Monday, September 13, 2021

Birthdays and Breast Cancer

                 The radiation waiting room was in the inner sanctum of the cancer center. Radiation was merely step two of my chemotherapy/radiation cancer treatment plan. The chemotherapy waiting room was simply the main waiting room just inside the entrance, where patients also waited to see a doctor or have blood work done. But radiation patients were special, we had our own waiting room. We got secretly buzzed back there simply by standing in front of the receptionist, Denise, who quietly buzzed us in while multi-tasking on the phone or computer.

                Back in the inner sanctum secrets were openly shared. One lady showed me her burned bosom as a badge of courage, seemingly whether I wanted to see it or not. The next day there was a new cubicle wall along the outer row of chairs, as if the flashing from the day before was too much for some unintentional eye to bear. The cubicle wall made it feel cozier back there, more private, secretive. Before that it was just a side lounge of chairs. With the wall it felt more like an actual waiting room. Perhaps there was a complaint, or even a suggestion in one of those ever-present boxes.

                So it was back in the inner sanctum one morning in August when a new lady arrived, Bev. She had been chatting with Cathy, who occupied the radiation time slot after mine. Bev told Cathy she had a lumpectomy and now needed five days of radiation, and that all of this was stealing her joy. I was hardly listening, scrolling through my recent sunflower photos, red, orange and yellow sunflowers I grew this summer, tired from stopping work and getting there every morning at 9am, when Cathy leaned back against the new wall and said “Wendy, tell Bev what you’ve been through.” I showed them some of my beautiful sunflower photos while relating how I had a mastectomy in January, started chemo in mid-February, first once every other week of a bad kind for four treatments, then once every week of another kind of chemo, not so bad but still chemo, but for 12 weeks straight! Then they gave me four weeks off before I started radiation in August, 25 treatments, one a day every weekday.

                Shortly after relating my story I got called back to get my radiation treatment. I thought about Bev that week and prayed for her, that God would restore her joy. I didn’t see her for a few sessions, but Cathy and I got to know each other better, and soon it would be her last session, since she started a few days before me and was only scheduled for 20 treatments. On her third to last day I gave her a magnet I made through Shutterfly. It’s a photo of a Paint Nite painting I did of a bird flying in a forest over a stream, and I photo-shopped the words “God will cover you with His wings” near the bottom. The next day Cathy gave me a nice card with her phone number in it and a gift bag with a cute figurine.

                Then I got called back to get my radiation treatment. My photo was on the screen and I said my name and birthday. The treatment went fast, and as I was leaving, I stopped in the inner sanctum waiting room and asked Cathy her birthday. She said “February 26th.” I exclaimed “That’s my birthday too!” And we hugged in tears. I couldn’t believe it! We were sitting there all those weeks and had the same birthday!

                The next day was Cathy’s last radiation treatment and we said our good-byes. I texted her once that week that I missed her, since there was a cranky man there one morning instead of her. Then I saw Bev again one morning. The next day I brought her a magnet also. I handed her the magnet and let her know I’d been praying for God to restore her joy. She started to cry and said she thought about me and all I’d been through but I was still finding joy in simple things like sunflowers, and she decided she needed to put on her big girl panties! That made me laugh, and also cry a little. I told her how I cried with Cathy when we found out we had the same birthday. I asked Bev when was her birthday. “Oh February 26th.” “That’s my birthday and Cathy’s too!” I couldn’t believe it. I actually got weak in the knees! Then I got called back for my treatment. After I came back out, Bev was telling the next lady in the radiation queue about our birthdays. That lady said she was there when Cathy and I learned we had the same birthday, and now she was there the same day Bev and I found out also. It was like they were events to remember! I gave her a magnet too.

                So Bev and I exchanged phone numbers and her last day came quickly. The next day there was a new lady there waiting in her time slot after me. I was chatty with that lady, and asked her birthday right away. She said slowly “February twenty…fourth.” So amazingly close. My husband Chris, says we have a very specific club, you have to have breast cancer and be born February 26th.

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