Transformation is Happening in Every Moment


When the Japanese mend broken objects,
they aggrandize the damage by filling
the cracks with gold. 
They believe that
when something’s suffered damage and
has a history it becomes more beautiful.
~ Barbara Bloom

Often we are fully aware of the moments we are in true transformation, but many times we are not.  Sometimes transformation is so subtle, it often doesn’t hit us until later.  I’ve realized, even with great setbacks (most recently I’ve been eating everything in sight and have gained weight, I know I have), I’m still transforming for the better, and in real, long-term ways.  My thoughts and beliefs about myself and the world around me are changing.  I’m striving, even in the smallest measure, to live by intention and not by habit.  And even when I fall short (which is all the time), my thoughts about falling short are different too–More of an “okay, that didn’t work” or “man, I fell off the wagon there, but it’s going to happen so get back up and keep going.”  I choose to no longer beat myself up about it or go spiraling into negative thoughts (which, the saying is true, being negative does absolutely nothing for you!  I should know as I WAS the resounding poster child for negativity!). 

We all have negative thoughts and I’m sure I will continue to have them, but I’ve learned not to let them control my life.  I’ve been made even stronger now and developed more awareness, and even gained some tools to keep me moving forward and away from the negative thinking.  Now, I look more toward how I can do things better or just differently.  Past events don’t plague me as they used to and I now see the truth behind them instead of the lies I had previously told myself.  I also see how incredibly strong I am to have lived through such tragedy and adversity throughout my life.  I used to believe so many things were my fault.  I felt so damaged or that somehow I was genetically flawed and entirely unfixable.  Well, LOL, let’s face it, I really am genetically flawed (albeit in a different way); however, aside from the real genetic mutation that has devastated my life (but that I am living and thriving through) the negative thoughts don’t have the stronghold they used to. 

As with any extreme hardship, you have two choices: (i) either you become so destroyed that it’s literally impossible to come back from; or (ii) you buck the hell up and gain an entirely new, more purposeful and positive prospective on life.  THANK GOD I think my ticket is for the later train!  And maybe I’m just not willing to be as critical on myself or about my choices anymore.  I have been beaten down and virtually decimated and now I’m working on being built back up even stronger.  As if my damaged body and emotional well-being lay motionless on a large, metal table being torn open by machines slowly working to methodically replace parts of me with stronger, smarter and more resilient ones.  Such as fire can devastate a forest, in time it brings renewal and even more, productive life.

Acceptance comes with grace and humility, and surrender brings great power if you can be still long enough to see it.  I can now see clearly the message behind the passage “[m]y grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness” because I’ve now lived it.  I am grateful for that as most people will never experience this type of revelation.

A year or two back, I started an outline of my book and recently realized I must continue that project.  It is becoming increasingly more important to me.  A few days ago I wrote a friend about potential titles.  She’d previously read initial draft passages from my book, for which I already had a title.  She encouraged me to think about sticking with the original title.  I think now that she may be right and that I’m on the right track as my current metamorphosis may play into the original title well, but more on that later. :-)

An End to 2013 and My Crap Year of Cancer!

Yay!  As the year of 2013 comes into its final hours, I sit in my cozy living room next to a roaring fire and drink pink champagne and enjoy the chocolate truffles my friend, Charlotte, made.  A very nice and relaxing celebration to the end of a bad year.  One full of a cancer diagnosis, TONS of doctor appts, a lumpectomy, five grueling months of chemo, a very serious blood clot, three months of blood thinners, and the cherry on top, a double mastectomy.

Yesterday I had a second follow up with my breast surgeon.  I stated I was still having some pain.  She stated it was most likely due to the drains.  She removed the drain tube from my right side but left the drain tube on my left side because it’s still draining a good amount of fluid.  I go back in one week to hopefully have the other taken out.  No infection or anything though.  Good news!

I also had an afternoon appt with my oncologist yesterday.  She was practically doing the jig in the exam room, saying, “yea, aren’t you happy, no more cancer!”  She said she was so happy for me and asked what my plans were now.  I told her I now have to get ready for reconstruction.  She said she was going to refer me to the Star program for rehabilitation to get me on a good fitness program.  She stated she wants to see me more than normal to track my progress in order to get me to my goal.

I was invited to a couple of parties tonight, and down to the lake in my little, lake community to watch fireworks, and even though I have been spending so much time snuggled on my sofa recuperating, I’m quite enjoying this quiet, cozy, pink champagne and chocolate filled end to a dismal year.  I just finished watching Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory.  What a classic!

I look forward to 2014 with an excited hope that I don’t think I’ve had previously.  Today was a beautiful, winter day in the Texas hill country.  I stepped outside feeling refreshed.  The day was sunny and crisp and I felt my prospective on everything around me has shifted slightly.  Maybe even much more than slightly.  I pray this next year brings amazing joy, incredible adventure, vibrant health, positive changes and happy gifts of love and life beyond my wildest dreams!  I hope for simplicity, abundant happiness, romance and incredible wealth in all aspects of my life, and for those I love in my life!

One final thought, remember to eat your black-eyed peas tomorrow! ;-)

Another battle won

pinkbraWell, I’ve survived M-day!  I honestly thought I’d be an emotional wreck, completely devastated, but a funny thing happened when I woke up from surgery.  I was crackin’ jokes and in good spirits.  I have cried a bit, as I think there’s no way around that.  It is a loss and you have to mourn.

I wore my hot pink, push up bra to my mastectomy surgery, which seemed most appropriate.  Other than that I strived for comfort.

I’m still really groggy, pain meds and all.  I told myself I’m never gonna look at my chest again, but then I catch myself sneakin’ a peek.  I can do this!

I can tell you one thing, if you’re ever in need of mastectomies and in the Austin area, St. David’s HealthCare off Red River and 30th is the place to go.  Best hospital I’ve been to and I’ve been to a few.  The nurses are all excellent, the food is restaurant worthy–really good and you kinda feel like you’re at a resort.  My favorite thing is this awesome water bottle/cup they give you.  I’ll be using this sucker like crazy!  Love it!!!  Ah, the things we can be amused by.

StDavidsCup

Waking Up from the Dead Life

The Unlived Life:  Most of us are living one life and have an unlived life within us.  It is resistance (aka Fear) keeping you from your unlived life.  – Msg learned from Super Soul Sunday with Oprah and Steven Pressfeild (author of The War of Art).

It’s weird, when you start to wake up from your dead life–The clarity that comes.  Nothing happens all at once, but little by little you just start to get it.  You start to see how dead you’ve been all along.  I have a lot of work to do, a lot of “making up” to do for myself, if that makes any sense.  No more living the dead life.   For clarity, a dead life is an undesired life you may have fallen into because of fear and/or obligation.  A life that really has nothing to do with who you really are and your true purpose on this Earth.  In any regard, I’m in a dead life and I chose to be stuck here for a long, long time–too long, way too long!   No more–It’s time to wake up!

The good crash and burn

Yesterday I had a potential opportunity that I thought I wanted for quite some time totally crash and burn.  For a full day and night I became completely distraught over this one thing not coming to fruition.  Sure, it could have possibly made all aspects of my life better for a while, but as a good friend pointed out, it wouldn’t of made me happy.  It would have just been more of the same, maybe with a nicer package.  I would still be the ‘walking dead.’

So nice to have someone pull you out of a bad space–exactly what I needed.  I cannot thank you enough, Kamishia!  When you are mired in it, sometimes it’s hard to see straight.

In reality, God, the Universe, whatever, is saying, “no, you must stay in the fire–you’re not done yet.”

I need spiritual bypass surgery!

Great blog post from Mastin Kipp’s The Daily Love blog.  See full post at:  Do you need spiritual bypass surgery?  by Mastin Kipp, October 28, 2013.

The following are particularly good quotes from his post: 

We need a spiritual bypass surgery when our fear blocks us from feeling our feelings.

You see – your Soul doesn’t need any personal growth work. Your Soul doesn’t need therapy. Your Soul doesn’t need yoga, green juice or an alkaline, gluten free diet – your body does.

Fear is not the opposite of Love….

and

We tend to carry so much shame with us when it comes to feeling our feelings because we believe that feeling our fear or negativity are “unspiritual.”

The only thing unspiritual is the judgment of our feelings, which is actually keeping us blocked from happiness….

We can’t make our dark side conscious if we are too self-judgmental to allow it to come forward – this is a spiritual bypass and it’s as deadly as a blocked artery.

DIY retreat to commense this weekend

I’ll be preparing and focusing on the start of my retreat this weekend.  I’m excited to take some serious time to focus inward and make serious changes regarding my physical, mental, emotional and spiritual wellbeing.  I’ve been teetering back and forth for some time.  Making strides and then collapsing back into old habits again.  This last time in a serious way!  I need crucial change now!   It’s time to dig in, work hard and move forward.

Yesterday was my 9th chemo treatment on Taxol.  3 more to go.  The countdown has begun! :-)  My last treatment is November 14th.  I was thinking of an ‘end of chemo’ happy hour or something–Possibly at my favorite Austin restaurant, Fonda San Miguel.  I will think on it some more.  For the very few who actually read my blog, please chime in!

I had a long heart to heart with the nurse practitioner at the MedOnc’s office yesterday.  She noticed that I’ve been moving in the wrong direction regarding my health and wellbeing and not focusing any longer on preparing for surgery.  I seem to be sabotaging myself, yet again.  Just the thought of surgery makes me teary-eyed.  I started getting emotional just talking with her about it.  It’s not just that it’s a major, life-altering surgery; my fear comes from the pancreatic surgery I endured 3 years ago for a rare, mucinous cystadenoma.  Initially, everything went fine, and then the complications started.  I suffered many complications, several more stints in the hospital, more surgeries, and painful rehabilitation with a 6-month recovery.  I cannot express here how brutal that all was.  I almost didn’t make it a number of times.

This has struck a fear of surgery in me that is so strong.  Honestly, it’s not the fear of surgery itself, but of the complications that can develop.  I have to move past it, somehow.  I’m hoping my DIY retreat will help me conquer this fear and move forward with preparing for surgery.  I cannot afford to keep moving the timeframe of surgery.  It must happen within the next 6 months, and my doc has made it clear sooner than later.  My MedOnc has given me a window that I must stick to, to stay on the safe side of things, hopefully!

My MedOnc has asked me to consider mastectomies and delaying reconstruction, but even now, as I write this I’m tearing up.  I cannot.  It’s too hard.  It’s all really hard.   My situation is different than the average woman’s, always has been.

Many women jump at having this done, immediately.  Their fear is very justified.  More and more women are having bimx/recon surgeries, a good majority who do not need to take such drastic measures.  Breast cancer scares the crap out of you.  I know, I’ve had this monkey on my shoulder my whole life!  I, unfortunately, fall into the category that absolutely should take such drastic measures.

I’ve always been on the forefront of this.  Knowing of my family history, I started seeing my breast surgeon in my early twenties.  She has been monitoring me ever since and even performed my recent lumpectomy.  When the BRCA gene testing became available, well, I didn’t do it right away but knew if I found out I did have a mutation I’d do what I needed to do to save my life.  But, after the panc surgery, everything became so much more difficult.  So many obstacles, around every corner.  The opposite has happened.  I’ve turned my fear of surgery into a more palpable beast than my fear of dying from breast cancer.  What kind of crap is that?  It’s all hard–So many brutal decisions!

I know I’m a survivor, I always have been, my whole life; but, how much can God place on one person?  How strong do I have to become?