Monday, May 26, 2014

Finding Quiet

I love the quiet.  I am reading a book called Quiet by Susan Cain.  In brief, she delves into the nature of quiet, introverted people.  Devon told me she had read the book and it helped her understand that some of her behaviors she was not comfortable with had become behaviors she now not only accepts, but embraces.  Cain quotes Proust as calling those special moments of unity between writer and reader as "that fruitful miracle of a communication in the midst of solitude."  It is miraculous when we step forward toward more fully accepting ourselves and loving ourselves unconditionally.  It is perhaps a process without end.  I felt that way this weekend while listening to Ramanand.  Nearly all of what he said resonated within me with full understanding.  For me, nothing esoteric, just basic truths most of us of age (or not) have come to know through painful experiences, hard learned lessons of life, plumbing the depths of ourselves, peeling away layers in our oftentimes compelling and urgent journey towards truth of self, of life, of relationships. 

Today is Memorial Day which I understand to be a day for remembering all those men and women who fought in wars.  For decades now I have kept the bronze star awarded to my father for his service during World War II in my night stand drawer.  Long past his death, I finally came to understand and love him, and I wept for him.  Severely traumatized, alcoholic, abusive, hard core workaholic, gambler, womanizer, an absent father.  When we understand, we forgive.  With forgiveness we are free to love, and I don't think it is ever too late.

After 39 years, Dale and I got "married" in Taos on Wednesday, May 14.  The ceremony was sweet, simple, quiet, and meaningful.  I didn't think a piece of paper would mean much of anything, but the ritual, the ceremony, the sacredness of it does spin one towards looking at things from a different perspective, a view with more appreciation, perhaps a renewal.  It snowed, the moon was full, the old but modernized adobe enveloped us with warmth and hospitality.  We took our dog, Mikio, along with us.   

This past Friday I had my cat Pepe euthanized.  He had alimentary (intestinal) small cell lymphoma.  His symptoms began long ago, and I think that by the time he was diagnosed, the cancer was quite advanced.  He did not respond to prednisone, nor to two different chemotherapy treatments.  It is always a hard thing to do.  I observed his slow decline, his change in behavior, felt him daily as the muscle tissue melted away leaving him nearly emaciated.  Along the journey of dealing with his illness, there were a multitude of decisions to make.  We did everything we could, and more, and I can only hope we didn't do too much.  When I instinctually knew it was time, I had to battle with my mind for several hours.  During this time, I somehow heard about a book entitled Blink, learning how to think without thinking, meaning to listen to our intuition, our gut.  The book is on my wish list. 

It is growing dark outside, and there is the distant roar of thunder.  My dog stays close as he fears stormy weather.  The house is quiet, the cats sleeping, Dale in his room probably reading, listening to music, or online.   It is intensely green outside in infinite hues.  Pepe is peacefully sleeping forever under a stand of oaks alongside Adam, Sam, Kit Kat, Pewter, and Ralph.  The rain last night nourished the trees and grasses, filling the air with the smell of organic earth.  My burn pile is now all ashes, the fire long gone.  The wind which has been blowing daily is at the moment sitting still.   

Friday, May 9, 2014

Tuxedo Boy

After Peggy's Monday afternoon class, before I left the parking lot, I listened to a voicemail from Sharon Theisen, DVM, regarding the results of my cat Pepe's biopsies.  Not good news at all.  Cancer.  Pepe was born early Fall, 2004.  I adopted him in May 2008.  The year before he was  he was rescued by an Austin Group from Town Lake Animal Center, which was at the time a kill center.  He has been a wonderful pet, very sweet and loving, a gentle nature, quiet.  Very much a lap cat and very social with people.  Well over 2 years ago he developed allergies and was tested and found to be allergic to a wide range of pollens.  I have been giving him weekly shots since then and he has seen a dermatologist, who treats allergies, regularly.  He has suffered from ear issues related to his allergies as well as all the aggressive grooming and scratching that results from the relentless itching all over his body.  There have been times when he itches so intensely that he will lick and scratch to the point that he bleeds, forms scabs, looses large patches of hair.  Cortisone pills do provide some relief.  For over a year now he has been plagued with lots of diarrhea and vomiting.  I have mentioned this repeatedly to his doctors.  One vet found some bacteria in his stool and prescribed an antibiotic, which helped a little, for a while.  It was suggested that perhaps he had developed a food allergy so I've tried feeding him prescribed hypoallergenic cat food, and other recommended brands and flavors, with no luck.  Then he was tested for hyperthyroidism, and he was negative.  Finally, after dropping down to barely 8 pounds from nearly 12 pounds, he was referred to an internist (Dr. Sharon Thiesen) who recommended exploratory surgery as the most comprehensive method of getting good biopsies from his stomach, ileus, and intestine.  The report came back yesterday as positive for alimentary (intestinal) small cell lymphoma.  He has been put on prednisone daily which should help a lot, but the next step is to consider whether or not to begin administering chemotherapy, which comes in a pill (chlorambucil) without all the side effects associated with chemotherapy in humans.  Still, there are potential side effects and at this point I haven't made a decision on what to do.  I will meet next week with Dr. Thiesen to have his staples removed (24 of them), and we will discuss the options.  His comfort and well-being is most important.  It is my understanding that with treatment, his life expectancy should be between 1.5 and 2 years.  He's probably had the cancer for about a year.  I feel sad that he has this terminal illness.  I feel gratitude for the wonderful years we have had together and gratitude that I was able to be his caretaker for the past 6 years.  He has been such a joy.  Now it is wait and see how he responds to the daily steroid treatment and possibly the chemotherapy. 

I just spoke on the phone with Dr. Theisen, and we are going to move forward with the chemotherapy as Pepe has bounced back quite well from his exploratory surgery.  I have a history with Sharon Theisen, DVM, as she treated one of my other cats many years ago.  Sam had a really bad heart, and with her expertise, we were able to give him 5 additional years of a good quality life.  He was my first rescued pet, and since then that is all I have had.  So, when I took Pepe in to see Dr. Theisen, I was delighted to see a photograph of Sam on her wall.  It was touching and brought tears to my eyes, and how well I remember the day we finally put Sam down, and how she and I both cried at his loss.  He was quite the warrior cat for sure.