The Accidental Patient

the accidental patient

 

I caressed her hair as she held me tightly.

Her call had come a half hour earlier.

“Ean, please come over. I have cancer.”

I quickly closed my Chemistry book and bolted downstairs and out the front door. There was a torrential rain, but I didn’t bother grabbing my umbrella.

The contents of her message and its tone were so dense that I felt numb. The umbrella would do nothing other than to weigh down my strides.

By the time I had bridged the two miles separating us, not a single thought had crossed my mind.

I rang her buzzer and she emerged moments later; a blank look scrawled across her face. She trudged up a flight of stairs and I quickly followed, only stopping to peel off my clothing and drop them in the stairway outside her apartment.

I followed her into the bedroom, where she sat on the bed, emotionless. I sat down beside her. She buried her face in my chest and began to cry.

I caressed her hair as she held me tightly.

—–

On the previous Sunday evening, while laying in bed, I had run my hands through her hair and down her neck. My hand encountered something new and I paused as I felt it beneath my fingers again: a hard marble-sized ball resting at the base of the left side of her neck.

She teasingly slapped my hand away. I didn’t dare feel it again. Terrible thoughts began racing through my head.

But I gave her a sly grin to distract her from my concern. We turned off the lights and readied for bed.

 

I caressed her hair as she held me tightly.

—–

When we awoke the next morning, I cautiously suggested she should go see her doctor first thing. A light-hearted soul who always smiled, she flashed her own sly grin at me.

I followed her smile with a look which revealed my overwhelming concern. “Please. For me.”

An uncommonly serious look came across her face and she promised to go immediately.

The doctor performed a biopsy of the lymph node and summoned her for the results three days later. She had Hodgkin’s Lymphoma, the same diagnosis her mother had received five years earlier.

—–

At the time, our relationship was still in its hot and fast stage, having been together for less than a year. On one fateful day, I had summoned the courage to give her my number. We had been nearly inseparable since.

We were scheduled to leave for Prague in only a few weeks. But on that night, as the rain streamed down her windows and her tears streamed down my chest, time seemed to stand still; the uncertainty of life reverberating through every one of her cries.

A few days before our trip, she dropped me off at home and as I paused to kiss her good-bye, she took a deep breath. It was as if she was sneaking some of the life out of me, knowing what lay in store for her.

Then she whispered words I could not believe. She said she was willing to undergo this battle on her own. If I wanted to end our relationship after our trip, she would understand.

I froze in shock and climbed back into the car.

 

I caressed her hair as she held me tightly.

—–

The next six months were a cauldron of emotion, marked by fear, anxiety, and sadness… for both her and I. Feeling overwhelmed by the magnitude of the situation, I did my best to be strong and caring for her.

I often failed.

Though universally beloved, she was an intensely private woman. She was able to tell only a select few co-workers and friends about the diagnosis because her treatment would “only” be every-other-Friday. And she told them only in case something turned for the worse.

Outside of work, she was active in coaching, a natural gift that made her a pied piper to the college kids. Her treatment would likely leave her ill and weak on the weekends, so she took a semester hiatus. Being away from the game and people she loved was agonizing for her.

In preparation for what was deemed inevitable, she used my hair trimmers and cut her locks short. For Christmas I bought her two trendy hats I thought would make her feel cute. But she never got around to wearing them; perhaps because she received so many compliments about her new look.

—–

Unlike her, I told everyone.

I had to. I was overwhelmed with uncertainty. I could feel the stress percolating in my body. I wanted to be Superman for her.

Her privacy kept her from allowing anyone else who loved her from coming and sitting with her at chemotherapy. Only I was allowed to see her in such a vulnerable state.

On those Fridays, as the clock neared 10AM, I would catch a cab from across town, and arrive as the infusion was beginning.

We would play cards and talk about what we would do over the weekend. She would declare with pride to the nurses that I was studying to be a doctor. And that she was my patient.

When the session was over, we would drive back to her apartment, sit down in front of the TV, and wait for the nausea to come.

She would run to the bathroom, return a few minutes later, give me a sly grin, and start chewing some gum.

Then she would lay down across the couch and rest her head in my lap.

 

I caressed her hair as she held me tightly.

—–

Her athletic frame and wide smile prevented most people from noticing the side effects of chemotherapy, even those whom she had been comfortable telling about her illness.

But they were awful. At night, she would vacillate between hot flashes and cold night sweats, often tearing clothes from her body only to hurriedly put them back on a few moments later.

In the middle of the night, her dry mouth left her gasping for water.

She craved physical intimacy, but the pain was unbearable.

I would awake to her crying and could not console her.

 

I caressed her hair as she held me tightly.

—-

After six months of treatment, she was free of cancer, with many people in her life none-the-wiser to everything she endured.

When nearly two years later I asked her to attend a cancer survivors event put on by the hospital where I was working, she shook her head no.

I don’t think she wanted to be reminded of those days.

—–

The end of her treatment and my birthday occurred within a week of each other in the summer of 2006. She reluctantly agreed to have a birthday/post-chemo celebration at her apartment. Friends from all of our walks of life stopped in, shared a drink, and made her feel special.

At the end of night she and I shared one last private drink and crawled into her bed, happy to have it all behind us. She looked relieved and smiled at me.

I caressed her hair as she held me tightly.

When I had a Son

jacob in central park

—–

Between the spring of 2012 and summer 2013, I lived in 3 different nYc neighborhoods spanning two of nYc’s five boroughs.

My third and final apartment was actually a room in a woman’s house in Jamaica, Queens.  Despite the tightness of the accommodations, I’d only be living there for two months, so I was certain it was survivable. Plus, the room was furnished with a bed, dresser, desk… and the “son-I-never-knew”.

His name is Jacob.

—–

sonsmoking

—–

A 12-year-old with an absentee mother and incarcerated father is quick to bond with anyone who gives him attention, as I quickly discovered.

When I arrived in May, the school year was winding down, so Jacob’s hours of daily supervision was waning in parallel. Jacob was a mildly delinquent kid to begin with and his mother did not allow him to participate in any after-school activities, thus creating the perfect storm for me to become Jacob’s de facto guardian.

—–

sturdy-wings

—–

Over the course of May and June, Jacob became my shadow… and a constant reminder of why I use condoms. Nearly 33 years old myself, Jacob easily could have been one of my own offspring.

In May, I was completing my Surgery Clerkship, which required me to leave home at 4:30A and found me returning home at 7P on a good day. Jacob would always be waiting for me. On some days, he would hide behind the front door so that when I would slog through it he could pop out and cause my heart to skip a beat. Each time this happened I imagined that skipped beat to be what it must be like to unexpectedly have a woman tell you she’s pregnant.

 

 

He would laugh and smile, which despite the soul-crushing daily commute and exposure to hubris-filled surgeons, would cause me to smile in turn.

The part of the house where he and his mother resided was separated from the upstairs rooms, so he would follow me up the stairway and ask what I was up to. Still clad in my scrubs, I would look at him and shake my head. “Give me 5 minutes, then we can hang out.”

He would dart back downstairs only to return 4 minutes later with a rap on my door.

Most nights would revolve around hanging out in my room, where he could watch Netflix on my phone or computer. Not wanting to have my medical career derailed by some scandal, I would allow him to inflate my air mattress on the floor, which propped open the door to my room, and watch some crazy shows.

—–

iphone-kid-by-mastrobiggo

—–

Typically I would inform him at 9PM that I needed to sleep because of my early morning, but I knew it would take him 30 minutes to finish up whatever he was watching, so I was never upset when he would simply nod his head and keep on chuckling along with whatever he was watching.

On Saturday mornings I would awaken at 7AM to a dull thud on my door. If I hadn’t been regularly awakening at 4AM I might have shot out of bed, swung the door wildly open, and screamed “What the hell, man!” But each time I would calmly put on some clothes, slowly unlock the door, and smile when I opened it to see him standing there, eyes barely open, hair a wild mess, and hear him mutter, “I’m bored.”

I’d reply, “No, I think you are still asleep.”

 

calvindad

 

If Jacob couldn’t find a friend to shoot hoops with, he would beg me to go with him. The first time I obliged, I ended up playing two-on-one basketball with another him and another kid and narrowly avoided having to retire from the game I love by blowing a 11-0 lead only to hang on to win 21-19. I also pulled one of my glutes going for a block.

When he needed a snack, he would ask if he could eat something of mine from the fridge… after he’d already eaten it.

If he felt like scaring the shit out of me, he’d sneak out the second story window in the kitchen, climb on the roof to the window that was outside my room and beside my bed… and bang on it like a wildebeest.

—–

dont-scare-your-kids

—–

 

During the first two weeks of June, I was in Boston, but would receive a daily text message from Jacob. It usually said something like, “Poop.” Or to ask if he could eat something of mine, which surely had already been eaten.

A few of the highlights of having a 12-year-old pseudo-son:

1) Being asked what sex is like… while walking to shoot hoops… And quickly realizing this was a lose-lose question.

2) Allowing him to pick a place and time to go see the latest Superman movie… and having the time be wrong and paying $15 for a ticket because he didn’t bring his money.

3) Playing catch with him in Central Park… and then having it abruptly end when he tossed a baseball over my head and it nearly concussed a group of innocent bystanders.

—–

ken-griffey-jr-sr

—–

4) Trying to get him to stop kicking a large bouncy ball down the aisles of a CVS.

5) Having him try to jump in the Central Park Pond to catch a turtle.

Despite the innumerable incredible experiences I had in nYc, this unexpected friendship/guardianship ended up being one of the most cherished. Perhaps one day I’ll have a real son of my own. Perhaps I’ll teach him about the birds and the bees while shooting hoops. Perhaps I’ll play catch with him in Central Park. But most certainly, I won’t forget the time I did it all before with Jacob.