Friday, December 9, 2011

lifecycles.

All that stands between me and winter break are two books, a paper, and workshop critiques. And 3 classes. I need this break. I need to read for pleasure, need to read brain candy YA books or sports books or US Weekly. I don't want to see a New Yorker or a Believer once over break. I'll make an exception for lit journals like Ecotone and Ploughshares. My brain is just wiped out. This week in particular has kind of kicked my ass. I just went through a whole bunch of bureaucratic/administrative red tape that did not end in my favor. So I can't do my Independent Study, which is like, the ONE thing I was really excited about for next semester. I never really got a firm reason why, but I think it's internal stuff. It was a whole week of stressful emails and conversations that never really met on the same common ground, ending in disappointment and, I admit, a very small feeling of defeat. But I hate feeling defeated, and after an afternoon of moping, got my scrappy self together and I know that somehow, I will pursue my interests in a really in-depth way. And when I am a famous writer, on panels with Atul Gawande and Jerome Groopman, I will say, "Let me tell you about this one time I wasn't allowed to do this Independent Study...."
A girl can dream, can't she?
Then I found out I didn't get the research fellowship for which I interviewed. I was really crushed, and honestly - without sounding like a total asshole - I do have more research experience than almost everyone in the program. I've done research at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, Memorial Sloan-Kettering, the UNC Schools of Public Health and Nursing, and the Cancer Institute of NJ. I don't think that's too shabby. But, I guess it wasn't what they were looking for. Which is a shame, because I genuinely enjoy research. Which may explain why I am blogging on a Friday night.

But honestly, all of that is small in the grand scheme of things. My aunt is on hospice and if she lives through the year, I will be pleasantly surprised. She looked almost ghoulish at Thanksgiving, with her skin stretched across her face and greyish skin; not the aunt I know. Cancer is relentless, it is fucking relentless - especially ovarian cancer. I never really found cancer "scary" before, like the "civilians" who don't do cancer research (that's how I thought of it). But since I've stopped reading oncology textbooks in my spare time, I better understand those feelings. Like I mentioned in a previous post, I've been thinking a lot about death, terminal illness, and what we think of as a "good" death, and dying with dignity. I've also been thinking a lot about grief. I have been a lucky girl. Although I have had my hardships and lost people I've loved, my life has been relatively spared from serious grief. I am lucky enough to still have 3 grandparents who are feisty and alive (although one is slipping into Alzheimer's - the other two have more active social lives than me), I have two parents who are well, a brother and nephew, and a cousin/his wife/their baby. I haven't wanted for much, and for the most part, haven't really struggled in school. I know I am lucky, and I am very thankful for this. But death and dying bring grief to everyone. And I guess maybe I am highly attuned to it now because I'm writing/reading constantly and have opened myself up more. But grief has a particular quality to it. It's sort of like a shadow or a mist that lays itself on you and is absorbed, and then expands until there is no room for anything else. It is constantly tumbling, like an ocean before a storm - sometimes it is fiercely violent, other times there's just rolling waves. But always there. I felt something similar to grief but not exactly, when Lambee had breast cancer. I would sit on the bus back to my neighborhood after classes and look out the window and think, there is so much sadness in the world. Because everything became tinged with fear and a sort of grief those first few weeks.
And of course, me being me, I've turned to books. I'd probably have a binder full of research on hospice/grief if I weren't drowning in schoolwork, just like I had bags full of research/peer-reviewed journal articles when Lambee had cancer. So I've mostly been reading fiction and some nonfiction. The Book of Dahlia. She's actually a graduate of Columbia's MFA program. Blue Nights. It's Joan Didion; no explanation needed. The Cure for Grief. This was written by one of my professors (also a graduate of the program). I've read it several times before, but each time there's a different nuance; I find different things. It's funny though; not many people want to ever talk about death/dying/grief, even in the abstract. You ask people for book recommendations and they stare blankly at you, or offer up religious texts. (Which, hey, I'm not knocking "When Bad Things Happen to Good People" or "Blue Like Jazz" - I've read both. I just don't want that right now).
I'm just rambling now. Not enough sleep, too much caffeine.

Listening: The Like, "Are You Thinking What I'm Thinking?"
Reading: too much stuff.
Snacking: Twizzlers, Haribo gummy bears

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