Originally written August 2008.
It is 1977, I am 11 years old and my mother is diagnosed with lung
cancer. My parents tell me that my mother has something called tumors on
her lungs and they show me the X-ray of where they are. An X-ray. A
picture of what looks like nothing is about to change my families life
forever. My mother is told that she has 3 months. I am not sure if I am
told of the timeline. She lasts 8 months. 8 LOOOOONG months of coughing,
comas, cancer, courage, clots, and caring.
I am there when my mother’s hair falls out from chemo. I am lying on
my belly watching an old Montgomery Ward black and white TV at the foot
of her bed. She is sitting up by the pillows. I see her out of the
corner of my eye as she pulls hair out of her head. She is holding a few
bunches in her hand. She asks me to go downstairs and get her a garbage
bag. I head down annoyed that I have to leave the TV.I am not sure what
I am watching.
Grabbing a paper bag from Grand Union from under the sink I head back
upstairs and hand it to her. We don’t say anything. I see her crying in
my peripheral vision as she takes hair from head and places it in the
bag. I am very aware of what she is doing and I think I sort of know in a
way but I am 11 and confused.
It is one of the most profound moments of my life and yet I was like a
fly on the wall just watching it, not reacting, not speaking just
trying to avoid.
Awful---so sorry you and your mom had to go through that.
ReplyDeleteSo sorry Maria. I was crying reading this. Reading this just tells me you were brave. Sorry you had to go through that.
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