The  other day I was sitting in my office, crunching numbers and pushing paper – needless to say, my brain wasn’t all that engaged – and I started thinking ‘If I  could be anyone, in the entire world, who would it be?’ I scrolled through  a few beautiful actresses, rich people crossed my mind, people who have never  had cancer came rushing in too but I kept coming back to the same person – me.  Now, that is not a normal reaction to this question that I’ve been asking myself  for as long as I can remember.
I've  spent many years wanting to be anyone skinny (I’m still kinda partial to  this one), I spent years wanting to be someone rich, someone famous, someone who  has traveled the world, someone who wasn’t afraid of needles and a variety of  other people who had traits that I admired or characteristics that I envied. It  was only the other day that I realized that I wanted to be me. 
I have  said this before, but although getting cancer at 26 wasn’t exactly what I would  call ideal, I have learned life lessons in my twenties that I may not have  learned until my sixties or maybe even ever. Don’t get me wrong, I don’t buy  into that whole ‘Cancer is a gift’ garbage, I am just trying to turn a horrible  situation into a manageable one. 
I  think Keith and I have done things that we wouldn’t have done otherwise, like  our Christmas trip to NYC. I think we would have put that off, until ‘next year’ and India – can you believe that I’m going to India? I fly out on the  14th of February to Delhi along with 11 other cancer survivors to  volunteer for two weeks. I am at a point in this cancer business (I just can’t write ‘journey’ anymore) where I am starting not to feel like a cancer patient anymore and I  feel as though it’s time to look to the future rather than the past. I am hoping  that this adventure helps answer the 'now what' post-cancer question. I would  have never gone to India if I didn't have cancer and didn't have  questions that needed answering. It is way out of my comfort zone and I  have never been more excited about something. 
I am  also not trying to convince anyone (including myself) that my life is  problem-free or perfect. My weight is at the forefront of my thoughts every  day (who am I kidding, it's every minute) and this one breast thing is really  getting old. I don't have much money and I owe a lot to the student-loan  department of the government. I went to school for six years for three degrees  in education and I am working in accounting. I still rent an apartment and  aspire to own a home one day. I live four hours away from family and am missing  out on our nieces and nephews milestones.
BUT
I am  alive. I have surrounded myself with the kind of people that you only hear about  in books. Keith and I spend the majority of our time laughing at cancer, at each  other, and together. I have a roof over my head, food in my belly, and a pony  tail. Although not having a breast does give me some anxiety and only feeds into  my body image issues, I am starting to accept that it was part of the price that  had to be paid to stay alive. I am slow moving on the reconstruction train  but I am getting there.
I am  surrounding by such generous, kind, and caring people. Your know,  after coming to and supporting my benefit in 2011, friends and family  dug deep into their pockets again and donated to Team Katie at the Relay for  Life and then when I told people I was going to India as part of my  survivorship business, they stepped up again to get me there.  Saying 'thank you' seems like a slap in the face compared to how I feel. I am so  grateful to so many people. 
Some  days I struggle, some days the bone pain from chemo that still ails me puts me  into a recurrence tail spin and other days I can convince myself that it's the  chemo still working hard to fend off any potential cancer. I have the regular  challenges that everyone has - too much to do - not enough time - need to  organize - don't eat this - gotta eat that - and so on - but I think I have just  learned how to compartmentalize what's important, what needs to be dealt with,  and what can wait. I've learned to take a deep breath and work my way through  life. I feel like I am living and not plowing through each year so I can get to  the next like I used to. I can safely say that I am enjoying each  day. 
Keith  and I have made a slight resolution. We have decided to do what makes us feel  good in 2013. I am very hard on myself for just about everything and many times  it results in guilt and struggle. I'm going to do my best to reassure myself  that I am enough. As I have said, 2011 was awful, 2012 was great, and if this  pattern continues, 2013 is going to be spectacular!
 
Katie..
ReplyDeleteYOU are spectacular..... This is a great post. Super Great...
I am SO GLAD you are going to Delhi with Terri and company. I can't wait to hear (see...read...) all about every bit of it!!
xoxoxox
You always make me smile! Thank you for THAT.
DeleteI cannot believe that I'm going to India. What was I thinking? (those are just the nerves talking). I am getting so excited (and scared).
Thinking of you (and your mom) always,
xoxo
Katie
dear katie,
ReplyDeletewonderful for you to have had the breakthrough - yes!!! YOU ARE
ENOUGH - if fact, more than enough, for all that you do to uplift and inform others with your beautifully written words.
i can't wait to follow you through your new delhi experience with terri and your fellow volunteers. you have sooo much to give - it's going to be so exciting. i think your admitting to be scared is a good thing, very honest - i hope writing that very fact relieves some of the jitters.
love,
karen,TC
Awww Karen, thank you very much! Very sweet words.
DeleteI'd be lying if I said that I wasn't nervous but I am also very excited too.
Holy crap, I'm going to India.
Katie