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What will we do with the big empty spot we’ll have when we ditch this stuff? I’m thinking accent chair…

Holy crap, I haven’t posted in almost a month!  Yeesh. Well, moving will do that to a blogger, I suppose.

The past few weeks have been a frenzy of packing up, moving out, moving in, cleaning, unpacking, dodging painters, installing things and logging miles between various big box stores. I’m a fan of shopping local and all that, but man, Target and Home Depot sure come in handy when you need, for example, 3 towel bars, 2 toilet brushes, curtains for the master bedroom, Contact paper, four 30″ cellular blinds — wait, no, make one of those a 29″, because for some inexplicable reason one of the windows in the room is one inch shorter than the rest — and non-aerosol insect repellent, because the girls need to bring it to Girl Scout day camp with them. Oh, and toilet paper. And make sure two of the towel bars are brushed chrome, not the regular shiny kind! Why? I just like them better. No, I don’t know why they’re three dollars more. Just get them.

So, life has been pretty chaotic and exhausting, and there’s still tons (tons!) of unpacking and arranging left to do. But it’s starting to come together and feel more like home. I’ve now cooked three actual dinners in the kitchen — as in, dinners that involve more than just warming something up in the microwave.

One of the biggest changes in our living situation — besides the fact that now, when the windows are open, I can hear wind rustling through trees instead of people cursing at each other — is that the girls now have their own rooms. They’re both pretty happy with this, especially Clio. (I think Elsa is of two minds; she likes it,  but also feels a little lonely at night.)

But it hasn’t been a screaming/whining/fighting-free transition. Before, the girls’ clothes were all together in one (increasingly crowded) dresser and one closet. Their books and dolls were commingled. And there were no “keep out” signs on the door. (Intended for sisters, not parents.) But hopefully things will improve as they get used to the new arrangement.

 

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I’m pretty sure Clio started with the “Keep Out” part, then decided to temper it with the “(k)nock ple(a)se”

 

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Elsa’s is more detailed and polite, but you get the feeling this has been an ongoing problem — perhaps for all two days we’d been in the ouse — hence the “Please!”

 

In all this transitioning, I’ve barely had a moment to stop and think about the momentous fact that Clio’s last round of treatment starts on Wednesday. Not brooding is good. But now that the dust is settled a little bit, I’m forced to confront it — and feel like I should. And really, it’s hard to digest. How can it be that after this cycle we’ll never (knock on wood) have to deal with steroids again? We’ll never have to load up on drugs at the Dana Farber pharmacy on our way home from the clinic? I’ll never have to slip a syringe of 6-MP between Clio’s lips while she sleeps? And after she gets her port out in a few weeks, no more Lovenox shots in her thigh before bedtime. 

It’s all become part of the rhythm of our lives. It affects how we plan our time, how our morning and evening routines go, and how we pack up for trips — even if it’s just a quick weekend with the grandparents. It’s just normal.

And I’m sure we’ll adjust to the logistical changes quickly. But what’s really hard for me to believe is that we won’t end up more tightly enmeshed with the medical world again. It’s not quite fear of relapse I’m talking about — although I have plenty of that, too. It’s this disbelief that everything will, from here on out, possibly just be normal in our lives. The way it was before Clio’s illness. No procedures, no inpatient stays, no nothing, except for the occasional — and increasingly infrequent — blood test at the clinic. (Barring any serious late effects of chemo, which can happen…) What’s that going to be like?

And what about the nurses and doctors we’ve come to know and trust and on some level love? What about the other families we’ve met? What about the unwanted but comforting feeling of camaraderie and belonging?

I wonder if it’s not unlike the feeling members of the military have when they’re about to come home after an overseas deployment. You’re in this intense and dangerous and always-on-guard setting for a long period of time, with a singular kind of camaraderie with your fellow soldiers, and then you come back home, and you’re relieved, but it’s not the same. It can never be the same, because you’ve changed. And the transition can be brutal. (My apologies here to military folks who have been in this actual situation, because I know it’s not really the same — it’s much worse — and I can’t possibly imagine it. Just thinking metaphorically.)

I’ve heard of some parents really breaking down after their kids’ treatment. Probably not just out of anxiety about relapse (though I’m sure that happens), but out of the emotional release of having been in adrenaline (combat?) mode for two years or more — holding emotion far enough at bay so they can just focus on putting one foot in front of the other, getting the treatment done, being strong — and then suddenly being able to let their guard down. To change metaphors, maybe like the way young children hold it together while they’re at day care or preschool or the grandparents’ house, then burst into tears the minute Mom arrives to pick them up.

I wonder if I’m going to lose it. I wonder if I’m going to get hit by a tsunami of pent up emotion. I hope not. But I’m bracing myself for it nonetheless.

7 Comments

  • Well, if the deployment analogy holds, some kind of collapse is likely. You don’t realize how hard you’ve been holding yourself together until you don’t have to. But maybe not! You have a lot of distractions.

    That will be interesting for your girls to have their own rooms. My girls have always shared a room and seem to really like it, and my son is still kind of feeling left out since he got his own room when we moved a few years ago. I always liked having my own room as a kid and wouldn’t have wanted to share.

  • April says:

    I read somewhere that PTSD is being found in parents of kids with issues like autism or I am betting kids with cancer. Because you are on guard 24/7 and its constant and stressful. So I think it can be a good comparison. I have been feeling a lot like that lately.

    Keeping busy can be a good thing because you don’t have time to sit and think on it too long, Hope you are enjoying your new home! So glad you guys have made it through!

  • Deb says:

    For those wonderful medical people you have met on your journey – you don’t have to lose them. Our whole family is still friends with the young intern who treated my daughter. He is a wonderful, compassionate man. He now lives in Boston, but we are all Facebook friends, and one someone in the family goes to Boston, we always meet up with him. They have been such a part of our life that you cant let them walk away.

  • Mary says:

    This is my first visit to your blog. Right now I am reading, and thoroughly enjoying your book Double Time. Not only is it the first book that I have read in, um, probably a year (!), and thus is providing a reconnection to that part of me that likes to think beyond dishes and diapers, but it also resonates with me on several levels. I am mother to a 5-year-old boy and beautiful 6-month-old twin girls, and have had my own relationship with mild depression over the years. You are so spot-on about so many aspects of life as a mother of twins, and I appreciate your perspective and sense of humor about the whole thing. Right now I am immersed in the lives of 18-month-old Elsa and Clio, so I am shocked and saddened to fast-forward in time to your present reality–Clio’s diagnosis two years ago, and now finishing treatment. I am sitting in a coffee shop (stealing a precious hour), fighting back tears and looking like a bit of a fool… Although I am pretty used to that these days. 🙂 You must be one strong mama. Please just know there is one more person out here sending good thoughts your way, and one more person whose path you have brightened on this beautiful, overwhelming, heart-wrenching, awesome journey of Motherhood. Wishing you and your family all the best.

  • Joan says:

    So wonderful hearing about your family and the move.
    Fantastic that the girls are getting accustomed to their own room.
    And so shall you transition to life without cancer in your own time via your personal emotional journey.

  • SarahB says:

    My husband was in the military, and I found myself nodding along with your comparison to deployment life. Absolutely. You get into survival mode, and transitioning out of it isn’t pretty. There can be a lot of delayed emotion. You’ve kept some of it at bay, because you had to, and just when you think you’ll be excited and happy you instead find yourself depleted. I outright sobbed in my husband’s arms for ten minutes straight in public for crying out loud when he got home–having not done more than occasionally choke up during his absence.

    It’s ok to be a wreck, it’s good to know you might be…and I think that means talking with Alastair and the girls about it. What’s something relatively fun and restful you might plan in the next month or so? Some new little tradition to start? A couple e-mails sent to families you’ll miss seeing and want to stay in touch with? What have you not been doing that you’ll be able to do now? The post-deployment vacation is a tried and true tradition…maybe post cancer treatment deserves one too.

  • Catherine says:

    I see that I’m echoing everyone else – but PTSD is a real possibility in both parents and kids who have gone through cancer (it’s the gift that just keeps on giving, huh?). I remember connecting in a very strange way when I read All Quiet on The Western Front and The Things They Carried – the military metaphors have some validity for sure.
    There’s definitely a bit of a “cliff” once treatment is over, because going back to “normal” doesn’t really work – it’s something of a new normal. I think staying connected to the folks and organizations who get what it’s like to be on this crappy boat is really important and helpful.
    Acknowledge your feelings – they may be complicated and varied.
    But do make a point of really and truly celebrating and appreciating this victory – it really is a remarkable feat that you’ve all made it through! And there are so many brilliant and rich and wonderful adventures on the other side. Congratulations!