stage four ovaria/complex ptsd
note: this post was originally from our stillness, a now defunct blogging project.
Our odds have slightly improved. It's not pancreatic cancer, which is almost always terminal.
It's ovarian, which is less terminal. She has a tumor the size of a chicken’s egg resting in
her abdomen, and that cancer has metastasized into her lungs. Apparently, that doesn’t kill
someone as much as a tumor the size of an almond in the pancreas.
I don't know if I am
lucky. I don't want to think of anything that happens to me in terms of luck—if I did,
I'd convince myself that I've been experiencing unceasing misfortune, which would make me feel
more helpless than if I thought I was experiencing life. There’s nothing unjust about what’s
happening to me. It’s just anarchic.
My mom speaks with an almost defiant sense of
acceptance. “No one wants to have a disease,” she said. “But once you do, you have to
accept it. And face it. And fight it.” She’s been putting my hand in a death grip to show me
that she still has her strength. And then, she would let go of my hand to take a small bite of a piece
of chocolate that I’d been watching her work on since the week prior.
I started going to
therapy to begin coping with her loss, but I learned that I was becoming her instead. My therapist
implied that I was exhibiting trauma-born behavior that I likely picked up from my parents.
Psychodynamic therapy.
I don’t want to talk about how she emotionally abused me. I want to
talk about how she’s the only person in my family who knows that I am struggling to find work
because she’s been the only person in my family who has shown me patience and forgiveness with my
career. I want to talk about how she only speaks English now because no one in the hospital knows
Cantonese. I want to talk about how she wants to cut down the mandarin tree she planted for me when I
was a kid because no one’s been eating the mandarins since I moved out and she’s too weak to
care for her garden now. I want to talk about how hospital nurses have probably never heard someone beg
so pathetically to keep a tree alive.
I’ve been driving back home sobbing these nights. One
night while struggling to find parking in my neighborhood, I happened upon a man leaving his spot. I
thanked him as he left, and with a raised hand, he said,
“You got lucky.”