I feel I must explain

My blog title. It comes from the book "The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe" by C.S. Lewis.

When the children have come into the world of Narnia and met the kindly Mr. and Mrs. Beaver (quite literally talking beavers, for those who haven't read the books), they are told about the great and powerful lion called Aslan, the true king of Narnia. Susan, the oldest girl, is quite afraid of lions, and proceeds to ask "Is he safe?"

To this, the wise Mr. Beaver replies "He's a lion. Of course he's not safe. But he's good."

You may or may not know that the Chronicles of Narnia are a more than obvious alagory for the life and some of the teachings of Jesus. This line is both literary genius and profound theological truth. (I find that most anything C.S. Lewis says is, also).

Following Jesus may not, and indeed will not be, the safe choice in life. But the goodness of God will, in the end, be more than enough reward for the choice. So my title is both a philisophical announcement to my readers of my beliefs, as well as a reminder for myself.

God promises that I will not always be safe, but that it will always work toward good.

Friday, July 1, 2011

A Terrible Beauty

I am writing this in response to my thoughts on my summer job.

Most summer jobs involve long, hot hours in a food stand, or longer, dull hours in a retail store stocking shelves with cans of tomatoes, or folding jeans and hanging t-shirts. Sometimes, if you're lucky, it involves late, hectic hours serving ungrateful people and their obnoxious children and earning just a little more in tips than your unfortunate retail-bound friends. Even more seldom, once in a great while, you land an internship in a field of your choosing, and get a taste of what your life could be like in a "real" job. This was NOT my summer.

Less than 24 hours after returning from school in my boyfriends tiny blue Saturn (which was packed to the HILT, poor thing) at an ungodly hour and sleeping on the worst futon in recorded history, I found myself alone with a woman who I didn't really know. She was naked, and I was soaked.

Now, this might sound like the juicy pages of some strange brand of novel erotica, but let me assure you, it was the FARTHEST thing from sexy in any context.

The woman, who will only be known as K, has stage 4 breast cancer, which has spread into her spine and down her back into her hips and legs, and now up into her brain. The cancer will kill her, and by the current estimates based on her condition, it will kill her soon.

My job this summer has been to help take care of her while her family gets rest and some time away. For anyone who has taken care of another adult in any capacity, much less someone very ill, you will understand that it is incredibly tiring work, and that breaks are needed frequently, but usually comes more seldom than that.
The impression that I got was that this would just be for a weekend or so, and maybe a few days here and there, but not for very long. I was happy to be able to provide relief for these poor, haggard looking people who so obviously needed a little R&R. Also, I figured out that I would be paid for these few days, and I was pretty stoked. Then I learned that I was getting paid double anything I'd ever been paid for a job, and I was even more excited. I thought- "A few days on a bed besides the futon, some major spending money, and I get to hang out with a lady who I remember being pretty nice. Awesome!"

As it usually does in my life, when it rains, it pours. Turns out, this has been MUCH more significant than a week's commitment. And the work, while on paper, does not appear terribly taxing ("medication management, dressing, toileting, bathing"), it has without a doubt been one of the most exhausting experiences I have ever had.

At the risk of stealing someone else's pun, and someone much funnier than me- We're going to Tarantino it. We're going to come back from that break to the part where K is naked and freezing and I'm all wet. It had already been an exhausting morning. After a night of waking up every 2 hours to administer pain medication, and sleeping only about 45 minutes in between each dose, K had been awakened with explosive diarrhea. And since the poor woman can barely help someone ELSE dress her, she is in no position to clean herself up during an event like this. We had spent the better part of the last 4 hours (starting at 5 am, mind you) battling said affliction, up and down in the bathroom, trying to keep K clean and dry, and trying to figure out exactly WHAT I was going to do with pajama pants and a floor mat with feces on them. Gag reflex stifled, and soiled laundry removed to the other bathroom tub to be rinsed at the earliest convenience- K's gut seemed to finally calm down. I knew that we had to get her into the tub to really get her cleaned up, since trying to use baby wipes was really only a band aid on an amputation. I was able to get her undressed and into the shower, and had a reasonable amount of success cleaning her up. But to understand how we got to the darkly comedic tableau that was our opener, you need to know about K's overall condition.

The poor woman cannot weigh more than about 95 pounds, and before the discovery of her cancer, she already had a significant curvature in her spine due to osteoporosis. This "hump" was made much more severe by her inability to sit up straight because of lack of strength and fatigue. She had undergone a mastectomy early in her cancer treatment to try and stop it's spread. This operation had not only disfigured her, it had failed. She also has a port of types under the skin on her chest which was installed to deliver her chemotherapy, and is still used as the site where she receives other injectable medicines. It kind of looks like the plug on the end of any power chord, only with short numbs instead of prongs. And it's under her skin, which is not only disconcerting, but pretty unattractive to look at. K's belly was terribly distended due to a constant battle between constipation and diarrhea, and a lack of eating or drinking. She is not a large framed person, and she was devoid of nearly all of her hair as a result of radiation.

In short- she sort of resembles a baby bird, only slightly more pathetic. So now I have K in the shower on her shower chair (she is not steady enough to stand up for long periods of time without a walker, especially slippery wet ones), and I'm getting her cleaned up, and the poor thing is FREEZING. She is devoid of all body mass practically, and because she's not standing in the warm flow of water, all the water drops are evaporating off of her as I'm trying to get her clean. She is shaking like a leaf in the wind, and I'm trying to go fast, so I can get her dry and dressed again soon, and in the process, I drop the sprayer, which promplty hits the floor of the shower, facing up, spraying me up my front as it falls, from the crotch to the face. At this point, K is not only exhausted from our battle against incontinence and the shower, but her usually preternaturally good attitude is rapidly drainig because she got sprayed in the face, too.

This is where you came in. I was able to recover the sprayer without much more fuss and get K dressed and back in bed reasonably quickly, and though it was May, and a warm day at that, she very much reminded me of getting into flannel jammies and sheets after a shower in the dead of December. That thawing feeling that you get that is so blissful after you've been chilled- you know the one. Also, I was able to rinse out the pajama pants and floor mat and wash them, and they recovered beautifully.

I choose this story to tell instead of others that I could for one main reason. As I was drying her off, her poor body shivering with cold, I was struck by a phrase that my CLFM teacher had used when describing God as He appeared to Moses on the mountain after the exodus from Egypt. Moses asks to see God's face, to which God replies:

"I will make all my goodness  pass before your face, and I will proclaim the Lord by name before you; I will be gracious to whom I will be gracious, I will show mercy to whom I will show mercy.” But he added, “You cannot see my face, for no one can see me and live.” The Lord said, “Here is a place by me; you will station yourself on a rock. When my glory passes by, I will put you in a cleft in the rock and will cover you with my hand while I pass by. Then I will take away my hand, and you will see my back, but my face must not be seen.”
Our teacher talked about God having a "great and terrible beauty". God's face is the face of love in the fullest and truest sense, but it is also so mighty and so completely pure that to just look at it would kill a human. The same concept can be used to describe a deadly animal with a beautiful coat or set of feathers- but this phrase flashed in my head while helping K get dressed. Why? Well, two reasons.
K used to be a dancer, and we often talk shop, since I used to dance as well. She talks about her time with great joy, as we all do when we remember something we loved so much. As I was helping her get into her adult diapers and put pajamas on, I was granted the opportunity to be very up close and personal with the body I was dressing. Even more than a year after discovering cancer and starting treatment, even in the horribly depreciated state that she's in, K's old dance muscles are still visible as she flexes her feet to bend into her pants. Her long and slender biceps are still hard as a rock as she lifts herself into a comfortable position in bed. Her bones are riddled with cancer, so much so that even run of the mill tests are considered too dangerous to run on her bones, for fear that they would simply shatter. But she bends, she stretches, and she moves. Her hands and feet still possess the kind of quiet grace that someone of an acient soul and strong heart have. She is unattractive to look at by any standards, grostesquely so, but there is so much REAL beauty there. The human body is capable of prodigous strength and ability, and that vast capability is beautiful and terrible.
The other reason I was struck was by K's mind. Through HEAVY doses of narcotics to try and deal with pain, and constant fatigue and the natural mal-nourishment that accompanies dying this way, she was still what I would consider extremely lucid. She asked and answered questions, had things she wanted to say and do, and still had enough energy to get a little bossy about how her house was being cared for. She has spunk and verve and is really an incredibly sweet woman. K managed, with cancer and morphine competing for her brain cells, to fight senility long enough to get her house painted after external repairs, and make decisions about her end-of-life medical care by herself, as well as help get schedules squared away to get her son moved in with her. She is terribly beautiful, inside and out.
I regret to have to report that in the last few weeks, she has declined much more rapidly than before, and is no longer nearly so lucid, and is sleeping between 20-22 hours a day, leaning towards the latter more often than not. I have been here since 6 am today, and it's now nearly 2:30, and I woke her up long enough to go to the bathroom and take her pills, and the hospice home health aid came and gave her a quick sponge bath. My guess is that totaled with a very brief visit from a close friend, she has been awake less than an hour today so far.  
In all likelihood, K will not live out the month. And I have grown to quickly love and care very deeply for this woman, and though they have been long and tiring and excruciating at times, I will miss my hours with her dearly. I already do.
If there was a "point" to this posting, it was to share with my friends how I have been spending my summer, and because the thought struck me as relating back to the title of my blog- of course He's not safe, but He's good. I think that this idea and the idea of terrible beauty go together. The longer you think about one, the more you can't let go of the other.
We often wait for God to speak to us as believers, to move in some obvious and clear way, and though in my experience, He's a little more subtle than that, sometimes He goes for the show. I have learned, and am continuing to experience, though, that even when He puts it right under our noses, God's method is usually so profound, that it ends up playing less mariachi band and more Amos Lee.
Even typing this blog, I look down at my hands and I realize how much the great and terribly beautiful God of forever loves me to have made me with fingers that work so well with so many intricate parts. Even the cramp in my wrist is a result of the kind of crafstmanship and artistry only made possible by complete and utter love and power. And it is terribly beautiful.
http://www.nationalbreastcancer.org/

Thursday, March 10, 2011

I'm pretty convinced that I'm going to die

This is both a theoretical, philosophical statement who's profoundness I like to think is equal to that of the cogito, like "i will die, therefore i am alive", as well as an INTENSE inner fear going on with my heart and mind right now.

A little explanation, you say? Well, you asked for it...

As you may or may not know, I was diagnosed with ulcerative colitis in the summer of 2004. Since that time, I have had a lifetime and then some's worth of ups and downs related to my health and overall well-being. I was on LITERALLY every medication available for my condition save those that I was allergic to, to no avail. I finally had surgery to remove my large intestine in the fall of 2009. Whatever God's plan was, he kept me safe and got me through recovery, and I'm living an essentially happy and healthy existence at this point.

So why the imminant doom of impending death? Well, it may be a bit of an overstatement, but then, I am occasionally prone to hyperbole. This last week, I had a TB test performed to get clearance to continue to work in  kindergarten classroom through APU's TAP program. (redundancy occasionally helps clarify for you grammar police). The process goes something like this: they give you a shot of a small amount of serum containing chemicals that are indicators for TB exposure into a little ball underneath the skin of your forearm. Two days later, those chemicals have had time to work, and if there is no redness/swelling, you have not been exposed to TB. If however, you develop what's called an induration (read: fancy word for a bump, not unlike a mosquito bite in texture and appearance), then depending on how large it is, you could have been exposed to TB at some point. It looks something like this:



Now, this isn't a positive test for actually HAVING TB, but it is positive for exposure, meaning that your body's immune system has encountered it at one point. If you test positive for TB exposure, the next step is to get a chest x-ray to make sure that there is not active TB in your lungs. I am asymptomatic, so I don't think I have anything to worry about necessarily, HOWEVER......
Even if you are cleared based on the x-ray, you can be put on a course of antibiotics that lasts for 6-9 months. Which I have no interest in doing, especially since said antibiotics are hard on the liver, and I have already had to deal with liver toxicity issues thanks to earlier courses of drugs for my colitis.
My test, according to the lady in the "health center" (read: glorified school nurses office where you may or may not get seen by an actual nurse) was negative, though I did develop an induration of 10mm in diameter. This, according to my mother, who is ACTUALLY a nurse, is considered a positive, and the lady in the health center doesn't know what she's talking about. Sometimes, I really love my mom and her ability at once to reassure me and scare the living hell out of me. She of course followed this up with a "Don't worry about it, we'll just retest you over break and if you're positive, you get an x-ray. NBD. I don't want you stressing about it."
Yeah, thanks.

So while I sit and wait for that lovely test to happen again, in all likelihood followed by a chest x-ray, I have ONE MORE thing to worry about.
For a while during my colitis treatment, I was on a medication called remicaid. At the same time, I developed massive swelling and completely random and unnecessary bruising on my feet and fingers. That looked like this:

 
This is the middle knuckle on my right hand, swollen up about 3/4 of an inch. It went from fine to swollen in less than 20 minutes. Don't believe me? Ask my ex-boyfriend, Ryan. He was driving me from my house to the movies when it happened.

Example: completely random and not caused by injury bruising

This is a picture of my middle finger on my left hand. The middle knuckle is CLEARLY swollen.

You get the picture. It sucked, would happen at random times, and made it so that I had to walk with a cane for several weeks because of the pain in my feet. I was told that the medication that I was taking was causing "medication induced lupus, which in turn was causing lupus induced rheumatoid arthritis". I was also told that if I stopped the meds, the swelling would stop. It was true! : D The swelling indeed stopped once the medication did.

This would be the happy end of an obnoxious, but now over story, EXCEPT:
Now, more than a year and half after surgery, I am still testing positive for ANA, which is a rheumatoid arthritis factor in the blood. Why, you ask? I HAVE NO EFFING IDEA.
The reason that I know this is because I had a blood test to check for it, thanks to pain in my tailbone for no apparent reason.
This was initially thought by me and my family to be a recurrence of what is called a pilonidal cyst, also called "Jeep's disease" due to the prevalence of these cysts on WWI and WWII soldiers from riding on the bumpy roads in jeeps who developed these cysts. THIS particular beauty happened the first time about 2 years ago now, and let me assure you,  I would not wish it on my worst enemy. It is not only embarassing (lots of strangers with nametags ask you to take off your pants and bend over), but incredibly painful and tedious to treat. There is alot of gauze involved. (no pictures for this one, you can google it if you're really that curious)
So when this pain first showed up again this past Christmas, I was worried that it was a reoccurence of the cyst, which can happen.
I went to the doctor, and they ordered blood work and an x-ray, and decided that it was not a cyst, and because I had not injured myself to cause this pain, they ordered the test for ANA. It was positive.

As a quick wrap-up: Even though I had a horrible disease that ended up causing incredible pain, weight-loss, weight-gain, emotinal trauma, and finally took major, life-altering surgery to cure, I could still have rheumatoid arthritis and tuberculosis.
fml.

And then I read this:
"And he said to them, 'Why are you fearful, O you of little faith?' Then he arose, and rebuked the winds and the sea; and there was a great calm." - Matthew 8:26

I really can't explain my fear when I remember that my God is the same God who created me and everything else. "Mighty fortress" is quite possibly my favorite hymn of all time thanks to the Promise Keeper's conference in the 90's at the Oakland Colusseum. (If you've never heard a recording of thousands of men singing mighty fortress together, find one. it will change your life and your whole view of worship music).
A mighty fortress is my God. He never fails, never quits, never takes a day off, and more importantly, he LOVES me in a way that I cannot even imagine. So why am I afraid? I guess my answer would have to be that I am a very fragile, scared, lonely human being who is so held ransom by sin and fear that I cannot allow my Savior to do what he does best- save. I'm working on it, though, and I am using this season of Lent to really try and allow God to help my fear.
"I believe, help my unbelief!" -Mark 9:24

I am choosing to end with the lyrics to mighty fortress and a youtube recording of the last half of the song. It's amazing. Let yourself see God as your fortress this week, as I try to see him the same way.

"A mighty fortress is our God,
a bulwark never failing;
our helper he amid the flood
of mortal ills prevaling. 
For still our ancient foe
doth seek to work us woe;
his craft and power are great,
and armed with cruel hate,
on earth is not his equal.

Did we in our own strength confide,
our striving would be losing,
were not the right man on our side,
the man of God's own choosing.
Dost ask who that may be? 
Christ Jesus, it is he;
Lord Sabaoth, his name,
from age to age the same,
and he must win the battle.

And though this world, with devils filled,
should threaten to undo us,
we will not fear, for God hath willed
his truth to triumph through us. 
The Prince of Darkness grim,
we tremble not for him;
his rage we can endure,
for lo, his doom is sure;
one little word shall fell him.

That word above all earthly powers,
no thanks to them, abideth;
the Spirit and the gifts are ours,
thru him who with us sideth. 
Let goods and kindred go,
this mortal life also;
the body they may kill;
God's truth abideth still;
his kingdom is forever."
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AhlnProP8o0

Saturday, March 5, 2011

It's been a long time since I smelled beautiful

first- name that movie.
Second- I would apologize for taking so long to post again, but I don't have that many followers. AND i've been insanely busy.
First, I am pretty sure that all of my teachers had a super secret meeting and decided that they would all assign group projects. Which, of course, I HATE with the fire of a thousand suns.
THEN, they clearly decided on this too quickly and needed somthing else to talk about, and decided that they would all have something ridiculously large related to the percentage of my grade due on the same day. That day was thursday.
WORST DAY EVER.
And then one teacher, on the way out of the super secret evil villain teacher meeting said "hey, if we made her really sick, it'd be funny."
so they did.
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...
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...
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.........
*silent*scream*
As a result of thursday, there is now a history test that I know I failed, a teacher who may respect me a little less for skipping his class, and a class of 3rd graders at Murray elementary who think i'm the most boring PE teacher ever. And the saddest thing is, they may be right.
It's a good thing I got paid, or this week would have been a total wash.
Thank the lord that it's over.

As it so happens- things like this just make me miss my friends even more. I haven't seen some in over a week that are here in LA, and others I can't see because they're literally on the other side of the planet. And I kinda miss my mom and her penchant for making the food that I like best when I'm upset.

And just in case I needed something else to feel heavy about, a really good family friend died this week from a massive stroke. He was in his 70's and not in the greatest health, so it's not SUPER surprising, but his wife and his 4 daughters will miss him terribly. And I was quite fond of him.

All of these things are hard to process when one is sick like me. IE- green nastiness in the sinuses and lungs, random and short-but-intense sinus headaches, and a hinky stomach for the first few days of this madness.

And now that this is all over, what is left is slight boredom (nothing on hulu and a lull in studies) and anxiety. I find out if I am an R.A. on monday. Which would be both a little disappointing (because it would mean that I cannot, in fact, go abroad in the fall) and incredibly amazing since they pay for your room and board if you do get a position.

All this is to say- Pray for me. please. and thank you.

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

First ever blog

I used to write "blogs" or "notes" or whatever they were called on myspace. Sometimes I post things on facebook. I hear that the popular thing now is to have an official blog. I only sometimes masquarade as an anti-conformist, and not very well, so here I am.
Not much to tell for now, which can't sound very promising, but I promise my life is preternaturally and eternally interesting. For now, I'm procrastinating. And if they paid people for that I'd be a millionaire by now.
I'm excited to post more though, when I have some more time, of feel like procrastinating more.
I'm getting into a really rich part of my life right now... God is moving in some ridiculous ways, some I haven't even seen yet, I'm sure.
This time next year I could be an R.A., or I could be fresh off of a trip to Lithuania for a semester. No, that's not a joke. And if you pray, or even just aren't opposed to the idea of praying, I wish that you would. For me, that is. I need all the help I can get right now.

Read or don't, I will only be mildly offended. Will continue to write anyway... I find it increases my vocabulary and helps cure me of bad typing habits.
More to come soon.