4 May 2014
1748 hrs
Good Day or, evening rather,
Dear and Patient Reader.
Here we are again. I certainly hope that you have been enjoying
these posts the last few days. I understand that you have been coming to CFF
since the early days, most of you anyway, since The Great Beginning, for my
world-class rants. I apologize somewhat
for deviating from the norm, even though it seems the norm is coming to be
these memoirs of my life, and these recent works of photography, both of which
I hope you richly enjoy.
There are many beautiful things
surrounding me, and I am sure that if you look carefully at the ratio of Things
to People, you'll see that humanity, in my own mind, has its limitations.
The few friends in my life are primarily
composed of women. Thank the IS. Haha. Three male friends of mine live in two different
cities; two male friends live here in my own, one of whom is gay and looking
and another who is straight and has found.
The rest of the men about me are mere
acquaintances, though they have earned my respect as I hope that I have earned
theirs.
If I have not, then fuck 'em.
The women closest to me are artists,
too. They pose for me and sing for my recordings and they like me for who I am
and do not despise me for not feeling what I do not.
Ah, but perhaps it is because I am not
involved with them beyond our friendship.
And they know and understand, even if they know it not themselves, not
yet at least, that I already know Love's secret: Love is but a Spectre.
Like the Devil, as many people believe
in Love.
These women understand that I know it,
and I hope it is not long in coming that they do as well. Soon is my hope,
before they age anymore under the Fist of Pain.
So allow me now to continue on with my
story of Miranda, her cancerous parasite, her sorrowful mother, and of course,
the Cunning Fennec Fox.
Shall I get the hell on with it, then?
Splendid!
Miranda, Carol, and the Cunning Fennec Fox
conclusion
Carol was
sending a message or, more accurately, her neurotransmissions were sending a
message, to fate. An open letter I was
able to read; to which I had Access Unlimited.
She was telling Pain to Fuck the Fuck off. She was going to feel a sensation so
different, so the opposite of Pain; so much better than any sensation she felt
in Who-Knows-How-Long?
She required satisfaction . . . spiritually, emotionally
. . . physically . . . and she was not By-god going to leave without tearing
off a piece to save whatever her soul was.
Carol was not my patient.
For all intents and purposes, neither was her daughter. I was the diagnostician in her case, and she
should have been transferred off my service a long time ago. I recommended treatments along with the
diagnostic tests my department did not perform; the ones I could not order.
Not being an M.D., I was not able to prescribe meds, but
I saw how anti-epilepsy drugs work, and which ones work best with what
seizures. So I gave my
recommendations.
It was the neurodiagnostic aspect of my knowledge in
which I was Lord and Master of All I Surveyed . . .
Miranda’s lack of proper treatment was not within the
parameters of my administrative powers.
Did I tell myself these things in order to justify my own
actions in my own mind?
I do not believe in Sin.
I do not believe in Good and Evil . . .
to me, there is only behavior.
Carol
stopped first. She asked me to come home
with her; to come back with her to that small town forty miles away. To come back with her and help her banish
Spectres.
“I have
to feel something,” she said. “Something
other than fear and hurt.” And I thought
to myself, ‘Don’t we all . . .’
Immediately
after my mother’s stroke all our family knew was terror. We felt it in the pits of our stomachs . . .
felt it circulate in our bloodstreams like the poison it is; caustic and
diffusing with every heartbeat . . .
transforming into a new molecule; something that felt like grief, only
more pointed. Terror was metabolizing
into something that would kill my family, only because we could not heal more
quickly than it tore us apart.
My
father would beat me just to be able to assert control over something in his
life, and he drank because he had to live with his behavior. So he beat me more for making him feel so low.
I
myself drank and used drugs, needing to feel something other than hate, or to
feel nothing at all. Life is tolerable
when you are numb. It is the lucent
realization that you are alone, that you have alienated everyone around you by
behavior alone.
I
thought about what Miss Vera said. I
knew what Carol needed. I knew she
needed to be held, to be the one protected and soothed and touched. She needed to succumb freely to the
overpowering sensations of pleasure . . . to force out the writhing serpents in
her gut. She needed to feel filled and
not empty. She needed therapeutic primal
screaming and needed someone to hear it . . . needed me to hear it. I was powerless in all other ways. Powerless against her Pain.
At the
end of a truncated workday, I ran into Carol in the lobby, where she was
waiting for me; ready to pounce as the puma pounces . . . patient and still.
Miranda had been admitted, as she needed more
powerful drugs to lessen the frequency of her seizures. Ativan and her cousins were indicated.
Carol
asked me once more to join her.
I
followed her home.
After,
warm in her bed on a cooling spring twilight, the bedroom window open to the
soft breeze. A month from now the daily
thunderstorms would start; rolling in from Mississippi like a chariot. These began around 1600 hrs, lasted an hour
or so, then the humidity would double due to the magic of evapotranspiration.
Tonight,
that night 25 or so years ago, the light breeze that moved the thin curtains
dried us.
I lay
my body there, worrying. What IS this? Was I
wrong?
You, Patient Reader, may have your views, your
opinions, maybe even your sober judgment of me.
I can tell you right now that I was the only one of the two of us that
had these worries. Seeing Carol relaxed
for the first time in however long; feeling the looseness of the muscles in her
shoulders where, two hours earlier, there was only the tautness of the drum, I
felt the worry slip off of me like a silken cloak.
Catharsis
took watch in that room that night. This
was new to me. I knew Lust and I knew
what Love used to be to me. But this new
wine . . . well, I knew not its provenance, nor could I dissect the intricate
bouquet. It simply was, I tasted of it,
and did not shrink from its intoxicating effects.
For
this was not Lust, nor was it Love, obviously, what it was was unique and . . .
well, special. There was no taking from
one another . . . there was only the
giving and the receiving, equal in all parts.
Reciprocal and profound.
There
was no Mine; no Yours. There was not even
really an Ours. It was a sort of here and have . . . and a
touch as light as butterflies.
I told
her that she was one that would be watched over that night. The one that would be protected and soothed
and cherished, however fleetingly. I
meant it. And she was and she knew that
she was. Evolution won. Again.
Carol
and I never repeated that night. We saw
one another frequently in what I was about to call “Neutral Territory,” but the
hospital was not that at all was it? The
hospital was MY domain; the land over which I had some control. The realm in which I knew no doubt. Where my judgment was sound and my knowledge
only limited by me.
We saw
one another over the all-too-brief couple of months after our close night in
her home. There was no awkwardness; no underlying
current of discomfort. We converged at
an intersection, we interacted, and the moments passed like that cooling
breeze.
I had
fixed that which was broken on that night, and that was all and everything I
wanted to do.
Miranda
died of cancer in July. The tumor grew
and occupied her tiny skull, laying siege and gobbling like the starving
wolf. Her ravaged brain finally gave up.
It was
a good fight; Miranda fought hard.
Miranda fought to the Death.
Poor
people, indigent, we call them,
cannot (or could not) afford expensive tests like MRI back then. At around $2500, they were among the most
expensive non-invasive tests that were done.
The machines themselves were over a million dollars, and jesus, they had
to be paid for, right?
Today,
they are commonplace, and relatively cheap.
CT
scans had been ordered on Miranda, but tiny tumors that are in their infancy
and in the crania of youngsters need a higher resolution than CT’s provide.
By the
time the glioblastoma was imaged, it was Stage IV; inoperable. Terminal.
However,
in the end, she was transferred to the Neurosurgery Service.
The six or so CTs the hospital ate
could have almost paid for an MRI. Ten
of us pitching in a couple hundred bucks could have paid for one, too. I suggested it, and was looked at as if a
second head was sprouting from my shoulders.
Gliomae
are aggressive, and hers grew faster than most.
It was only pain Miranda knew in the end.
The
tumor, as it turns out, was in the L
parieto-temporal area. Being right is not
always rewarding.
I was
asked to a private meeting. Present were
two men in dark, expensive suits. My
medical director was there, staring down at the huge, oval conference
table. They all asked me to “alter” some
of my notes. To sacrifice one or two or
all of my principles for the sake of the hospital; to take one for the team . . .
Miranda
could, under the right circumstances, help their bottom line.
I just
might get a bonus. All I have to do is
play along. The alternative was the
poisoned pen that dripped into my Curriculum Vitae over the course of my
so-called career. My choice.
It was
now Medical-Legal that was taking away my free will.
I
refused their kind and generous and illegal and immoral and just plain wrong
proposal, and I promptly resigned my position as Assistant Associate Professor
of Neurophysiology.
They
circled the wagons.
Miranda’s
complete chart was almost impossible to get.
Almost. Medical Records had yet
to be warned about me. Heart in my
throat I went down there in the Abyss of Records and checked it out, taking it
then to my soon-to-be-vacant office. No
one was the wiser.
As fate
would have it, my personal file on the case was not in my file cabinet. It sat in the accordion file, along with a
few other cases, safely tucked in the trunk of my car. I always charted the final notes in the quiet
solitude of my home office.
To this
day, I disavow any knowledge as to how Carol had ended up with the unabridged
version of her dead daughter’s chart. I
know not how that chart happened to have the business card of one of the best
Malpractice Lawyers in the region stapled to it.
Some anonymous
donor, perhaps?
I do
not know how the end played out for Carol.
How much is a child’s life worth?
Need we factor in inflation as we calculate the value from then to now? I do however, suspect that Carol could now
afford an MRI. She could quit her server
job and stay home full time. Sad that
the house would be empty and silent.
How
many MRIs could have been bought with my bonus, those thirty silver
pieces?
Am I not
the Bodhisattva of Compassion? Can I, in
my misanthropy, in my sociopathology, set
the fractured heart? Am I kind
enough? Good enough? Probably not.
Am I the EEG, the suspicious diagnostic tool
that renders on accordion paper hope and despair?
Am I
the sum of evolutionary biology, and nothing more? Does Broca or Wernicke even matter if it is
only deaf ears that are turned toward me?
Am I
more than the sum of my neurotransmissions?
Are any of us?
Am I
more than my hypothalamus, regulating the Four Fs; Fight, flight, feed and
reproduction? And if so, is it worth it?
Am I
the glioblastoma multiforme; malignant and menacing; infiltrating, insulting and
insidious? Am I a Space-Occupying
Lesion?
Does my
indifferent yet malicious existence kill the will to live of those in whom I
take up residence? Do I make them, in
their agony, pray for death?
Am I the
Bodhisattva of Wisdom? With wisdom lies
Great Sorrow, to paraphrase the ecclesiastic, and I have surely reaped sorrow,
and see it perpetually in humanity.
Gandhi was asked once what he thought of Western Civilization. He said it was a great idea.
Do I witness
sorrow any more than any other? Less
than most?
Can I not
be this being? Can I not reach this Higher Light? Sometimes I think it is
the only way I could contribute. Can I not
be both He of Compassion and He of
Wisdom? Must I be neither?
Was my
desire to heal other helping or harming my case? Was the desire to be these persons damning
me, perpetuating Samsara?
Is the
universe not broken by the deaths, those agonizing endings of far-too truncated
lives?
Is all
we ever know simply the varying degrees of pain?
Am I
the forgotten man and his ruined career, living with his principles both good
and flawed? I am both of these things;
good and flawed.
Should I
have played along?
Am I but
the pit of loneliness in the stomach, the gut?
The pit we all have felt, this void, empty, abyssal and bottomless; more
an oubliette than a symptom? The pit in
which Carol existed before that cool spring night?
How
could I be the Bodhisattva of Anything with these all-too-many questions?
But One
only become Wise by asking them, these, and eternally more, questions. One becomes Compassionate only when they are
answered.
Finis
Well,
Patient Reader, I certainly tested your patience on this last leg of the
journey. Thanks for hanging about. 2500+ words to this post alone.
But y’all
are completely aware of my rambling nature; my digressions. I know my buddy Dr. -------- knows- you
remember her; my last writing professor.
The
pics sprinkled throughout the blog are ones from the film I am putting
together. Some of the others are already
on CFF; previous posts, I mean. Hope you
find them all enjoyable.
Anyhoo. (Did I really say anyhoo?) Tune in for more rantings and ravings to be
posted as they come to and move me. I
bid you good day.
Always,
The
Cunning Fennec Fox
Phantastic photos.
ReplyDeleteThe photo of Sarah with the sprinkling of the faerie dust are actually the lights that mark the stairs far behind her. Happy accident.
ReplyDelete