I was just drying off from my shower. Naked. Glancing at myself in the mirror. Hearing the familiar voice start up in my head about what I am not doing or what I am over doing. Or it may have been the lament of "Time" this go round. How years, gravity, and wear and tear...
Ev, my 8 year old, walks in.
I was surprised and caught in the headlights.
White blinding light of: Now what? Cover up? Stand, revealed? A mix of the two maybe with a dangled towel here and there?
She was just looking in my eyes at first, talking to me. Then her eyes started roving. She stared at my belly button region that raged a war, time and again. Her hand went to her own extremely tight and etched gymnast abdomen. My hand went to mine.
"This is where you guys lived, nice and cozy."
She giggled.
"You are soft." was her reply.
"In some ways. But that is good for a hug. In other ways I am hard." and I mocked yelled at her, reminding her of how tough I can be. Breaking the intensity with a laugh as always.
Unabashedly she kept looking and I went about my getting ready.
"If you are too muscley- your hugs wouldn't be good." she decided.
"Well, a hug has all that love to help keep it soft, too."
"Yeah".
My thighs were wiggling into pants. She watched.
I gathered all the back flesh I could into the front of my bra with what remains of my breasts. She watched.
"Why do you even wear that?"
"It gives me some shape up top. Most people wear them to support their breasts."
"Why bother wearing it at all? For you? I wouldn't bother."
"Sometimes I don't. Sometimes I do."
She kept standing there. I was basically clothed, but my openness and vulnerability, even with my own child, had reached it's max.
I asked why she didn't run along and play.
She shrugged.
I didn't know how to end the scene. I don't know why I thought it needed an ending other than my discomfort and feeling of being on a very vulnerable limb of exposure, openness, and responsibility to show myself as a real body with no shame or disparaging remarks, all the while not putting down a body toned, tight, and different than my own. No doubt the body she will have.
So, I just said, "And that is me getting dressed."
And she said, "You are beautiful."
She left happy.
I was left winded.
Monday, December 30, 2013
Thursday, December 5, 2013
Better, Not Bitter
Adversity is something we all face at various points in
our life, correct? Maybe you call it one
of the following terms instead:
However you describe your challenges in life, it is safe
to make the assumption that our hardships certainly mold our characters and our
suffering changes our life path. For me,
my traipsing through life in thirty-nine years has afforded me a great deal of
misfortune, if you will. My “bad luck”
has crafted my inner-being to nearly define resilience. Would you like to take that journey with me?
In "What Did You Say",
I shared briefly the story behind my hearing loss. At the age of four, my parents realized I was
having a hard time hearing when I asked them to turn around so that I could hear
them. I had adapted and learned how to
lip read so that I could hear the world around me. On my fifth birthday, January 5th,
1974, I received two hearing aids – alas, the gift of hearing but that “gift”
also came with a mound of limitations placed upon me by the medical profession. Fortunately, the true gift was courtesy of my
parents , the support that I could literally do anything I set my heart on –
regardless of restrictions imposed upon me by others. My hearing loss was an affliction, but then
unknown to me, this particular adversity early on would be the concrete
foundation that paved my strength for difficulties in later years.
As a child of a parent with a mental illness, the pain is
two-fold. As a young child you do not
ever understand why your parent, the one who is supposed to love you
unconditionally, goes on rages and beats you.
As you nurse the welts, the bruises and wipe up the blood, you try to
understand and you try to justify the outbursts for your parent. The flip side is you feel immense guilt and
embarrassment once you start to learn that other families do not beat their children
and you are shamed into keeping quiet. In
"Not All Mothers Are Created Alike",
I share more of the details of the abuse I suffered at the hands of my own
mother. Once again, the trauma of wooden
Dr. Scholl sandals crashing down upon my youth limbs, the searing pain of
wooden dowels making forceful contact with my skin, the sickening clang of cast
iron pots against my bones…..has added to the firmness of my core’s strength
for the years that lie ahead.
Not unlike many of us as children, I was bullied as a
child. Namely, because my hearing aids
were so large and so uncommon that name-calling and jokes flowed regularly from
my peers. Once people got to know us,
my mother’s behavior and my subsequent bruises became a focal point for
rudeness and for public inquiry by social service agencies. Time and time again, the strength of my
character was built upon through adversity.
Somehow, despite the abuse as a young child and my
tumultuous teen years, I firmly believed that my relationship with my parents
was important and I took them in as my dad’s health declined for the
worse. We had a large enough home with
an in-law space and I envisioned my parents living their golden years whilst
making terrific memories with my children, their grandchildren. My grandparents died when I was young, so I
longed for my children to have that relationship with all of their
grandparents. I was grossly naïve as my
mother’s mental illness was still in full force and the upcoming four years
would be akin to living in hell.
Nursing my parents through dialysis, a kidney transplant,
MRSA, countless cellulitis infections, weekly ambulance visits, regular falls
with injuries, poop everywhere……and more, after balancing a ridiculously
demanding full time job and two little children was about the limit of distress
I could handle.
Little did I know then, but I now understand that all of
these tribulations were little preparatory missions for what would be, by far,
my hardest challenge yet: a fight for
my life in the war against cancer. Had I
not had enough misfortune in my life but I would be the one to be diagnosed
with an aggressive form of breast cancer while pregnant with my third
child? Geesh, what the heck wrong did I
do in my former life to deserve all this adversity? Kill a pope?
April 15, 2013 was a day that most of us in Massachusetts
will never forget. I was in Florida on
April vacation with my family and during the day at the beach, I checked my
phone to see who won the marathon only to get a news alert that there had been
a bomb at the race. Disbelief and shock
set in as I devoured the news and realized the severity of what had happened in
my home state that day. Two bombs,
hundreds injured, fatalities including a young child, oh, my god……….what has
happened. My mother died suddenly two
days later. As much as I had previously
grieved for the loss of my mother during the fall out of her behavior when I
needed to fight for my life and my baby’s life, her death took me by complete
surprise.
1.
My five year chemoversary was June 2013. What better test of my health and the control
over my life that I had not only survived cancer but I was thriving?
2.
My 40th birthday will be January
2014. I am not too old to accomplish my
bucket list!
3.
How dare some deranged terrorists think they can
dismantle and inject fear into MY city, OUR city, Boston? Do they not have a clue about just how STRONG
we Massachusetts folks are?
4.
26.2 miles of reflection – 26.2 miles of
shirking off limitations -26.2 miles because I can.
With that, I am honored and blessed to be a part of Team
Eye & Ear for the 2014 Boston Marathon.
I was chosen to represent what Boston Strong truly means to so many of
us. Massachusetts Eye & Ear was one
of the fine facilities to treat many of the injured last year after the catastrophic
day of events. Somehow, it is very
fitting that I will be representing an institution that provides care for the
very type of afflictions that first set my life path in place – and I have
chosen the fundraising dollars I obtain to be funneled into their ear clinic –
for research and patient care.
I will run because I can, yes. My body is healthy, cancer free and an
amazing machine.
I will run for my best bud, Karen as she battles for her life against leukemia. She rode her bike for the PMC Challenge to honor me during my cancer, so now, I will run to honor her and show her just how strong life after cancer can be.
I will run for my best bud, Karen as she battles for her life against leukemia. She rode her bike for the PMC Challenge to honor me during my cancer, so now, I will run to honor her and show her just how strong life after cancer can be.
I will run because I can, yes. I will run for every person affected by the
bombings last year because I have two very capable limbs to do so.
I will run because I can, yes. I will run for you, to represent that fear is
not a limitation that we will allow to control us. We will be BOSTON STRONG in 2014.
I will run because I can, yes. Resilience is my middle name. I am better, not bitter.
Help me believe, please support me because you can by donating
here: Rebecca's Page - Team Eye & Ear