Thursday, March 12, 2015

Ode to a Puppy

Three o'clock in the morning
And it looks like it's gonna be
Another sleepless night.

I've been listening to your whines
And gettin' very mad
Wondering what I should do.

Maybe I'm being foolish
'Cause I think I put you out
Just an hour ago.
How I wish I could be sure
You really need to pee
Each time you whine your noise
I pull the blanket up and close my eyes.

You've been whinin' in my sleep
Yelping in my ears
Because you need out
Waking up the house
Depriving us of sleep.
I'm sure we'll never do this
Whining in my sleep,
With peeing on your mind.

Maybe I'm being foolish
'Cause I really thought we had
The schedule figured out
How I wish I could be sure
You really need to pee.
Each time you whine your noise
I pull my blanket up and close my eyes

You've been whining in my sleep,
Yelping in my ears
Because you need out
Waking up the house
Depriving us of sleep
I'm sure we'll never do this
Whining in my sleep
With peeing on your mind. 

-  With Apologies to Crystal Gayle, one of the finest voices ever recorded, Talking in Your Sleep by Crystal Gayle

Saturday, March 07, 2015

It's A Dog's World

So, guess who has three dogs in the house. I have a 13 year old, a five year old, and a two month old. Who's-the-insane-one?-That's-a-girl.-I'm-the-insane-one. The 13 year old is a pomeranian-chihuahua princess. She was very well treated and well groomed until her owner passed away five years ago. Because my daughter was the dog-walker, the family asked if we'd take in the princess. I'm not a big fan of small dogs, in general, but she is a sweetheart. She has a good temperament but very little sense of humour. The five year old is a collie-lab tomboy. Hyyyy-per! Her herding instinct keeps the whole neighbourhood on its toes. She sounds the alert from a block away and then corrals everyone in sight. Luckily for us, our neighbours are very easy-going people and most of them have dogs so they don't get worried if they're being herded. The latest addition is the two month old. He is a rottweiler-mastiff cross. In the one week that we've had him, he has almost doubled in size and is about the same size as the princess. Technically, he's my daughter's dog and won't be staying with us forever. In the meantime, though, he's getting a lot of training from me. I am tired but also quite amused by him. I think he may prove to be my favourite dog yet. When he's playing, he launches from all four feet and goes straight up into the air and hops up and forward like a rabbit. This is amusing to all of us except the princess. She's the one he's hopping towards. Like I said, no sense of humour. As for the collie, the pup has learned to give her enough space. The first few days were tense but it appears that the collie has forgiven the puppy for existing. Twice yesterday, she brought him a toy and dropped it in front of the pup to play with. I don't think he's the smartest dog I've ever seen. Yesterday, I took him outside. As he was climbing the stairs back into the house he stopped to lick the metal trim on the top step. It was -20 and his tongue got stuck. I tried to help but I was too slow. He jerked back and left a few tongue cells behind. Thankfully, it wasn't serious and he did learn from his mistake. Now he just quickly climbs the stairs. Have you ever seen a puppy's first experience with noodles? I had some leftover noodles that I gave to the old dogs which the pup discovered. He decided to stalk them. Front legs were strained forward. Back legs spread apart. Tail high in the air. Nose to the ground. I didn't realize what he was doing so I came up from behind and asked, "What are you doing?" He didn't know I was there. Who knew puppies could jump so high?

Sunday, March 01, 2015

Hope

The bigger you dream,
the harder you might fall
But ambition raises the chances,
And gives you a cushion
To fall on, Unharmed
And ready to try again.

Hope will never stray,
It will always be there,
Like memories from yesterday
And dreams of tomorrow.
Hope is the key to ambition,
Ambition, is the way to success

- GM

Friday, February 20, 2015

Gutted

Having always thought of myself as a reasonably adept wordsmith, one of my pet peeves is the inability to find just the right word to describe a feeling or event. I like to believe that for every emotion, tone, attribute, or circumstance there is a way to precisely describe it; even if, for no other reason, than to keep me from becoming complacent with my language skills. Unfortunately, there are some things in life that seem to defy description. Chemotherapy is one of those things. Everyone has a different experience but when chemo hits hard, it hits hard and defies explanation.

I got a little chuckle the other day. I was having lunch with a friend and a few of her friends whom I had never met before. One lady asked me how I was doing and I answered her that I was doing well, "just tired". Another lady said, "Oh, I know how you feel." My friend gave her a look and said, "No, you don't." She was right. No one can understand chemo unless they've been through it. For my part, I'm teaching myself to take "I know how you feel" out of my repertoire. I like to think I'm being empathetic but really I'm just being presumptuous. I know how you look. I may know what you need. I may know how to give you comfort. But, I can never know how you feel. That is something that belongs to you and you alone.

A few weeks ago, my father and I were making some cosmetic renovations to my house. He is an extremely talented craftsman. My husband, myself and two teenagers live in a very old, not large, but well-kept house. Any time I want something done, I call Dad-1-1 to the rescue. I love my old house. It was built in 1876 and still has the original hardwood flooring, baseboards, door frames, bannister, etc. Over the years, it has had many additions and renovations. When my parents-in-law first bought the house in 1979, they gutted it and re-did all the important stuff. The wiring and plumbing was all brought up to new code. The walls were opened up and redone from plaster and lathe to gyproc. Insulation was upgraded to better than code. My parents-in-law were very wise people. I have all the amenities of a brand new house in the classic charm of an old Victorian style house. My husband and I are trying to keep the renovation tradition going - new kitchen, new washroom, new laundry, new windows, new paint.

As I said, a few weeks ago, my father and I were making some cosmetic renovations to my house. As we were working (he worked, I pulled out nails), I was reminded of the renovations that my parents-in-law had made 35 years ago and how they had gutted the house in order to make improvements. I looked at my father with a "light just came on" kind of look.

"That's it!" I said.

"What?"

"I was gutted." I said.

"What?" (He's a man of few words.)

"Chemo! I was gutted. Everything on the outside looks the same. The framework is still there. I still look like me. But the inside. It's all ripped out. I was gutted."

"Oh." (Few words.)

So, here's hoping that the extensive renovations made on me are better than code while maintaining the classic charm.

Cheers, everyone.


Wednesday, December 31, 2014

Right Where I Should Be

2212 (10:12 PM) Central Time, December 31, 2014 New Year's Eve

I can tell you that I've never been happier to see a year come to a close. To say this year was tough would be an under-statement and an insult to truth, my integrity, and to anyone who knows what cancer treatments can feel like. I will not tell you it's been a good year. I will not tell you I feel blessed because of it. However, I will tell you that I'm glad the cycles of treatment are over and that I feel like I've been given a second chance at life. You know the saying, YOLO, You Only Live Once. That's not true. I am on my second life. Life #1 was from birth to 49 1/2, the pre-cancer years. Life #2 is from 50 1/2 (January 2015) to whenever. The gap from 49 1/2 to 50 1/2 is exactly that: a gap. It's like a big black hole that swallowed up everything. There are certain events I remember and certain dates and numbers I'll never forget but my awareness of the passage of time or seasons passing is just a blur. I am glad 2014 is over and I am slowly getting my mind back.

To celebrate the end of 2014, I figured I would be out tonight with lots of people and lots of noise; perhaps at a restaurant or a pub somewhere with the TV on and people talking. I would rebelliously order a Rye & Coke just because I can, and my husband and I would watch the countdown and kiss at the stroke of midnight. Instead, I'm at my computer talking to you. My oldest daughter is out with her friends. My second daughter and a friend are in the TV room playing Just Dance. And my husband is upstairs sleeping. And me? I am right where I should be. There was a time when I would experience a strong sense of the Fear Of Missing Out (FOMO). Everybody's doing something and I'm not. There's a party going on somewhere and I'm not there. There's a pub full of people and I'm not there. What am I missing? Tonight, I don't feel that. Tonight, there is a calmness in my heart. The fear of missing out is gone. I am not missing out on anything. I have lived. And I will live again.

Happy New Year, Everyone.
Dawn

Thursday, December 18, 2014

Christmas 2014

Normally, I'm not a huge fan of Christmas. I have nothing against it. I just think the whole thing is over-rated. I liked to wait until the girls were on Christmas break and then I'd start shopping and decorating. However, this year has been anything but normal and, given my post-cancer-treatment status, I am creating a new normal for myself. I am not the same person I used to be. I do not do the things I used to do. I don't think the way I used to think. The good, the bad, and the ugly, it's all different now.

When I found out in January that I had an aggressive form of breast cancer I had months of not knowing what the outcome would be. I do not have the words to describe how I felt when facing my mortality. The dread of leaving my children without a mother or leaving my husband/best friend to grieve was terrifying. Even the moot point of being closed up in a box was extremely unsettling. At the end of February, my first question to the surgeon was, "Is this a death sentence?" He assured me that it was not a death sentence but that the best result would come from an equally aggressive treatment plan. We had no conversations about whether or not I should accept treatment. There were no other options. As a mother, I owed it to my children to do everything I could to keep myself alive as long as possible. So, every horrible, miserable thing that the doctors told me to do, I did.

That process began one year ago (December 2013, with a clinical breast examination). Today it is one week before Christmas Day 2014 and two months since my last radiation treatment. Since mid-November, I have been having a blast getting ready for Christmas. I still get phenomenally sleepy on a regular basis and am not working yet, but I'm cleaning, I'm decorating, I'm baking, I'm shopping, I'm going out to Christmas tea. And the best part is that once or twice a day I stop what I'm doing and give myself a little metaphorical pinch. I get a goofy little grin on my face and think, "Look at that. I'm still here."

It's Christmas and I'm still here.
Merry Christmas, Everyone.

Tuesday, December 02, 2014

I have Cancer

The following piece was given to me by a friend. I did not write it and, unfortunately, I do not know who did so I apologize for not being able to give credit.

I have cancer, but cancer does not have me.
Cancer is not who I am.
It is only a bend in the road- an unexpected detour on my path.
It is a lesson in the cosmic schoolroom of human existence.
So I will pause.... To rest..... and heal......
And study the lesson......
Before I move on to a life beyond cancer
I will not give in to fear.
I will not be discouraged by setbacks.
Setbacks are only opportunities to review the lesson.
I will not be ashamed of my scars
Scars are the brushstrokes in the masterpiece that is my life.
I will be thankful for the many blessings cancer has brought me into my life
People I never would have known
Love that I'd never been still or quiet enough to witness
Humility I needed
Strength I thought I'd lost
Courage that I never thought I had
I remember that I can still have fun
I will remember always that its okay to be healthy and silly.
And remember that I must endure the rain
To find joy in the rainbow
While I may have cancer
Cancer does not have me!