Monday, March 5, 2012

Still here

It has been a month since I've written anything here and I suspect you know why.  On February 6, my friend and fellow blogger, Rachel Cheetham Moro died of metastatic breast cancer.  What seemed impossible turned surreal later in the day when I learned another young woman and fellow blogger, Susan Niebur died as well.  I wouldn't say Susan was my close friend, but I did meet her last year in Washington DC and read her blog consistently.  So I guess really she was my friend.

Photo Credit
Among other thunderstruck thoughts over the last month, I have thought a lot about the nature of friendship, especially over the internet.  My bond with them, and many people who read this blog, is cancer.  We speak the same language.  We understand both the unique and the universal nature of each other's journey.  People we've never met might be our go-to support network for anger and grief that we don't feel comfortable discussing with the people we see every day.  In my history of friends, though, I'm not accustomed to this sort of compartmentalization.  I don't have one friend I talk about my kids with, one I talk about my writing with, one I talk about my jobs with.  So what to do with all this?

I was unable to attend Rachel's memorial service, but watched some of it on a live stream.  I felt a little weird about it -- voyeuristic -- but when I tuned in, I was touched and humbled to hear Gayle Sulik read some of my words and to include me in her speech to Rachel's family and friends.  How much I didn't know about Rachel pre-cancer was apparent as well.  Like all of us, she had a life before and even during cancer treatment that she didn't necessarily share. During the last six months of her life, Rachel became increasingly sick and disabled.  She had lung collapses and lost the use of her dominant left hand.  As she put it, her world was shrinking.  In know in those last few months, her virtual connection to us was essential.  But it wasn't everything.

I'm taking that cue from her in dealing with grief.  Losing Rachel, losing Susan, and losing Ashley feels awful. But I can't let it be everything.  I still see darkness and light in the days I have lived in the last month.  To paraphrase Jack Gilbert, to make our anger and sorrow the only measure of our attention is to do a disservice to the life itself; to this gift we have; to this magical chance we have to begin again.

I'm consciously turning my attention toward honoring these women, as the gloriously imperfect and wonderful human beings they were.  

12 comments:

Jody said...

Thank you for this beautiful post, Katie and for honoring the wit and wisdom of Rachel, Susan's gentle, unwavering intelligence..in this special way.
xxoo
jody

Christina said...

I loved their take on metastatic disease, and though I never met them, and rarely even commented on their blogs, I felt a special connection. I felt like someone out there understood how horrible my disease is, and that it isn't just mine. As much as cancer sucks, metastatic disease sucks more... because your support group shrinks all the time. Even worse, new people are always added.

Nancy's Point said...

Beautiful post. Simply beautiful.

The Accidental Amazon said...

A thoughtful, articulate post. Thank you, my friend.

Beth L. Gainer said...

This is a poignant, beautiful post, Katie, one that I really needed to read. Your last paragraphs have been healing to me. I have taken a long time to take pause on the blogsphere myself. And just recently I posted my first post in awhile because I was overwhelmed by other friends going through cancer.

BreastCancerSisterhood.com said...

I, too, felt a bit like a voyeur as I watched Rachel's memorial service, but it made me feel closer to all of the women I know online. You're right when you say our online friends are, for the most part, compartmentalized, and yet I get the most support from them.

Pinkunderbelly said...

Yes! I love how well you explain that we can talk about our most intimate cancer-related thoughts with our blog friends, who we've never met, more comfortably than with those closest to us. Because our blog friends understand in a way that no one else can. Beautiful post, and the paraphrasing is simply lovely.

Katie Ford Hall said...

They really need to idiot proof this comment publishing system. Publish and delete are too close to each other on my mobile devices. Anyway, apologies to Jackie Fox. Here is her comment.

Katie,
What a beautiful, beautiful post. I especially loved the Gilbert quote that to make anger and sorrow the only measure of our attention is to do a disservice to the life itself. So true but oh sometimes so hard.

Mary said...

Katie,
Such a grounded and compassionate reflection, Katie.

Sigh........

I support your choice to choose a conscious path to remember friends.....

The Jack Gilbert poem is something I turn to often; thank you for the reminder of "A Brief for the Defense."

Mary said...

and this is another poem that creates what the Buddhist teacher Charlotte Beck calls "A Bigger Container" for grief

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZwQJHx615eE&feature=share

Jan Baird Hasak said...

Welcome back to the blogosphere, Katie. Like many of us, you took a needed respite to regather your thoughts. I gain my biggest support from my fellow bloggers, no question. Every morning I look forward to seeing what these kind online friends are up to and how they are faring. You are well loved. XOXO

uvmer said...

Beautifully written Sherpa friend. With love for Rach and Susan, let the cowbells ring. xox