Four weeks ago, the fourteen-year-old nephew of this Lead Innovation Specialist at a university hospital was diagnosed with inoperable brain cancer.
“I’m getting to see the other side of medicine. Normally, I work in innovation, commercialization, and idea development, not in the clinical end. I wonder if these medical professionals, in caring for people who face such insurmountable odds, walk around all the time carrying this weight I’m hauling now.”
To help her family bear the devastating diagnosis, she leans on her strengths, scheduling doctor’s visits and keeping a calendar for her sister and brother-in-law. Facing such heartache, however, the mind burrows and spirals in its own directions. She finds herself bargaining sometimes, philosophizing others. She can feel guilty one second, and the next, utterly helpless: “It’s like there’s a rabbit in my head,” she explained, “and I’m just trying to get the rabbit to hop a little less.”
Listener Poet Moriah Cohen
Practicum Poem
CLPC Winter 2023
The Mind is a Rabbit Making Warrens of its Grief
you schedule bloodwork
follow-ups
calendar appointments on
post-it notes emails
to your sister
like you are brushing
crumbs from the counter
with one hand
while the other
tallies
statistics in this masterclass
on cancer—-how
often patients die
within twelve months
the likelihood of its being
inoperable
the way it is
in your nephew’s
thalamus the precision
of radiation
the size of the tumor
how does one live still
with this knowledge
and not say
the heart with its
many burrows
and chambers
is unlivable
you watch your nephew
pull out enough
hair to make
a nest
mourn the arrow knocked
off course
say you do but do not
pray there is no
quota on catastrophe
no lamb’s foot
nor talisman no insurance
to warden the kennel
when you cry you steal
your sister’s suffering
have no right
to pivotal
transformation
another baby
in a house you yanked
out of a hat
there is a rabbit
in your head
its foot on a brick scale
there is no through
no comfort to be born
is to be blind
and hairless
and prey
to offer your body
to the fire
and pretend
you won’t burn
“I always believe, no matter what the doctor says, that I will be cured,” she says as her sister sits next to her.
“I wonder if these medical professionals, in caring for people who face such insurmountable odds, walk around all the time carrying this weight I’m hauling now.”
He had been trying to cope with the grief ever since and was on a quest for soul-searching and meaning-making.
She spoke about the ways this traumatic event shaped who she is today: a person with an “unshakeable peace” born of deep faith,
She wanted to help people feel comfortable and transform the shame around colon issues. "I want to talk about things that matter, the things people don't want to discuss.
When we met, she was coming off a stretch of nine 14-hour shifts. She was tired but in good spirits.
She reflected on how her resilience was born from moments of shared mirth amid life's trying chapters.
“Life is complex and dirty, but digging in is important to me,” she said. “Maybe if more of us understood history, we could understand each other better.”
We are expected to research, contribute to scholarship, earn grants – all on our own time.
We are expected to research, contribute to scholarship, earn grants – all on our own time.
Every day, I try to see through the patient lens, and I ask: what can we do to change this broken system?
She was very proud of her daughter and has hopes for “a bright future that’s as pain free as possible”
“I’m trying to focus on doing little things to make people feel better during everything that’s going on in the world,” she told me.
“It’s hard to see others struggle,” she said. “How can I help with their struggle without struggling myself?”
"I'd tell her it's OK to be loud...it's OK to challenge and to bring all of you into these spaces where no one looks like you..."
“I'm continuously questioning: did I do it right?" she said. "I’ve always done a good amount of second-guessing, but I’m re-learning how to show up differently.”
“It’s weird,” she said. “This is one of the biggest accomplishments of my life, but it doesn’t feel like it.”
"It changed me; It changed the way I look at life," said this woman about her profound experience during her pregnancy.
“It’s been more challenging than normal lately,” she said. “I’m only one person. It's a struggle for me to say no, but I can’t do everything that’s being asked of me right now.”
"I've been processing how to make the most of the small amount of life we have to live," said this physician.