Seeing Is Believing. A Desire To Personify My Cancer

Cancer feels to me like a faceless foe. People talk of fighting, and beating cancer, but how can you fight what you cannot comprehend or see? At some point soon my fight will involve chemotherapy; transparent, toxic and potent fluids committed to fighting for me.
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As a 'visual' person I like to see things. Ideally I like to touch them. It makes things real to me, and the more my senses are stimulated through colour, touch, smell, taste, etc the better my understanding and memory is of any experience or fact. I suspect I'm not alone in feeling like this.

One of my issues with cancer is that is doesn't feel real. Everything has been articulated and confirmed verbally, but sensory evidence has been scarce. Admittedly there were fleeting, intense abdominal pains on that fateful weekend in October. And I now have a laparoscopic scar and stoma bag as evidence of an operation...but what of the cancer itself?

Clearly those in the medical profession, those 'in the club' have seen it; I had an X-ray, CT scans, a physical tumour. There are now physical slides buried in a pathology lab somewhere, slivers of my cancer dissected and prepared for microscopic review by the experts.

Only none of this has been shared with me, other than orally, and there seems to be a reluctance to do so. Why, I'm not sure,

So cancer feels to me like a faceless foe. People talk of fighting, and beating cancer, but how can you fight what you cannot comprehend or see? At some point soon my fight will involve chemotherapy; transparent, toxic and potent fluids committed to fighting for me. It is likely there will then be some physical symptoms and signs of the fight within; exhaustion, nausea, etc to name some of the milder side effects as these clear and seemingly innocuous liquids wage war on cells, healthy or otherwise, that I cannot conceive, see or comprehend. A truly bizarre scenario.

All of this 'invisibility' is beginning to nag at me psychologically. At some point I will perhaps get really pushy and demands sight of my own results and scan, but for now I'm trying to be likeable and to 'play the game.'

Those suffering depression often speak of the 'black dog.' Sometimes it's not a dog but another animal. Some give their animal a name, they draw it, they personify it. This is a known technique to help some people deal with and manage their depression. I have therefore decided to give my cancer its own physical face.

I haven't quite settled on a name yet, but this creature is now (in my world) the physical embodiment of my cancer and my fight against it. Huge disclaimer. This is in fact a jellyfish hat, probably best suited to my ever-expanding fancy-dress collection. He looks nothing like a cancer cell or indeed anything medical, but I was drawn to him. Something about the legs and the evil, cartoon eyes. In my head it is definitely a 'him.'

Until named (very open to suggestions here?) I'm going to call him, Grim.

Grim is not a proper name, but it's a good description of how I feel about cancer. I don't like having cancer, therefore I don't like Grim. The good thing about Grim is that I can see him, I can feel him. If I want to I can shout at him, punch him, throw him out the window, kick him down the stairs, cry at him...and maybe, just maybe, one day I will be able to escort him to the bonfire in my back garden and say goodbye to him forever. But that day exists only a shimmering mirage at the moment.

For now, Grim is going to be living in my house. Owing to the nature of toddlers and their curiousity I suspect Grim is going to go walkabouts and surprise me by appearing in random places. But that's ok. The nature of cancer is that the emotions and awareness of this often unseen condition leap up to ambush you at unexpected moments. You think you're doing fine, you're functioning semi-normally, you're distracted putting the kids coats and shoes on then 'Wham.' A Macmillan book on the hall table is an unwelcome reminder of my diagnosis.

So it will be with Grim.

Perhaps he'll emerge from under the kitchen table one morning at breakfast perched on my son's head? Maybe he'll pop up in the bathroom during my morning shower as a hand puppet? Or perhaps he'll be brought to the front door by my faithful, present-bringing spaniel when I return from a shopping trip. For now he's going to be an omnipresent character in my household, the physical embodiment of my cancer.

This is good news. The fact that I can see Grim and touch him oddly that makes me happier and more at peace with my bowel cancer and the currently verbal-only fight which has yet to begin physically.

So I say, welcome Grim. Let the battle commence.

To follow my story from diagnosis with bowel cancer through to treatment and beyond, please go to http://mytakeonfeelinggrateful.blogspot.co.uk

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