Wisps of Clouds

In front of me: a very large electrolyte-charged bottle of water and a turkey sandwich from Trader Joe’s. I spent most of the afternoon receiving chenmotherapy in Scarborough at the Doc’s office and now have bag full of the stuff to be pumped into me for the next 48 hours.

The dishwasher is full and the last thing i want to do is deal with it, but, as they say, God is in the details. God is in me and in front of me, God is the thing I least want to do. Ha- I have no idea; these are just the loose thoughts that float through my chemo brain like wisps of clouds.

I was empty long before I ever got into drugs or learned of this cancer; I recall isolating a great deal as a child. On a sailboat my father rented for the day I would hide and sleep below decks. The shadowy warmth of simply being alone; there was great comfort in spending time with my only companions- depression and my fantasies.

The laughter of my peers as a child felt like a stab to my chest; I couldn’t understand how they could know anything like happiness. There were entire dimensions that seperated me from the child sitting next to me in math class.

Suicidal mindsets followed into adulthood like an echo. There were a scarce few scattered romantic relationships, but for the most part it was me and my bed and my self pity.

The happiest I remember being was when I had a career in radio- I spent much time writing for the station: imaging statements and such. It was an easy listening station. I think they still use one of my imaging statements: “Easy 99.1…. putting the soothe in smooth.”

It was cocaine and enraptured frenzied writing. I found something finally, or something found me. Entranced, I would bury myself in the desk in front of me, writing intro poems for the romantic air time which followed my shift. Cocaine locked me in and gave me a vitality I never had. It gave me a promise of something biggger than myself. It gave me the hope for love.

I remember one night, blood in the bathroom of the radio station, my eyes darting at the video cameras to see if anyone was around the station, my heart a drumbeat of fear- I remember falling to my knees and praying for the first time I can remember.

“God, please help me.” I knew I was licked but it would be some time before I would ask for help. It would be some time before something else would begin to fullfill cocaine’s empty promise.

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About Ben Dooling

I began this blog shortly after being diagnosed with terminal rectal cancer. It has since begotten a short book of poems, most of the poems came from here. Cancer has taught me more than it has taken. It has shown me my gifts, and what an examined life is.

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