Where it Hurts

The day I learned that I needed hip surgery, I cried tears of relief.

On September 23, 2013, I was playing in a JV field hockey game when all of a sudden, after passing the ball to a teammate, I felt something go wrong.  It was… a pop?… a snap?… a tear?… and it came from somewhere in my left backside.  I could not identify precisely where—in my lower back, upper hip, or glute—I felt it.  As I crawled off the field, I struggled to assemble an explanation to provide the athletic trainer.  To this day, I cannot say exactly where it was or what it felt like, but I do know, as the past three and a half years have proven, that something was not right.

For the first eleven months after my injury I was diagnosed with a torn muscle in my hip, but physical therapy did little to relieve my pain.  I began to see an orthopedic surgeon specializing in hips, who saw nothing notable on my MRIs and encouraged me to continue treating with physical therapy.  After months and months of hard work without relief from the pain, I started to worry that I was somehow doing it wrong.  Finally, a new MRI of my hip, this time done with contrast dye, showed torn cartilage in the joint.  This would require surgery to repair.  When, after a year of persistent and unidentifiable pain, as well as numerous consultations with hip specialists, a surgeon walked into my examination room and claimed that he knew exactly how to cure my pain, I sat on the table in front of him and sobbed.  The recovery would be long and painful, but at least it would mean I was healing.  At this point I would have done anything.

After my surgery, I completed nine months of physical therapy to rehabilitate my hip and the rest of my body.  But as the physical therapy came to an end, I noticed that something still felt off.  I occasionally had that same original pain; it was a pain distinctly different from the normal soreness of post-operative recovery, and I was all too familiar with how it felt.  Worried that the operation had failed, I tried to ignore my discomfort for a year and a half.  I was terrified that if the surgery had not provided a cure, then nothing could.  This past December, after the pain suddenly grew much worse, I finally decided that I could no longer ignore my fears.  I scheduled a follow-up appointment with my hip surgeon, who referred me to a spine center to look for other possible causes for my pain.  To this day, my doctors and I are still searching for its source.

My pain taunts me.  It comes and goes.  It moves from place to place.  It floats, it hovers, over my mind and body, cruelly defying articulation.  The English language offers a myriad of terms to describe pain: sharp, dull, burning, throbbing, sore, stiff, tender… the list goes on.  And yet, my three-and-a-half-year search for the words to most accurately capture my experience has left me with the following clumsy explanation: most of the time it does not feel quite like a throb, but more like a series of discrete pinching and tugging sensations with each movement of my lower body, located somewhere between my sacroiliac joint and L5 disc; other times—when I sit or stand for too long—it aches across most of my lower back.  Sometimes, though, the pain deviates from both of these descriptions.

Without looking at a calendar or an MRI report, I can list off the top of my head everything I have done in the past three and a half years to try to relieve this pain—five MRIs, a CT scan, countless X-rays, six specialists, two chiropractors, two injections, and one unsuccessful surgery—including the dates on which most of them took place.  But, despite my three and a half years of familiarity with this injury, I cannot explain how it physically feels.

Three years ago, I spent my time training for the sport I loved, pushing through the pain of conditioning and doing everything I could to prevent the pain of injury.  Now, I spend my time catering to physical pain, altering my movements and avoiding certain motions altogether.  I prepare for each doctor’s appointment by obsessively practicing my story—the words I’ve carefully picked to best convey how the pain feels—in my head.  I brace myself for the disappointment of watching yet another medical professional fumble for a diagnosis.  And I desperately hope for the opposite: I hope that one of these appointments will lead to definitive answers.  I hope to one day again cry tears of relief like those I cried the day I believed in the miraculous powers of hip surgery.

This piece was originally published in The Medical Humanities Journal of Boston College, Volume 3, Issue 1, Spring 2017.

Evelyn Caty is currently a sophomore at Boston College majoring in Biology and planning to minor in Medical Humanities.  She works as an EMT for Boston College Emergency Medical Services, and hopes to pursue a career in health care in the future.

The Show

This week in shadowing, we saw a coronary artery bypass. Because we shadow anesthesiology, we get to see the doctors and nurses set up. It is like setting up a show, everything must be done a certain way in a certain order. From inserting the catheter to carefully draping him so only the necessary areas of his body were exposed (in his case, his entire torso and his legs) and even unwrapping the towels a certain way, everything must be done just so and this was all before he was even cut open. A nurse got us step stools to stand on so we could see. The surgeons walked in at the last minute, taking the drill and the blade and adjusting the lights above. Then, they got to work and we stood there mesmerized until we had to go back to class.

On the walk back to campus, I was in a daze. Upon reflecting on the experience, I found it to be simply bizarre to consider how the show and many others like it are continuing in operating rooms all over the world while we walk outside in the light of day. I couldn't stop thinking about the aftermath of the show. When I was in fourth grade, I was the wicked witch of the west for my class’ version of the Wizard of the Oz and the face paint dyed my face green for three days after. The show was over but I felt like it was still happening to me.

The man who underwent surgery today is going to wake up and hurt. But the surgeons had to break him to fix him. It was simply another day of work for these doctors. The anesthesiologists likely won’t see the patient again, but the surgeons, the ones who weren’t even there from start to finish, will be the ones to see him again when he wakes up. He will go home eventually and have a long, difficult recovery from this invasive surgery.

I admired the patient’s bravery and the surgeons’ dexterity. I was amazed at the anesthesiologists’ ability to compute complex body statistics against powerful medications. If I walked out in a daze and the man under the knife walks out in pain, how do the doctors walk out? Do they hurt, too, when they imagine what it feels like later to have the many sutures down your chest? Do they smile when they think about the years of life they added to his by just doing their job? In the operating room, they are all one show: surgeons, anesthesiologists, nurses, perfusionists, and even us undergraduate students. Outside, we are a fragmented entity that carries only our unique perspective of the show, combined with some input from their explanations.

As a doctor, I will need to learn how to make sense of the show every day. To care for children with medical complexity, children whose needs do not fit inside a single diagnosis or a single medication, I will need to work in teams to put on good shows. But at the end of the day, when I will go home hopefully to my family, I wonder where I will put it. I am an empathic, emotional, and sensitive human being, but I am also driven and dedicated. I believe that I will learn how to integrate what I see of and the role I play in the show into who I am, without losing myself in the process.

Hannah Todd is a rising senior at Rice University, where she is majoring in Spanish and Policy Studies with a minor in Medical Humanities. Additionally, she is concurrently pursuing her Master's in Public Health at the University of Texas and ultimately plans to attend medical school, which would allow her to integrate personal, academic, and professional experience into care for and policy regarding children with medical complexity.

The Courage to Reach Out: What Being There Really Means

An Interview with Kelsey Crowe, Ph.D., co-author of There Is No Good Card for This

By Val Walker

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Dr. Kelsey Crowe is an author, speaker, and founder of Help Each Other Out, which offers Empathy Bootcamp workshops to give people tools for building relationships when it really counts. She earned her Ph.D. in social work at the University of California, Berkeley, and is a faculty member in the School of Social Work at California State University. Regular clients for her talks and workshops include UCSF and Stanford University, among several others. She is a cancer survivor and human survivor, each day finding meaning in connection and a purpose driven life. You can reach her at www.helpeachotherout.org

INTRODUCTION

by Val Walker

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I first discovered Kelsey’s website, Help Each Other Out, two years ago while doing research on how to comfort people living with serious illness. I loved her honesty, compassion and gentle humor in her writings about how to reach out to people in distress. She was learning to live with breast cancer, creatively weaving her personal experience with her expertise in social work and social justice.  Drawing from her research, insights and stories, she developed an innovative training program to teach relational skills called Empathy Bootcamp. We chatted on the phone a few times about our common interest in the power of empathy and our writing projects. I found her to be warm, encouraging and generous, even though she had recently endured losing her home in a terrible fire. Fortunately, no one was hurt. Later in 2015, I was delighted to hear she was well on her way to landing a book deal, co-authoring a book with the viral Greeting Card designer of Empathy Cards, Emily McDowell. Kelsey and Emily’s book has just come out this January, called There is No Good Card for This: What to Say and Do When Life Is Scary, Awful and Unfair for People You Love.  It’s a wonderful resource with lively, vibrant graphics and illustrations, yet full of practical guidance for the delicate art of reaching out.

Q&A with KELSEY CROWE

Congratulations on your book! What experiences convinced you to write There is No Good Card for This?

Kelsey:  My experience with cancer was an invitation to write my book.

I began writing when my friend in Grad school got cancer, and I wanted to reach out, yet I was hesitant. I felt stuck. What should I say? How did I belong as a friend now? My experience of feeling so powerless as a friend led me to exploring the cause for my hesitancy to reach out to people who were seriously ill. By doing research and interviews, I gathered material about how to offer help for people in times of need.

While developing this book, I worked as a faculty member at California State University, teaching courses on public policy. I found research that convinced me how important it was to publish a guide for reaching out to people in crisis. I created a guide book, and I tried submitting this to publishers, but it didn’t take off at first. And then, I got diagnosed with breast cancer. That changed everything about how I wrote about helping each other, and I revised my book. I realized I needed to make my private life public. I began a website called Help Each Other Out where I could share my own experiences living with cancer as well as share about so many hard times like loss or divorce and others that affect many of us at one point or another. In addition to the Help Each Other Out website, I collaborated with several empathy experts to develop a training program for lay people and healthcare settings called Empathy Bootcamp, which gives people communication tools for being with others in their time of suffering. With a stronger platform developed for my book, I again worked to find a publisher.

Ideally, to enhance my book project, what I envisioned was having it illustrated. I had heard of Emily McDowell, and loved her Empathy Cards, which were going viral in 2014. As a woman who had been through cancer herself, Emily designed greeting cards for people coping with illness. I had wanted a comedic tone to illustrations for my book, and she seemed like the perfect person to approach, but I wasn’t quite sure how to connect with her. Then, one day, amazingly, I received a text from a friend at the New York Trade Show who was sitting right next to Emily! That friend connected with Emily in person, and introduced my book project. Soon I followed up and called her. I found out that she had also wanted to write a book about empathy. We talked, and she was pleased that I had already written and researched so much of the material—that the project was fully vetted and ready for her input. So, we created the book together with her illustrations, humor, and ideas.

Kelsey, what a remarkable story. It sounds like it was “meant to be” that you connected with Emily—fantastic timing, Kismet. You were the perfect duo to create this book!

If you could sum it up, what are the five main takeaways of your book, There is No Good Card for this?

Kelsey:  Here are five takeaways about reaching out to others:

  1. Err on the side of doing something rather than doing nothing. If you are trying to decide whether to reach out or not, it’s better to offer whatever you can, rather than hold back.

  2. You can manage how much you give. Comforting someone can be manageable for who you are, and where you are in life.

  3. It’s much more helpful to listen than to find that elusive “useful” thing to say. Even if you’ve been ill with cancer, it’s important to respect and remember that each person’s experience is unique. Use your experience with illness as a good reason to listen to each other.

  4. Small gestures make a big difference.

  5. Give what you know how to give; and don’t wait to be asked to give.

A few years ago, you started an innovative training program, Empathy Bootcamp. Many of your participants are healthcare providers and caregivers. How do you teach empathy—or how do you teach a way to “operationalize empathy,” as you put it?

Kelsey:  First of all, empathy is about a way to live and not just about doing your job well. Empathy is a part of connecting and listening in all areas of our lives. In the past few years, empathy has become a popular buzz word. People are interested in learning empathy skills, especially in our digital age. In my Empathy Bootcamps, I focus much of the training on listening skills which are essential to putting empathy into action. I present three different categories of listening that each require different skills. It helps to distinguish empathic listening from the other kinds, as empathy is so important as a first step to establishing a relationship.

  • Empathic Listening:  This is listening that builds trust. We start with empathic listening before we go to other interactions.

  • Evaluative Listening: This is where we ask questions to offer up a judgment or assessment.

  • Fact-finding Listening: This is when people ask a lot of questions because they need specific knowledge to be helpful, like when networking with someone to appropriate resources, or when being a patient advocate.

Empathic listening is the kind of listening we should do most of the time. The other forms of listening can come across as judgmental, or take the person off track from what they truly want to talk about--so use evaluative and fact-finding listening with careful discretion.

Yes, so we need to start with empathic listening to establish a relationship with the person before we move into problem-solving mode. I see how empathic listening lays the foundation of trust and understanding before we get to evaluative listening and fact-finding. Otherwise, we feel more like a commodity than a human being!

Kelsey: Right!

I’m so glad you are teaching this vital skill in your Empathy Bootcamp.

On a more personal note, I was wondering if you could share an experience of being comforted when you were first diagnosed with cancer? What were the gestures of comfort that touched you the most?

Kelsey:  It wasn’t so much the gesture itself, but the timing of that gesture. One evening I was so tired, felt so alone and shut down. I was pushing myself hard to make it to the end of that day. And suddenly that evening I received a delivery of flowers. It was so spontaneous and beautiful. Perfect timing.

Another time I told someone I was afraid I was going to die. She just hugged me and held me for a moment, and it helped me so much.

What you said convinces me that the little ways we reach out can be vital. One simple gesture just might just come in the nick of time to get us through hell.

Kelsey: Right. Our words or actions don’t have to be perfect--just reach out. On my worst days, it was such a relief to know someone cared.

So true, Kelsey. It’s been a pleasure talking with you today—I could talk with you all day! Thanks so much.

Kelsey: Thank you!

RESOURCES

Kelsey’s truly helpful site, and packed with resources too:  Help Each Other Out www.helpeachotherout.org

Emily McDowell’s Empathy Cards— uplifting and honest!  www.emilymcdowell.com

A wonderful read and fantastic guide for times we need to reach out:

There Is No Good Card for This: What to Say and Do When Life Is Scary, Awful and Unfair for People You Love.

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Val Walker, MS, is the author of The Art of Comforting: What to Say and Do for People in Distress (Penguin/Random House, 2010). Formerly a rehabilitation counselor for 20 years, she speaks, teaches and writes on how to offer comfort in times of loss, illness, and major life transitions. Her next book, 400 Friends and No One to Call: Breaking Through Isolation and Building Community will be released in March 2020 by Central Recovery Press.

Keep up with Val at www.HearteningResources.com

My Breast Cancer: Reflections Sixteen Years After Diagnosis

By Leah Meyer

As a social worker at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, Sandy often works with young adults who receive potentially life-threatening diagnoses. “I think it’s absolutely jarring”, she reflects on the experience, though not solely in her capacity as a provider. Sandy was diagnosed, herself, with bilateral breast cancer when she was 35.

That first year included bilateral mastectomies, two different kinds of chemotherapy, and radiation. Then followed 15 years of hormonal therapy, so “technically”, she states, “I didn’t end treatment until a little more than a year ago.” Though cancer doesn’t affect her day to day existence anymore, it has certainly not disappeared from her life. She refers to it, wryly, as “the gift that keeps on giving.” She still sees the oncologist every year and waits anxiously for the results of her annual blood tests, and her history as a cancer survivor has forever shifted her self-perception and the way that others perceive of her.

When reflecting on her own treatment, Sandy thinks of the work she does with people in recovery from addiction, citing the value of the “one day at a time” philosophy prominent in 12-step treatment models. “I really took my cancer diagnosis and took life a day at a time…I think I was already living that way in part because of the work that I did,” she recalls, but cancer made this way of life even more pressing. Early in her diagnosis, soon after completing the most aggressive stage of her treatment, she remembers that she stopped saving in her 401K. “In part”, she says, “because you wonder, am I gonna be around for retirement?” She wanted to spend her money, to go on fun trips and do the things she had always dreamed of doing. Nowadays, with the fear of recurrence less of a constant in her mind, she has shifted her perspective slightly. “I have to make plans for tomorrow, but I have to live in today.”

And so it comes back around, her experience in return informing her work. “I think it’s actually helped me be a better social work provider because I know both sides...you know what it’s like.” She urges providers not to make assumptions about patients and their priorities, as she herself experienced when preparing for her own double mastectomy. Sandy, who is a lesbian and an accomplished athlete, recalls that one of her doctors made a comment on how the surgery would give her the “athletic body” that she had always wanted. “That was what I wanted? No,” she corrects, “I’d rather have my boobs.”

Some of the memorable lessons Sandy holds close required a different kind of strength from her usual persistence and fighter’s attitude. As an example, she remembers attempting to tackle a strenuous ropes course as part of an Outward Bound community building activity with her breast cancer support group while in the midst of treatment. Always one to try the hardest route, she fell her first time through, but she got up and tried again, this time taking a gentler approach. “Sometimes the easier way is the better way,” she realized, and she has carried this lesson forward.

She has found the humor in her experiences too, believing that “you can do stand-up comedy about some of the things” that cancer brings along, telling the story of a prosthetic breasts mishap on the golfing range. And there’s always new material. You have to keep laughing.

As for advice to others navigating similar health challenges, Sandy says “don’t let it stop you.” She acknowledges that you may have to “accommodate” the cancer, but you can (and must) keep going. “You can have aggressive cancer and aggressive treatment and still get better,” she reminds us. Also, she encourages people undergoing treatment to identify what kind of support is helpful and to seek it out. Personally, she finds the hushed, knowing prompts of “how ARE you?” annoying, but knows that some people like to be asked. “Whatever works for you, teach your friends,” she urges, “find community.” Finally, and perhaps most importantly, “try to celebrate each day.” Some days, Sandy remembers, “I was miserable, I was sick as a dog. But I still tried to put good things in each day no matter how crappy I felt, and that made it easier to get through.”

Dr. Annie Brewster, a Boston internist and founder of the Health Story Collaborative. Leah Meyer is an intern with Health Story Collaborative and a student at Yale College.

When There’s No One to Call: Caring for Patients Who Lack Social Support

An interview with Dhruv Khullar,M.D., M.P.P.

By Val Walker

Introduction: Social Isolation is an Increasingly Important Topic

Could there be anything more frightening than going to a hospital alone for surgery, knowing that no one will be by your side when you wake up afterwards?  What if you have no one to turn to for help when you become seriously ill?

As a former rehabilitation case manager, I witnessed too many patients without social support. Too often I scrambled to contact any possible friends or relatives to help, and came up short with utterly no one available. I turned to social science research to better understand why people were so isolated. An alarming AARP study in 2012 on social isolation highlighted formidable barriers to social support:

  1. Living alone (Nearly 40% of adults over 65 are living alone.)

  2. Mobility or sensory impairment

  3. Major life transitions/losses.

  4. Socioeconomic status (low income, limited resources).

  5. Location (rural, unsafe or inaccessible neighborhoods)

  6. Being a caregiver for someone with a major impairment.

Moreover, the study revealed that full-time caregivers are mostly women who are often alone without support while struggling to take care of their own health care needs.

 The AARP study convinced me that being socially isolated is most often not a choice. Many societal and economic forces prevent us from being able to count on each other for support. Today we're more likely to find ourselves alone in a hospital regardless of how much or how little we've invested in our relationships. Indeed, in 2012, I found myself alone, stranded in a hospital bed after my hysterectomy because my friend failed to show up as planned. I had no one to take me home, and no one to check in on me during my first days after my surgery. I had made firm arrangements, but people just did not come through at the last minute. This shocking experience opened my eyes to how alone and stranded any of us can be.

Recently I read a New York Times article titled How Social Isolation is Killing Us by Dhruv Khullar, MD, who works at Massachusetts General Hospital. Dr. Khullar's compassionate view of his socially isolated patients sparked my interest in contacting him for an interview. Annie Brewster and I were thrilled when he responded to our invitation and agreed to talk with us.

Q&A with Dhruv Khular, M.D.

You wrote a powerful piece for the New York Times called How Social Isolation is Killing Us. As a doctor at Mass General Hospital, do you personally see an increase in socially isolated patients?

Dhruv Khullar:  All the time--every day, I see real life evidence of how isolated people are. And social isolation is increasing.

Lots of interesting statistics are out there about social isolation, but it’s my personal experience that motivated me to write more about this problem. I see elderly as well as younger patients coping with a lack of social support. We’re now living in a world of smaller families, and we often lack the extended support that larger families once provided. I see older patients living without their core group of support after many of their loved ones have passed away. And many younger people are dealing with the stigma of addiction or mental health issues, so their social support has been thinning out.

In our digital age, we can have 1000 friends on Facebook, but who is going to show up at the hospital for us?  Who is really there in our support system? Many connections we have through social media are only secondary supports, not the one or two people we can really count on in a crisis.

What can doctors do to help socially isolated patients?

Dhruv Khullar:  I think it’s in the doctor’s purview to ask about the social needs of our patients. Doctors have an important opportunity to screen for social isolation just by asking a couple of questions. We can identify isolated patients by asking simple, concrete questions such as “Who do you have to talk to about your surgery?” Or “Is there someone to take care of you when you go home?” Just two or three basic questions can make a difference. Also, practical, care-based questions are less likely to be threatening for a patient.  Instead of starting with psychological issues (“Are you feeling lonely?”) we can ask, “Is someone coming by to see you today?”

And once we have identified a patient who lacks social support, we can make a referral to a social worker, chaplain or hospital volunteer. They are a crucial part of the team. Healthcare has become so complex, it’s better to deliver care in a team-based setting, especially for a patient who has no one to rely on. Though we as doctors can play a vital role in identifying socially isolated patients, we need to alert our team so these patients get connected to the best services that meet their needs.

What you said makes so much sense. It does seem natural that a doctor would ask questions about who is caring for you—who is there for you. And further, I’m wondering this:  If your doctor is genuinely concerned that you don’t have anyone there for you, could these questions encourage you to talk openly about your lack of support?

Dhruv Khullar:  Yes, I believe asking simple, care-based questions can make it easier for patients to have an honest conversation about their need for more support. And this conversation could alleviate some of the shame and distress about being alone without support. Conversations, even brief talks with doctors, have a way of normalizing what has felt uniquely embarrassing or shameful. A patient might not feel so alone when their doctor emphasizes that social isolation is a common problem.

You got me thinking about the stigma in our society that makes it so difficult to speak up if we lack social support, and are truly alone. We don’t want to appear “needy.” What do we do if we really don’t have people to turn to when we must have surgery, or find ourselves seriously ill? Isn’t talking about being alone and needing help a hard conversation to have?

Dhruv Khullar: Conversations can start with a doctor or healthcare provider, even if we are too ashamed to discuss our lack of support with someone else. Once the conversation has started, patients may be able to face their need for support with less shame and more action. Once again, care-based, concrete questions can help us speak openly, and begin planning our care, including making referrals for the support that is needed.

We need to have more conversations about social isolation. The more candid the better. Hopefully we will find the courage to ask, “Will you be there for me?” And we will keep talking until we know who we can count on.

Besides making referrals to hospital social workers, chaplains or volunteers, is there a particular resource that you find helpful when you identify a socially isolated patient?

Dhruv Khullar:  I highly recommend the Health Leads program. This service is available in many hospitals in Massachusetts and other areas of the country. It can help connect patients to services they need, with links to community resources.  I use it very often.

When interacting with a patient who is alone and lacking support, what do you say or do to put them at ease?

Dhruv Khullar:  In the busyness of the hospital what sometimes gets lost is the human connection. One patient I remember was dying alone, without any loved ones around. At those times, it’s important just to listen. So I listened to whatever he wanted to talk about. Being present was as valuable as anything else I could do.

In my experience, even in just a few minutes, there are moments for deep connection. If we make the time, we can deeply and honestly communicate about what’s most important.

I’m really moved by your words. Thank you so very much for your generosity and insight, Dr. Khullar. And I’m so grateful that you’re encouraging people to talk more about this problem of social isolation. You have validated for me just how vital it is to have honest, realistic conversations when we need to ask others to help us.

Dhruv Khullar:  Thank you, it was a pleasure to talk with you today.

Resources

More about Dhruv Khullar

Health Leads Program

AARP Study on Isolation: Framework for Isolation in Adults over 50

Dhruv Khullar, M.D., M.P.P. is a resident physician at the Massachusetts General Hospital with interests in health policy, economics, and journalism. He is a contributor at the New York Times and writes regularly for both mainstream and academic publications, exploring evolving trends in medicine and health care. He recently worked at the ABC News Medical Unit, where he helped curate and communicate health information, and was previously at the White House Office of Management and Budget (OMB), focusing on Affordable Care Act implementation.

Khullar graduated with honors from Yale University (B.A. in Biology), and earned his medical degree (M.D.) at the Yale School of Medicine. He also received a Masters in Public Policy (M.P.P.) from the Harvard Kennedy School, where he was a fellow at the Center for Public Leadership. His work has appeared in the New England Journal of Medicine, Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA), New York Times, Washington Post, Wall Street Journal, USA Today, The Atlantic, Slate, Politico, and Scientific American. He was recently recognized by LinkedIn as one of the Top 10 Healthcare Professionals Under 35.

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Val Walker, MS, is the author of The Art of Comforting: What to Say and Do for People in Distress (Penguin/Random House, 2010). Formerly a rehabilitation counselor for 20 years, she speaks, teaches and writes on how to offer comfort in times of loss, illness, and major life transitions. Her next book, 400 Friends and No One to Call: Breaking Through Isolation and Building Community will be released in March 2020 by Central Recovery Press.

Keep up with Val at www.HearteningResources.com

The Reverberations of Rape: Orna's Story

Seven years ago, Orna's life was irrevocably changed when she was abducted, tortured, and raped. Though she survived the attack, her wounds are still healing.

In this intimate podcast, Orna describes the mixed medical and psychological care she received, the complexity of tending to both her personal health and the legal process, and how she is learning to navigate the healing process. Orna suggests how healthcare providers can provide more sensitive care, offers solace and inspiration to other survivors, and shines a light on the racism and stereotypes our culture perpetuates about rape. We must collectively commit to dismantling the misnomer that rape only happens to young white women: it also happens to men, people of all races and cultures and ages, LGBTQ individuals, prisoners, and military personnel.

Suggested Resources:

The nation’s largest anti-sexual violence organization provides advocacy, resources, and educational information: RAINN.org

National Sexual Assault Hotline: 1.800.656.HOPE

Article on racism and rape: http://endsexualviolence.org/where-we-stand/racism-and-rape

For survivors: http://endsexualviolence.org/forsurvivors

Online forum for survivors to anonymously share their stories, and read others to see they’re not alone: Brave Miss World Speak Out

When Hope is Hard to Find, Keep Looking

This patient on my mind—let’s call him Sam—is smart. Sharp might actually be a better word. He knows what he should say to get out of here, and he probably even knows how to do it gradually enough so that we believe him. Sam knows our attending thinks he’s afraid of people caring about him, for instance, so he could play that up and pretend to let him in, fabricate a healthy exchange. These are the thoughts I have about Sam on the walk home, typing furiously away at my notes in my phone, with the hope that they’ll stay in the document and out of my head. I think about Sam, what he says, and what he actually means.

Sam has made multiple attempts to kill himself. He’s had a tough life, and I won’t attempt to explain the root of it all. He accepts his pain as constant, and he does so without drama. He fits the criteria of involuntary commitment because he’s at what’s considered an “unacceptably high risk” of hurting himself if he’s discharged, and he’s waiting for placement at a state hospital, where he’ll be for an undetermined amount of time. Sam keeps asking what the point is, saying that he’ll kill himself when he leaves, that he doesn’t envision a future for himself. Still, he repeats all the things he knows will keep him here. Why does he set himself up to be institutionalized, if he really wants to leave and end it? Does he want help, but is so incapable of asking for it, that he’ll say whatever will compel us to keep him here? How can we connect to him, if that’s the case?

At first glance, Sam looked to me like a lot of teenagers do, with this angst sort of hovering over him, sulking around with huge headphones on and refusing to show up to morning rounds. I’d catch him at groups, sitting with his hands glued in his pockets or folded against his chest. When I say Sam is smart, I mean I think Sam is probably a lot smarter than me. He’s cynical, with a sort of wisdom and a dry humor that ages him and makes him easy to relate to. Sam will laugh at you when he knows you’re trying to “doctor” him, an effective way to puncture and deflate your ballooned ego.

He brightened up a little while we played scrabble during group one afternoon, making me think for a moment, I don’t know, maybe there’s a chance for him. It’s frustrating, maddening even, to see a guy as sharp, as funny, as “normal” as he is, describe how painful life can be, and watch him carry that pain so complacently. But I can’t be mad at Sam for being in the kind of pain he’s in, I can’t even blame him for wanting to hurt himself. The fact is, I’ve only been here a few short weeks. Who am I to say he’s being selfish or pessimistic? Through his charm, in a way, Sam throws a wall up around himself, one you feel like you can’t tunnel through no matter how “real” you are with him. How can you really know him? How can you understand what he’s going through, and how can you know what to do to fix it?

I like to check off boxes, to feel like I’ve accomplished something. I like to feel as though I can walk out of a patient’s room having made a genuine attempt to contribute to their care. With Sam, it feels impossible to do that. At the end of the day, I am one of a batch of students with stiff, starchy white coats that cycles in and out of this locked unit for six weeks at a time, eager to “let these patients in,” but it’s likely that nothing will change for Sam and his painful reality in that time.

I pursued medical school with an idea. I even wrote about it in my application. I wrote that I wanted to become a doctor so I could meet people from all over, each with a story of their own, and that I could take a little piece of them with me and that all those pieces would add up to something meaningful. I think this became a part of my mindset growing up. My dad was in the military, and he traveled all over the world flying huge carrier airplanes. My siblings and I lived on a military base with my mom, and with each trip we waited for him to bring back all kinds of souvenirs and stories. I started to dream up all the places he went to, and the people who lived there. I kept a picture of a pyramid he took while he was in Egypt on my bedside table. I imagined people with lives so different from mine, and I convinced myself that as a doctor, I would find the most opportunities to encounter all these people, to get to know them and become a part of their stories while they became a part of mine.

When I met Sam, I began to wonder if all those pieces I’ll take with me would eventually show me how futile this job can feel. It started to feel like so many of the pieces we take are the ones full of pain and hopelessness, frustration and grief, and fear. My short experience with Sam puts a stark but simple realization back into view. I can’t fix his life, or hand him some profound new way of dealing with it. And it’s not about what feeling of accomplishment I can gain from working with him. All I can do is try my hardest to know where’s he coming from. I can educate myself on all the options he might have—medications, therapy, or anything else I can think of. I can help lay them all out for him and try to be prepared to answer any questions he might come up with. I can be honest with him, and I can listen. I can try my best to know what he cares about most, what he fears most.

Maybe that’s unsatisfying, but I think that’s sort of the point. You have to keep trying, whether or not the feeling of self-satisfaction ever comes.

Read more from Medical Student Voices here

Learn more about the Community Voices and discover more empowering health stories here

Jacqueline Hodges is a third year medical student at Tufts University School of Medicine. She is from Gainesville, Virginia and graduated from the University of Virginia, where she majored in biochemistry with a minor in global public health. Jacqueline is pursuing a dual degree in medicine and public health at Tufts and plans to do a residency in internal medicine. Outside of medicine, her interests include graphic design, hiking and traveling, and eating Korean and Southern food.

Daniel: Healing From Sexual Abuse By A Teacher

By Annie Brewster

Daniel and I went to the same private school I attended for high school. I was older by a few years and don’t remember him well, but he seemed like a happy enough member of our school community. It wasn't until last year, 30 years after graduating, that I learned about the abuse: In middle school, he was molested by an English teacher. Students, faculty and administrators stood by, most of us oblivious but some aware, all silent and all somehow complicit.

Now 45, Daniel shares his story with strength and compassion, speaking out straightforwardly and unapologetically about this trauma and the effects it had on his health. He has not only recovered, but is also helping other individuals who have experienced similar abuse, or are at risk of it.

Trauma associated with the abuse of a student by a teacher is especially insidious, as the perpetrator is often a respected authority figure, someone the student wants to please, typically held in high regard. For Daniel, it was difficult even to label what was going on as abuse. Instead, unconsciously, he internalized shame. Years of depression and anxiety ensued, and an ongoing journey of recovery. Today, Daniel says that the struggles he has faced, though unwanted, have made him stronger, and ultimately healthier, by encouraging depth of perspective, self-knowledge, resilience and empathy.

Recent reporting by the Boston Globe has highlighted the prevalence of sexual misconduct by staff at New England prep schools, with over 100 private schools identified as potentially involved in such incidents over the past 25 years, and more than 300 alleged victims coming forward.

In most cases, like Daniel’s, school administrators did not intervene to stop the abuse when they should have. Allegations were not taken seriously, and abuse survivors are justifiably angry. But Daniel would say that our school responded admirably, with compassion, respect and action, when he approached administrators regarding his abuse a decade ago -- more than 18 years after it occurred. The school, with Daniel’s help, has become a role model in guiding other schools through this process.

Daniel recently brought a civil suit against his abuser, and is satisfied with its settlement. Recent changes in the law extending the statute of limitations on sexual abuse of minors allowed him to bring the suit, and still more such legal changes are likely in the coming months.

Daniel says that recovery, both from depression and trauma, is non-linear and involves slowly naming and making sense of what has happened.With time, he has learned to integrate the complexity of his situation, to appreciate his vulnerability and his strength. He is a survivor of trauma, and so much more. No one part defines him. In this acceptance, he is whole.

Originally posted on the WBUR CommonHealth Blog on December 28th, 2016

Traumas, Bruises and Healing

Picture this scene:

It was winter in 2011.

I was 35 years old.

I had two little kids, a girl and a boy. Clare was 4 and Hayes was 1.

My husband Sam was totally engaged in family life, a great husband.

My book publishing job was full time and included frequent travel.

I was trying to take care of the kids, to be a good wife and good friend, to exercise, to eat well, to cook, to read, to stay up to date on current events, to relax, to meditate, to travel, to volunteer at our preschool.

I knew that I could do all I wanted to do and I was happy a lot of the time. But as much as I was happy, I was exhausted and cranky.

I remember saying to Sam that I couldn’t maintain the level of intensity, that my body was breaking.

I was worn out.

On the last Sunday in February, I felt a lump in my right breast. Since Hayes was still nursing, there were lumps and bumps, but this felt different. More solid. I went to my midwife’s office on Monday morning, and the nurse agreed that the lump felt unusual. In fact, the cheerful banter about the kids immediately stopped when she felt the lump. Her face was instantly serious, drained of color. She recommended that I have a biopsy and she scheduled it for Thursday of that week. That was my first mammogram and my last. The experience of the mammogram and biopsy was fine. I was a little scared, a little shaken, a little teary but at that point there was a 50% chance that the lump would be nothing to worry about. Life would go on as usual.

But that of course is not what happened. The results of the biopsy came back on Monday morning. The same nurse who helped during both of my pregnancies and who sent me to the hospital for the test called me that morning. She said that all of the details of the biopsy were not back. The preliminary news: You have breast cancer. It is invasive duct cancer. We can’t tell you more at this point. You have a meeting with a great team of doctors at Mass General next week.
What??

On the one hand, this was shocking news. I have breast cancer? I am 35 years old. I have two babies. I have a full time job. I have plans. How is this happening?

On the other hand, cancer had always been looming on the edges. My mom died of pancreatic cancer when I was 2, my brother was almost 6, and she was 33.

There was a haunting feeling that we were reliving history. The ages were too close, the story too close. I knew what Sam and my kids could lose. The pain is real and forever.

[I want to pause here for a second. I have a hard time untangling my cancer story from my life story. My mom’s death is certainly part of my cancer story, but it is important to note that it is really the central theme of my life story. Her death changed everything—from where I grew up to how I grew up to the person I married and to how I mother. My cancer story exists within her cancer story.].

In the days after the diagnosis, I was in organizational mode. I spent a lot of time organizing my office, calling family and friends, grasping for control.

At our first medical appointment, we talked about my cancer—about the stage, the grade, and the plan. Sam and I left with a clear idea of how MGH would treat my cancer. I would have a lumpectomy, followed by chemo, and maybe by radiation. We had a team in place. We felt in good hands.

At the recommendation of the doctors, I decided on genetic testing for a breast cancer gene mutation. It was notable that my mom had cancer in her early 30s as well, even though it was a different cancer, one that I always thought was not inherited. What I didn’t know before my diagnosis is that pancreatic cancer has a dotted line to the BRCA mutations.

A few weeks later, on a really crisp and bright morning, our little house was buzzing. I was getting ready for work, the nanny had just arrived, my husband was using the vacuum in the kitchen, Hayes was crying, Clare was saying “Mom. Mom. Mom. Mom. Mom.” The phone rang. It was my surgeon. The rest of the world fell back, sound faded, as I heard her words: You’re BRCA1 positive. This changes the course of treatment. We recommend a double mastectomy, followed by chemo and radiation. For whatever reason, I immediately agreed to this path. I was not reluctant to have the surgery, even though I nursed my babies for a long time and was still nursing Hayes. I was attached to my breasts, but I knew they had to go. I wanted every single breast cell to be history. The mastectomy would be followed by breast reconstruction and an oophorectomy because of an increased risk of ovarian cancer. At that point, I didn’t understand the long-term consequences of taking out my ovaries, removing my breasts, but even if I had, I would have moved forward with this plan. I wanted to do everything possible.

Waiting for the surgery was hard. The mind plays tricks: I knew that I could feel the tumor growing. I could feel it move to my lymph nodes.

The surgery was on March 31. I don’t remember arriving at the hospital, meeting with the doctors, going under—really any of it. I do remember my parents at the hospital. I remember being incredibly out of it. I remember a friend visiting, though only vaguely.

Day by day, I felt better.

At the end of April, I was accepted into a clinical trial which required a full body scan in preparation. Though my oncologist was confident that the cancer had not spread, I was happy to have the scan for peace of mind. A baseline. I went to MGH West for the day with my oldest and best friend Rosie. I drank the awful drink, we laughed, goofed around, and headed home. I was not nervous at all.

We had been home for about an hour when the phone rang. It was my doctor. Something in the liver looked suspicious and a biopsy was scheduled for the next morning.

The biopsy was the worst experience of my life. The giddiness of the day before was gone. I was terrified. My husband took me to the appointment in the bowels of MGH-no windows, no private room. Curtains only. The anesthesia did not totally knock me out because the doctors needed me to respond to cues. The suspicious spot was behind my ribs so the needle went between two ribs.

The medicine made me sick. I vomited so much that blood vessels were popped on my face. I couldn’t speak. Finally, around 8:00 my husband wheeled me out and we were home soon after. My daughter ran up to me—I remember in pink tulle—but I couldn’t speak and I was too weak to even hug her. I slowly carried myself upstairs and into bed.

This was a very physical experience. I felt so annihilated by the experience that I didn’t have the energy to worry about the biopsy results.

The results were fine. The cancer hadn’t moved. The suspicious spot was a lesion that has now been monitored for five years and hasn’t changed. We stayed on course. Chemo started in early May.

I got through chemo. I very rarely felt nauseated like I thought I would. What I did feel was totally crazy. I was wired and not thinking straight. I was wide awake but totally out of it. I felt out of my mind.

Surprisingly, over time, I began to feel healthy and confident with my cancer look. I loved the shape of my bald head and the colorful scarves. I felt beautiful, but not always. During a visit by my incredible sister-in-law Mary Lou, I happened to catch a glimpse of my naked body in a mirror. I was thin. I was bald. My breasts were gone, with only the shape of my expanders and stiches where my nipples used to be. My chest had been dug out up to my collar bones, so the upper chest was concave. The scar from Hayes’ delivery a year earlier was still red. It was shocking. The hug that she gave me in that moment literally held me up. Without her I would have collapsed in despair. She supported me and the moment passed.

Our family was in survival mode. During the treatment, my dad assured me that my story would be different than my mom’s story, that the times had changed, that my cancer was not her cancer, and that my ending would be a happy one. But the chance that I would leave these kids was too real.

The kids were little so cancer was not tangible to them in the way it would be to older kids, but it was hard on them. Our routine was destroyed. Clare turned 5 that May. Clare is amazing, full of life and vigor. She fights for what she wants—and at age 5, she wanted attention, sweets, and TV. People were coming and going. Everyone had different tactics for disciplining her. And different tactics for spoiling her. Presents, ice cream, pedicures. It was so confusing for her.

Hayes was a baby. After the surgery, I couldn’t lift him out of his crib. I couldn’t hold him. I stopped nursing him. I felt as if I was abandoning him. In August, after my chemo had ended and I was feeling better, I was on a walk with Hayes and Sam. Hayes wouldn’t come to me, and Sam said, accurately, “He doesn’t trust you anymore.” My heart was broken.

But then, moment by moment and day by day, we rebuilt our bonds.

During my cancer treatment, many people suggested that I go back to work for at least a year and a half, to find normalcy again. This was great advice, helping me to put other things besides cancer on center stage. But in June 2015, about four years after the diagnosis, I packed up my desk and headed home. I really wanted to be with my kids, to raise them, to mother. I felt that I was missing too much. We’ve spent the last year living normal lives—doing homework and extracurriculars, lounging, traveling, bickering, cooking, exercising. It has been a great year, filled with bumpy life.

My health has been good, and my trips to the cancer center have slowed down. Cancer still has my attention (when I had a stomach bug recently I asked my husband if he thought it could be metastasized cancer—he didn’t), but it is not the focal point. It is part of my story, not my entire story. It is my story, not my mom’s story. And I am thankful for this.

Son or Medical Student? Finding Balance With Mom’s Cancer

Spring 1997

I eye up the worn and tattered catcher’s mitt 20 feet ahead. It’s a warm May morning and the elementary school bus is coming down the street in 10 minutes. But, more importantly, baseball season is finally here. Mom is down in the catcher’s stance, “Fire it in here!” she shouts and then grins at me as I start my wind up. I pull my gloved hand up to my face and tuck my right hand in, resting the ball in the heel of the glove. I take a short step to my right and shift my weight slightly over my right foot. I swing my left leg up high and, pushing off my right leg, send everything I’ve got into the pitch, whipping the ball at mom, as she squats in the grass with the mitt held open wide. The ball smacks into the glove’s weathered pocket with a “Crack!” “Isn’t that the best sound, And!?” she exclaims, firing the ball back to me and readying herself again. We have to get 10 pitches in before the bus comes. There is no secret to being good at something. You just have to love to practice. That is her philosophy. Now it is mine too.

January 2011

It’s now junior year of college and my morning routine has shifted away from baseball. Now I get up, eat oatmeal, and review notes before class. Fewer “heaters”, a lot more books, but the same philosophy: love to practice, love to learn. I write frequently in the journal I keep on my computer. So far it is mostly ramblings -- on my dying faith in the Catholic church (what’s the point of God?), on my breakup with my high school girlfriend (what’s the point of love?), on my fascination with cell biology and chemistry (what’s the point of studying anything else but the pure molecular basics of life itself!?)

In this moment, my relationship with cancer is so ordered and neat and sterile. It is a series of PowerPoint presentations in air-conditioned classrooms. A set of logical experiments, producing clear data from which succinct conclusions are drawn. It is graphs and figures and tables and genes and proteins and signaling pathways. I have a poster outlining all the known cellular pathways that contribute to cancer on the wall beside my bed. Cancer biology is what I do, not something I fear.

April 2011

That ordered, neat, sterile, intellectual relationship with cancer collided with the powerful, unpredictable, emotional, force of real life on a beautiful spring morning later that semester.

I am home for the weekend from school, with my mom. Our morning ritual is to have a cup of Irish breakfast tea together. Always with a splash of evaporated milk and a half teaspoon of honey. We started this in high school when she was teaching 9th grade and I would hop a ride to school with her each morning.

I made my cup and walked out to the back porch where she was sitting, her mug beside her, at our small wrought iron table. If that table could talk, it could tell the entire history of our family. It has sat on the cracked slab of concrete we call the back porch ever since we moved in on Evelina Road

“Good morning, Andrew” my mom says as she smiles and looks up at me from the crossword puzzle, looking not quite her usual chipper, enthusiastic self.

 I don’t remember exactly what we talked about at first, but, eventually, she said to me, “I’ve got some news, And. I went to get this thing on my leg checked out and they said I’ve got some bad cells.”

 To me, immersed in a Cancer Biology class, bad cells equal cancer. No need for further description. I just took an exam on this very topic.  How ironic is that? “Bad cells” stop doing their jobs. “Bad cells” disobey orders. “Bad cells” exhibit the 6 characteristics of cancer, which I can hardly remember in this moment.

“What did the path report say?” I ask. “What kind of cells? How fast are they replicating? What stage is it?” In this moment of internal turmoil, I grasp for what is familiar to me – the science and the cells -- rather than looking for what might be helpful for my mom. She recognizes my angst and -- despite the fact that she received the diagnosis, she will receive the treatment, she will be confronted with  her own mortality in the coming weeks-- she opens her heart and comforts me.

June 2011

You would never find mom inside on a sunny day. She’d be ticking off miles walking all over town with her best friend, hitting the tennis ball with a fellow teacher, or kneeling in the garden behind the house, back bent, hands covered in mud, transplanting some black-eyed Susan’s or pulling weeds. But on this “glorious summer day”, as she would most certainly have proclaimed it, there she was, inside. She was curled up with blankets in her bed, her hair, frizzled and wild, pushing out over the covers. She was now a few weeks into interferon treatment for her cancer. On the days of her infusions, she collapses into bed with chills and whole body aches. It’s jarring seeing my mom so visibly weak. She could not help the shivering. She could not bite her lip and just power through the aches. The interferon was pummeling her and I hated the medicine for doing that, even though I knew, theoretically, that it was helping. I went into the room and wrapped my arms around her without anything to say.

Eventually she completed the treatment and the chills and the aches stopped. The scans came back “clean”; but that might have been the easy part: getting cancer off the scans. The real hard part is getting it off your mind. Mom told me that the greatest challenge after treatment is not becoming obsessed that every headache or cold, sharp pain or little rash is a sign that the cancer is back.

For the rest of us, at least superficially, things seemed to be “normal” again. We didn’t really talk about cancer. We didn’t use the term “remission”. We just assumed “cured.”  It was logical. Plain and simple. Mom had cancer. Mom endured the treatment. Mom beat it. Like we knew she would. We could all move ahead with our lives now, thank you very much.

April 2015

Until last spring, April 2015. She went in for her yearly PET scan. She came back with “findings” that needed to be explored with a biopsy. “This really is not happening,” I remember thinking to myself, “Why not?” came an internal reply.  The worst was confirmed: metastatic melanoma, stage IV cancer (“That’s the last stage,” I remember telling my older brother when he asked me how many stages there are).

September 2015

Now I’m in the first year of medical school. Tomorrow we will be talking about melanoma in class. I am doing the reading to prepare and I come across the survival statistics. Odd that I have never actually looked this up myself before. The five-year survival rate for a person with stage IV lung metastases is 17%. I stare at the accompanying figure, a Kaplan-Meier survival curve. Looking out at the 16-month marker on the x-axis: not many survivors. Were all those dots on the chart really someone’s mom or dad, or brother or sister? I keep reading, “Malignant melanoma is the cutaneous neoplasia with the greatest mortality rates and one of the malignancies with the highest potential of dissemination. The prognosis of patients with metastatic melanoma is grim…” Time for a shower, I think,. Enough studying for tonight. I walk down the hall of our dorm in my sandals, head straight to the showers and turn the water on hot. I get in and stand there for a few moments, letting the water pour over me. “The prognosis is grim,” I think to myself, “17% survival at 5 years.” “Shit,” I whisper. I am hit with this longing to see my parents and be with my brothers. I picture my mom’s funeral. My brothers carrying the casket. I picture my dad speaking at the wake, thanking everyone for coming. There’s my mom’s sister and brother. There’s her best friend. There are her nephews waving goodbye to her. I picture my mom on the back porch with a cup of tea, looking toward the sun. The hot water runs over me and I weep. I cover my face, but what is the point? I can’t stop it; the tears flow, falling off my face, joining the water droplets from the shower, crashing into the tile and falling down the drain. I want to follow them down there.

September 2016

I pull a mask over my face, slip a pair of gloves on while I make my way over to the metal table to join my classmates, who are peering over specimens while a pathology resident asks a question: “What do you guys think this person died of?” I pick up the cold tissue in my hands. Definitely a lung, though it is collapsed now, greyish-tan color – bland, lifeless. The tissue is dotted by small dark specks, some as small as a pencil’s tip, others the size of its eraser. I roll these little specks through my fingers. They are smooth, but irregularly shaped. They are hard and stick well to the tissue. They are uniformly black. “Is that from smoking?” a classmate ventures. “No, but good guess!” the resident replies excitedly, “That black stuff isn’t from particulate matter. Think about what cells can make that sort of pigment.” Another student speaks up, “Skin cells. Melanocytes produce pigment!” The resident, who nods in approval, concludes, “Yes, this patient died from metastatic melanoma.” The group shuffles to the adjacent table where diseased kidneys await us. I stand with the melanoma lung in my hands and roll my fingers over the small bumps again and again.

As a medical student, I’ve learned enough to fear diseases like cancer, by studying their pathology, watching tumors excised from abdomens in the operating room, or as I did recently, holding the nodules of metastatic melanoma in my hands.

But as a son, the disease is not so much what I’m afraid of…loss is. The cellular morphology isn’t scary. Even the scans aren’t that scary. The thought of being without someone irreplaceable, like my mom, is what is terrifying.

Sometimes I try to live only as the medical student, sometimes only as a son. This experience, I’m learning requires both, and, as a great poet has said, the only way forward it seems, is to live like the river flows, carried by the surprise of its own unfolding.*

* John O’Donohue

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Learn more about the Community Voices and discover more empowering health stories here

Andrew is a second year medical student at Harvard Medical School.

Good Mornin' Glory

On September 28th, as part of HUBWEEK 2016, Health Story Collaborative hosted one of our Healing Story Sessions at the Paul S. Russell, MD, Museum of Medical History and Innovation. Healing Story Sessions are live storytelling events founded on the belief that story sharing is healing. In preparation for these sessions, we work closely with participants to construct their stories of illness and healing and to become comfortable sharing their stories in spoken word in front of an audience. Typically, story sharers invite a group of community members to witness their stories in a safe and supportive environment. On September 28, in a departure from our norm, we opened the event to the public.

We had three courageous story sharers. In the coming weeks, we will feature the written stories and the accompanying videos from the live event. We encourage you to read and watch.

As our first feature, we bring you Michele Foley. Michele is living with Stage 4 Melanoma. Her story is brave and beautiful. For the event, she shared the stage with her son, Andy, currently a second year Harvard Medical School student. Stay tuned for his story next week.

Good Mornin’ Glory

By Michele Foley

Andrew reminds me of a story I often forget. It is a story of becoming stronger, forgiving myself, laughing at myself, connecting with others. He reminds me -with his questions and focused listening -how sacred it is to share in someone’s story. I thank him for his sublime attention to my medical experience over these years. His willingness to be so involved inspires action within me, and action from others. He wraps his positive energy around me—and he might not know till now, how he has held me together and kept me walking forward.

2010 At crossroads in my life. Our answer to the empty nest? My husband and I take flight ourselves- new college jobs in the Southern Allegheny Mountains of rural Pennsylvania. Initially empty nest for me is filled with a sense of loss for what I called home: 28 years of memories with our three sons, close friends, a high school teaching routine. Change evokes a gut-wrenching ache. Where is everyone I have been centered on for the last twenty-nine years? I am off-balance. Why is my reaction to withdraw and isolate myself? Why cling to the familiar, and long for what has been? “Give yourself time,” my sister reminds me. Time to listen, pay attention, so I start to open my eyes to my new world. I drive back and forth every day, up and down the Cresson Summit, 2,430 feet above sea level. I notice massive cloud formations, September blue skies, sunsets, stars, and moonlight with magnificence like never before. College chapel bells bless each hour, adding sounds familiar from my neighborhood as a child that bring comfort. Let this new adventure be an example of what I want to tell others: get up, get out and walk boldly into your life. “Shine on,” those chapel bells sing. And so we do. Poet Nina Bogan’s lines capture my feeling then:

When I walked up the road, the string sack

Heavy on my arms, I thought

That my legs could carry me anywhere,

Into any country, any life…

One year later I am rambling back on the train from NYC to the college, to my new home. Sent to the big city to attend the JED Foundation Gala, I finish with my five hours of fun and fancy. I return to work in the train’s quiet car. Answering a call from the surgeon’s office, I step out between shifting train cars, struggling to keep my balance, and lean on the aluminum wall to take notes. I cannot hear the medical assistant’s voice and ask her to repeat and spell the results. I copy her exact words on a remnant scrap and keep it in my hand, returning to my seat. I struggle to keep my inner balance. This can’t be good. Exceedingly rare neoplastic cells positive for Melanin A, HMB-45, S-100 features consistent with metastatic deposit. Malignant metastasized melanoma. No. Not this, not now. I am just into my new life. If I don't say it aloud, look at the words scribbled on the paper, I might not have it. I will deal with this myself. Alone. No one else needs to get upset or derail their lives. Not so much sorry for myself, I feel sorry that I must begin to tell family about this. Once I disclose the diagnosis, I will have no control over others’ reactions. I don’t want to be the reason my husband is upset, my sons are sad.

I return the next day to have sutures removed. Maybe there is a mistake in the lab report. Staff stare at me as if I am dead. Even the surgeon gives me a hug, “god blesses” me, hopes I have my “things in order.” I can't leave fast enough. I bolt to my car, roll down the windows in the sweltering Ford, sit quietly, and notice bells dreadfully tolling the noon hour from the nearby rundown cathedral. “For whom the bells tolls, it tolls for thee.” Doomed, done, those bells keep telling me.

Surgery tolls. Driving to the hospital, I command my husband a la ultimatum. “If they can remove the cancer completely, but need to take my leg--fine. If they go in, the cancer is everywhere, lymph nodes and all, keep the leg intact and let it be.” Not long ago I felt “my legs could carry me anywhere.” Foolish to think I am in command. Come, Holy Spirit, fire me up. Keep me warm as I shiver pre-op. I ask for boldness of heart, I ask for patience with the unfolding of life, I ask for joy. Come what may. Good thing I memorized it. Pre-op needles in, monitors beeping, it all signals solemnity.

Post op results – Tumor exceedingly rare. We have never seen this (tumor type) before. So I am “one in a million?” Ah, it makes my stomach ache. Can’t this be ordinary? Please no, not exceedingly rare.I like to think I am one in a million but not like this!

My bubbly Brazilian surgeon exudes optimism and hope. I try to share his outlook. It lasts three days. Floodgates open when, with water from the shower, I make my first attempt at loosening the bandage. There it is, a twelve-inch gash spanning my left outer thigh. Raw, jagged, unfamiliar- I begin to sob. My life-long optimism betrayed by this. It felt like I was being mocked--ha-- “my legs could carry me anywhere.” I was going nowhere. I was heading straight to the Interferon lab.

“Give yourself time to heal,” my son Matt coaches. The scar healed; I started to fall apart, needing constant reassurance that all of the cancer was removed, margins clear and everything under control. Guaranteed, right?

Patient patient I am not; setting new goals helps. I will walk again without a hitch. I will wear long pants forevermore. I will never go to the beach again, only to be mocked by the sun. I, I, I, now seems silly. Pace myself? Who am I kidding? My body will let me know. Let go. No control. Let it, allow it, flow with it. Practice it. Make it my practice. Learn again. Again and again. Work to get my balance back. Identify what gives me strength, go after it. Slow and steady. “Take your time,” my husband reminds me. This is not a race.

2011. 2012. 2013. 2014. 2015 No evidence of metabolically active recurrent or metastatic disease. With each checkup I move a little closer to lightness of being. The remarkable feeling of seeing reports that deem organs “unremarkable” brings a smile. My ordinary life swings back with tutoring, teaching, editing. I act as if the summer of surgeries is a distant past. Deep within though there’s the tolling. I am aware of time ticking both in my head and heart. It counts the time I may have with my people; it counts the time until the next scan. I try to remind myself: Be open. Be alive. Pick up what is right there in front of you--this gift!

2015 Routine PET scan reveals spot on left lower lung. I feel that shot to the gut again. Unfortunately default mode kicks in. I go to clinic appointments alone. I go to biopsy alone. My heart pounds. My head throbs. Tears well up but not out. Metastatic melanoma Stage IV. Medical plan RadVac. It is on the move, in my bloodstream, everywhere. I go to radiation appointments alone. My arms hurt. This is too much for me to carry. Our son Matt is getting married to Katie in a few weeks. Wedding bells should be ringing, not the tick tock, chime, timer, bells tolling that my time is up. Off-balance. I steel myself. I will carry this latest news myself.

When will I learn?

I tell my people. It is happening to all of us, our son, Andrew reminds me. We will walk this next part together.

After two weeks of radiation and one Pembrolizumab treatment, wedding bells chime! Our son Tommy, reminds me to feel all the love that fills, overflows in our home. I stand off to the side looking at our yard filled with a circle of love-all of us enjoying a summer eve together. I listen: belly laughing and belching; crickets’ song and sounds of kids. Listen hard. What a fool I’d be to isolate myself from all of this wonder-filled-ness. Balanced and buoyed. I gather strength, more than I ever knew from those who love me. It is the ordinary time we spend that is the best: taking a walk, prepping a meal, pulling weeds in the yard, collecting sweetie tomatoes, icing up a glass of cold water and surprising the other with it. Such comfort in the beautiful ordinary day.

“What’s good?” my son asks, just to remind me.

Along the way, it has been a challenge to find the energy to always begin again: new treatment, new clinics, new procedures, new side effects, new allergies, new story –that is the norm. Gather again and again the beginner’s mind. Inner balance is what I am spending time on, and implementing a plan to keep strong. I begrudgingly take time to attend to symptoms of the pembrolizumab treatment. My sister chimes in, “Be as good to yourself as you are to me, to others.” Only after that can I spin into the ordinary day: tutoring, editing, walking, practicing yoga, humming, being grateful. I am the luckiest person on the planet.

I have imposed only three goals this time around. One, I limit my thought/conversation about the melanoma on an ordinary day to max ten minutes. This includes internet research, telephone conversation, complaining to family. The timer is set and when it chimes--DONE. Two, taper back on daily work--some tutoring, editing continues. Three, tend to the wellness to keep balanced. I admit all that attention makes me weary. No shortcuts. Fresh fruit and veggies, green tea, yogurt, kefir, beans, broth; then start over again shopping and preparing. A cup of tea, a homemade blueberry muffin, good company: today’s recipe for feeling fully alive.

There are a few aspects that I am working on these days.

*What does life as “normal” after cancer look like? Loved ones just want to see the old “me” back as a sign that all is well. Gone, she has moved on

* In my quest to pay more attention to detail, I try to work and stay ahead of whatever symptom is presenting, no matter how small. This self-compassion and self-coaching has been helpful in keeping my brain focused on a plan to affect a better outcome.

* I have pledged full disclosure always to family (in so doing I model what I hope will be same for us all).

* I am terrible about asking for something for myself, so that is my subset of full disclosure. Not edit, sugar coat, back pedal, apologize, or cry. Name it; claim it and move through it. This is applicable from extremes: craving butter almond ice cream to refusing to go to the next scheduled treatment.

2016 Currently, I am on hold after 8 Pembrolizumab infusion treatments. Last scans just in August were straightforward. No new evidence of metastatic disease in the chest, lower left lobe. Nodular component near the medial margin measures 0.9cm and is unchanged since 5/16/2016. There are no new pulmonary nodules. Like Poetry.Details regarding this type of melanoma say it is least receptive to targeted drug therapy. Darn again, that one in a million! The plan is to monitor and report symptoms to clinic every three weeks. No travel. Follow up PET scan. It feels good putting a bit of distance between clinic visits now. So I approach this interim as time to get my second wind. I want to be present to the here (and hear) and now, taking it all in—saturating my sense as I pause often during an ordinary day. I continue to pray to have the guts to be able to “carry” whatever comes next. Not really sure if that points to me or to those I love. No matter. Lately a sense of great freedom is emerging - having faced a bit of darkness. How to get back a bit of the “my legs can carry me anywhere?” Get up, get out and walk boldly into your life. Begin to hit the tennis ball, plant basil, bake Irish soda bread, dab on lavender, walk two-a-days, occasionally buy a good cup o’coffee.

In a monumental turnabout, I have moved from “I have to take care of everyone” to “Good morning glory. Let me gather my strength and be of help today.” I am humming along with guarded optimism, knowing the limits to that I can control. So I have retired from some of my favorite avocations: running my brother’s life, offering childrearing advice, meddling as the smother-in-law, badgering students about Thirsty Thursday when a paper is due Friday, forwarding TED talks to 30 on my contacts list, arguing with my hubby.

Postscript

As the Joan Didion quote says, “We tell ourselves stories in order to live.” The story I tell myself is to get up, get out, and walk boldly into life. Over and over again I realize how lucky I am. Andrew shared with us a quote during his first week at Harvard Medical School: “ Life is short and we have never enough time for gladdening the hearts of those who are travelling the journey with us. Oh be swift to love, make haste to be kind”. This is my avocation now.

This narrative unearthed so much that was unspoken, tucked away, intentionally forgotten. Wrestling with, loving, crying, remembering, speaking, listening, forgetting, and forgiving—all messy indeed. It has been cathartic and calls me to be courageous. As the psalm says, for what has been, thanks. For what is to come, yes.

Creating Outreach Through Theater about the Opioid Epidemic: An Interview with Ana Bess Moyer Bell
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Ana Bess Moyer Bell

Drama Therapist, Founder of COAAST (Creating Outreach about Addiction Support Together)

By Val Walker

Ana Bess Moyer Bell is the founder of COAAST, a non-profit organization in Rhode Island that offers arts-based education and therapeutic programing to address the opioid epidemic, aid in prevention education for teens, and continuing medical education for healthcare professionals. She most recently graduated from New York University with a Masters in Drama Therapy. She currently works as a Drama Therapy consultant for The BETES Organization creating and implementing theater-based programs for families of children diagnosed with Type 1 Diabetes. She previously worked as a drama therapist at Access Community Health Center, an outpatient substance abuse clinic, in Manhattan, New York. She held a position as drama therapist at the VA Hospital in West Haven Connecticut, and worked with patients in hospice, cancer treatment, and with PTSD diagnoses. From 2013-2014 she volunteered in San Quentin Prison where she co-facilitated group talk therapy with inmates.

COAAST is a non-profit 501(c)(3) whose mission is to create an ongoing dialogue about addiction and recovery through arts-based community-engaged programming. COAAST (Creating Outreach about Addiction Support Together) is a community-oriented organization that helps individuals recognize addiction not only affects the addicted person, but also their family. Their programs use this saying as a guide: “We hurt in relationship, therefore we heal in relationship.”

Val: What sparked your interest in doing theater about the opioid epidemic?

Ana Bess: I lost my high school sweetheart to an overdose in 2012, which I thought to be an isolated incident. By 2014, three more of my friends died from addiction. I was suffering from the grief of so much loss along with many others around me. There was a feeling of isolation inside this kind of grief because heroin addiction is stigmatized, and often there are feelings of deep shame. From my own suffering I understood that addiction is a family disease, as well as a community disease.

2014 was the turning point when I realized something bigger was happening—more overdoses were reported that year in New England, the worst ever. Communities were desperate. We needed to share our experiences in a way that brought families, friends and communities together. Because I knew theater could be a safe place to explore our stories together, I believed the timing was right to start a theater project about this crisis.

As soon as I became openly vocal about it on Facebook, it seemed like people came out of the woodwork to tell me their story. I inadvertently became the town’s story collector. From these stories themes began to arise; shame, silence, guilt, scapegoating, loss…etc. Finally, I sat down and teased out all the salient themes, and used them to write the play, Four Legs to Stand On.

Val: How does theater create a safe place for healing?

Ana Bess: Theater does two opposing things, both at the same time:  It brings you in so you can empathize with the characters, but it also provides distance, so you see their situation in a larger perspective. Sitting in the audience with the physical distance of the stage, we can be deeply touched while gaining a greater perspective all at once. This happens simultaneously, so we’re participating in an event in real time, while reflecting on it.  Theater asks a lot of us as participants, both in the audience and on stage.

Val: You say theater asks a lot of us as participants, to feel and react, but also to see the bigger picture more clearly at the same time. When it comes to the topic of the opioid epidemic, what is it about a performance that heals the grief and suffering?

Ana Bess: First, just acknowledging people are suffering from being stigmatized, and suffering alone. This very act of acknowledgment connects us. As the story unfolds on stage, we see how this epidemic has separated and divided us, and how we are isolated in our suffering.

Val:  It’s ironic-- by acknowledging the aloneness of our grief together in a theater, we become connected.

Ana Bess: Yes, and by witnessing our own stories, we become more compassionate and empathetic with ourselves. We must start with ourselves. Even subconsciously, we feel a call to action within ourselves.

When we go to see a performance we create a supportive community, at least for a brief period in time. This is especially important for people struggling with addiction. Research has shown they are more likely to seek help, enter rehab, and follow through with long-term recovery when they have a supportive community and family.

After each of our performances we always provide a 20-30 minute period for the actors to take questions from the audience. Talking together following the performance is a vital part of healing. This offers the audiences a space to process their feelings, tell their own story, and brainstorm what their immediate community can do in terms of social action. We often perform for medical communities, such as Harvard medical staff, the Rhode Island Department of Health, and other healthcare entities.  CEUs and CMEs can be provided.

Val: I’ve read terrific reviews of your play, Four Legs to Stand On, which toured this fall throughout Massachusetts. Can you tell us more about this year’s highlights with your group, COAAST?

Ana Bess: Where do I begin? What all of us as a cast sat with over and over again this fall was the overwhelming amount of loss. Town after town, we were faced with mothers, daughters, uncles, friends, and lovers of those lost to opioid addiction. When we were in Middleborough, there was a mother in the audience whose son had died five days prior to us performing, and I’m not exaggerating in saying that every single person in that sold-out crowd had lost someone to addiction. The devastation this epidemic has caused was so palpable every place we performed, and yet felt so silenced.

I learned again the dire need for better and more accessible treatment. Again, over and over, it was glaringly clear how important family and community support is; not only for our addicted ones, but also for those who love them.

At our final performance at a gorgeous black box theater in Franklin, one of the audience members pointed to a lack of attendance. If this were another more fashionable disease, he stated, the room would be filled with a line out the door. So, I guess that’s what I’m left with: stigma is still our biggest battle.

Val: Where will you be performing in 2017? What lies ahead?

Ana Bess: I will be using the performance to teach at some Universities this winter, and we have begun booking already for our spring tour. You can find those dates on our website: www.coaast.org. If you are interested in bringing us to your local community theater, hospital, or school, please contact us.

Val: If you could sum up why storytelling through theater is vital for you, what would you say?

Ana Bess: I believe in the power of storytelling; it is how we make meaning of our lives. Story is a meaning-making tool. Through performing, sharing and witnessing our stories, we’re able to uncover what it means to be a human being. It helps us feel less alone, less disconnected, and more understood.

Val: This is such important work you are doing. I’m honored and thankful to have spent some time with you today.

Ana Bess: Thank you. I’ve enjoyed it.

Ana Bess Moyer suggests these websites for further reading about COAAST and the opioid crisis.

LEARN TO COPE, a support network for families coping with addiction and recovery

SUBSTANCE ABUSE AND MENTAL HEALTH ADMINISTRATION

FACING ADDICTION

SAFE COALITION

AED FOUNDATION, ASSIST, EDUCATE, DEFEAT

Val Walker, MS, is the author of The Art of Comforting: What to Say and Do for People in Distress (Penguin/Random House, 2010). Formerly a rehabilitation counselor for 20 years, she speaks, teaches and writes on how to offer comfort in times of loss, illness, and major life transitions. Her next book, 400 Friends and No One to Call: Breaking Through Isolation and Building Community will be released in March 2020 by Central Recovery Press.

Keep up with Val at www.HearteningResources.com

Back to Basics: Medicine’s (Re)Turn to Storytelling

Storytelling seems like a strange topic for a daylong event in the middle of Hubweek, a weeklong celebration of “innovation at the intersection of science, art, and technology” in Boston. Innovation implies novelty or discovery, but storytelling is ageless: we are, after all, narrative creatures, hard-wired to tell stories.

 

The panel discussion during Storytelling and the Future of Medicine—the concluding session of Hubweek’s Medical Storytelling event—focused on defining why storytelling in medicine is natural as it is innovative. Featuring Jon Adler, PhD, Annie Brewster, MD, and Suzanne Koven, MD, and moderated by WBUR reporter Rachel Zimmerman, the panel reflected on medicine’s (re)turn to its narrative roots.

 

Despite our narrative nature, modern medical practice has minimized intimacy of caregiving and storytelling. To an extent, modern technology has dehumanized medicine and, in its turn, muffled the patient’s voice. Clockwork appointments leave little time for interpersonal exchange. Diagnostic technology lets the body speak for itself. As a result, patients feel dissatisfied and isolated, and caregivers burn out.

 

While medicine and storytelling are staged as opposites, their relationship is complementary and vital: health and healing are possible only at their intersection. Where the medical institution has established boundaries or binaries, Dr. Adler, Dr. Brewster, and Dr. Koven have all found remarkable overlap.

 

Dr. Adler, who studies narrative psychology and identity formation, spoke about the ways stories influence our sense of self. Storytelling puts both routine and extraordinary life events into context. Our life stories are mutable: we are constantly contextualizing and re-contextualizing our lives. Mental health is thus intimately tied to the way we frame our stories and make sense of our their high points and low points.

 

Dr. Brewster’s work as an internist and as founder of Health Story Collaborative are rooted in her interest in human connection. As a patient with Multiple Sclerosis and a medical provider deeply interested in the stories of her patients, Dr. Brewster understands the power of listening and being present. Illness and health challenges are isolating and frightening, and stories can provide moments of connection and relief in the face of such incoherence. The listener is as crucial as the teller precisely because the listener is able to accompany the teller, to be present when everything else seems to fall away.

 

For Dr. Koven, Writer in Residence at Massachusetts General Hospital, medicine and writing were not always two intertwined pursuits. Although she is a lifelong reader and writer, Dr. Koven was trained to separate her two passions. Her view was transformed as she recognized the resemblance between writing and healing and storytelling and clinical practice: stories were key to understanding and caring for patients. What’s more stories give caregivers the opportunity to make sense of their experiences in the rushed and fragmented circumstances of modern medicine.

 

For all three, to understand the achievements of modern medicine is to understand its shortcomings. Medical advances have come at the cost of human connection and storytelling, and patients and physicians alike have expressed their dissatisfaction at the structure of modern medicine.

 

Dr. Adler, Dr. Brewster, Dr. Koven, and Ms. Zimmerman refuse to settle for medicine’s isolation and thus turn to storytelling as the necessary solution. For each, their return to storytelling is as radical as it is natural.

Gillan Wang, Quilts, Collage and Painting
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Quilt for Emalia Brown, 25.5" wide x 25" high

Machine quilted and hand stitched with organza overlays and beading

 

By Gillan Wang:

This quilt was made for Emalia Brown, a high school friend from Maui, where we both grew up, after she was diagnosed with stage IV cancer. The news of Emalia’s illness came as a terrible shock. I created the art quilt to raise money to help defray her escalating medical costs and to work through my own sadness and demonstrate my compassion. She died while the quilt was in process, and It is now being donated in her honor to benefit her preschool aged son, in the Kahalakea Guard Educational Fund. The format of the piece is based on a traditional Hawaiian quilt, but differs in that it tells the story of Emalia’s journey, and our shared connections to Hawaii. 

Traditional Hawaiian quilts typically feature a solid geometric plant-based pattern, appliquéd onto a high-contrast solid fabric.  The geometric pattern that I created is based on the silhouette of my friend from a high school year book photo.  The reference is specific, yet her identity is intentionally ambiguous.  (Emalia’s trademark is a flower behind her ear, which is discernible in the silhouette). I used sheer fabric for the silhouette/geometric shape, atop many colorful fabrics that collectively evoke a sense of water, marine life, flora and fauna – all of which we both love. The sheer fabric allows the imagery below to read through, thereby allowing for multiple readings, and suggesting an elusive state of existence. The words grace, love, peace and eternal are embroidered on and around the geometric form, in English and in Hawaiian.

While I was driven by sorrow to create this quilt, I aimed to express a more upbeat message of love, peace and acceptance.

 The creation of this artwork helped me to come to terms with a very upsetting loss.  Initially I was overwhelmed by my sadness, but eventually this project helped me to reflect on the positive attributes of my friend, which we will forever celebrate.  It also allowed me to feel empowered by taking action to help my friend's family in a tangible way, as opposed to feeling helpless about an unfair situation.

 

Artist Statement:

 My work is primarily mixed-media, with a recent focus on art quilts. Most of my work is inspired by life’s poignant experiences, such as newborn children, parenting and loss. I am especially interested in establishing a narrative in my work, which invariably informs the aesthetic of a piece. I enjoy creating and considering multiple interpretations, and I take pleasure in exploring concepts and ideas using a variety of materials in unexpected ways. Whimsy, bold color schemes, text and found materials often characterize my work.

I grew up on Maui, Hawaii, which heightened my aesthetic sensibilities and appreciation of color and the natural environment. I have a deep love of diverse materials and for working with my hands. I have a BA from Bard College and a Master’s degree in Architecture from Syracuse University, which expanded my capacity to think spatially, and introduced me to many concepts that I now explore in my artwork, such as layering and transparency.

 

Art by Gillan

Art quilts, collage & painting

Website: ArtbyGillan.com

Email: ArtbyGillan@gmail.com

Tossed Photographs

Today I attended the funeral of my friend and neighbor of 35 years, Ms. Enid.

No one knew her exact age except for her best friend Ruby, another neighbor here at the Roycroft, our six-storey art deco apartment building that we all lived in.

Enid was distinguished and healthy, but dementia grabbed her sensibilities in her last year. Because she was single and had no family, she was sent to a nursing home far away from the Roycroft and her friends, a good forty-minutes drive on the highway.

Her death has had a huge impact on me. I miss her tremendously, of course, and her passing has made me reflect upon my own situation. You see, I’m single too. Even though I have my will in place and am relatively healthy (despite the Canadian health system), financially stable, and of sound mind and soul, I’m not sure that my end-of-life wishes will be carried out. Who will be my advocate?

I’ve selected two executors, but in reality, in the absence of caring family or friends, I worry that no one monitors the executor. What happens if there’s no one left alive to watch over you and your belongings? Can the executor do anything he/she pleases with their client’s estate, body, burial, and belongings? It seems the courts only step in if someone blows the whistle.

Enid’s funeral service seemed designed more to please the needs of her estate lawyer than to please her. When I asked him where Enid wanted to be buried, he admitted that he had never asked her. Her ashes were to be shipped two hours away to a cemetery where he believed her parents are buried. I asked him if Enid wanted to be buried with her parents. He said he hadn’t asked her. How could that happen, I thought?

Interestingly, Enid did have the wherewithal to state that her obituary NOT print her age. Good for you, Enid. Age should be irrelevant, and besides, it’s no one’s business.

These days when we hear a person’s age, assumptions form. An older person is rarely thought of as being or having ever been vital, skilled or talented, and yet, many were and are. While other cultures honor and respect their elderly population, North America seems to dismiss the thought that a senior can be captivating, attractive and interesting. Adding insult to injury, seniors are often referred to as ‘cute’. A puppy is cute. A baby is cute (sometimes).

Unfortunately, after a certain age, people become a member of the invisible race. (I should keep that in mind the next time I want to steal something.)

Enid's memorial service was different than those I’ve been to, particularly because she had no living relatives, no one to eulogize her life from personal experience, and no one to shed tears the way primary mourners do. I cried plenty when I received the news of her death, but somehow that's not the same thing. Or is it? Enid’s friends didn’t want to speak at her service, so I was asked to say something.

I spoke about being Enid’s neighbor for over three decades and what she meant to me. I spoke about the night we spent together one New Year’s Eve, sharing stories while she polished her late mother's silverware, an annual ritual. I spoke about the answer she gave me when asked how she maintained such a close friendship with Ruby for over 60 years.

“Two things, Marla…boundaries and privacy.”

And I spoke about the best advice she ever gave me: “Take a walk every day, and have a goal for your destination. It could be to buy an apple, or the newspaper. Most importantly Marla, get out and move.”

As I looked out into the faces of Enid’s few mourners--just eleven neighbors from The Roycroft, her cleaning lady, and our superintendent--I thought about the sense of community we had created, complete with love, hate, and disparity.

When Enid’s memorial concluded and we crowded around her boxed ashes, and fragile-framed portrait, her lawyer asked a painful question:

“Does anyone want Enid’s photographs?”

Enid's photographs were respectfully scattered about the memorial room as if it was a staged set. We didn’t know who the people in the photos were or their importance to Enid. But there they sat, and what to do with them now was our dilemma. These photos may have been of her parents, or treasured aunts and cousins. We shall never know, now. What we did know was that no one wanted them, not even Ruby (who is also single with no family and 95 years young). Perhaps for Ruby it is just too painful a reminder of what she will miss. I wonder how long she will last without Enid, her best friend, to walk with and talk with and share meals with, especially on Christmas Eve and New Year’s Day.

An 8x10” portrait of a younger Enid now sits in our lobby, with a battery-operated votive candle beside it. Soon it will be removed, tossed into the trash and driven to the city dump where it too, will become ashes.

Questions swirl around in my mind.

Is this how the single population in our society end up? Our once cherished photographs recording our life, loves and lineage all to be tossed into the garbage?

What becomes of their worth, their knowledge, and their very existence?

Deep in my heart, I know that my photos, articles, and recordings of my careers will also end up in the city dump along with the other single people’s tangible memories. They are nobody’s keepsakes but mine.

For now, I’m going to dust off my framed articles of me as standup comic, inspirational speaker, and jazz singer, as well as my photo collection of family members and dogs. I’ll try not to think about what will become of them when I am gone.

A common epitaph is: “You Will Live in Our Hearts Forever.” Another popular one is “Gone, but not forgotten.” I’m starting a new one: “Ashes to Ash, Tossed in the Trash.”

I’ve learned a lot from Enid’s death. We must all legally prepare for our inevitable passing, and get our specific needs, desires and end-of-life arrangements down on paper, while we are mentally able to do so. And we should have someone outside of the executor’s circle making sure our wishes are respected. Some find it morbid to discuss such matters. The truth is, it’s imperative. I’m feeling a bit low today and I know what Enid would tell me. She’d say “Marla, go for a walk. Pick a goal for your destination. Buy an apple, a newspaper, it really doesn’t matter what. Just get moving. It will make you feel better.”

I think she’s right.

Marla Lukofsky is an Inspirational Speaker, Comedian, Singer, Cancer Survivor and Writer. Her stories have been published in various medical journals including Cell2Soul. With two TEDx Talks to her credit, Marla continues to share her experiences in the hopes of helping others.

My Decade of Mesothelioma Awareness Efforts

In 2005, at the age of 36, I was diagnosed with mesothelioma, an extremely rare form of cancer caused by asbestos. I developed the disease because as a little girl I used to wear my dad’s coat – the same coat that he would wear to do construction with drywall and demolition work. Asbestos particles would travel back with him on his coat, and from there they got into my lungs.

Most people who develop the disease die within 18 months. The really lucky ones make it five years. My story is almost unheard of, as earlier this year marked 10 years of being free of this deadly disease.

The last 10 years have not been easy, but they have been a blessing despite hard times. One thing that has helped me get through it all is the work that I have done to spread awareness and educate the public about mesothelioma. I have also spent these last 10 years warning people about the dangers of asbestos, and trying to get the toxic substance banned here in the United States.

It is really amazing how many opportunities have come my way because of mesothelioma, especially because, for most people, the disease means closing rather than opening doors. I’ve met so many wonderful people and been a part of so many incredible events. It seems hard to believe in light of my original diagnosis.

In 2009, after I had attended a symposium run by the Mesothelioma Applied Research Foundation – a nonprofit organization dedicated to finding a cure for mesothelioma cancer – I became aware of the annual observance of Mesothelioma Awareness Day, started by the Meso Foundation. The idea behind this event is to have a single day when mesothelioma patients, caregivers, advocates, doctors, researchers, and others can take out all the stops and let everyone know about the disease. That day is September 26th.

But Mesothelioma Awareness Day is more than just any old awareness day. The Meso Foundation wanted to do something different. Every September 26th, supporters of the foundation-- Mesothelioma survivors, caregivers, individuals who have lost a loved one to the disease, union and industry workers exposed to asbestos--meet in New York City with the goals of coming together, learning together, and spreading awareness. On my first Mesothelioma Awareness Day, more than 50 of us met early in the morning outside of the Today show in Rockefeller Center. We wore the Meso Foundation’s T-shirts, all with large, bold letters, and held signs telling the world why we were there. The Meso Foundation combined this awareness event with a one-day seminar on malignant mesothelioma. Since, my mom and I made have made this an annual tradition. Every year, we attend the events put on by the Meso Foundation, and also take advantage of all New York City has to offer. I love having my mom be a part of something so important to me. Every year is a reminder of how far I have come since my diagnosis.

Over the past few years, I have decided to take in some other events to help bring awareness and raise money for mesothelioma research. For example, I have started participating in the Miles for Meso event, a fun 5k run or walk that has grown into multiple races held in several states. I am proud to be a participant again this year, and to be bringing my supportive husband Cam and my beautiful daughter Lily with me!

This year, for the first time, I participated in the 6th annual Kayaking 4 Meso event. Although I wasn’t able to kayak myself, I, along with the other survivors, rode down the river in a pontoon! This event, started by my close friend Mark Wells whose daughter is a 15 year survivor of the disease and only 16 when she was diagnosed, (the average age of diagnosis is 60), was held on September 10th, before Mesothelioma Awareness Day, and raised money for the Mesothelioma Applied Research Foundation. There was over 225 people kayaking down 8 miles of the Hudson River from Stillwater, NY, to Halfmoon, NY and there will be even more in attendance. Upon completion of the race, Mark was presented with the “Above and Beyond” award by Melinda Kotzian, the CEO Of the Mesothelioma Applied Research Foundation. A much deserved honor for Mark who has raised well over $50,000 for the foundation. It was so great to finally be there to support him and be there when he received the award.

All year long, I attend conferences and events and connect with patients, survivors, advocates, and others as much as possible. Back in the early years of my cancer survivorship, I even started my own observance on February 2nd that I call Lungleavin’ Day, as it marks the anniversary of the day that I had one of my lungs removed – an operation that saved my life. It started out as a small get-together with a handful of family and friends, but has since grown into an event that approximately one hundred people attend. We all write our fears on plates and then smash them in the fire to show that those fears cannot conquer us!

I know how lucky I am to have survived so long. I still sometimes struggle with strenuous activities, but this hasn’t kept me from getting out there and doing all I can. Ten years ago, when I was having a lung taken out and getting chemotherapy and radiation, I never would have guessed that I would have so many opportunities to spread awareness about my disease in order to help others.

I’m not writing all of this to pat my own back. I’m writing it in the hope that it will inspire others to get out there and spread some awareness of their own, about mesothelioma and the dangers of asbestos, or about some other rare disease or condition that has affected your own family. The important thing is just to get out there and make sure others know about it!

You can learn more about Mesothelioma Awareness Day here.

If you would be interested in writing your Mesothelioma story, please share it with us at abrewster@healthstorycollaborative.org

Naming ‘It’: Me, My Tumor, and Cancer

A tumor.

The first time I noticed “It,” I was looking at my reflection in a dingy bathroom.

“Hello,” It introduced itself, “I’m new, but I’ll be here awhile.” It was a lump on my neck, found only because it cast a shadow.

“Do you have a name?” I asked, hoping in vain that this time It would answer. Silence, as always, would follow. Just the steadiness of my heartbeat, pulsing blood through my veins—through It, feeding It, helping It grow. Out of my control, yet within me.

I bargained with that silence as if it would have made a difference. “If you go away, I’ll go to the gym more. I’ll eat fewer desserts.”

Still silence.

“I’ll work harder in school. Go to the gym EVERY day. Eat no dessert.”

Still silence.

But the bargain felt complete, and the silence less threatening, and Its presence retreated back into the corners of my brain. I carried on, hating the body that put me in this position. Feeling helpless to do anything, yet determined to do something—if I couldn’t control It, I’d control everything else.

This cycle repeated for months. Until the first time It broke the silence.

“My name is Danger,” It said, “and you should fear me.”

“What kind of Danger?” I asked. But my translator, the doctor, didn’t know. It wasn’t speaking clearly yet. The doctor needed to make a personal visit. Needed to cut It open and confront It. Surgery.

So It had a name. A vague name: Danger.

But I was no closer to knowing what kind of Danger. An urgent one? A false one? “It’s most likely nothing,” the doctor said. The visit would be a formality, just to confirm this.

The Danger’s silence was deafening. I went back to bargaining, desperate for more control; more information. My bargaining had me eating too little, working too hard, and stressed out about how to act ‘normal.’

I looked like I had it all together, people later told me. Wrong: I was a sad and anxious human.

In the midst of these bargains, I learned about cultivating a gratitude practice while scouring health blogs for diet tips. Be grateful, and happiness will follow, the experts said. I wanted to be happy.

So I would wake up 5 minutes earlier and list what I was grateful for. My family, my friends…the usual. Then 5 minutes became 10, and I listed more things: the opportunities to attend college, and to live near the best hospitals in the world.

One morning, there was something new on the list. I hadn’t planned it. It just slipped out unexpectedly:

“I’m grateful for my body.”

What?!

My body, inhabited by Danger, my elusive enemy? My body, the home of that tumor? No, that can’t be right, I told myself.

But then I thought about it. My body lets me run and jump and sing and laugh and love. My body was fighting back against Danger and all his pervasive silence.

Okay…maybe I could be grateful for my body.

It became my mantra. Even on days when I didn’t believe it, I expressed gratitude for my body. In the beginning, that was most days. But I had believed once, so I knew I could believe again.

The next time Danger broke his silence, it wasn’t good news. The visit that my doctor paid didn’t confirm It was “nothing.”

 “I’m sorry, but it was cancerous.”

So that’s your real name. Not “It.” Not “Danger.” Cancer.

But the name, Cancer, was liberating. While fog had once obscured the path to health, now I had a flashlight, and a map. Now I knew my enemy. How to fight him. How to beat him.

I think that I’d known all along that It was really Cancer. It hadn’t felt like a friendly tumor when I first found it. It felt wrong, full of dark energy. Panic and anxiety greeted me whenever I examined It in the mirror.

But now that it’s all over, pride greets me when I look in the mirror. My scar is a daily reminder that two surgeries and radiation sent Cancer packing. My body fought back. She wouldn’t let the worst happen because she was strong and full of love. Now, when I run or jump or sing or laugh or love, it’s a victory lap.

Cancer wanted to rob me of fully embracing life, but I didn’t let it. There wasn’t one specific moment when I realized that I had really started living; there were lots of small moments that added up:

Like on the day I was three months clean, and my friends surprised me with an enormous card telling me how proud they were and how much they loved me. That was the day I realized that I didn’t fight cancer alone for a single moment.

Or when I was eight months clean, when I walked out of class at the Sorbonne and realized I was living out a childhood dream, to study in Paris. That was the day I realized that I should continue to dream, because those dreams could come true.

Or when I was sixteen months clean, and the leader for a retreat I had agreed to help with kept poking just a little bit more than anyone else had at my feelings about cancer, and I admitted out loud for the first time that I had been scared. That I had pretended I wasn’t so no one would worry about me. That was the day I realized the importance of being truly vulnerable and honest with myself about my feelings.

Really living means being aggressively friendly to friends new and old. It means saying yes to pizza AND fries, because life is too short to choose. It means running faster, jumping higher, singing louder, laughing longer, and loving deeper.

Really living means I don’t bargain with the silence. I fill it with life.

Kitty Sargent is a recent graduate of Boston College, where she studied Political Science and French, and served on the executive board of Real Food BC, a food sustainability group.

Sit

I sit down in the chair opposite yours. It’s a lovely day outside: Spring peeks her head out along the esplanade, the sun warms our space beside your bed.

 You don’t know me. I am a stranger to you, but you let me stay anyway.

Our conversation starts slowly: small talk about the weather, hospital food. Then we shift; the gradual dance of vulnerability between strangers begins. You take a breath, and begin letting me into your life. I listen and learn. About your frustrations. About how long you have been here, in this hospital, beneath the fluorescent lights. About the lack of answers, the constant struggle for control. I nod and murmur.

Now you talk about your family. About feeling like a burden to them, being here, sick, dying. Now you talk about depression, the loneliness of death, how narrow the tunnel becomes when you’re heading towards its end. You talk now as a human being struggling to hold onto your humanity.

Gingerly, I reach across the sun-lit space. I hold your hand, but I say nothing. What is there to say in the face of human suffering? Where words fail, touch and silence speak.

--------

For the past two years I have been blessed to work as a palliative care volunteer in a hospital. My job is simple: to provide company to patients who are chronically ill or dying. Really, I just serve as a companion – to sit with, to talk to, to watch TV beside, to listen to music with. In this role, doing these simple things, I have received one of the greatest gifts of my life: through others’ stories of suffering and joy, I know the beauty of a shared humanity.

 If healthcare is defined as curing or fixing, then I am essentially helpless as a volunteer – I have no skills, knowledge, or experience that can cure or fix these people. However, I have come to learn through time spent with my patients that sometimes it is not knowledge, tools, or skills that are required for healing. Rather, healing can be wrought by each of us simply as we are, as people. Sometimes all we need to provide a moment of healing for one another lies in the ways in which we are able to hold, sit, and simply be in each other’s company.

From my patients, I’ve learned something both humbling and empowering: in a world where we are constantly trying to fix, sometimes it’s okay to just sit together and be broken in our own separate ways. It is through the cracks within us that the healing enters.

Claire Stauffer is a recent graduate of Boston College, where she majored in Biology and English. She serves as an EMT-B and palliative care volunteer in the Boston area. Her first narrative piece “Weight” was featured in the Boston College Medical Humanities Journal and on the HSC College Voices blog.

Living Consciously While Facing Death

When A Mother Decides To Stop Cancer Treatment And Face Death

By Dr. Annie Brewster and Leah Meyer

More than a decade ago, Colleen Lum was diagnosed with Stage 3 ovarian cancer. Her children, Kyle and Kiara, were 11 and 8 years old at the time.

A few months ago, after battling the disease for 13 years, Lum, who lives with her husband and family in Hopedale, Massachusetts, decided to end treatment. Today, at age 56, her health has further declined, according to her daughter. Lum is no longer eating or drinking much. And she's very, very tired.

Through it all, though, she's been clear-eyed about her illness.

"We’ve always been straightforward and honest," Lum said during an extensive interview in June. The kids "get the facts and the truth and it’s not 'Mommy has a tummy ache.' No, 'Mommy has cancer.' "

Lum added: “I was a good parent before cancer, but cancer made me a better parent, because you don’t have time to postpone.”

Listen to Lum and her daughter Kiara share their stories here:

Ovarian cancer is an insidious disease, often asymptomatic until it is quite advanced, resulting in five-year survival rates of under 50 percent.  Lum has beaten the odds and navigated an onslaught of difficult decisions with resilience and a keen sense of her priorities.

"You can talk about sex and drugs and alcohol with your kids because you don’t have time to postpone those conversations," Lum said. "Nobody’s guaranteed tomorrow. And cancer makes that very relevant. When you can sit and talk to your children about your death, everything else becomes easy."

Four years ago, Lum refused to participate in a clinical trial that would have required her to spend several months away from home and apart from her kids. When her physician implored her to enter the trial, saying it was his job to keep her alive, she replied, “Well, it’s my job to be a mother.”

Lum knows that she won’t be around to see her 21-year-old daughter graduate from college — and it's the thought of missing those major life events that saddens her most. "It’s not the dying that upsets me," she said. "It’s the milestones in your children’s lives you’re gonna miss. Seeing them walk down the aisle or seeing them have babies."

Still, she's happy and proud she got to be a mother for so long. "My miracle isn’t that I walk out of here and I get cured. My miracle is that I got 13 years of a Stage 3C diagnosis and I watched an 8-year old and an 11-year old turn into a 21-year-old and a 24-year-old. The biggest thing here is perspective."

After years of intrusive treatment, harsh side effects and approximately 160 rounds of chemotherapy, Lum knew in April that it was time to stop. Her body had had enough. To those who insist she must keep fighting, she said: “So many people want to jump back into denial and pretend … that this isn’t happening. If you’re coming along for the ride, you’re getting in my boat, and my boat is reality.”

Now, with death approaching, Lum is grateful to know that not much has been left unsaid. And she spends time envisioning her death:

I hope I die with grace and dignity, which I probably will, and a few swear words. It’s one thing I’ve got as cancer’s gone on — I’ve maintained my filthy little mouth and my few favorite swear words. I wanna have the best quality of life for whatever days we have, and then it’s like, I don’t know what this whole dying stuff is gonna involve. I hope it’s not painful, I hope it’s peaceful. I hope I can die at home. But I don’t know what it looks like. If I got to call the shots, I’d get to hang around in bed and talk to the very last frickin’ minute. And kinda joke and go, 'Hey, it’s time to go.' And I say goodbye, and I’d walk out peacefully. But as with cancer and most things, I don’t know how much of a choice I get in that.

Lum wants to go out on her terms. “No ventilators or feeding tubes in this body,” she said. While she accepts that she may not be able to control many things that happen at this point, she wants to control the things she can, and she has spelled it out clearly for her family.

For instance: If she is in a coma, she says it's OK to send her to the hospital or hospice. She has chosen a casket, and wants it to be open. She's lined up a caterer for the reception.

In our society we are notoriously bad at talking about death. It wasn’t until this year that Medicare finally began reimbursing for end-of-life conversations between patient and doctor.

In one of the countless conversations Lum has had over the years, she imagines death as a continuation of life, but different: "What if [it's] nothing but two little hills, and there’s a bridge? And you’re just leaving one world to go to another … and it’s really something very simple?”

Dr. Annie Brewster, a Boston internist and founder of the Health Story Collaborative, is a regular contributor to CommonHealth. Leah Meyer is an intern with Health Story Collaborative and a student at Yale College.

Originally published on WBUR CommonHealth Blog on August 5th, 2016.

Resource:

The Conversation Project

Man Enough: Reflections on Male Body Image at College

“Do I look man enough?”

As someone whose body falls outside the societal ideal, I have struggled to establish a positive body image. Skinny, lithe, and lean, my body might fit the mold of a long-distance runner, but one would hardly consider it stereotypically masculine. One might even say it’s feminine. And if there’s one thing men are taught to reject, it is femininity.

I have spent years painstakingly overanalyzing nutrition and exercise and appearance, trying to decipher whether my body was a body I wanted, a body I felt proud of. I’ve tried to balance my daily miles with my daily calorie intake, a strong lower body with a comparatively weaker upper body. My exercise accomplishments —hikes, long runs, marathons, personal records—can sometimes feel less valuable when I consider my frame.

While trying to make sense of my body, I’ve grappled with the rigid definitions of masculinity and femininity: what constitutes a “good” body versus a “bad” body? The construction of these illusive categories show deep-rooted problems in the way society understands health, gender, and individual expression.

In the United States, the ideal male body is muscular, athletic, formidable, and toned. I don’t have bulging or sculpted muscles. I’m not tall or broad-shouldered. And for so long I focused on how my body failed to meet standards instead of defining my own terms for body satisfaction.

My time at college is marked by small steps forward in my journey towards establishing healthy body image. It has involved coming to terms with the ways in which my body does not meet the dominant standards of masculinity. This progress is largely due to students and faculty initiating conversations and posing important questions about body image and campus culture at Boston College and other campuses across the country.

While exploring my body image, I have grappled with questions like:

“Do I look man enough?”

“Do I look masculine?”

“Do I have a good body?”

“What is a good body anyway?”

What I’ve come to value—and what has helped so much—is having space to explore these questions with others, whether in class, at a lecture, or in a friend’s living room. So many people are exploring these questions!

June was Men’s Health Month, and advocates across the country created space for discussing issues like preventive health and mental health. After long being solely cast as women’s health issues, body image and body satisfaction have become increasingly vital topics

in men’s health as well. For instance, during Love Your Body Week at Boston College, there is always an event that addresses issues of masculinity and body image.

This chiseled ideal of masculinity narrows the range of male bodies deemed acceptable, attractive, or desirable and casts an impossible mold for men and boys. If you deviate too far from that standard, you might just feel out of place. For example, restricting the ideal body to an impossible healthy and muscular standard has produced an unhealthy culture of workout supplements and bodybuilding. The body is often a source of concern and dissatisfaction, and this kind of scrutiny can have debilitating consequences for mental and physical health, as in Body Dysmorphic Disorder and Muscle Dysmorphic Disorder.

Stories about body image are necessary because they reveal the cracks in the impossible model of embodied masculinity. Even starting these conversations can be difficult because stereotypical masculinity dictates that we show unwavering confidence in the face of adversity, that we hide vulnerability. Instead of engaging honestly and critically, we keep quiet.

Against the odds, while in college, I began to embrace my own body and celebrate the remarkable and beautiful diversity of all bodies. At college, we’re encouraged to examine the way our bodies affect our relationships with friends, classmates, partners, mentors, and professional connections. What’s less talked about is how this obsession with idealized bodies affects our relationships with ourselves.

Taking part in the campus conversations about body image and learning to celebrate difference provided the momentum I needed to move forward.

I had many difficult days and experiences, like runs not intended to celebrate my body but to punish it, restrictive eating habits, and experimenting with protein supplements. But I’ve come to focus less on how my body looks, and more on what it can do. I might have a slight frame, but my accomplishments are sizeable. I’ve raced two marathons and run countless miles. I’ve hiked difficult trails, culminating in the most spectacular views. I’ve become an adventurous eater, and I’ve embraced food as nourishment and cooking as an opportunity for building connections with friends and family.

Taking a holistic approach to body image—realizing that I am more than my body as much as I am my body—has helped me recognize the value and worth of my own frame. Instead of focusing on the stereotypically masculine features I don’t have, I focus on what I do have: an agile body that supports my everyday activities, an efficient and powerful stride that powers my long distance running.

I’m only one man, but this body is man enough for me.

Christopher Kabacinski is a recent graduate of Boston College, where he studied English and medical humanities, co-founded the Medical Humanities Journal of Boston College, and led the public speaking and storytelling group Word of Mouth. Originally from Scranton, Pennsylvania, Chris now lives in Boston and works in global public health.