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Sunday, April 11, 2021

Transition

Who would have thought that transitioning back to home after a long hospital stay would be an adventure? Not me. I figured it would be like any other time I had spent away from home, a natural, instinctual rhythm. Nah. Something changes in your brain when you experience "living" in a hospital. Day in and out of traversing strangers that seem to multiply or change "shifts" just when you develop a pattern causes a structuring level in your brain kind of like being a stocker in a grocery store. You are putting the same product up but different faces surround you tugging at your attention to answer questions, meet demands, or simply flutter around you poking at your private space. Private space. That's a good one. I can't tell you how many people have now seen me naked. Door knocking or checking before entering is not a thing. I was reminded as I was consulting with a supervising nurse that my concerns were legitimate as I relayed how people just barged in or duties were left undone. She stated matter of fact that our room was now our home and that anyone entering should be as respectful as if they were in my home. They should pick up after themselves, clean up the toilet area and speak with respect as they addressed us. Don't get me wrong, most of the people did most of these things at least some of the time, but some made our stay incredibly challenging. I say this to help my brain process the quirky adaption that is happening today as I am in my  6th day of home experience. The first day, I woke in my own bed, got up to go to my own bathroom and froze midway, fear piercing my heart because I didn't know where my mask was. In the hospital, I only went without the mask when I slept or showered. It was surreal and a bit terrifying to get up and walk to the bathroom without my face being covered. Of course, I joked about this later but the feelings like this are daily. Getting up to take care of me is not my main focus. I wake to clean every surface before my Bear wakes and touches anything. I need to make sure his area is ready for his day to begin. Alarms are going off regularly to ensure that meds are taken on time, and food gets administered to aid in the healing that miraculously is happening so much faster without the tubes, IV trolley, or "sterile" smelling environment. I started to depend on these strangers for the much needed direction and care, thinking that they knew best and the hospital was the best place for my love to heal. That is partly true. These experts were giving the care that only they knew how to administer and the hospital setting was necessary for a time to get the scaffolding in place for when we left the nest. It really does feel like taking a dive out of a nest. You doubt that you will know what to do, or how to do it correctly. You even worry that the house you feel the safest will be a danger. Then you come home and you watch your patient start to flourish. They are sleeping through the night, eating food that comforts, and feeling the souls of the family they have missed wrapping them in the spirit that only home can offer. They are back in fertile soil, and their bodies recognize where they grow best. My mind has often wondered if this is what it will be like when we pass through the veil and return to our heavenly home. Will I fall into the over stuffed couches and feel my shoulders release the burdens from my long stay away? Will I smell the familiar scents of foods I love and surroundings that give me peace? Will my recognition of those beautiful souls I've been waiting to embrace clear my troubled mind and fill my heart with the much needed love and support? I say yes. I know the answer is yes. I'm grateful that Josh and I have created a home that emits the love that our family needs and thrives off. I love that people who cross our threshold tell us they feel an inviting and warm spirit in our home. We do too. I'm confident this will be what I feel when I return to my maker. This warm invitation will be the same. Going home to the soft place I can land, the protection from the world, the peace of love and wholeness. No fear, no anxiety just the place I know. The place I flourish. The heaven I call home. 

Monday, March 1, 2021

Both of me

  She looked straight in my eyes with tears pooling. My words were clear but unaffected. "Why?" "What is troubling your heart and mind that you must flush those emotions through tears and pain?" "What fears lurk behind the strong teeth you bare?" "Where did you go?" "Who are you?"  I peered in the mirror, searching for the woman I know, desperate to recognize the face I can't place. There are two voices in my head. One is clear and controlled. She always sees through the chaos to lead us to the safe path. She knows just what to say and how to calm our mind and heart. She is the lion, the leader, the fierce voice that brings the much needed perspective. She is power. The other is tender and kind. It is she who caresses and holds. She feels and sometimes that pierces us deep. She cries. Oh how she cries and racks the frame we abide. She makes the human in us. She keeps us soft enough to see others and love them, sometimes too deeply. She has been crying and crying, so I ask. Where are you? What are you doing? WHY ARE YOU CRYING????? Calm steps in and grabs the insides. What are you afraid of? He is here. He will always be here. He is not going anywhere. There is enough around you. There are so many around you giving you all the love and support you need. He is tired. He is sick, but that won't last. PULL YOURSELF TOGETHER!!!! You are going to make it. You are OK! Things could be worse. Head up. You have this. You will come out on the other side...victorious. You will. My heart slows down. My breathing evens and the tears....the tears dry. They dry and I can breathe again. I can breathe again....for now.

Saturday, January 23, 2021

Mia (my dear)

 There are many things I have noticed as a woman in the world. It's been a rooted understanding that women are dangerous. When I say that out loud I realize that I have many wonderful, supportive and kind women who do not fit into this statement. I acknowledge that there are people in general who can be categorized as dangerous. It's an instinctual statement that comes from a deep place that automatically feels this. Where is this simmering in my conscious? It might have been planted when little girls ran away instead of played. It might be the later prepubescents that snidely commented on my clothes, or maybe the teenage wanna-be's that hated my boyish confidence. All I know is that I grew up being treated like a she-boy. I learned to cook, clean and take care of littles like a good Iranian woman, but chopped wood, cleared corn, and was taught to beat the boys in my karate class. I do tend toward masculinity in some physical aspects and certainly in my train of thought. It did not serve me well with the "secret-telling", whispering girls who played mental games. I noticed the boys were more straight forward like me. The boys didn't play head games and the boys were easier to befriend as long as I didn't best them in a fight. That was hard not to do. I did eventually find girls like me. They exist. A little rough around the edges and different, odd, eccentric. Straight-shooters. They became my trusted, lifelong confidants. 

From these experiences, I learned that when  girl looks you up and down she is either instantly hating you or friendly with the intent to hate. It will come later when she has devised a plan. The only people I knew I could trust besides my rag-tag gang of "misfit" girls was my grandmas. I was blessed to have both of my grandmas through my youth. Oddly, these woman both adored me. Grandma Tryfonas spent most everyday with me. I shared her love of music and the ability to play and sing. I also had her fiery temper. She was my fiercest ally and my biggest fan. Every concert, pageant, talent show, she was there, her face shining with pride. She let me be me and I loved her. My Grandma Tizpa only knew me for a short time before we fled Iran. I was 4 and she was miles across the ocean. Still, I was her favorite. She told me and everyone else as well. She loved me unconditionally. She loved me in spite of the miles between and she loved me for me. 

There is a little sniff of a woman who cleans my Bears room. She is the same size and color as my grandma. She has the same twinkle in her eye. She calls me "mia" and speaks to me in her broken English. There are many women around me. Some are friendly while others simply do their job. Some don't like me even though we have never spoke , but Ruska sees me. She remembers me. She sees me. She loves me. In a world where so much pain, fear, uncertainty, and unkindness abides, she sees me. I believe our ancestors watch over us. I believe they are our guardian angels. This little sniff of a woman who reminds me of my grandma was sent for me. In this difficult time, she was sent for me. How grateful I am.

Saturday, January 2, 2021

Small and simple things

 The days have been catching up with me and I find the compounding effect stifling. I can't say that I am unhappy as that is not my nature. I feel happiness inside as a constant current. Still, I am not immune to the piling up of emotional garbage, and as such need to vent that out of my system. Sitting here day after day, listening to the myriad of information and fighting to get the beds made, urinals emptied, I started to slide into the critical eye.

 I hate the critical eye. 

It is what makes us only see the dingy edges, the dusty surfaces, the food in teeth. It stops us from smelling the fresh linens, seeing the twinkling mischief, tasting the cold milk. The critical eye is the real disease that no one has noticed has taken over our social networks, media airways and infiltrated our most private places. It is the slippery slope that has created the havoc we see out in our streets and feel in our hearts. I do all I know to do to keep my eye clear of criticism so I can see the joy around me. It is a conscious effort and requires improvement each day. Lately that effort has been like pushing the 10 ton boulder up a jagged ledge. Last night was a turn that allowed me to step aside and let that boulder bully its way back down the incline. Natalie is her name. She is one of the many CNA's that attend my Bear. Natalie has spent countless hours attending to Josh's needs physically, but one night she came in, took a seat on the couch and chatted about nothing. We laughed, made fun, and told stories that connected us immediately. Her dark, piercing eyes show excitement and instant love. I met her at the ice machine one night as I had just finished up a final I was hoping to avoid. It was nearing midnight and my eyes were closing in exhaustion. "How are you doing?" she asked. "Well, I had to take a final that the teacher wouldn't let go, even though I have a 99% in her class. Chemo wasn't a good enough excuse", I riley smiled. "It's done and I'm wiping it from memory." She smiled and commiserated with me for a bit, making me feel her absolute attention. I don't even remember everything we spoke about, just that she was listening like I was the last human. Last night as the food was brought in I noticed another box of Swiss Rolls. I say another because I had already purchased my love a box, and he had also secretly asked for a box from our friend bringing our laundry exchange which yielded him 4. At seeing this new box I wondered if they were starting to bleed out of the walls. We quickly realized that it was Natalie. She came in to take vitals and we asked. "Yes, it was me. I knew you liked them and was shopping so I grabbed a box." It's the small and simple things. We have been shown so much love by those who know us and for that we are grateful, but we expect the people we love to love us. It's the surprises from the "working staff" that prick our hearts and make my eyes leak. It's that amazing humanity that you see unexpectedly from those that have the "mother's heart". Thank you Natalie. Thank you for seeing us. Thank you for remembering we are human. Thank you for your tender care. We needed you.