One thing I noticed was how offended people are when you tell them you have a tumour. It is almost as though you have slapped their sensibilities and mortality in the face. You don't intend to offend people, actually I am sorry that they are offended. I am offended too come to think about it. Its very personal having someone tell you that this invasive bit of blob could actually determine the quality of your health and the duration of your life. Once you climb back up after being floored square on your back with your diagnosis you turn around to see the shadow of your life pack their suitcases and walk away. Your so called friends and certain family members - almost as if they have taken their collective cue, retreat into their own sheltered lives, as though you are contagious and limiting contact would mean they would not catch your disease. While you weren't looking, your life changed in so many ways. Ways that were obvious and ways that were not and still, to this very day continue to suprise you. You have a determination that is steel reinforced and with that comes an almighty intolerance for stupidity and all that is shallow and unjust. Your fractured life is like a family photo shattered across your soul with shards of glass falling everywhere, but you know, you will be ok. You know it because your soul says so, it is in every fibre of your being, whether you live, or whether you die. You are and you will be ok. So how do I feel about people? I think we are naked souls in which we wear our bodies like overcoats, exposed underneath, and when we give the occasional flash, sometimes we may be confronted by what is in front of us. So I may be offensive when I tell you I am a survivor of a rare tumour that even the doctors aren't quite sure what to do about. So you plan with dreams and ambitions in mind, but you take it one day at a time. Relationships are no longer defined by title or job descriptions, friends, family, colleagues are judged and embraced by the quality of their soul, their connection and their compassion. So I am walking away, from people, the way I knew them and I am walking into a quality of relationship that is so much better then I could have ever imagined but I am also letting go of the past and forgiving and letting go of people who let me go. I am moving on, most likely offending people with my survivorship, but that's ok - I know what they look like underneath their overcoats.
2 Comments
harker
Frequent Contributor
Thanks. I recognise this. You've put it well. I'm now seeing myself more like other people than ever before. This is a surprise to some as they assume I am now a different species or have some secret potion or knowledge because of my illness. But I see exactly the opposite; my illness has made me more like other peope, rather than something 'special'. I am now challenged by knowing that I probably did see myself as special before and now I am confronted with the overwhelming fact that I am not! Diagnosis saw to that quick smart, as we all know. However, what you have pointed out here, Teacher Mum, is that very change I feel in myself, but with a nice image to go with it. Clothing, nakedness, the real person underneath, the guises we all wear, etc, are things I'm thinking about after reading your piece. So, yes I am more like other people than ever before, because we are all naked underneath. Hmmm. H
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samex
Regular Contributor
I really like these images of how our illness makes us confont who we really are. I'm still working on that but lately I am starting to feel more positive about a number of aspects of my life. I even said "no" today at work because I was just too damned tired to do any more extra stuff! I beleive that I am less judgemental these days and accept poeple with all their flaws, particularly when you don't know what their story is. Who knows why that person is walking soooo slowly down the street and holding you up? I now try to take more time with people and take each day as it comes. This doesn't always work of course, but we can but try! Some interesting thoughts Teacher Mum, Samex
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