Oh, what sky! Oh, what Tundra V8 power up Clipper toward Portola and toward the sky! Oh what reverence before rainclouds: Where in the built world is found that color gray? Can it be the sun-silvered look of weathered redwood fenceboards in the low, leaning fences of Sunset backyards? Can it be the pewter of a grandmother's teapot, or the rough pale glint of some ancient beaten metal? Can it be an exact and perfectly ironic replica of Toyota's own Tundra silver-gray? That's the color of my truck that roars up Clipper and rises out of the Mission toward the ocean! My truck is the color of the rainclouds that rush at us off the Pacific.
Oh, what miracle of life has brought me here! That is, I mean to say, I survive, I heal, I celebrate my healing and I wonder: In what skin or bone lies the code of reconstruction? What blueprint is held in what vault for just such an occasion as a partial sacrectomy? How do I heal? Is it I who is doing this healing? All I do is sit around and heal. I do not know how I heal. I live and I heal. I sleep and I heal. I watch teenage crime wave 1950s black and white movies on TCM and I heal ("Teenage Crime Wave" was awesome). And besides the cutting and slicing of flesh, what do I heal from? Oh, sheesh: Sacral nerves 3 through 5 severed and removed! Got a clue what they do? Number 2 mercifully saved, meaning that I walk with relative ease, I suffer only minor nerve pain in my left foot (the nerve pain's from the still-intact S-1, says Dr. Ames: We had to muscle it around a bit to get it out of the way, and it's still a bit roughed up). Only the, ahem, functions of S3-5 are impaired. So otherwise I am a laughing miracle of Cafe La Boheme, writing at our sunny table again on a Friday noon after missing only seven Fridays!
Seven Fridays I was out of the game, confined to couch and bed, allowed only to stand, walk or lie, never to sit for seven weeks. Seven weeks without a chair! Seven weeks without relaxing into the plush holding hands of an armchair. Seven weeks without sitting at a desk to contemplate.
Then Monday the doc says go do what you can do. And so I humbly try to get back in the game. I am slow, weak and in some pain, but I take a shot at it.We've still got to schedule a few weeks of proton beam radiation therapy at Loma Linda; that's going to be no picnic. But I'm alive and I'm outside! I'm spending cash!
I have just gone out for the second time since December 17. The first time -- yesterday -- was a dry run to see if I could drive OK and get in and out of the truck (painfully, stiffly, but yes, in and out). They were only errands but what errands they were! Ace Hardware on Noriega, Walgreens on Taraval, and Kragen Auto also on Taraval across from the tempting stereo repair store ([really irrelevant parenthetical]: once when the old Quasar set crapped out and Norma said nobody gets TVs repaired anymore, they just buy new ones, but the only new ones were like a thousand bucks so I took the Quasar in and got it repaired for $125. I still get a glow of accomplishment every time I pass that place). But anyway, on my first foray I was in the zone: Ace for lightbulbs and felt glides for the dining room chairs; then Walgreens for a new razor and the best parking spot possible opened up for me as I pulled up (Oh, the ecstasy of a perfect parking space; oh, the ecstasy of a new, close shave!). And then Kragen for lithium grease to take the squeak out of the driver's side door (Oh how I neglected that truck, synecdoche for my flesh)!
O gods of clorophyl and proteins: To almost lose life and then to get it back! How bright this earth now! How beautiful these faces! I stop at every stop sign and look around to see what new miracles there are.
Oh, I could take it or leave it, life, I thought before this happened. What's so great about this beating heart, these heaving lungs, these eyes through which the world enters and signs its name? But threaten to take it away and see how I change: What pleasure in every heartbeat and every breath! What complexity in the color of a raincloud!
Look how I can walk again! No cane this time, I threw it off, left it on the backseat. No cane, no shuffling, no shoulder to lean on, I'm steeply soloing up 24th Street toward Guerrero. What neglected gluteus muscles are coming into play! Portions of the gluteus maximus muscles were removed from the resected lower part of the sacrum and tied to each other. Were they tied in a bow? That's how I picture them as I motor up Guerrero: tied together in a bow.)
So the body, temple and vehicle, again gains my gratitude. Me, lord and master, taken down a notch by the wisdom of disease. And driven to new reverence for photosynthesis and light! For the complex yellow of a squash and the red of an apple, the green of chard and the orange of an orange, the yellow of a lemon and the purple of a grape: these colors and their molecules will save me, I am sure. For what brought on that tumor? How have I allowed this deadly encroachment? I am not separate from my "body." I am not some absentee landlord: I was here, eating a bagel and cream cheese every morning for years. I was here ignoring the muted, dour warnings of high cholesterol; I was here, drinking coffee after coffee for the charge and the power, pretending the insane ups and downs didn't affect me. I kept getting warnings: a panic attack in 2004 that I thought was a full-blown heart attack; squamous cell skin cancer in 2008; and then this, the impossibly rare chordoma, a final warning for sure: Get well, my boy, live within biology's rules, with gratitude for the planet's cures; stop fucking around with your body.
So don't laugh if I go vegan. I'm not a halfway man. I could never stop drinking once I started and I could never have just one cup of coffee or one cigarette so if I appeal to the wisdom of the plant universe to reverse the machines of cancer, to turn back their deadly aspirations for eternal multiplication, then I doubt that I can have the occasional burger. Also: "The China Study" has me thinking about dairy and not in a good way, though the Cowgirl Creamery and the farms of West Marin are still brilliant and beautiful.
There is no moment now that I do not cherish. My mom and dad are gone but they can rest easy in their graves: I'm going to be OK.
Also the long, strange nights on sleepless painkillers gave me a new and welcome craziness, allowed me to enter the neglected dark realms, the realms of Rimbaud, the realms of Baudelaire forgotten in the cheesy daylight of good advice. What phrase is that? ha ha ha the cheesy daylight of good advice, it's either Shakespearian or McKuenesque, hard to tell, and not my job really to figure out, I'm just riffing here: riffing for my life, riffing for the spirits that live within me, riffing to wake them up and wake myself up, riffing to turn me on again, riffing to find a language for my reverence and joy, riffing to revere the engine of language, hoping for maybe an answering cry. Yep that's it: an answering cry: We holler into the abyss and hope for an answering cry.
Not that we need it: Our riffing is sufficient. We don't need the answering cry. It's enough to ripple our muscles of speech, to sing uniquely in the night.

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Comments
I know those fragrant Eucalyptus trees up Clipper way, and I have smelled the salt from the sea carried on the air mixing with their fragrance, but these are not the descriptions that my clients treasure.
Congrats on the successful excursion!
If I had a hat, I would tip it to you for this post.
I once had a medical moment where I was not certain I would have one more tomorrow and yet I did. It was a peanut compared to what you've mustered through, but I get it. Your appreciation anew is infectious - in a good way.
It fades.
But enjoy the hell out of it. It's like love.
Who knew buying a razor from a chain store could produce such honest joy, but these are the odd truths we discover when the prospect of never again partaking in such a mundane task is a probability.
Jill Kinmont wrote a book that was later turned into a movie called The Other Side of the Mountain. She suffered a spinal injury while trying out for the Olympics and was permanently paralyzed. What single feeling did she miss the most? The sensation of a cold toilet seat turning warm after she sat on it.
I know when I was "disabled" for a mere three months the ability to do things for myself, or rather inability, took on a precedence in my life that took me unaware. You can not know what that is like till it happens.
Lots of things, good and bad, have happened over the years but it is easy to keep them in perspective because every day that you can go to the toilet, bathe, move about the world, breathe the fresh air, and have good food in your belly, well that is pretty fantastic. If you're lucky enough to love and be loved too super fantastic!
Rock on Cary.
And Nick, it does not fade. Eight years later, the sight of a plume of steam rising from my cup of green tea each morning is enough to make me weep for joy. Every cup of tea is the best cup of tea I ever drank.
This view can be annoying to friends and loved ones, so you learn to keep much of it to yourself, that the world has become your daily buffet of minutiae. Ace Hardware. That blade of grass. This snowflake caught on my marvelous miracle of a tongue.
Cary, I also enjoyed reading your thoughts on healing. How the body has a wisdom the mind doesn't. Maybe the locus of the mind is not the brain. It felt that way to me. And yeah, I'm also vegetarian. Consuming the energy of suffering critters just doesn't feel right after all that.
i'm happy to see your joy. Continued progress for you I hope.
I am awestruck and feeling the same way. Thank you for articulating this feeling so eloquently. -r-
We daoists think that life is enhanced by thinking of death. It sounds weird and your words say it so much better.
Hugs.
Another one I liked is a very well-researched survey of alternative cancer treatments by Michael Lerner, director of the Commonweal Institute where they have spiritual programs for cancer patients. I also love Rachel Naomi Remen's books, which deal with the emotional/spiritual/meaning issues around illness and the medical establishment. She is one of a kind.
This is just my personal opinion, but I think avoiding toxic or possibly-toxic chemicals is the first step towards any kind of health, especially for those who are more susceptible (unfortunately we don't know who we are, so it's like Russian roulette with the who-cares-let's-make-money-creating-toxic-stuff business model we live in).
I'm so glad you're recovering!
Such yayness.
Big warm bright YAY.