Tag Archives: 2016

Letting It Out

I realized this week that I’ve been holding in my grief a bit too tightly. My shoulders and back were starting to ache, and there was this massive pressure of compressed grief coming from my heart. It is exhausting trying to hold it in all the time.

When I go grocery shopping (for example) I run into up to five different people who know what is happening to my family and who ask how we’re doing. This is the blessing and curse of living in a smallish town and being open about Brock’s cancer diagnosis. I can’t cry on five shoulders within 30 minutes — I’d be a wreck and end up never leaving our house — so I put on my comfortable Dealing With The Public face and smile while providing truthful, unhappy updates. My self-imposed role has always been to manage other people’s feelings and I continue to do this now.

Brock’s health is deteriorating rapidly — much more quickly than either of us expected — and the truth is that I am sad about it all. There’s no need to hide it. It’s my habit to Put On A Brave Face and smile through conflict, but this is a situation that has absolutely no silver lining and no one expects me to smile. If anything, they are very confused that I’m able to discuss it all with them without sobbing.

So earlier this week I decided to let the dam crack a bit. I intentionally watched Still Alice on Netflix: a movie about a woman with early onset Alzheimer’s. It’s very sad and I let myself cry. I felt myself relax a little bit into our own sadness, this daily grief of living with terminal cancer.

A few days later I watched some of Brock’s farm machines be sold and loaded onto the buyer’s trailer. Brock had longed for these machines for years, researched and designed and finally custom-built them. We never really got to use them to their full capacity before his cancer diagnosis, and to see them be carried away — to see that tangible reminder of the death of his vision, that incredible waste — made me so sad. This time, instead of smothering the grief, I let myself cry.

It feels very, very good to finally let myself be sad.

On Trend

It’s been a big week for cancer in North America. David Bowie died, then Alan Rickman (oh Professor Snape!), then Celine Dion’s husband. Barack Obama prioritized cancer research in his final State of the Union address. And we were finally able to watch part two of Mad Men’s last season, thanks to our local video rental store, only to learn of Betty Draper’s stage 4 cancer diagnosis.

Yes, we’re hyper aware of cancer references due to our own situation, but this is ridiculous. Maybe it really has become a more prevalent disease, or we’re more aware as a society.

My half-joking idea of writing Cancer: The Musical seems like a better idea all the time.