were celebrating a zit as if it were an amazing part of our lives. I applied the prescribed cream, your skin swollen from the breakouts, bumps upon bumps, tender to the touch. They covered every inch of your back, your face, shoulders, arms, even elbows. Your skin was getting worse and worse by the day. Really? Hooray for this? I applied cream to a million red bumps, lovingly. Like it was suntan lotion. I didn’t miss a spot. Your whole skin texture was changing into bubbly, deep, toxic acne. I tried to Zen out, back to high school, back to Kool-Aid and whiskey and weed.

  “Okay, I think I got it all.” I kissed your lips, the only spots without bumps. “I’m gonna be late for work.”

  …

  “I miss you already.”

  “I’m still in the driveway.”

  “It’s hard to see you go, beautiful, beautiful girl.”

  “I’ll see you soon.”

  “I’m so happy we moved in together.”

  “Me too. Now go unpack the boxes in the kitchen.”

  “Fine. I love you.”

  “I love you more.”

  chapter forty-one

  everything’s not lost

  When a relationship is new, you stand together at the edge of heartbreak, not knowing where it is going, unsure of whether or not you really fit together, feeling enraptured one moment and terrified the next. Although you feel like throwing up all the time, you also feel pretty alive. It’s exhilarating and also completely nerve-wracking. The possibility of imminent heartbreak really keeps you on your toes.

  I understood every word Susan Piver wrote, an instant bond with a self-help book. You’d think I was getting all airy-fairy on you. Next I’d start using crystals and burning incense and chanting, but it was the next paragraph that got me believing:

  The more deeply you love, the more closely you feel the possibility of loss. It’s really true that loving something or someone dearly is the most vulnerable position you can ever find yourself in. On one hand, you are filled with indescribable joy and gratitude for such incredible good fortune. On the other hand, you could lose it. This is totally true. And P.S. you will, whether by falling out of love, finding a new love, or, of course, by death.

  She then writes of her love for her husband and considers that one day one of them will die first, leaving the other behind. Wait, what? Why did I feel the need to read this stupid book again? Why did I think The Wisdom of a Broken Heart would be a good read? I am retarded. Clearly. And into self-torture.

  The love you so painstakingly searched for will eventually disappear. No matter how carefully and beautifully you build your castle together, one day it will simply wash out to sea.

  Good God, that’s depressing. Wash out to sea? So in other words, Snow White was wrong? There’s no forever, no wishing well, no song break. I knew exactly what the author meant by standing on the edge of heartbreak. She didn’t believe in words like forever or always or evermore. She didn’t sing songs of someday. She wasn’t a Disney princess. I wonder if her husband had had cancer.

  From: [email protected]

  To: [email protected]

  Sent: Thursday, May 18, 6:15 p.m.

  Subject: yum

  ate a pb&j, letting it settle before taking a bath.

  bath.

  yum.

  like those.

  especially now, looking out the window of our backyard,

  sitting in the peace of the house we share,

  fighting this insane battle of health, life, care…

  so much has changed.

  i smile.

  i love you so goddamn much.

  for where we are, for how far we have come.

  for how we never gave up on each other,

  for how we somehow made it to this place.

  i love you for it, i love you despite it,

  i love you with it, and without it.

  smile.

  smile at all of it.

  and then smile again knowing
r />   i am with you. in every way.

  "Everything's Not Lost"

  Coldplay

  From: [email protected]

  To: [email protected]

  Sent: Thursday, May 18, 6:39 p.m.

  Subject: Re: yum

  thank you…

  for reminding me just how sweet you can be.

  just how beautiful and moving your e-mails are.

  and just how lucky I am.

  I love you.

  healthy you.

  sick you.

  beautiful you.

  and nothing, even cancer

  will change that.

  …

  I didn’t know your parents then. We were merely strangers under stress, trying to care for a shared loved one. I understand that stress now, but I didn’t then. I kept thinking; if your parents knew what you were going through, why wouldn’t they be here more? It wasn’t as if we were keeping it a secret, your health. So, when your stepfather called and started telling me about his busy schedule of summer cello playing and church events, I was irked. Maybe even rude when he then told me about the fine lawyer he was chatting with in Los Angeles who was ready to review our failure to diagnose case.

  “The lawyer needs the names of the doctors who Anthony has seen to check for conflicts of interest. He also needs copies of Anthony’s health plan contract to see what Anthony’s reasonable entitlements are. Chas, can you get me this information, and I’ll e-mail it to him?”

  Honestly, Anthony, I had this superficial hostility toward them. I know now that this happens in this kind of situation. But, I needed them then. Not when it was convenient in their schedule to visit, but every day — and you needed them. I should have just said it: “I need your help.” But, I didn’t know how. So instead I said, “Anthony isn’t feeling great these days. I can’t tell if he’s discouraged or fatigued. It’s been hard… I think he needs an outsider to talk to. Maybe a therapist. I will try to stay in touch more. Anthony is having a tough time keeping up with all the phone calls. Times are tough, but Anthony seems to be strong and continues to fight best he can.”

 

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