Tuesday, November 29, 2016

Radiation

Dealing with the cancer I had, is a four stage process.

Stage 1: surgery.  Done!
Stage 2: Four rounds of chemotherapy.  Done!
Stage 3: Fifteen zaps of radiation.
Stage 4: Ten years (yes, you read that right) of hormone treatment.

If you don't count the hormone treatment, I'm two thirds of the way through, with the worst of it over with.  If you do count the hormone treatment... I'm not sure!  I'm starting that in the next week or so, and I'm feeling a bit apprehensive about it.  The oncologists are fairly blase about it, but I've heard some fairly grim accounts about the side-effects from women who have been on it... so we shall see.

The most immediate side-effect will be that it will keep me in menopause, which the chemotherapy started.  It is what it is, and I'd rather go through an early and chemically-induced menopause than die of cancer, but I didn't like using the pill because I didn't like the idea of faffing about with my hormones; and I really don't like the idea of being on this stuff for 10yrs.  I'm sick of hot flushes already, and it's only been a few weeks!  Finding something that can help with menopause side-effects is going to be tricky, because most treatments for menopause issues involve either oestrogen or progesterone.  As these are the hormones that were feeding the cancer I had, and that the hormone treatment is suppressing, putting them back into my body is a very bad idea!  Unfortunately that leaves me with... pretty much nothing to help.  I talked to the oncologist about it, and she suggested using a fan.  I'm thinking that going by her empathy levels, she hasn't been through it yet!

Radiation is starting on 19 December.  Fabulous timing, right?!  The radiation oncologist (the shortened version of which is 'rad onc'... I told him he needed a better nickname.) wanted me to start treatment in early December, but I told him I wasn't available until 19 December.  He looked a little surprised about this and asked why, so I told him that I have four kids (he seemed quite horrified at the thought of so many children), I've missed half a year of their school events, and I'm NOT missing the last few weeks of prize-givings etc for radiation!  He mumbled a bit and did a few calculations, and agreed that I could wait till then.  I then mentioned that Christmas was at the end of that week, and with holidays and things they would probably be very busy, and wouldn't it be easier for everyone if I just started after the new year?  He was very decisive about the fact that no, that would not be a good idea at all, that waiting till the new year was pushing the timing out to far, and radiation WOULD be starting on 19 December.

Sigh... oh well, I tried!

So what does all of that mean?  I'm getting 15 zaps of radiation.  It happens in Palmerston North, and I have the option of either staying there, or traveling there and back each day (a group of my friends have told me they're happy to be my taxi if and when I require it).  Radiation happens every day, apart from weekends and statutory holidays - they said that's to give my body a chance to recover, but I think it's at least partly because they want the time off! - so it's going to take about four weeks.  The actual treatment should only take about 15 minutes each time, and doesn't hurt.  Oh, and it doesn't involve needles, yay!

I have been told to expect skin burning - like a bad sunburn - and tiredness that will last for weeks after radiation is finished.  But because everyone reacts differently, there's no knowing beforehand whether I'll just get slight burning, or whether my skin will break down and I'll need district nurses to change dressings etc (this was mentioned as a possibility), and whether I'll just feel a bit  tired for a few weeks, or be completely exhausted for months (also mentioned as a possibility!).  And then there's the fact that they try to angle the radiation so it won't hit my lungs or heart, but there's a chance that they might be affected too...

So yeah.  Radiation is not like chemotherapy, but I'm also aware that it may not be a walk in the park.

Oh, and did I mention that after having a mastectomy, I found lying on a table naked from the waist up with my arms above my head, with medical staff watching through a glass window while other medical staff talked above me, drew on me, tattooed me and took photographs of the end result (all so they can make sure that the radiation happens in the exact same place, every time) to be actually quite traumatic?

It didn't hurt much, physically... but I'm not looking forward to doing radiation.

Saturday, November 5, 2016

Hair today... gone tomorrow.

Chemo sucks.

Everything hurts or doesn't work properly, including my brain.

And then it almost wears off, I start feeling human again and noticing the rest of the world (until I notice the US presidential elections, and wish I hadn't...), and then it's time for my next cycle, and down I crash again!

It's hard.

Getting the chemotherapy is actually the easy bit.  Dealing with what happens as my body tries to cope with what's been thrown at it, is hard.

The most obvious side-effect is the hair loss.  My hair hasn't quite all gone yet, but what's left is very thin, and prickly.  When my hair was falling out, my scalp was really tender, and sore to touch, but that stage seems to have gone now, thank goodness!  So, now I have pretty much no hair.  It has really surprised me how cold my head gets - hair is obviously a very good insulator. I have to wear hats etc, because otherwise I get cold.  It does work quite well in reverse though - when I get hot flushes (another side effect), I can take my hat off and cool down pretty quickly!

As a woman, having no hair is pretty confronting.  It totally changes the way I look, and it totally changes the way people look at me.  I've never been particularly worried about how I look - I almost never wear make-up, and clothes shopping is something I only do out of necessity.  If something still fits and doesn't have holes in it, I don't see the point of throwing it out.  I've never thought of myself as beautiful, or been particularly bothered about how I look, and I'm much more interested in a person's opinions, character and story, than the brand of sunglasses or shoes they're wearing, or the car they drive.

So I honestly didn't think that I would be particularly phased by losing my hair.

Lol!

Silly me.

What to do, when you have no hair and don't want to go bald in public? For the first while I decided I didn't care what I looked like, and went for comfort.  Cue the beanie!  Great for comfort and warmth, but rather lacking in style.  After several weeks of mostly beanie wearing, even I was starting to feel decidedly frumpy.  Not good!

I've also got some scarves, which work really well as turban-style head-covering.  However, I've discovered that wearing some things on my head gives me flash-backs to my brethren past - I wore silk scarves on my head when I was at church from the age of 3, and for the last few years I was in the brethren I was wearing a scarf the whole time unless I was home.  At school, going shopping, at work, at church: unless I was in a brethren home, I had a scarf on my head.

I haven't worn a scarf on my head since then.  I didn't think about it, until I was wearing a cap thingy, and was struck by how I kept pulling it down over my ears, and wondered why that feeling was so familiar, and why it was accompanied by a sense of dread... and then I realised.

Life in a cult: the gift that keeps on giving!  I'm slowly getting over the flash-backs... but it's just another thing to deal with.

I've got two friends who have been through chemotherapy in the last couple of years, who have loaned me their wigs.  This has been fantastic, because it's meant I've had a couple of different options available right from the start.  The wigs look amazingly natural, and I look very different with each of them.  I've had several people I know reasonably well, walk straight past me in the street because they didn't recognise me.  But... it's not my hair, I'm always worried whether they're sitting right or not, and they're a bit itchy and tight on my head.

It is nice, not having to bother with washing my hair, or brushing it, or trying to keep it out of my face, or getting haircuts... but I am REALLY looking forward to my hair starting to grow back in a few months time.  Not just because it turns out that I quite like my hair, but because it'll be a sign to me that I'm through the worst of this cancer crap, and that life - and my hair - is starting to return to normal.

In the meantime, there is one silver lining.  It's not only the hair on my head that isn't growing - I haven't had to shave my legs for a couple of months!






Wednesday, September 21, 2016

Chemotherapy, Round 1

It's been two weeks since I had my first dose of chemotherapy, and it feels like the worst of the side-effects have mostly worn off.

It was pretty awful... but not as bad as it could have been.  I'll tell you more about it after the second round.

What I'm really struggling with at the moment, is the feeling that I'm on some kind of weird home detention.  Because the chemotherapy wipes out my immune system, I am very, VERY susceptible to other people's bugs, and what is just a cold for a friend, can become pneumonia for me very fast.  Which sounds ridiculously dramatic... but it's true.  When explorers came across a tribe that hadn't seen outsiders before, it was very common for much of the tribe to die from illnesses that the explorers were carriers of.  The tribe's immune systems had never been exposed to these viruses/bacteria before, and they had no way of fighting them off.  That's pretty much my position.  All my built-up immunity has been wiped out by the chemotherapy, and it's starting again from scratch!  And it has to start again from scratch after each round of chemotherapy.  So I have to stay away from people, particularly groups of people, as much as I can 

All of which means, if you have a cold or a tickly throat, or someone in your family has bugs, PLEASE don't come and visit me!  Please don't have my kids round to play if your family aren't all healthy, because my immune system has enough challenges going on at the moment, particularly with 4 kids in the house.

Moving on from the physical to the mental...

The chemotherapy process seems to be one of letting go.  I've had to let go of going to school assemblies, watching my kids in various different activities, growing a big vege garden, going to church, being a part of the community garden... and yesterday I had to let go of my hair.  Even the way I think is different - it's called chemo-brain.  My thinking is fuzzier, sometimes it's hard to find the right words, and every now and then it's like my brain fills up with fog, and I can't make decisions about anything, or even think coherently.

It's hard.  And scary.

I know that it's all temporary... but it's my reality right now, and will be for the next few months.

It feels like I'm in some weird kind of personal autumn.  I'm like a tree, watching so many of the things I love doing and so much of my physical being that I took for granted, just fall away, like leaves onto the ground.  And there's nothing I can do about it!  I can't hold on to these things tighter, I HAVE to let them go.  I have to surrender to this process, and let so much of what has brought meaning to my life, slip out of my hands. 

What makes it stranger, is feeling like this while it's spring outside.  Seeing new lambs, trees budding, bulbs flowering, everyone getting excited about what they're going to grow this season, the weather starting to warm up... while in my life, everything is slowing down and paring back to what seems like a long way short of the bare essentials.  I feel completely out of tune with life around me.

It often feels like I'm in that little patch of shadow, watching everyone else in the sun.




Sunday, September 4, 2016

Both And.

After almost a week of agonising, and trying to get second opinions (which proved to be impossible), I finally made the decision - I'm going to do chemo.

I immediately felt much better - I looked out the window and thought 'Oh wow, the sun's out and it's a beautiful day!'  I actually hadn't noticed until then.

So, I've made the decision, and I'm getting my first dose on Wednesday, 7 September.  I'm going to be having four lots of chemotherapy, about three weeks apart, if all goes well.  Nobody can tell me how I'll be afterwards - whether I'll be one of the lucky ones who sails through chemotherapy, only feeling a bit seedy for a few days; or whether I'll be one of the ones who is completely wiped out the whole time.  I'm obviously hoping for the first option!

So I've been trying to figure out how to keep all the plates of our family spinning, while having no idea how much help I'm going to need.  Which makes it a little tricky... there have been a few phone calls where I'm asking people if they can do such and such, if I need it.  And so far everyone has been very obliging!

One thing I do want to talk about is my positive attitude.

I do have a positive attitude, in that I'm doing my best to deal with whatever is thrown at me, the best that I can.  I'm doing #100happydays on Facebook, where I'm talking each day about the little or big things that make me happy.  And people seem to like that.

But the 'brave cancer fighter' label is a tricky one.  Because yes, I'm brave.  And yes, I'm fighting this.  And yes, I have a positive attitude.

But I am more stressed than I've been in years.  I cry a lot.  I'm still taking painkillers from my surgery 4.5weeks ago.  Little things like trying to decide what to wear, take a lot of emotional energy.  I often want to hide - to just be by myself - because my heart hurts about the way our lives have all changed.  We're having dinner conversations about the side effects of chemotherapy, and what I'll look like with no hair, and while that's good, and I'm glad we can talk about it with the kids, I HATE that my kids are having to think about this stuff, connected with their mum.  My head often feels like it's spinning, and I've learnt that deep breathing helps when my stomach hurts from stress.

This is what brave looks like too.

This is the other side of the 'positive attitude'.

If I was only ever upbeat and happy, that wouldn't be healthy.  And sometimes I worry that because I'm publicly focused on the positive, the other side of this might be forgotten.

The other side is, that this is one of the scariest times of my life; that it's so hard that my husband and I congratulate each other, every night, on making it through another day; that despite our reassurances, my kids are worried that I'm going to die; and that I really, really wish my biggest concern was that my seedlings were getting knocked over (like last year).

That's why this is titled 'Both And', rather than 'Either Or'.  Because life isn't one or the other, it's both at the same time.  That's what this is about - focusing on the positive, while still feeling scared.  Noticing the lovely, while wiping away tears.  Taking deep breaths to be calm for the kids, while knowing that the reason they're fighting so much is because they're scared too.

I see focusing on the positive as my act of defiance.  Regardless of the bad and scary and evil that is going on in the world, in my life and even in my own body, I WILL still see the good and beautiful and lovely in the world, and my life... and even my own body.


Both and. I acknowledge the dark is there, but I choose to focus on the light.



Wednesday, August 24, 2016

A Histology Report and a Minion

As it seems to be my habit to write blog posts just before something happens, here I go again!

We had our appointment last Thursday with the surgeon to get the histology results ('histology' means the study of cells and microscopic stuff), and as you may already be aware, it didn't go terribly well.  Not because of the results, but because of a registrar (junior doctor) who was standing in for the surgeon.  The registrar unfortunately had very little knowledge, and even less empathy.  I haven't been so angry for a very long time.  However, he eventually fled the room, and shall be ignored henceforth.  Be gone, minion!

The surgeon (probably summoned urgently by someone telling her the registrar had run away and there was a patient about to lose the plot) went through the histology report with us, and the results are mixed.

First up, the good news: I don't need any more surgery!  YAY!  There was a chance that they may not have been able to get enough of a border of healthy tissue around the tumours, which would have meant going back into surgery.  They got a clear margin, and I'm done with surgery.  Very, very happy about that!

Next, the not quite so good news: the lymph nodes they removed looked clear on first inspection.  However when they were thoroughly checked, one of them had a micro cancer in it.  When they talk about lymph nodes, they talk about micro and macro cancers.  This one was a micro cancer, which means it had only just got there, and hadn't gotten around to unpacking it's bags or meeting the neighbours yet.
Because it was so tiny, and the other lymph nodes they removed were all clear, they are going to leave the other lymph nodes in.  But because it was there at all, the necessity for me to have chemotherapy has gone up from about 10% to 50%.
The surgeon said that they are suggesting, rather than recommending, that I have chemo, and that they are leaving the decision up to me.

How nice!  The ones with all the years of training and experience and degrees and white coats, are going to let ME make the decision about whether I have chemo or not. 

Then they said that I'd have a meeting with the chemo guys in 2-3wks, so they could give me percentages and probabilities and statistics, and then I could make the decision.

Sigh... more waiting, which I was extremely unexcited about, but had finally mustered up a few more skerricks of patience, to wait, again.

Until this morning, when the phone rang.  It was the hospital, saying they had an appointment for me this afternoon, if I could make it!  After a minute of frantic mental calculations involving travel time and the logistics of 4 kids, I said yes, thank you very much!

So, I'm off this afternoon, to talk statistics and survival rates with the chemo guys. 

Preparations for Round Two are beginning.

Wednesday, August 17, 2016

An Eclipse Of The Moon - or, post-surgery update.

Time for an update.  It's been a while, since my last post, and things have been happening.

I had surgery 2 weeks ago, on August 4.  They took a few lymph nodes out and sent them off to the lab for testing, while they did the mastectomy.  Those lymph nodes came back clear for signs of cancer, so I got to keep the rest of my lymph nodes.  This is really good news, because it means much lower chances of possible problems down the track from lymphodema.  So, yay!

I spent 2 nights in hospital, after having problems with my blood pressure dropping after surgery - this made things very interesting when I tried doing something extravagant, like sitting up.  However, I got there in the end, and despite a power cut at the hospital because of a major storm going on, I got home!  A week after surgery, I got the drain out, which has made a big difference to my discomfort levels - getting 35cm of plastic tubing out of my body, and not having to carry round a bagful of tubes and canisters has been good.  Although my youngest son was a bit disappointed, he's been very interested in how it all worked, and kept wanting to check how much fluid was in the canister every day when he got home from school.  I guess it was sort of like checking the rain gauge?!  I think maybe he's going to be an engineer, or a doctor.  Or maybe a professional air guitarist...

Then there were complications with pain meds - apparently I'm sensitive to them.  And THEN there's been a bit of lymphodema in my arm, and now I'm dealing with cording!  Cording is scar tissue forming in the lymph drainage channels, and it hurts.  I've got some in my arm, and I can also feel some across the top of my chest.

So it's been quite busy, what with one thing and another!

I've spent a lot of time on the couch, watching Olympics and sleeping, we've had a wonderful array of food fairies who have brought us dinner every night, friends have done washing and looked after kids, I've had lots of visitors and texts and messages and phone calls, and we have been very well cared for and loved.

This afternoon we go back to see the surgeon.  We'll get the results of the testing they've been doing on the lymph nodes and tumors, and we'll be told what the suggested plan is for further treatment.  At this point, I'm expecting to be told I need radiation and hormone therapy, and in the back of my head is the possibility that I might need chemo as well.

It feels very much like I'm going to see the judge to hear my sentence!

I don't want to be doing any of these things.  I want to be planning what's going to be happening in the community garden this spring, and drooling over seed catalogues while planning my own vege garden, and planting new fruit trees, and finishing my proof-reading course, and being fully involved in all my kids activities, and thinking about carpet colours for my daughter's new bedroom, and working out with my husband when, exactly, our new shed is going to be built.

I think I'm pretty much over the shock of the diagnosis, and now I'm more frustrated and grumpy and scared, than shocked.

None of this is what I wanted.  But it's what I've got, so I'm dealing with it one day - or one hour - at a time.

Do today well.  That's what I'm trying to do.  Some days that means I rest and heal.  And some days I manage to pick up a little bit more of what I've - temporarily! - let got of.

I saw some photos I took 2 years ago, of an eclipse of the moon.  And somehow it made me think of my life.  It's dark at the moment, and it's going to get darker.  It's scary, and things aren't right.  But this shadow will eventually pass, and slowly, slowly things will come back to normal.  It won't ever be 'normal' like before the 22 June, but close enough to be recognisable as normal.

So I'm holding 2 thoughts in my mind.  The first is, do today well.  The second is, this too, shall pass!


Monday, July 4, 2016

The Rollercoaster I Wasn't Expecting

Ok, so here's a blog post I never thought I'd have to write.

I have breast cancer.

Looking at the words, sitting there in black and white... it still seems surreal.  Really?!  I've birthed four babies, and breastfed them all, isn't that supposed to give me some protection against breast cancer?  Apparently not enough.

It's been a shock for me, and an even bigger shock for my husband.  I was shocked, but not surprised when they told me; I had been sure something wasn't right for a while.  My husband wasn't prepared at all, and was blindsided by the news.

I've known there's been a lump since Easter.  I got it checked, because it was painful, but we thought it might just be trauma (my 6yr old son had been headbutting me during an Easter service.  Lol!), so when it stopped hurting, I assumed it must be fine, despite the lump still being there.  About a month ago, the lump started hurting again, for no apparent reason, and even though the pain stopped after a few hours, I thought I should probably get it checked again.  The nurse agreed with me, and referred me to the breast clinic... and here we are.

Just to be clear - we are not blaming my son for causing the lump, we are thankful he drew my attention to what was already there!

So yeah... it's been a hard week.  Dreading telling people, but wanting to tell them.  Not wanting to go through chemo, surgery and radiation, but wanting to get on and DO something.  Feeling healthy, but knowing I've got cancer.

It feels like preparing to go off to war.  Thinking about what I need to change, what I'm not going to be able to do, all while being carried along by the usual daily life.  Making lists in my head of people I need to tell, and how I'm going to do that...

I'm not afraid, exactly - no soldier going off to war thinks they'll be the one that doesn't come back.  No, change that.  I am afraid, but I'm not terrified.  I'm very concerned about what this means for me and my family, and how this is going to affect us all.

My husband needs his wife, and my kids need their mum, and I will be doing absolutely everything I know to do, to make sure I can be there for them until I'm at least 90!  I know what it's like to not have a mum, and I do not want that for them. 

One thing I am sure of, right from the start: I will be honest.  I will not pretend to feel or believe or act or think anything, to make anyone else feel better.

No pretending.  If I'm sad, I'm sad.  If I'm fine, I'm fine.  If I'm falling apart, that's exactly what I'll do, and if I'm ridiculously happy, then please don't tell me I'll be feeling worse again soon!

That goes for everyone else around me - don't try to 'be strong' for my sake.  What I'd much rather you do, is be real.

I still want to hear about your lives - what madness your in-laws have been up to lately, how your kids are driving you nuts, how you're so sick of your car breaking down again, and the funny thing your 4yr old said to you yesterday.  But I'm going to need to talk about me, too.  And I'm going to need you to listen.  So if you want to help, but don't know how, send me emails, or message me on Facebook.  Let me know you're thinking about me, and you care, and tell me about what's going on in your world.  And when I reply, keep the conversation going!

One last thing.  I'm not going to say that I'll be fine, or ok, or that God will make everything turn out well.  All of those things are what I want with all my heart... but they're what everyone wants, who starts out on this journey, and it's not true for us all.  I'm being honest, remember?  I don't have any assurances from God that everything will turn out the way I want it to, and to be honest, I'm not asking Him for any.  What I am very aware of, is the presence of God with me; loving, compassionate, and patient. He's not demanding or expecting anything from me, He's just there. Solid, warm and real.  

That is what is real, and true, and rock steady.  And that is enough.

Thursday, June 16, 2016

Pigs Fly, Briefly.



There once was a man who went mad.  We don't know why, but there are many possible reasons.  Maybe his child died.  Maybe he lost all his money.  Maybe the chemicals in his body weren't at the right levels for his brain and body to function the way they were supposed to.  Whatever the reason,  the reality was that he was lost to himself, and to others.  In those days, treatment consisted of guards and restraint, usually with chains, but in this man's terror and fury, he couldn't be contained by clothes, chains or people, and shredded them all.  The village where he lived became afraid of him, and threw him out.  Finally, his only refuge was the village cemetery on a hill by the lake, where he found shelter amongst the tombstones.

One day, in the calm that followed a sudden storm, a small boat pulled up on the shore, and Jesus and His disciples got out.  The man had seen the boat approaching, and was watching their arrival.  Jesus saw him, and spoke to him, but the man sank to the ground, screaming, 'What business do you have messing with me? You're Jesus, Son of the High God, don't give me a hard time!' The disciples had heard about this man - they knew that he was a Gentile, which meant he was unclean to them, and they needed to keep away from him.  They also knew that he was said to be possessed by demons and was violent and unpredictable, which meant they'd like to keep quite a long way away from him, and he lived in the tombs, which made him even more unclean to Jews, which is what the disciples were.

At this point, the disciples, still rattled from the storm they had just survived, were in agreement with the man who was mad - they thought the best thing to do was to get back in the boat, sail away to a nice quiet little bay, gather their wits about them and ask Jesus what, exactly, had just happened out there on the lake.  Where had that storm come from?  Why hadn't He done anything to help them sail the boat out of danger?  If He could make storms stop, why didn't He make it stop sooner?  And why on earth was His only concern their lack of faith, instead of their iminent, watery death? (Luke 8:22-25)

Jesus ignored the disciples' muttered cautions towards Him, as He always did.  He turned back to the man and spoke to the demons inside him, telling them to come out. To the shock of the disciples, He then had a discussion with the demons as to where they would go when they left the man.  Finally, the demons left the man only to attack a large herd of pigs that had been grazing nearby, and the disciples watched in horrified awe as the maddened pigs ran frantically round in circles, before hurling themselves into the sea... where they drowned.

The disciples had had quite a day.  First they were almost drowned in a storm, then they discovered that Jesus could stop storms, next when they finally got to dry land there was a man who was known to be mad and possibly possessed by demons, and a herd of pigs who jumped into the lake and drowned.

Next to enter this scene were a group of people from the nearby village, who are - or were - the owners of the pigs.  These people were not in the least bit happy!  Their pigs had drowned, and somehow the local madman was involved, along with a group of those crazy Jews from over the lake.  The villagers told Jesus that they didn't know what He'd just done, but they didn't want Him to do any more, thank you, and could He go away, now.  They had large rocks, sticks, and some hungry looking dogs to back their arguments up.

The disciples were now terrified, again, in risk of serious physical harm, again, and Jesus was not doing anything about it, again.  One of the disciples (possibly Thomas) noticed that the madman had calmed down and was shivering.  He found a spare cloak that was mostly dry in the bottom of the boat, and threw it over the man, who wrapped it round himself.  At this point, the townspeople's attention was drawn from their floating pigs to the man.  This was the one who had terrorised their community - raging, screaming in the streets and outside their houses, terrifying their children and servants, shredding clothes, chains, dignity and peace, along with his family's standing in the community.  This man, who had been mad, possessed, existing alongside the dead when the living threw him out from their midst; this man was now sitting at the feet of the man Jesus who had somehow been involved in their pigs' deaths.  He didn't seem mad anymore - the manic glare had left his eyes, he had a cloak wrapped around himself, and a look of peace on his face.  Even his matted hair seemed a little less wild than it used to.

Jesus pulled out what was harming the man, and returned him to himself.  The man wanted to go with Jesus and the disciples, but Jesus wouldn't let him, telling him to go back to his home and his family, and tell them what Jesus had done for him.

I have often wondered how that went.  I wonder how his family reacted - did they welcome him with open arms, or were they fearful and closed off?  Was he even allowed back into the village at all?  When he returned back to what used to be his life, what was left of it?  The bible says that he told many people about Jesus, and what He had done for him, but doesn't tell us anything of the reaction of the man's family and friends to the startling events in his life.  As is so often the case with the bible, reading it often leaves me with more questions than answers!

...

Monday, June 6, 2016

FUNDAMENTALISM AND NOAH

 Or: How Russell Crowe reminded me of Argentina.
 
Spoiler alert: If you haven't seen Noah, and don't want to know the plot-line, stop reading now!

I watched the movie 'Noah' last week, with Russell Crowe playing the main man.

I didn't intend to - my husband had asked me if I wanted to watch it, I declined, and went out to bible study.  When I got home, he was partway through the movie, and despite myself, I watched most of it.

Let's get this out of the way for starters: I didn't like it.

For me, it was an insight into an unchecked fundamentalist mindset.  One where only men count, only men make decisions, and only men get to hear from God.  Actually, in this case (as in many others in real life), only ONE man.  Because Noah's sons certainly weren't given any say in the decisions affecting their lives.

Watching the way Noah steeled himself against the rest of humanity outside his boat, making huge life decisions about his boys' lives because of what HE had decided God meant, made me feel both angry and sick.   Because life in fundy-world is just like that.  Someone in charge decides that God has told them something, and hundreds or thousands of people have their lives turned upside down, and aren't allowed to question it.

Here's one example from my life.  When I was in my mid-teens, the leader of my cult announced that God had told him that the people in the cult should be more evenly distributed around the world.  Places where there were big gatherings should think hard about whether any of them felt 'called' to move to a smaller location.  When nobody seemed particularly inclined to move away from their families, the leader started telling people where God had told him they were to move to.  One of my relatives lived just round the corner from his elderly parents and disabled sister.  Neither of his parents were in good health, and they needed a lot of help with his sister, which he and his family very willingly gave.  The leader told my cousin that it was God's will that he should move to Buenos Aires, Argentina.  My cousin had never been there, couldn't speak Spanish, didn't want to leave his parents and sister who needed his help, nor his eldest daughter who had just gotten married and moved to Auckland.  However, God had spoken, and who was he to argue with God?  So... he and his wife and their two young daughters sold the business they had spent years growing, sold their house, packed all their belongings, said goodbye to everyone they knew, and moved to Argentina.  All the rest of us looked at each other, wondering who was going to be called on to 'make a sacrifice for the sake of the testimony' (cult-speak) next.

The thing is, when you know God only speaks to 'that' person, you're not listening for God to speak to you.  And even when He does speak, you measure what you hear by what 'that person' says God is saying - and if it doesn't line up, you assume you must be wrong.  Or that it's actually the devil talking to you.  You know it can't be God, because you know what God sounds like: the person who tells you what God says.  This is how 'God' can say increasingly more bizarre things, which nobody questions, because who are they to argue with God?

Back to the movie.  By the time we got to Noah announcing that if his unborn grandchild was a girl he would kill her, I was having trouble staying seated on the sofa.  I kept making my husband pause the movie so I could share my thoughts... which he patiently listened to.  What can I say, the man is probably a saint. ;)

This is such a good illustration of how people force themselves to do things that their mind says are right, despite their hearts shouting that they are wrong.  'BECAUSE THIS IS WHAT GOD WANTS!', they shout back at their breaking, traitorous hearts, and become angry, defensive, and more convinced that what they are doing is The Right Thing.  Because who can stand making huge decisions that tear your heart apart, only to realise that the decision you made was not only unnecessary, but the wrong one?

Once you've paid a huge emotional cost to make a stand, you become very attached to that stand.  It is incredibly difficult to rethink or change your decision.  This is how people like my parents could watch me walk out their front door, and break off all contact with me.  Because they are convinced that it is what God wants.  And nothing or nobody (including God Himself) has been able to tell them otherwise.

I then watched Noah's heart win over his head - and thought to myself, he will be tormented with guilt for the rest of his life, over letting God down.  He will be telling himself how weak he was, and how shameful what he did was, because he was so convinced that God wanted him to stop the human race continuing... and he couldn't do it.

Fundamentalism - the game where everyone loses.

I don't have any nice, tidy bow to wrap all this up with.  I don't really know how to finish this post.  I don't have any bible verses or quotations.  I just know that it's better out here, where I have so many questions and an ever-decreasing stock of answers, than in the cult, where all I had were answers to defend myself against questions I wasn't supposed to ask.