Yes, I have the bug. The Travel Fever bug. The "I need to get out of this town before my head caves in" type of feeling.
It hits me about every 6 months. And it's intense. I start getting super twitchy and it's all I can do to stop from kidnapping Bryce and just driving. And not stopping for about 7 hours.
I don't know if I just get bored of life or if I have a hard time settling down (that analysis could probably be its own Blog post entirely.) But, regardless of the reason, I just have the insatiable urge to travel. Explore. Do something to break up the monotony of everyday life.
I have been told that I am spontaneous. It may be true. But, it may also be a curse. It comes creeping up on me and I just need to throw all caution the wind and drive far away. Or buy a plane ticket to anywhere. But it has to be acted upon.
For instance, this past weekend my family called me and invited me to the Hunter's Expo in Salt Lake City at the last minute. And so I immediately packed a bag and caught the train and ended up sleeping over (even though I already had plans.) Just because. I don't know if that makes me irresponsible or just restless. It's probably both.
And it's weird because I have tons of friends here that I dearly enjoy and I love my job at KSL and I even really enjoy being in Provo. I like the city, the culture, and the vibe of Northern Utah. But every once in a while I just get the strong urge to leave it all behind and just leave.
I am just thirsting for a good adventure I guess. I get bored of the mundane lifestyle I suppose and so I just need to roadtrip and explore every once in a while to make me feel alive.
Due to our current finances, my adventure will have to be relatively close and cheap. I am thinking maybe Mesa, Denver or San Francisco, three places that I have never been.
India will just have to wait for now.
Monday, February 25, 2013
Memoir of My Mom
(This Blog is lengthy and sad, but I felt it should be shared. I actually wrote it for a Magazine Writing Class in April 2011. My professor commended me for my honesty in writing which is something I have always strived for. I feel that you can often be your most, honest self on paper.)
“Girls, we went to the
doctor. He had some bad news for us. I have breast cancer.” My mom seemed calm
enough as she said these words, but I could see a quiet panic in her eyes. My
younger sister, Hope, and I sat around our long, wooden kitchen table trying to
swallow the news. Cancer? What exactly does cancer do to a person? How could my
mom who has never smoked, drank alcohol, done anything bad to another person in
her life have cancer? As a senior in high school on that chill, February day, I
didn’t understand how my mother’s statement would impact my life three years
later.
I
had what some people could call the “picture-perfect” Latter-Day Saint family.
I am the ninth youngest of ten kids. All of us are active members of our faith,
good upstanding members of society, and best friends with each other. All my
siblings are about two years apart, but we are all very close and have loud,
boisterous, happy get-togethers during holidays and the summers. Everything in
my life was basically perfect, up to the point of that February day.
That night I remember crying by myself in my bed, scared
senseless of what this could mean and how at eighteen years old, I was too
young to go through something like this. I felt like a child that had just had
a bad dream and I couldn’t shake off the feeling that a monster was crouching
in my closet, waiting to pounce. So I did what any child would do. I went and
crawled into bed with my mom and dad. I cried myself to sleep with my mom’s
arms around me, and her tears falling into my hair.
* * * * * *
Mom
had to get a mastectomy. They lopped her breast right off, and she had to wear
a special bra so she didn’t look lopsided. I remember thinking how nice it
would be not to have boobs at all and deal with the hassle of bras and sports
bras. Me and Hope would joke about getting ours removed as well, and how much
easier cross country and basketball would be without all that jiggling and
jostling around.
However, the cancer had spread and I was informed that
Mom would need chemotherapy and radiation. All I had learned about chemo up to
that point was that it makes people look 20 years older, and their hair falls
out. All of these things turned out to be true. Mom showed me her “plug” one
day. It was a port that they implanted under her skin right by her collarbone so
she didn’t have to get an IV every time she got treatments. It was as though
she was trying to make the experience seem scientific and safe. But to me, it
looked like they were turning her into a robot or a lesser form of herself.
Then Mom’s hair started to fall out. My mom used to have
beautiful, straight, long black hair. Then halfway through having all her
babies, she chopped it off into a short “grandma” haircut. Then it turned gray
and slowly faded into a silver color by the time she was fifty. So the Mom I
knew had always had short, thick grayish silver hair that swept across her
forehead from a deep side part. My mom was very practical and down to earth.
She never wore makeup, went to the salon, or any of that “high maintenance
girly stuff.” But it was hard to see Mom bald with no eyebrows or eyelashes.
And it bothered her more than we realized too.
Me, all six of my sisters and three nieces decided to take
a trip with my mom down to Las Vegas to see Phantom
of the Opera in the Vanetian Hotel. On
the three hour drive there, we all discussed Mom’s cancer, and how we all
needed to have strong faith in God so that she could be healed. We believe in
modern day miracles, and expected to see one with Mom because if anyone
deserved it, it was her.
When
we arrived in Vegas, we all got dolled up and fancy. We had decided to enrich
the experience by dressing up in old high school prom dresses with red lipstick
and white opera gloves. We were all laughing about the experience and the
people that would stare at us, when my mom suddenly exclaimed, “Oh shoot. I
forgot my wig!” She was really upset. I hadn’t seen her that bothered and
irritated in a long time. “I just won’t go. I will spoil all the pretty outfits
with my beanie. Just go ahead.” I was shocked that she would actually think
about missing this event, and for the first time in my life, I saw my Mom who
could wear gardening work clothes anywhere, feeling self-conscious about her
lack of hair. We of course made her come, and made her be in the pictures as
well, though she tried to be the one to just take them.
* * * * * *
I
remembered still thinking that Mom was invincible. My mom was that person that
would be baking bread, while watering the garden, working on a quilt, preparing
a lesson for church, organizing picture books, and talking on the phone all at
the same time. She was stronger than cancer. So why was she getting thinner and
having to take naps during the day? And Dad was getting worried. But I knew
that she would get better. If I had strong enough faith in Jesus, then He could
heal her because she was a good, righteous loving person. And God always keeps
His word when good people keep His commandments.
And
Mom did get better for awhile. The summer after my freshman year in college,
our miraculous healing came. The doctors reported that her white cell count was
back up, and the chemo was working faster than they had ever seen. Her cancer
went into remission, and I felt that we had won the battle. Life was perfect
again, and the sun came out to fill the brilliant blue sky. Mom’s hair started
growing back, and most of her energy returned.
Then
during my sophomore year of college and after a six month break from PET scans,
the check up tests came back with bad results. The cancer was back, and it had
spread like wildfire through her body. There was a spot on her lungs, her
liver, her ribs, her hip, and in her lymph nodes. I remember the family
meetings where Dad would gather us all together around the long, wooden kitchen
table, and he’d give us a “pep talk” to give us hope in the future, and that
“we just all need to keep having faith in God and things will work out.” These
talks always made me feel better, and I pushed the doubts out of my mind. Mom
could not die.
I decided to serve a mission for the LDS church like so
many of my older brothers and sisters. I had been assigned to serve my
eighteen-month mission in Mississippi and Louisiana. I remember feeling nervous
about leaving my sick Mom in her condition, but I knew that if I was going to
do God’s work, and dedicate a year and a half of my life to serving him and
others, then God would definitely watch over my mom while I was gone.
When
I hugged my family goodbye when my family dropped me off at the Training Center
for missionaries, I was startled at how much my mother was crying. She always
cried when my family members left on missions because you are basically cut off
from any contact with your family during that time: You can email them once a
week, and make a phone call on Mother’s Day and Christmas. But in my head I
knew that I would see her again, and eighteen months wasn’t really that long.
My mission flew by, and I loved every minute of it. I had
never felt so happy or fulfilled in my entire life. I saw people’s lives change
as they accepted the things we taught them, and as they joined the church and
made a fresh start. I saw so much happiness and growth in my own life, and I
learned to love and serve these hospitable people of the south. I was in
Hattiesburg, Mississippi and me and my companion, Sister Johnson, were getting
ready for church on a bright Sunday morning in November. I was lying on the
couch in the living room, and our cell phone rang. The president of our mission
wanted to speak with me.
“Sister
Heaton, I am afraid I have some bad news,” he began.
I
instantly knew that something really terrible was happening with my mom. I felt
the sheer panic begin to sink in, and I began to sob uncontrollably. Somehow I
had pushed to the back of my mind that my mom had cancer while I was thousands
of miles away, talking about Jesus in the ghettos of Mississippi day in and day
out. My hands started shaking, and I could barely speak. I heard some words about
how my dad had called him, and he wanted me to check my email because my dad
had sent me more information about my mom’s situation. But it was not good, and
she didn’t seem to have much time.
The
words were hollow and faint. How could she not have much time? She had already
beaten cancer once. I mumbled a few replies through my numb sobbing, and hung
up the phone. The email was also a blur. The sobs kept wrenching from my chest
as Sister Johnson held me while I read. The words rang through my pounding head.
“Your mom isn’t going to be with us much longer. We will call in the afternoon
so that you can say goodbye. She has gone downhill really fast in the last two
months. She loves you and is proud of what you are doing.”
I
struggled through church that day, trying to contain my emotions. Most people
thought I was crying nonstop because I was getting moved out of Hattiesburg
that week, and being relocated to different city, Meridian, Mississippi. I had
been serving in Hattiesburg for almost five months, and I had grown close to
the church members and converts in that city. But I let them think what they
wanted. I didn’t want to explain myself to these people. They didn’t know my
Mom or the impact this would have on my life, and I didn’t feel that they deserved
to know.
Then the phone call from my dad came, just as church got
over. I instantly cried when I heard his voice on the phone. It had been months
since I had talked to my family, and I hadn’t realized how much I missed them
until that moment. I felt like a homesick puppy dog that wandered off to play
and just realized that it was lost, and didn’t know its way back home.
My
dad explained that they hadn’t told me how serious Mom’s situation was before
now because they didn’t want me to worry and lose focus on the work here. I
nodded and tried to comprehend what he was saying. Death? Not gonna make it?
What did these terms mean? I had heard them before, but now I couldn’t make
sense of it all. He wanted me to say goodbye to my mom. “She hasn’t been able
to talk for a few days now because the cancer has attacked her vocal cords, and
she is too sick. Just talk to her and tell her anything you want to say. She
will hear you, and she seems to be comprehending things pretty well today.”
My
heart pounded in my chest, and my throat constricted with my sobs. I didn’t
know if I would be able to speak at all. “Mom, I love you. I will miss you.
Thanks so much for always being my best friend.” That was all I could choke
out. I heard her raspy breathing that will be stuck in my memory for the rest
of my life. My dad later told me that when she heard my voice, her eyes lit up,
and it looked like she was trying to say something.
I
couldn’t sleep that night. Words and thoughts and that raspy breathing kept
pounding through my head. Finally, at 3 a.m. I couldn’t handle it anymore.
“Sister
Johnson, are you awake?”
“Yes.”
“Do
you want to go on a walk with me right now? I can’t sleep.”
And
because she is that quiet, loyal, understanding person, Sister Johnson replied,
“Yes. I would love to. I can’t sleep either.”
We
walked down the bike trail located right behind our apartment. It was dark, and
humid, but quiet and still. I felt numb as we walked in silence down that
narrow paved path. We reached a bridge that ran over the top of the freeway,
and walked to the middle and stopped. I stood there side by side with Sister
Johnson, and we watched the cars drive underneath us with their bright
headlights zooming by. I realized as I watched them, that I felt a slight
anger. How could these people’s worlds continue on just fine like this when my
world had suddenly stopped and shattered? I thought about dying, and I wondered
what it felt like. Ironically, several cars began to bright us with their
headlights and honk as they drove by as if to say, “Don’t jump. Things will
work out.”
My
Mom passed away 2 days later. My dad called me with the news as me and Sister
Johnson were in the ghetto walking off a splintered, wooden porch that was
littered with cigarette butts. The old black man we had gone to teach a lesson
to that day had flaked out on his appointment. I promised myself that I
wouldn’t cry that day, and I didn’t at first. I felt a numbness begin to settle
in my mind. This wasn’t real. I walked around like a robot for the next few weeks,
numb to any emotion, just going through the motions, and forcing myself to
breathe in and out.
I
decided not to go home for the funeral. God needed me in Mississippi, and that
is where I would stay. I wrote a letter to be read at my mom’s funeral, but
struggled to find closure in the words. I wanted to hug her more than anything
else. I didn’t sleep at night, and began losing weight from the stress. I lay
in bed crying silently to myself one night so that I didn’t wake my companion.
I finally got out of bed and walked into the living room. I sat down on the
floor, and hugged my knees to my chest and stared at the picture of Jesus we
had hanging on the tan stucco wall of the apartment.
How
could she have died? Didn’t I have enough faith? Hadn’t she been healed before?
The words rang in the silence, as the picture of Jesus stared back at me
through my tears. Suddenly an overwhelming peace enveloped me. I knew that I
would see my Mom again someday. The numbness was shattered, at least for that
small moment, and I seemed to glimpse a sliver of sunlight.
It
seemed that all the people I met and talked to in Meridian had just lost
someone. I cried every time I heard the word cancer. I don’t know if I had
never realized there was so much death in the world before, or if I just hadn’t
been so acutely affected by it until now. I cried and prayed with strangers on
their porches, and in their living rooms. I rarely talked about my own loss,
because the less I talked about it, the less real it was, and the more likely
it would be that my mom would be standing at the airport when I got home. But I
tried to give other people hope as I talked about how there is life after death
and families can be together forever.
* * * * * * *
Six
months flew by, and before I knew it I was heading home from my mission. I left
with great sadness because Mississippi had become my home, and the people had
become my family. I bawled all during the plane ride, and I bawled when I
stepped off the airplane and saw my family waiting for me. I instinctively looked
for that grayish, white hair in the crowd, but it wasn’t there. This was real.
My mom was gone.
When
I arrived home with my family from the airport, I dragged my luggage up to my
old bedroom, still the same after eighteen months of emptiness, just a little
dusty. I paused in the doorway of my mom’s bedroom, as if waiting for her to
appear out of her office, and to see that wide smile and crinkled hazel eyes.
As the reality sunk in, I felt that same feeling of despair and numbness start
to close in.
It
has been almost a year now since the moment I walked into my house, and
realized that my mom really wasn’t there. I still feel depressed when I think
about it, and I feel the loss heavily in my life. There are still times that I
feel she will be in her room when I walk by, sitting in her old, green armchair
reading a novel, her eyebrows furrowed in concentration. I think I still feel
that way because I wasn’t there to see her get really sick, or to see her lying
in a coffin.
I
have the moments of peace every now and then just like that dark night in
Meridian. It’s almost a reassurance that everything is ok, and my mom is still
alive, but we just can’t see her. But for me, it still hasn’t ended. And I want
it to end on a good note because I don’t like sad stories.
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