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Hi.

I’m a North Carolina writer looking at the world and making some sense of it through weaving words together. I hope you'll linger awhile and find your stories in my own.

Keeper of the Keys

I turn into the parking lot and park my car at the curb. 

‘What’s a phone number?” Tim asks. “And a last name?

Tim has been greeting me almost daily for the past few months, taking my keys and parking my car, while I join all the other souls in the waiting room. He wears a black scally cap and a perpetual smile. 

I remember the day I met him, way back in May, on my first day as a new cancer patient, unaware that the cancer center offered free valet parking for those of us in their care. 

“I’m new,” I remember saying as I stepped out of the car, feeling quite brave as I recall. “I can walk from the parking lot, really.” He took my keys anyway, smiling, happy in this job that keeps him at the front door in 100 degree heat, in tropical storm rains and crisp fall days. A nurse later told me that once I was well into treatment, walking to my car would become a chore. 

Well, after 18 weeks of treatment, here we are. 

Tim is among a team of people I didn’t know existed before early June but who have become particular players in the middle of my kidnapping. There’s Jean, the receptionist who checks me in at the door and knows my name now. Andra, who must know my birthday by heart — and who places heart and smile stickers on my arm band. Rose Marie, whose name I memorized by thinking of the Dick Van Dyke Show — she’s helped me juggle my schedule so I can have a small semblance of regular life. Marlene, one of the nurses who accesses my port each week (with a truly tender touch), and Colton and Kendra and Ana and Jana, nurses assigned to me who cheered me on when I came back to chemo after a two-week absence. Jamie, my nurse practitioner, high fives me when my counts are good and doesn’t judge while I cry and curse. You’ve read about Hope, before. 

I’ve been getting shots three days a week lately in addition to chemo — an unexpected regimen that keeps my bone marrow strong. Which also means I spend more time at the cancer center than I do anywhere else, other than home. Though I have not gotten to know any patients, these people who are in charge of my daily well being have become a little bit like family. They are pumping me with drugs and good will so I’ll outgrow my need for them, we all hope, in a matter of weeks. 

After that, I’ll have a whole new team caring for me in the next phase of this ‘ridding your body of cancer’ camp activity. Kind of like going from high ropes to low. Or from target practice to sailing (though I hear it won’t be smooth. Tim will still be there to greet me, but my nurses will have moved on to other patients. I’ll miss them.

When we discovered the cancer, I wondered what to tell my children, though I don’t remember what rehearsed it in my mind. I did tell them through my tears that we would fit this around our already busy summer and not the other way around. But the reality of cancer and its treatment is that in the mind of those treating you, there is no more important life event than your recovery. Not grandbabies being born or 91-year-old mothers who need hip surgery, not sisters who fall and break both feet at once, not husbands who find themselves scattered along the edges, waiting for signals. No grandsons you wish you could hold tight but can only visit by FaceTime. No Friday night suppers with friends. No church. Work, when you can do it, has to be from home. The big C breaks in front of the line on all you thought you had planned.

You must simply pull up to the curb and hand over your keys. 

I’m not sure what I expected that first day when I gave my keys to Tim. Like most things, I’ve learned that there is theory and then experience. I would lose my hair, they said. And I did, though in theory I had no idea what it would feel like staring at my bald head every morning. And I didn’t expect when I tried to use mascara on my eye lashes recently and there would be a day when I couldn’t find them. (My eyebrows are gone, too.)

I was so naive as to think I could fit cancer around my life and not the other way around. Missing out on the things that matter to me so much, I know, is a minor inconvenience — momentary realities that when viewed in the long game will seem like a blip. Hair grows back. Eyelashes, too, Google tells me. But the other thing I’m learning about cancer is that it is sometimes hard to see the end of that long game. Just when you look at your calendar and see “last day of chemo!” written (in pencil) and start thinking about who you’ll miss in the windowless room with the warm blankets and the comfortable chairs, the real keepers of the keys (the doctors) throw in another 9—9! — weeks, between chemo and surgery, surgery and radiation, and THE END. Weeks more until they will finally hand the keys back to you and you drive away. You hope forever.

Don’t misunderstand me. I want to be present for the long game, I do. To witness my grandson ride a bicycle and and cut himself shaving, to be present when the new grand baby walks and dances and drives away in her first car. It’s the space in between all that and right now that has gotten to me.

“I don’t remember what I was planning to over summer,” I told Andra, the receptionist, when I checked in for my shot a couple of weeks ago. We laughed, but it was only so I could keep from crying. I really don’t remember what I had planned, though “cancer” didn’t appear once on my calendar, even in pencil. 

What had I planned? Was it trips to New York to walk to school and read books and visit the park with my grandson Henry? Or hours of time with two-month old granddaughter Audie and not brisk snatches when I can hold her? I know those would have been on my calendar a lot had there been any room at all. 

I don’t mean to seem ungrateful. I know there is no more important work for me now than what I am doing — fighting cancer. Getting well. But I wish they would leave a little room on the cure calendar for LIFE. 

A memory: the wee hours of an early spring New York City morning less than two years ago, when I held tiny Henry in my arms and thought: There is no more important work for me to do in this world. I have missed similar moments with Audie, and I grieve that. And so much more. 

I keep telling my doctors that sometimes complete healing doesn’t come in a pill or a vial attached to tubes. Life and family and love heal, too. I have those things, surely, but at a distance that doesn’t feel like part of the cure.

My father, a doctor, believed that medicine wasn’t always the answer to what ails you. And though in this instance I know he’d tell me that this is what I have to do right now, he would also say that the distance between my reality and my hope will narrow soon enough. I just have to hang on a bit longer.

One day in the next few months, Tim will hand me back my keys, and I’ll drive off. Seeing him won’t be on the calendar anymore. I hope he won’t take it personally when I don’t look back. 

Chemo Camp —  home at last

Chemo Camp — home at last

Chemo Camp: Cut, then Come Again

Chemo Camp: Cut, then Come Again