Poetry

2014 October 16 - And It Is Sweet (Lotsa Update)

I thought it only fair that, after last night's sorta low and sad update, I share with you a little moment from today.

Feeling still tired, but quite a bit heartier this afternoon, I made my way to my counseling appointment at the cancer center. Topics were intense and I left the therapist's office a little shaky, making my way to my new favorite spot, the hope monument/reflecting pool on the hospital complex. I thought I'd just sit quietly and breathe for a little while. Down the way, a street preacher was blasting his message through a megaphone. Not the vibe I was hoping for. I don't usually listen to music on my phone, but remembered that months ago, when I started taking guitar lessons, my teacher had asked me to make a playlist of 5 songs I'd like to learn to play. I dropped the guitar playing after my surgery, but it turns out my January self knew just what I'd like to listen to today. I've been sitting here, in the sunshine, looking at the pond and watching the people pass, listening to the loop for a while now. And it is sweet.

Peace and fall breezes,

Sara

PS. If you're curious, the songs particularly appropriate today... June Hymn (The Decemberists), Me by the Sea (Edie Brickell), Somewhere Different Now (Girlyman).

2014 October 7 - Chemo #6, Ringing the Bell (Lotsa Update)

Well, friends, we've made it through the 6th chemo treatment! I still have the next 7-10 days of feeling bad, but the chemo infusions are done. I can hardly believe it.

Just a couple of quick and sleepy thoughts:

My dear friend, Mary, is with me from Tulsa. Her reverence and strong presence and calm are a gift. (I credit Something bigger for getting her here right now.)

Jen T came to visit the infusion center and I asked her for a poem. She recited "blessing the boats," by Lucille Clifton, and delivered it in the solid, clear, lovely way that she reads. It was the perfect poem for that moment. Please, for me, google and read it now.

Finally, Ringing the Bell is a rite of passage at the end of a chemo cycle. When I did it today, I was all drugged and sleepy and forgot the words of the quote I wanted to say, but got close enough... What I wanted to say: "All will be well, and all will be well, and all manner of things will be well."* What I said: "all will be well, and all will be well, and everything that matters will be well." Close enough, I guess. :)

Now, time to sleep.

Peace and love,

Sara

*from Julian of Norwich

blessing the boats

(at St. Mary’s)

may the tide

that is entering even now

the lip of our understanding

carry you out

beyond the face of fear

may you kiss

the wind then turn from it

certain that it will

love your back may you

open your eyes to water

water waving forever

and may you in your innocence

sail through this to that

Lucille Clifton (1936 - 2010)

2014 October 4 - Wide-Armed Into the Emptiness (Lotsa Update)

Hey friends,

I've been thinking about you a lot, imagining how busy life gets at the end of summer and, since so many of you are academics, the fall really kicks into busy mode. In comparison to all that, what I've been up to seems so slow-mo.

The aftermath of treatment number five went just about as expected. Kristi was a quiet wisp of a companion, taking care of me and my home, and spreading her calm energy around. After she left, I had a few more days of feeling bad (punctuated by lovely visits from Shawnessey and Jen). As I've come to expect, 10 days after treatment, the acute side effects had settled and I was left with just this vast fatigue. I'll take it! With fatigue, I can still go for occasional walks and shopping and work some, and even lunch out now and then. By this point in the cycle (end of the third week), I've even felt up to dropping in for a meeting at work.

On Tuesday (10/7), I have my 6th (and last scheduled) chemo treatment. I've spent the few weeks since #5 with my mind on what happens next, and thinking about that has me terrified into silence. The possibilities are stunning. This is stare-silently-at-the-wall/ceiling territory. I actually had a dream last week (after taking a long walk by myself, something I hadn't done yet on my own) that I was making my way down the sidewalk and it ended at this giant pool of darkness - not particularly scary dark, just dark. I wanted to keep walking on the sidewalk, but it didn't go on, so I leapt, wide-armed into the emptiness instead. There's a metaphor for ya. Yikes. Lots of uncertainty around here.

I have a CT scan scheduled for October 30th and the follow up with my doctor on November 4th to see what happens next. In whatever way you pray, please do that for me over this next month.

Right now, I'm sitting in one of my new favorite spots, though I can't take the credit for finding it.

A large part of my junior high English curriculum was memorization of poems; sometimes we had to write them out, punctuation and all, and sometimes we recited them for the class. I guess I was about fourteen when I had to memorize Emily Dickinson's "Hope is the thing with feathers." It's become a sort of life-long touchstone for me - my poem. At 23, I got my first and only tattoo; it was inspired by that poem.

Last week, I had my regular appointment with my assigned counselor at the Cancer Center. (The Oncology Psychology program is endowed so current and former cancer patients get free therapy and other services - it's fantastic). I was trying to describe to my therapist this amorphous yearning I've been having - for something like home or comfort - and after looping around for a while, like you do in therapy, what fell out of my mouth was this, "I just want to know that someone bigger is handling things." Then, "I just want to know that someone bigger is handling things?" After 20 years of mostly skirting the issue, I was pleading to let myself really believe in God or a connected Universe, or Something bigger than just little, frightened me.

I left, sort of stunned and sad and meandery. I didn't want to go right back to my car and on with my day. I wanted to be outside in the sun, under the big sky. I wanted to take a deep breath. I couldn't seem to find a way out of the Cancer Center except into the exhaust-filled pick-up and drop-off area, so I asked the woman at the info desk if there was some way out to nature. She told me to go out the main exit and keep walking for about five minutes and I'd come to a pretty little pond.

It is a pretty little pond, but it's also a monument (designed by Maya Lin, I'm told). The first thing I saw when I walked up to the reflecting pool was that the center piece of the monument is my poem. There, in the metal that lines a circle set into the water, is the whole thing in a string. "Hope is the thing with feathers that perches in the soul, and sings the tune without the words, and never stops at all; and sweetest in the gale is heard, and sore must be the storm that could abash the little bird that kept so many warm; I've heard it in the chillest land and on the strangest sea, yet never, in extremity, it asked a crumb of me. -Emily Dickinson."

Some people see my finding this place, with my poem, on that particular day, after making that particular plea, as a sign. I'm not sure what it is, friends, but the way the light shines through the letters sometimes makes it feel like it's something, and it makes me feel a little more peace while I sit and stare at the wall.

Sending love and hope and thanks to you.

Xo,

Sara

2014 August 4 - Wounded Deer (Lotsa Update)

Hey friends,

Just a quick update. I had a pretty great week last week - worked from home, ran errands, and generally felt a breath of what life used to be.

Thursday, I noticed that something seemed off with my port (the access point implanted in my chest for delivery of chemo, blood draws, etc.)   I went in and had it checked out but nobody could see an issue. Then, on Friday, I noticed again that something didn't seem right. When I went in for my weekly blood draw, I was told that the port was pushing out through the skin and needed to be removed immediately. (This can be very dangerous since the port creates easy access to a main artery; a problem like this was one of my biggest fears.) So, right then, with Shawnessey'a help, I underwent a procedure to remove the port and made plans to have another one installed Monday, in time for my scheduled chemo on Tuesday. Ugh.

So, today, Shawnessey-the-amazing, picked me up and supported me through a very stressful day during which I had another minor outpatient surgery to implant a new port. The experience this time was so much better than the first time and hopefully the long term result will be much better as well. Ugh again.

Ok, enough with the frustrating news! Good stuff now... My darling Aunt Mia arrived from Denver tonight to join me for chemo week. It's exciting to see her again and I see many episodes of Parenthood in our future.

Some of you may have seen that the fundraising site* my brother launched to help me afford the costs of making it through all of this is going extremely well. We've surpassed the goal and I am just absolutely stunned by the generosity of people who have given and people who have shared the info on FB and in other ways. It is unbelievable and I can never say enough about how grateful I am.

I started this update with info about a few seriously bummer days and I'm ending with thanks for being as awesome as you are.

And with this quote I read today from Emily Dickinson; it may be out of context, but I love this line for what it is and what it helps me hold onto today: "A wounded deer leaps highest."

Tomorrow, I take another leap. Thanks for being there to help with a soft landing.

Xo

Sara

http://www.youcaring.com/medical-fundraiser/help-sara-ross-beat-cancer/2 06587

2014 July 15 - Chemo #2, All the Flowers (Lotsa Update)

Hi again,

Just a quick follow-up to let you know that today's chemo treatment went smoothly. I was there, with my cousin Alexis (Portland, OR) from 9am to 4pm, then came home and napped for a while. Imagining that the next few days will be on the crummy side for me, but I think I have a better handle on how to use the medications to make things more manageable.

This is the epiphany I had today, guys: with your help, I just might be able to do this. I'm struggling to find a way to say something more than thank you, so I'll share this quote I read recently:

"You can cut off all the flowers, but you cannot keep spring from coming. " - Pablo Neruda.

I'll be in touch again soon.

Love,

Sara

PS- Someone sent me the DVD of To Kill A Mockingbird and somebody else sent me Mark Nepo's Book of Awakening, but I don't know who? First, thanks! Second, drop me a note to let me know it was you!