
My strong desire for order and control are being severely tested at the moment. In addition my values around individual empowerment and the right of each individual to decide what happens to their body are also being put to the test. My mum decided to delay surgery and chemo/radiation in order to go on a health retreat/cleanse. Now - don't get me wrong I have nothing against the whole idea of cleansing ones body; however, I can't help but think that getting the cancer OUT would be a good first step. At the same time, I know this decision is consistent with what she believes is best for her own body. Its hard accepting that when the consequences if things go wrong would be so devastating.
I went with my mum yesterday to tell my Nana (age 96) that she has cancer. It was a strange a surreal experience, sitting in the kitchen of the home my mum grew up in, watching my Nan, who I have spent many hours with over many years, crying for the first time (as in, the first time I have seen her cry). Not only that, she cried about five times over the space of a few hours, that kind of deep emotional wrenching where you can't speak because of the effort it is taking to hold it in. I wanted to take that pain away, for both of them. This is the third daughter/step-daughter my Nan will have nursed through breast cancer.
I find myself terrified as the concept death stares me in the face. At the same time I feel an urgency not to allow my mind to go there. I just have no idea how or with whom to explore this - I wonder how most people come to understand and process the fact that we all die, eventually, and the fact that others around them are dying. To me its horrifying and I wonder if its because I am young or whether something else might be wrong with me. Do other people just not talk about this? I want to explore and make peace with this, but somehow it seems now might not be the best time?
Perhaps its mental exhaustion, stress or whatever, but I feel a darkness settling over me. I hope it doesn't stay.