Posts tagged ‘blogging’

November 9, 2011

Tunnels and vehicles.

I sat down to write a blog post a few days ago updating my sinus situation and as I wrote, all I could think was I’m sitting down to write an update on my sinus situation? It made me poof-haired crazy. Has it come to this? Writing about the clogged tunnelage in my little melon of a head? I decided several things.

1. I’m a deficient CF blogger. I write about CF, the daily huff and puff and the corollary emotions. But I prefer to keep a comfortable distance from the uglier aspects for everyone’s sake. There are several CF bloggers who have more guts and less vanity than I do and who are able to write about the ravages of the disease in a sensitive yet honest way. I praise them and I thank them, because many of those blogs lifted me out of the cystic fibrosis quicksands with information and the comfort of knowing I’m not alone. But I realize I am unable to write a “CF blog”. I get shrill. I get teary. I get grossed out. I hate myself a little bit extra. And anyway, it becomes difficult to write a CF Blog when I refuse under penalty of self-inflicted death to never ever use the word p.h.l.e.g.m. in a sentence, so help me God.

2. My sinuses do not require an entire post. Surgeon Number 1 swaggered into every appointment wearing scrubs and the musky scent of egotistical pride for having developed a less invasive method for sinus surgery (balloon sinuplasty). He began every appointment with genuine amazement to see me standing there (still alive!) and ignored me when my insurance refused to cover the surgery. For once in my life, I actually felt thankful for coverage denial, because it forced me to get a second opinion.

I went to meet Surgeon Number 2 armed with a sinus battle plan courtesy of Noan. Surgeon Number 2′s exam was thorough (did I mention the first surgeon didn’t bother to look in my nose a single time?); he took over an hour and a half, but spent most of the time listening and creating a mutually agreeable plan of action. He agreed I was in need of surgery, but felt the conventional  method of sinus surgery was the only method which would actually benefit my small and inflamed sinus passages (balloon sinuplasty would have lasted a few months at best). The good doctor gave me several weeks of treatment with oral antibiotics, steroids, and nasal spray. All of this occurred a few months ago and the treatments helped a lot. Unfortunately, it seems the improvement was temporary because soon after the therapies ended, I returned to a stuffy nose and burning cinder headaches. I have an appointment next week to reassess.

The story has not ended yet, but I’d say the moral is to trust yourself if you have a bad feeling about a doctor. Find a better one. There’s no reason to seek treatment from a doctor you don’t trust, or worse, dislike. Medical treatment consists of medicine and treatment– human interaction and relationship. The most important lesson I learned though is that if I must have an eight inch  metal scope pushed down my nostrils, it helps so much when the young medical fellow who is learning how to properly scope has coffee colored skin, green eyes, and a delightful English accent. I asked ten times, Is it in? Is it in? Not quite yet, you’re doing great, just lovely. Just lovely indeed. I think of scopes now and I smile.

3. Illness is not a muse. While I was reflecting on the foot-dragging resistance I felt against writing a medical update, I realized CF is not a topic I explore in poetry. Not one single poem is about CF. Lungs make occasional appearances, but the disease? Never. I’m sure it’s there in the spaces, between the lines, or casting a shadow over the words. Maybe CF is the dirt from which the words grow. But I don’t find the disease inspiring or worthy of ink on my page. As Rafael Campo writes in his fascinating article about illness as muse:

The only way we can defy our own mortality is through acts of the imagination, by creating the stories and sculptures and paintings and poems that will outlast us, but that will always be animated by our will to have created them. Even our greatest scientific discoveries can be understood in this way: they are not truly ends in themselves, by which we can ever hope to explicate away our suffering, but are rather part of the same process of dreaming and desiring, wishing and wondering.

Illness is simply a means of transportation. It’s a vehicle which drives me closer  to the precipice of life and death, the greatest show on earth. The swizzle of life and death, mingling and steaming and frothing, constantly and simultaneously unfolding within every living thing (yes! in your body too! this very instant!). I’m not interested in the means of transportation; I’m interested in the view: the thin little string that keeps us here, inhaling, exhaling, multiplying, decaying,  swinging back and forth, swinging swinging like a pendulum, maybe amazed and maybe not by the wild cacophony.

——————

Today’s poem is for knowing nothing.

Looking West from Laguna Beach at Night by Charles Wright

I’ve always liked the view from my mother-in-law’s house at night,

Oil rigs off Long Beach….

May 1, 2011

Drum roll please.

The first annual lizislifelines National Poetry Month poetry book give away raffle (whew, long title!) is finally here.

And the winner is:

Teri!

Teri, please acquaint yourself with the selections and make your choice.

Thanks to all of you for playing and contributing your warm, funny, thoughtful comments to the blog. Don’t worry, there will be more poetry books up for grabs in the future.

Also, because April turned out to be such a great month in many ways, filled with so many moments worth celebrating, I’ve decided to send out the other book selections as well.

Liz wins a book for leaving the greatest number of comments. Once Teri has made her selection, Liz will have a choice of the other two.

Stacey wins the third book for her enthusiasm and the fact that she was first-responder to the scene of the crime almost every single time.

Games are fun. Presents are too. I wish I could shower you all with poems, books, and monsoons of cash. For now, I’ll shower you with love and appreciation and hopefully a good story every once in a while.

—————————-

Today’s poem stops me in my tracks every time I read it. Every moment of delight, every shared pleasure, is an act of resistance to darkness. We’ll find delight; we’ll find reasons to laugh and play even as the ship goes down or the jailer locks the door. Thank you for giving me over 70 reasons this month to smile.

Today’s Poem: (click link to read entire poem)

It’s This Way by Nazim Hikmet

I stand in the advancing light,

my hands hungry, the world beautiful…

Tags: ,
Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 38 other followers