34….
Those that know me know that my birthday has always been
a great day. There were the years that I
counted down all 365 days. There were
years that some of my peers got daily countdown signs. There were years where I would announce 6:16
daily. There are still days that I call
my brother Aaron at exactly 6:16 to announce the time for him. Not so much fun now that he lives in the
central time zone. You get the gist, I
enjoyed my birthday and made sure everyone around me was celebrating one way or
another.
I was very nervous of this coming June. First of all, I started to have flashbacks of
last summer and we all know what fun Chemo was for me. Next, I started to
realize that I will have to tame Shua and keep our house in one piece (pictures of his new room soon). I guess my
main fear was that shortly after I turned 33, my life spiraled out of
control. One minute I was on top of the
world and the next minute I was trying to process the fact that I actually had
cancer.
Well, the truth is June started off fantastic! I got a great surprise party thrown by my
father’s family. Thanks to chemo I was
not able to put two and two together with my cousin’s texts. It was nice to spend time with everyone. It was nice to celebrate and see the cousins
play so nicely together. I loved all of
my presents and the thoughtfulness of everyone.
It was great to taste vitamins….just kidding, had to put that in there
to see who reads the whole blog. I was a
little sad that it was so cold and I couldn’t go down the waterslide but I do
have all summer to accomplish that goal.
Secondly, I got a package in the mail.
I was so excited to see a box for me. I did order a few things and could
not figure out what would be in the box sent from Parsippany. I did the whole “what did I order again?,
let me check my email to see what I ordered.”
I was in for a surprise. I got a
beautiful necklace from my brothers. The
necklace was the sign for infinity. For
those that know my brothers, it was a perfect choice. The card was well written and brought tears
to my eyes. My brothers are not really
the mushy type. We usually share more
laughs than tears. I guess this year I
shared more tears than laughs with them.
I know that I was a bummer to talk to at times. I did call them sometimes solely for a laugh.
I was guaranteed a laugh especially if I
asked about Joe’s sons.
A surprise (I knew about it for a while but thanks to
Chemo had forgotten all about it until about a week or so ago) for the end of
the school year occurred. The students
decided to dedicate the yearbook to me.
How awesome is that! It meant so
much to me when the girls came to me way back when to ask if they could dedicate the yearbook to me. I was still going through radiation and life
was still a struggle. However, these two
young ladies were so kind and encouraging to me.
When I got home I got a nice present from my fellow warrior Elisa. The cards were hilarious and totally made me laugh. And we all have learned that laughing is the only way to get through cancer. Thanks Elisa!
Well the celebration continued. I got another beautiful
necklace from Stephen before Shabbos started on Friday. I got a few little
gifts from the kids to use with my i-pad.
Stephen picked up a nice dessert for Friday night and for Saturday as
well. I got a two hour Shabbos nap! Again, those that know me know how very
special that was. (Thanks Shua!) During my nap I did hear the doorbell and boy
was I in for a surprise when I really woke up.
Kimmie and Lindsey sent me beautiful flowers. They rock!!!
After Shabbos I got a slew of FB birthday wishes and texts. I got a beautiful song from my friend Darian
(and Jill). All of it made my birthday
so very special.
Since the girls were not so well behaved on Shabbos I
decided not to do cake on Saturday.
Stephen and I were going to eat it without them after they fell asleep
but I am pretty sure I fell asleep before some of them. So the celebration continued on Sunday. As my dad said “it was the never ending
birthday.” We brought the cake up to my
parents’ house to visit with my nieces who were there for Shabbos (from
Georgia). Lots of singing and more
celebrating was done by all. My nieces
made a nice card on the computer for me.
They chased Shua around for a bit and fed him (huge help). Sunday night I opened up my birthday cards that came on Shabbos. Yes, thank you Chemo. I was so excited to see the big thick envelope from Erica only to totally forget about it until Stephen was working on the mail and said "you never opened your cards." I tried to be sly: "oh, yes, I was just thinking about them." However, Stephen knows me too well and said "because I just told you about them....."
And now the paragraph that has nothing to do with the
birthday blog. This past month at school
the students were preparing for a poetry slam.
Usually, I read a funny poem (written by someone else). This year I decided to write one. As soon as the LA teacher mentioned poetry
slam, I started to compose my thoughts.
Each night I would check it over.
Sometimes I would delete it all and start all over. Other times I was pretty proud of my
work. I didn’t read it at the slam but I
did read it to my 8th period class.
Here it is.
Choices
Ring...ring...ring...
I dash for the phone like a cheetah capturing his prey.
Hello?
Yes....
I see...
ok...
thank you....
The cheetah is long gone and now I am a balloon rapidly losing all of my helium.
Whoosh, whoosh, whoosh, higher I soar into the peaceful sky.
Whisper whisper, hush, hush sing the voices around me.
The doctor spoke for ten million minutes but I only heard one word.
Cancer.
Cancer? Not me...
I eat my green leafy vegetables.
Cancer? Not me...
I eat a red juicy apple every day.
Cancer? Not me...
I go to bed on time.
Cancer? Not me...
I exercise regularly.
Cancer? Not me...
I hear the whispers around me.
I feel the arms hugging me.
I see the tears falling down the sad faces.
What do I do?
Hiding under my warm, soft comforter is not a real option.
Pretending the doctor had the wrong number won't work.
Ignoring the situation won't make it go away.
Ring...ring...ring...
I dash for the phone like a cheetah capturing his prey.
Hello?
Yes....
I see...
ok...
thank you....
The cheetah is long gone and now I am a balloon rapidly losing all of my helium.
Whoosh, whoosh, whoosh, higher I soar into the peaceful sky.
Whisper whisper, hush, hush sing the voices around me.
The doctor spoke for ten million minutes but I only heard one word.
Cancer.
Cancer? Not me...
I eat my green leafy vegetables.
Cancer? Not me...
I eat a red juicy apple every day.
Cancer? Not me...
I go to bed on time.
Cancer? Not me...
I exercise regularly.
Cancer? Not me...
I hear the whispers around me.
I feel the arms hugging me.
I see the tears falling down the sad faces.
What do I do?
Hiding under my warm, soft comforter is not a real option.
Pretending the doctor had the wrong number won't work.
Ignoring the situation won't make it go away.
What
do I do?
Fight! Fight! Fight!
The cancer was strong and fast growing.
I chose to be stronger.
I chose to fight.
I chose to smile and laugh.
I chose to not let the cancer win.
I chose to be here today.
Fight! Fight! Fight!
The cancer was strong and fast growing.
I chose to be stronger.
I chose to fight.
I chose to smile and laugh.
I chose to not let the cancer win.
I chose to be here today.
Here is to turning 34!!!
I noticed your necklace on shabbat- so beautiful, and so is the sentiment. Here's to many more amazing birthdays w/family and friends!
ReplyDeleteHappy birthday Rachel.
ReplyDeleteGreat post! Only you can make me smile, laugh and cry all in one post... The picture at the end is great and I hope to get one in the mail or when I see you next. Love you, Rachel.
ReplyDeleteGlad you chose to be here today. I didn't realize you were such a poet! I remember all those tears when I was so far away and you told me to finish my trip. I remember how you made a plan so quickly and a really ambitious plan at that. You followed the plan and conquered cancer! I am proud of you and I love your poem.
ReplyDeleteLove, Mom