Wednesday, April 16, 2014

Hope Floats

A reprint, in honor of my upcoming "cancer-free" anniversary…

It was July 4, 1998, just a little more than a week after my mastectomy and breast reconstruction surgery, that I got the good news from my doctor.  According to the pathology report and the results of a variety of imaging tests, my body showed no further evidence of cancer. I was officially designated NED. No Evidence of Disease: The best possible outcome to a situation where few outcomes were promising. Thereafter I’ve considered July 4th my personal holiday - my Independence (from Cancer) Day.
Each year on this date I stop and reflect. I feel grateful. I feel relieved. I feel hopeful.  I feel lucky.
But I also feel something else.
I feel ripped off.
With all the technological hoo haa my body has been put through, I should damned well have developed some super powers by now.
Peter Parker gets bit by ONE teensy radioactive spider and turns in to freakin’ spiderman.
Meanwhile, I’ve been injected with chemicals that light my internal organs up like Christmas trees and shoved inside gazillion-dollar pieces of machinery that have bombarded me with every type radio, light and ultrasound wave known to science.
I have had so many radioactive isotopes injected into my body that my pee glows in the dark. Geiger counters spike if I get within 10 feet of them . I can rent myself out at barbeques as a combination street lamp/patio heater/bug zapper.
But do I have heightened senses? Incredible strength?  Can I climb the side of my garage or shoot a web out of my butt? Do my spidey-senses so much as tingle?
No.
All those waves, all those isotopes, all those chemical dye injections, and I got buttkiss.
I’m not asking to become IronWoman or SuperRedhead or SpiderGirl.
I don’t need the dexterity to scale a skyscraper. It would be fine if I could get something off the top shelf of my closet without falling off the stepstool.
I don’t care if I ever have xray vision. At this point I’d settle for being able to read a menu in a restaurant without my cheaters. Or to be able to find my cheaters in the first place.
I don’t need to be able to run faster than a speeding bullet or have catlike agility. It would make me happy to get to and from the mailbox in a reasonable amount of time and to not bang my shin on the side of the bed every morning.
 I’m not asking to be able to bend steel with my bare hands. I’d consider it a major coup to break into a bag of potato chips. And would it be too freakin’ much to ask to be able to open a CD case or “twist off top” bottle without calling for backup?
I’m not looking for genius-level intelligence or phenomenal mental acuity. Remembering where I put my car keys on any given day would be a good start. So would not having to go back into the house three times after I’ve already locked the door because I’ve forgotten stuff. Making my checkbook actually balanced – just once – would be enough.
I don’t need to have six-pack abs or look good in a neon superhero leotard. I just don’t want to have to solder myself into an iron foundation garment to keep from spilling out over the top of my jeans. I suppose my ability to blind people with my lily-white legs in summertime is something, but unless I can distinguish between blinding the Good and blinding the Evil, it’s value is limited.
I'm not giving up. I still hold out hope that I will one day morph in to some semblance of a super heroine and develop some sort of power or ability that will at least make a good party trick.
Until then, I do admit that I haven’t gotten COMPLETELY shortchanged by cancer. It has imbued me with a few strengths.
I’m fearlessly immodest. I will whip off my shirt and allow anyone who flashes a medical credential at me to cop a feel without embarrassment. Ask me about my scars, and you’re going to get to see them for yourself.
While I can’t see in to YOUR body, I’ve got full color images (some of them in 3-D) of all my internal organs. I like to bring them out when people start making me look at photos of their grandkids or their vacation trip to the Ripley’s Believe It Or Not Museum. “Look, here’s the world’s largest ball of twine.”  “Look, here’s my liver. I win.”
My man-made side (which I affectionately call the Bionic Boob) is permanently perky and sag-proof. It stands proudly, stoically refusing to succumb to the ravages of time and gravity. While it’s not resilient enough to, say, deflect a bullet, it will serve as a floatation device should the airplane I’m on have to ditch in the ocean. I’m sure that my innate radioactivity will also provide and handy locator beacon to guide rescuers to my location.
I can hear the conversation now: “Um, sir, we’re picking up a radio signal from the ocean – it appears to be coming from a woman.”  “A woman? Is she in a raft?”  “No sir, she’s just bobbing up and down like a buoy. We’re dispatching a rescue boat.”  “Well keep a close watch on her, these waters are infested with sharks.”  “Sir, she’s a redhead. Sharks are leaving the area almost faster than we can follow.”
I can't be counted upon to save you if the bus we're riding ends up teetering helplessly on the edge of a cliff. I can’t save you if the elevator we're in malfunctions and plummets 50 stories. But… if we ever end up traveling on the same trans-Atlantic flight? Well, you might wanna forego sitting beside the emergency exit and take the seat next to me.