January 25, 2016 - Can someone please turn on the boob?

I was in charge of finding the light fixtures. It was the first of many hysterical things that would happen during this house renovation. I went in search of at the local home store, but I couldn’t get past the fact that every single fixture I needed for the hallways all looked like boobs. And some were more boob-like than others, but all carried the boob formation. Every single one of them. So I am standing in the aisle staring up at the ceiling laughing. And I mean really laughing. Like hide-it-under-your-breath kind of chuckling so the employee next to you with the restock inventory doesn’t haul you off to the local institution laughing. Who stares at a ceiling and laughs? I tried so hard to see it for what it was – Edison’s mode of improving the next century - but I just couldn’t get past the Impostor likeness. I then spent the next hour, yes hour, trying to find the one that least looked like a boob, but sticking with the style we needed (white glass, oiled bronze frame, flush mount, 3 bulbs). I found the prettiest boob I could find in our price range, threw it in the cart, and went home. “Ron, what does this remind you of?” “A boob.”  See what going through breast reconstruction can do to you? EVERY TIME I see a flush mount light fixture, this is what I see. And I guess now you will too. (You can thank me later). “Ron, will you please turn on the boob?” The store employee next to me in the store, however, seemed completely oblivious to my new discovery and left me to laugh all alone. We got the boob hung this weekend and now I find myself saying “Ron, can you please turn on the boob?”

Hysterical thing #2. Now I know you may have had to be there for this one, but go with me. It was hysterical. We are ripping out the floors to replace with hardwoods. Long story short, but we now are doing the entire downstairs instead of just the master bedroom as originally planned (Thank you, super fantastic deal!). Part of the new plans included the half bath. Well in order to do that install, we needed to remove the toilet. It’s now close to 11 pm after an exhausting 13+ hours (day umpteen of such!) of ripping staples out of the floor and such when we realize we need to get the toilet removed tonight since install starts tomorrow. I hear Ron in there removing bolts and then “Sally, get the front door!” I walk around the corner to see him bear hugging the commode. (Picture Ron FACING the toilet mind you, straddling the bowl between his legs, bear hugging the back tank portion, with his chin on the tank lid, and waddling down the hallway carrying this 40+ pound awkward contraption toward the front door.) And of course Sally starts giggling. Ron gives me the angry look as he is juggling this awkward beast at 11 pm at night after an exhausting day of serious manual labor where even our teeth hurt. But how could I not laugh? Did you picture that in your head? Did you? And out the door he went, through the iced walkway, to the garage. And there I stood again, alone, trying to stifle the hysterical laughter. I might have been a tad giddy after the exhaustion night after night.

 And then earlier in the same day there was hysterical laughter #3. As I am standing in the garage with Ron as we are “making room” for our cars, I glance out the garage door to see if it is snowing. Longing to be out there instead of in box hauling mode I was in. Suddenly, I see over the top of Ron’s car to see my car hood car inching its way down the driveway. Inch, Inch, Inch. “RON!!!!! RUN!!! The car is rolling down the driveway!” Ron goes tearing out of the garage, fumbling with the key fob, and jumps in the car. Then I see the car reversing back up the driveway. Ron gets out of the car, comes back into the garage all cool, calm, and collected. I am standing there wide eyed wondering how in the world it was so perfectly timed that I happened to glance out of the door at the exact moment the car starts its get-away stroll. Shew. Crises adverted. Head back inside to the dining room to once again start ripping out nails. Climb back onto the floor. Start pulling out nails with the dang needle nose pliers. Cussing inside my head as to why we didn’t hire this out. Wondering how I am going to get myself back up off the floor after having sat with my legs in a v shape in front of me and leaning my aching back over for hours on end over the last few days while yanking with all of my might for not 10, but now over 500 nails. Look out the window to dream of the crystal blue seas of Caicos. Inch. Inch. Inch. “RON!!!! RUN!!! It’s rolling again!!!!!” Ron goes tearing back out of the house, through the garage down the driveway……OK, now how does this happen not once, but twice to us! And how do I so happen to time my day dreaming moments at the exact right time? Needless to say, the car was then parked back in the driveway with 2 bricks under the back tires, the emergency brake on and in gear. Again, like while standing in the department store, I was the only one laughing.

Then comes the not so hysterical portion of this house episode. We had been suspicious when we bought the house. That baseboard in the kitchen looked a little “off”. We were right. At inspection they found a small leak, which was “repaired” and all was well (until we found it leaking again after inspection and it was inspected and repaired again). But yesterday, when we pulled up the vinyl, what did one find? Mold (well, what we think is mold anyway). You could see it, you could smell it, you could feel it. And now we sit, not laughing, waiting with the floor exposed for the expert to come to see if it is isolated to that portion of the floor or has it seeped behind and up into the wall that connects to the floor there. Will the wall need to come down? And did I mention it is the one wall I had just painstakingly painted only a few hours before? The man better not tell me we have to pull off the sheet rock …that I just painted. To say I am terrified of mold would be an understatement. It’s horrible in the best of states. With my working in bone marrow transplant I see the nasty outcomes of such predators for people with no immune system. And now in my pulmonary fibrosis state I am over the top terrified of it. So that is being dealt with STAT! Unfortunately, there was no laughter during or after this story. In fact, I felt a little anger. But what can you do? And so we wait. (Update: The good news is it turned out to be a super small area isolated to the vinyl floor. No wall contamination. No crawl space contamination. It's now completely gone. Crisis averted).

I say all of this as a reminder to myself that even in moments (weeks, months) where you feel like life is just over the top, there will still always be moments of laughter. On a day when just 24 hours before I felt I had hit my last ounce of energy and the frustration-induced-rant was spilling over the end of my tongue came a day not of changed circumstances, but a day of carefully disperse moments of laughter in the middle of all of the exhausting muck.  And those moments perfectly arrived to give me a little burst to get through the next nail. The next carpet square. The next mold spore. When every fiber of every muscle was throbbing, He sent me a few moments of laughter. (Well, laughter once the crisis was adverted…and evidently if you aren’t the one carrying the toilet!) Those moments are always there. When life gets out of sorts, they are still there. You just have to be open to seeing them. And it helps to have good friends helping you along the way. 

Can someone please turn on the boob? Oh yeah, I forgot, the electricity is out. 

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And the one I actually chose.

January 22, 2016 - God is...

I officially live in Durham now. I wasn't really expecting that when we started our house search, but we all know sometimes what we expect is now always what we get. I don't miss the old house at all, and I don't know how that is even possible. Well, I do miss my garden tub, but honestly that is about it. And that is only because I was in the habit of using it every night before bed, especially in the winter. The rest of it now is just a house we used to live in. God sure did his thing there. I was really mourning the house the day we moved out and then it was just done. I moved, and I moved on. And that is saying a lot because I am currently living in a not so happy go lucky renovation zone. We had to move upstairs because we are prepping the downstairs for the hardwood installation happening next week. After that, we can bring furniture out of our loft and back into the downstairs area. I honestly feel like I am living in a cardboard box in the interim...and I guess I am. You will recall we tried to install the week we moved in, but they arrived the wrong color (Yes, Pat, I am still hearing you to stay focused and encouraged). Well, what a blessing that fiasco turned into with us finding replacement hardwoods for a 3rd of the price. So now instead of flooring the master bedroom, we are now able to do the whole downstairs for the same price. Score! BUT, it now has me living in a reno zone, and let me say that gets old very quick. Every single night it is something. We are currently pulling out all of the quarter round so that this weekend we can rip out all of the carpet, vinyl, and hardwoods currently in place. To say I am tired would be an understatement. We are still running our full work days at work, then coming home to 4 or 5 more hours of house prep. EVERY NIGHT! My arms are tired. My legs are tired. My soul is tired. Yesterday, I was in a rant about how exhausting this all is. Yesterday, I needed to vent. Yesterday I vented a lot. Today, well today, I am just here getting it all done. We are on this urgent timeline because Ron's shoulder surgery is coming up in 2 weeks. After that he is in a sling for 8 weeks, and "out of commission" for 3 months total. So we have these 2 weeks to get it all done. The clock is ticking.

God continues to just "show up" in all of this. We were able to get this amazing price on hardwoods after our mishap. We no longer think about the old house. We were given a bunch of left over tile from the people who bought our old house (also downsizing; also delightful people; also crazy how we have gotten to know and enjoy them) so we have enough free tile to upgrade the vinyl in our bathrooms and laundry room. So while I am ubber stressed with the renovations and the exhaustion there of, I am still able to vividly see how God chose all of this for us. It simply makes it a little easier to get through. And believe me, I will take any extra ease I can get! Last week, I lugged over 30 boxes up to the second floor. We painted ceilings. We cleared out the garage. And tonight, I get to paint new quarter round to install on the hardwoods. Note my feigned excitement.  I am very frustrated with the day to day of this move, but I have peace in the big picture of knowing we are supposed to be here. Life will slow back down soon, and I will one day find myself with no house installation to do. Tonight as I climb into bed with everything aching like the forty year old that I am (but the imposters aren't sagging!), I crave those days.

In these exhausting few weeks, I am learning. I am learning about myself.  I am learning about my faith.

God is teaching me resilience.
God is teaching me to find not only contentment, but excitement in less.
God is teaching me that hard physical work with your spouse can bring about a myriad of marital advantages.
God is teaching me that ranting really doesn't fix anything but rather makes every one around you miserable too.
God is teaching me to recognize sincere friendship.
God is teaching me that trusting in his plan may have huge surprises and outcomes.
God is teaching me that what we think is perfect for us, is sometimes proven wrong.
God is teaching me that choosing the "crazy" path can be exactly what we need.
God is teaching me to think outside the box.
God is teaching me that life feels more fulfilling and accomplished with hard work.
God is teaching me just how awesome his choice in spouse was for me.
God is teaching me that I have to choose to be an equally good spouse for Ron. It does not come naturally in stressful moments.
God is teaching me to keep plugging forward even when others doubt your choice.
God is teaching me to seek him in exhaustion.
God is teaching me you can't teach an old dog new tricks. I will evidently always look at Wake county on the weather map.


God is still teaching me His way will always be better than mine.

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January 12, 2016 - A slumber that actually slumbers

I can’t believe I am writing. I would not even begin to know how to do these last 4 days justice through words. I also don’t recall ever in my life being this exhausted or sleep deprived. Those things in combo will likely result in a garbled up combination of misprint and memory folly. To say I am “out of sorts” would be a slap in the face of what I really am. I plan to rectify that tonight with a Benadryl induced slumber for at least four consecutive hours of sleep, which is long overdue. In the meantime, I've placed a want ad "Wanted: A slumber that actually slumbers." 

We spent the entire last week taking items from Old to New after work in our cars. So when the day of the move came, I thought it would be a streamlined event of a few hours. It turned into an organized chaos of 13 hours with friends devoting too much time to our lives while lifting a sofa that struggled to fit through the door. Having started at 8 that morning by picking up the truck, we completed with the truck being turned back in after 2 a.m. For two people who live without clutter, we sure managed to have a lot of furniture and boxes to be moved. And I am hopeful we have friends (and a very devoted sister in law) that are still speaking to us! It's not lost on me that I am now too old to do this. But move day isn’t the culprit here, it was the 2 solid weeks of after midnight preparation prior that catapulted me into dis-orbit. This isn’t that fog of frustration, irritation, off balance that plagued me most of December, that has resolved, but rather a snow-ball effect of sleep deprivation and tizzy of packing where there wasn’t a single moment of downtime to be found. A 12+ hours moving day followed by another night spent without consecutive hours of sleep simply sealed the deal. Not all sleep is sleep. And not all slumber is slumber. And still, now 2 days later, I have barely even begun to unpack and still have yet to gain the prize of restorative sleep. My niece said our garage looks like an episode of “hoarders”. Very well put. It does indeed.

So it came as no surprise to me when this morning I woke up from my few hours of sleep (again!) to find myself very much not myself. Despite this, I managed to shower, and dress (having gone to 4 different rooms to find enough items to make an attire), and drive myself to the office and find my desk where very quickly soon after, I lost it. How unfortunate for the coworker who happened to walk into my cube to ask me how it was going. Her simple gesture of kindness resulted in the water dam spilling open and the contents of exhaustion, sleep deprivation, and overwhelming disorientation flow into a heaping puddle of tears. I simply didn’t know up from down anymore and every ounce of lost sleep spent moving a box was plastered on my now overly swollen face. I immediately knew (and with her validation) I had to do something to reset myself and that meant a very long winter slumber would have to be in my very near future. I made the decision then and there that I would get through this work day and then head home to ignore every unopened box. And I did just that! Now I sit with computer in hand in the bed waiting for slumber to come. I am hopeful that writing will clear this mind and then restful lengthy sleep will follow...And I have no doubt this will be the exact same plan for my next 2, if not 3, nights. I am also hopeful that tomorrow …Paint colors will seem more calming, work emails more easily deciphered, thoughts better regurgitated, groceries less absent and take-out containers no more, sofas less overbearing, dining rooms less compact, sub-floors more inviting, unopened boxes less hoarded, silverware drawers less misplaced, dog smells less overbearing, and finally familiarity and sleep patterns restored (as I have never felt more disoriented than I do this week).

You guys have been asking me how I have been doing. I am simply smack dab in the in middle of restoring normalcy. God’s prompting certainly doesn’t always result in smooth sailing. A 12+ hour moving day proved that. But I know overtime it will bring calm. Yesterday, we went back to the old house to clean up and then grab the last few remaining items. As we walked back in to do a final check, Ron and I turned to each other in a now empty hallway and recalled the memories had. This home was the beginning of our marriage. This home softened the emotions following the death of a parent. This home absorbed the choice of mastectomy. This home delivered God capturing our hearts to live less of this world and more of him. So much of our coupled life was lived out here. The new house will soon hold its own stories. They are already starting. God brought us here, and He has not forgotten us. Now to see where it all will go and how this next story will be told.


Isaiah 44:21  “Pay attention, O Jacob, for you are my servant, O Israel. I, the Lord, made you, and I will not forget you.


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January 7, 2016 - Pat

She sent it to me a few weeks ago, during the time I was in my mental funk. It arrived in an email to me titled “I’m with you.”  It would be her last email to me.

 Sally,
I learned this quote when I was much younger and can’t forget it. 

      Life is mixture of sunshine and rain,
Teardrops and laughter, pleasure and pain.
We can’t have all bright days, but it’s certainly true
There was never a cloud that the sun didn’t shine through. 

Love and prayers,
Pat

She had typed her words to me in response to my blog post.  That was Pat, the encourager. I recently had learned that she read every single one of my posts and followed along as the words flowed from my screen to hers. She knew more of my story than most of you, as she also was a very dear friend of my mom’s. When my mom slept in my spare bedroom for the first few weeks after my mastectomy, Pat would get the inside scoop from nightly emails. She was the faithful prayer warrior through the 5 additional surgeries that would follow. And when fibrosis reared its ugly head, she was there with every step praying me from one day of funk to the next. She was Pat. And encourage is what Pat did. She died yesterday after a short battle with Leukemia and Pat’s world now feels her void.

I got the news while ranting to my sister about my hardwood floors. It honestly was perfect timing.  I had just experienced the most frustrating morning. We had closed on our house the evening before and this day was our first day in the new house. We were prepping it for the formal move coming in a few days. This day specifically was set for the arrival and installation of hardwoods, painting, carpet cleaning, and other to-do tasks. So when they pulled up the carpet in the master bedroom, prepped the subfloor and then opened  the box of hardwoods, we were quite disgruntled to find the wrong floors had been ordered. It has seemed pretty fitting for my week for this mishap to occur. In my reactive ways, I went from “all planned out and right on track” to now “what are we going to do???!!!” in a few short seconds. And as I was typing out my roar to my family, in came the email from Dad telling me of Pat. In that very moment my soul found calm. The floors slipped into perspective as Pat’s words came to mind. 

There was never a cloud that the sun didn’t shine through.

Even in death, Pat perfectly finds a way to remind me that while life will always have a sting, that sting is temporary through the grace of Christ.  She knows that oh so well in her own battles as leukemia definitely brought a sting, but her strength through circumstance served as a shining light of life pointing upward instead of inward.  The sun (son) always shines through. Sneaky Pat unknowingly using death to redirect me back to all that the Son can do. 

This is the first of many posts Pat will not get to read, but it seemed fitting to pay tribute to her journey that ran simultaneous to mine. She was there for all of the many moments of my last 3 years, hanging on to every word. She was there with encouraging words and prayerful support. She was there when the funk came, and she celebrated when the funk dispersed. (She was even there when I ran my snowmobile into a tree!) She pushed me forward all while fighting through her own battle. Hers was a battle fought with dignity, and little complaint. And her words penned above to me on a day when I felt at a low now remind me again that truly great warriors in Christ are hard to find, but Pat led the way and gives me the example of head held high and hope in tow no matter what life brings you.

Heaven gained another great, Pat Transou. Encourager to the end. 



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January 4, 2016 - Enough said

It’s a good thing I found the jovial Sally again last week. Just in time! I got locked in the garage. You, had you been staring into the glass windows of the electrical garage door, would have found yourself doubled over in laughter at the Calamity that was unfolding. Me, locked in the garage in my car with no way out, felt a little less laughter. I was in the process of leaving for an appointment (Ron having left an hour earlier just fine) and went to push the garage door opener only to find it would raise up 3 inches and immediately go back down to closed. Push the button again. Go up 3 inches and then back down. Get out of the car and go to the wall control. Push the button. Go up 3 inches and then back down. I tried it on both devices about 10 times feeling quite sure the next “push” was going to be the magic trick. Then push 11 came. Go up 3 inches and then back down. Pick up the phone and call Ron. “Hun, did you have trouble getting out of the garage today?” “Nope.”  “Of course you didn’t. Ok, so how do I my car out?” (Me keeping Ron on speaker for him to walk me through the process). 

Now in normal circumstances, this would have been a pretty minor ordeal. However, as you well know, life for me is not quite normal these days. Keep in mind I am in route to an appointment which I now know I will be likely not be making. Sitting in the garage on one side is my car. On the other side and spilling into the middle is a flatbed trailer loaded to the brim with items going to the new house this week. Of course that obstacle now sits in the middle directly under the “pull lever” I needed to pull in order to unhook the garage door. We all know a door doesn’t malfunction when the garage is in its normal state.  So…I go find a ladder, on the other side of the trailer mind you. Climb up the ladder (in a dress and ballet shoes), lean far out to the right with one arm with holding the ladder with the other to try and grab the cord above the trailer. Finally, while on tip toes on a ladder, I reach and yank the pull cord to unhook it. Climb down the ladder. Head around the trailer to the garage door and reach down to lift with all my might without bursting a gall bladder. Quickly realize the garage door gained weight over the holidays, and I instead need to get in Sumo stance (in a dress) and try again. Get the garage door up about 2 feet and “clasp”, I hear the garage door hook re-engage itself with the pull down lever. GRRRR! Let the door down. Go back to the ladder, climb up the ladder to grab the pulley. Balance. Yank. Back down the ladder. Back to the garage door. Sumo stance. Pull up with all my strength as fast as I can to get it past the “hook” before it re-engages. Score! Except now I am standing on tip toes holding a garage door that won’t stay up in the fully open position. I’m glancing around the garage (while holding the door above my head) to find something to “brace” the door in the open position so I can drive my car out. Nothing. OK, pull the ladder over with my leg and get it next to me, climb up on the ladder while holding the door. Marvel that all of my appendages are still in tack and climb up higher on the ladder with the garage door to get it high enough to lock in the flat position to stay fully open instead of the curved position where it will come crashing down to the closed position. Almost wet my pants. Climb down the ladder. Move the ladder. Grab the cell phone (Ron is still on speaker phone) Run to car. Crank car. Drive like a bat out of the garage in full fear of hearing the door come crashing down on top of my car. Get outside and stare at the now empty space in the garage. Mumble a few not so nice words in the <35 degree weather. Say to Ron “Well, the car is still in one piece. Ok, now how am I going to get it back down?”. Get out of car. Go back inside garage. Climb the ladder. Balance, strain, cough and wheeze. Pull the door down (ok, so maybe I wasn’t so successful holding it and it came down heavily on its own). Jump off the ladder. Stand inside the now closed door garage with my car outside the garage. Go inside (all grateful the door was unlocked since my keeps where in the car now outside the locked garage). Out the front door. Back to car 30 minutes after the first time I tried. Notice one of my neighbors staring at me. “Having trouble with your door?” Remind myself I need to be a good neighbor.

The good news is the door isn’t broken, it just needed some grease on the chain. The last time I got locked in the garage, I was on crutches about 3 weeks after knee surgery. Also in January. But in that case locked out of both the car and the house (my cell phone, jacket, and crutches I had just put in the now locked car. That story may have ended with my peeing on myself. Maybe. So there is some improvement in this most recent scenario at least.

I'm still rather jovial. It's a miracle. It’s house closing week. Enough said. 



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January 1, 2016 - And then...Tuesday came

It's been a month of figuring myself out. Or maybe I should say not figuring myself out. This funk that now inhabits my mindset has been long lived. The assurance of Christmas coming and restoring my balance, much to my dismay, came and went unaccomplished. It wasn't depression. It wasn't anger. It wasn't hopeless. It was rather frustration, irritation, and fatigue. The tiniest of things set me off kilter. And the biggest of things kept me off balanced. I'd found a new norm...and I didn't like it one bit. I'm grateful that you, if in my presence, most likely would not be aware of my demeanor. In fact, the social and work environment re-grounded me a bit. But then the re-entry back into the packing of boxes, or the gathering of documents, or the ninth running of errand, or the the climbing of 10 stairs and finding myself winded brings back into the play the bubble of irritation/frustration/or fatigue. And then...Tuesday came.

Tuesday morning I woke up different. Or rather, I woke up familiar. Familiar had been missing for at least one, and now maybe two, months. And it makes no sense whatsoever why Tuesday was the magic day. We are still right in the middle of the woes (ok Sally, be positive...the joys!) of moving. This coming is our last weekend in our "forever home" as God decided "forever" was better defined by his terms rather than my own. So as I am STILL packing up boxes and organizing de-activations and re-activations, and paint colors, and mail transfers, and the mess of loan paper work, and closing documents, I was suspecting my funk would only grow. I had confided in a very small few that I was worried what next week would bring out of me. I felt I was on my emotional last limb. And then....Tuesday came.

It was as dramatic as night and day, this Tuesday. I had found my chuckle again. I found anticipation. Grabbing a box and unloading the closet felt freeing (in that I love to organize), instead of debilitating in the frustration of one more thing to do. I see my to-do list and now want to mark it off instead of curling up in exhaustion of what is left to do. I was suspicious it was to be short lived, this highly anticipated return to familiar, surely limited to a few hours or a half day at best. But then the next day came and voila! "Happy-GO-Lucky Sally" is still in tact! And then at dinner tonight with my life's "board of directors", I was able to contribute and laugh! The timing is bizarre, but the timing is appreciated as next week is most definitely going to be a zoo. And a zoo is much better tackled with happy-go-lucky Sally in tact compared to ticked-off Sally who I now loathe and want to bury in a deep sopping wet hole in the "forever" back yard.

Had the rest for the weary finally come? (Though I doubt my level of weary is what the verse was targeting in Matthew Chapter 11.) Had my process of restoration finally begun processing? What I know is I am suddenly finding happiness in the day to day moments of moving. Don't get me wrong, it's is still a ridiculous to-do list that would have any of us spinning, but I see the purpose in the task and find it manageable instead of constricting. My corner has been turned and it just may be long-lived!

Simultaneously, I find myself at a place where mastectomy is behind me. Still part of me in that it always will be in the here and now, these impostor boobs and their creation story. But I have this understanding (expectation?) that they've made their last surgical debut. The complication is over and the angst in check. I've not yet reached the same verdict with the fibrosis. I know not yet what that might bring. There is the underlying wave of suspicion that its effects have yet to unfold or fully declare itself. My head tells me it's contained, but my heart sways me in the uncertainty.  Once every few weeks, Medscape sends me summary reviews on disease state topics. Coronary Artery Disease, Obesity, Asperger's Syndrome, Ewings sarcoma. One never knows what you will get. You open your inbox and contained before you are a multitude of literature reviews and clinical studies compiled for the topic at hand. This week? "The killer without a cause." "How do you identify and manage this frequently fatal condition." "Evolution and risk factors for early mortality in IPF." You guessed correctly. Pulmonary Fibrosis. Seriously?!?! What are the chance of that timing. Of the billions of diagnoses to be reviewed and documented THIS is the one they send to me the very month of my scare.  I have radiation induced pulmonary fibrosis. Idiopathic isn't in my diagnosis list any more. So why does it weigh on my mind still? I need to understand more why I have the symptoms and where it will go. Knowledge is empowering....and also a plague. I'm eager for February to come to gain some better understanding.  Delightful Fibrosis Guru will ease my mind. That's her job.

Until then, I'm working to focus on the comfort radiation induced comparatively brings, and I remind myself of life outside of self. I have a friend who has entered hospice. I have a friend who's son is now wayward. I have a friend who had breast reconstruction this week. I have a friend undergoing lumpectomy next week. I have a friend who is a single parent of 2 having difficulty navigating the course. I have a friend whose husband has lost his voice. I have a friend who attempted to take their life. All of these are reminders of how blessed I am in circumstance and all will soon be reminders of how God prevails. God has provided me a hand picked house of his choosing. God has provided me a job I adore. God has provided me the fulfillment that comes from family.  God has provided me my story of resilience in circumstance, blessings and grace undeserved, and the power to see through the muck to what beauty lies underneath.  He provides me vision when I seem off course, as I have these last 2 months, and reminders that he can bring me back. God has provided me restoration. And guess what? He gave you the same.



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