Write from the Scar

In happier times…just a few days ago in fact! At the ONDA Christmas party with Phyllis and Mary, two amazing women.

I’m so tired. Maybe it’s the ghost of the impending anniversaries from December 2024 and learning the truth about my injuries, but what’s my excuse this year? I’m discombobulated. I’m depressed. I’m in pain, and I’m grieving for something. I think it’s for who I used to be.

Yesterday I sunk into the depths of a dispair that I didn’t know existed, but today I woke up determined to have a better day. That looks like standing up without bracing for the rushing pain of low blood pressure in my head and shoulders, and instead slowly moving through it, anticipating the other side of the dizzyness, not getting derailed by the dizziness. That looks like leaving the house to write at a coffee shop where I can type these sentences with the accountability of being a human in public.

I don’t yet have the words to explain why I dip into these deep chasms of weeping, but when I try to understand, when I type out the sentiment behind the feeling, I can at least distance myself from it enough to see it a bit more objectively. That perspective takes on more weight as I circle around and around the idea of writing a book about my cancer experience. “Write from the scar, not the wound,” author Cheri Kephart said in her workshop, and that makes sense for a book. My book will be written from the scar, but this blog is written from the wound. From the bloody front lines of a life torn apart and knitting itself back together. At times I think I’m healing and toughing up, but yesterday reveals that I’m still raw and bleeding. The wound is tender and sore. 

Bits from this blog may end up in the book, but I imagine the book will look back on this experience from a larger scale (hello fractal, my old friend). It will be putting all the pieces back together as a work of art, with thought and craft and structure… but now I’m still discovering what the pieces are, and what shapes they take. Writing here is sometimes messy, unshaped, uneven, and scattered, but it’s helping me find the pieces far faster than if I were stewing in this malaise and pain without getting it out into the open and letting it breathe. Writing from the wound is completely appropriate to this phase where I’m trying to make sense of what it means to almost die, to get a second chance at life, to confront my limitations in this new body, all within the context of losing my Dad just a few months ago. 

Saw this on Substack and thought it appropriate, is depressed almost the same as stressed? In dessert speak, that is.

In a way, remission has been harder than treatment. At least during the treatment phase, I had a reason for being tired all the time, I had an excuse for staying in bed and not answering my emails. But after? Maybe it’s the scanxiety (the anxiety of the cancer coming back…all to be revealed in my next scans in early January, and every three months after…for the rest of my life) or it could be PTSD from my close brush with death a year ago. Or maybe there is no reason, and it’s just one big pile of shit that threatens to suffocate me each day.

Some days I don’t feel better, and wonder, is this the new normal? Now I’m starting to understand why people give up, why they don’t want to be alive with cancer anymore. But just thinking that thought scares me into thinking that thought will invite it back. If our minds are that powerful, can thinking about it coming back open the door? (proceeds to tear hair out)

Writing here has been such a lifeline; that’s a reason not to tear my hair out. Fun fact: my hair was thinning during the chemo process, but now it’s growing back, and in certain mirrors I catch a glimpse of myself with 2 inch hairs standing up from my part line; it does make me giggle (actually, you can see it in the photo above!). Through writing, I’ve been in conversation with myself and with you, and these connections have been everything. I’m sending out holiday cards this year, and it’s truly overwhelming. I look at the list of people who donated to my go fund me, who sent cards and care packages, who dropped off meals and stopped by for a visit, and there is not enough stationery or stamps to write enough cards. Hundreds of you came through for me this year, and even if you don’t get a card in the mail, please know how important you were and are to me. I’m so rich in friendship, true connection, and love that I know none of this has to be faced alone, even when I feel alone.

So let’s end this blog post on a high note. Thank you for listening. Even if it feels like I am screaming into the void, I know you are listening and care. That helps so much.

11 thoughts on “Write from the Scar

  1. We ARE listening and we DO care, VERY MUCH. And hell yea it’s ok to have off days…be kind to yourself! It’s ok to cry, to scream, to mourn the losses. It’s not nice, or fair or something everyone around you will understand, but WE DO. Prayers and hugs!

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  2. Babe,it breaks my heart knowing I can’t help you go through this or take your place.  None of us are promised tomorrow and your strength lies in going through all your struggles and keeping on.  There are no reasons for all that happens to us.  No way we could have prepared for dad going through all he did.  As the years pile up we simply have to do our best as you truly are.  Look forward to being with you and sharing all life has given us. I love you,Mom

    Sent from Yahoo Mail for iPad

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  3. I love you Renee, and am here for you in whatever way you need. Do you know you inspire me every single day? I think of you ” on purpose” in the morning when I wake up and at night before bed. I do it in an unplanned way too, all throughout the day. You are living the gift of not taking life for granted and it is A gift for everyone you encounter; this PRESENCE of YOU!
    I am inspired not because you are “rising above it all,” but because you are IN it, going into the dark unknown of each moment and each step, with an honest tell about your experience as you live it.
    oh and it breaks my heart that you are weighing yourself with the task of writing a card to everyone who has been there for you in the last year. Just LET THAT GO. It is enough that you are HERE. Period. Nothing else is expected from anyone or needed. Please KNOW that deeply and give yourself the gift of a BREAK from ANY have-tos. Really. I know everyone would agree. People WANT to be needed; they/we need to be needed. The gift is in the giving. NO other gift is required.
    I love you so much. No need to be “okay” in order to be. Just be.

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  4. Hi She-ra, Thank you for sharing your woundedness and vulnerability. I have found those things key to my connection to myself, others, my higher power, and our beautiful planet. And of course, we can connect through Joy also. A wise person told me to drop the ‘why’s’ As they are cognitive and do not heal the heart. But why? Ha ha. My husband is in remission also right now, and his hair is coming in kind of curly. He was pretty much bald before so we find humor where we can.

    ❤️

    Rynda Clark

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  5. She-ra,

    What an inspiring story you are living …

    33 years ago … August 1992 … I suffered a near fatal subdural hematoma at age 52. My first wife, Barbara, sent me a fundamentally moving card which I treasure to this day … and have shared with many …

    Each one of us who travels further than the obstacles …         Will know a different fife from that time on … 
    

    Well into my 85th year I vividly remember that day … and that message. May you be able to look back to 2025 and ponder the road you have traveled to today.

    Bill Sadd Fredericksburg, TX

    >

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