My Third Eye: One Woman's Vision of the Great Mystery

Via the Paths of Creativity, Cancer, Folly & a Wild LOVE OF LIFE

Jane Underwood

Jane Underwood
Location
San Francisco, California, USA
Birthday
October 08
Title
Owner
Company
The Writing Salon
Bio
I'm a mother, writer, photographer (amateur), and owner of The Writing Salon, a school of creative writing for adults, in San Francisco. I'm also a woman living with breast cancer (since Aug. 2005), working to heal myself (and to understand just what that means, REALLY). Since I'm beginning this blog six years after my breast cancer journey began, the first post is a flashback to that fateful day. The rest of this blog will be, I suspect, a kaleidoscopic mix of past and present, as I refer to the first six years of living with breast cancer... but also focus on the present. And the present contains a whole lot more than just breast cancer. So be forewarned: I will frequently digress.

SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 12:56PM

The Other Woman: She May Be Dying

Rate: 18 Flag

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Note: I wrote this piece twelve years ago and am reviving it now because I am struck by how its content relates to my current life as a breast cancer survivor. It's as if I had a premonition (Sort of? Maybe?...Who knows, really?) of what would eventually transpire in my own life. 

***

I'm sitting on the beach thinking about Gina, my boyfriend's other girlfriend.

These days when I imagine Gina, she's walking down the street wearing a turban and a loose-fitting dress. Nobody suspects that the pretty woman is bald and lacking part of a breast. Somewhere in her body, a few stray cancer cells may be floating around, impossible to detect. Nobody knows if these cells escaped from the tumor before the surgeon began to slice and dissect.

Here on the beach, the grains of sand, like the cells in a human body, seem infinite. I think how hard it would be to search out and destroy just a few "bad" grains in this vast expanse.

When I first started dating Ted, he told me about Gina, but not much. That was fine. Obviously he wasn't interested in seeing her exclusively, so I figured anything could happen between us. Maybe even true love.

That was three years ago. Since then I've learned that Gina has been married twice and is childless. She owns a chic women's jewelry shop, had a nose job when she was younger and made the striped curtains hanging in Ted's kitchen.

Chances are, Gina has gleaned some information about me, too. She probably knows I have never been married but have one son, and that I gave Ted the Klimt print that hangs in his bedroom. I wonder if she knows that I write for a living and dye my graying hair. I wonder if she wonders about me as much as I do about her. I wonder if she, too, has resigned herself to the fact that Ted has no desire to be monogamous

As I shiver in the chill wind, my 11-year-old son does cartwheels in the tide. He wears a bathing suit; I'm in a jacket and wide-brimmed hat to protect myself from the sun. Wrinkles are even more frightening when you don't know who has more of them, you or the other woman.

The apples and juice we brought with us now seem unappealingly wholesome. What I crave is a glass of brandy in front of a roaring fire with a lover who wants only me. But then I always yearn for what I don't have -- milky skin, a garbage disposal, Katharine Hepburn's neck, rapier wit, a committed man.

Our dog cavorts alongside my son, who is running now, down the beach with a kite rising slowly behind him. It floats high above us, red and white and gold against the late afternoon sky. When my son comes back, he sits down beside me and begins to concentrate on attaching the kite handle to two sticks that he has placed upright in the sand.

"Look at my invention!" he says. I envy how he stays with the moment. The kite, like one of my unrealized dreams, has risen far beyond us, its string stretched taut. Then I remember the dreams that have come true, like motherhood, like having a lover who makes my heart race at the mere thought of our next night together.

Gina and I just happened to fall for the same guy -- a man who was unhappily married for 20 years, finally got a divorce and now wants to answer only to himself.

Ted once told me he thought Gina and I would like each other, that we share many of the same values. We do seem to have at least one thing in common: an ability to make do with what we've got. We're two pragmatic women in our 40s, no longer holding out for the "one and only." Instead, we're settling -- possibly for less than either of us deserves, possibly for more than either of us would otherwise have.

Who knows? In another life, maybe she and I would become friends. She could teach me to wear jewelry with flair; I could invite her to share in the joys of motherhood.

But in this life, I often wish Gina would drop off the face of the Earth -- like I did last week, when I saw a bottle of champagne in Ted's refrigerator and knew, since Ted doesn't drink, that it must be hers. (I reminded myself, of course, that if Gina ever reached behind the frozen waffles in his freezer, she'd find my vodka and feel the same pang of jealousy. The reminder didn't help.) But how can I be jealous of a woman who recently had a lump removed from her breast and is now suffering through chemotherapy and radiation?

It would be unthinkable to begrudge her time with her man, even though he's my man too -- but, of course, I do. I try to put myself in her position, try to imagine her terror, try to see myself as her sister, not her foe -- yet still I begrudge her that time. I want her to be gone. I have even stooped to wonder what might happen should Gina fail to beat the cancer. Would my relationship with Ted get better? Would I have more of what I want? I know the answer, but the answer doesn't matter.

Last night, as Ted and I were on our way out the door to a movie, the phone rang. It was Gina, feeling panicky and depressed. Ted said he couldn't talk right then but promised to call her back later in the evening.

When we returned, that's what he did. I waited in the kitchen. They spoke for just five minutes, but I think he helped to calm her down. Meanwhile, I poured myself a double shot of vodka straight up, and thought, would I want to be with a man who didn't call her back?

This wild, windy stretch of beach is surrounded by cliffs. Behind me, tall reeds of grass grow in a circle, forming a clearing. When I was a little girl I would have turned that empty space into a secret hideout, or a pretend house. I would have chosen to believe that these grassy walls were shielding me from the wind, keeping me safe.

My son has let go of the kite string, and it falls onto my skirt. He has run to the ocean's edge and is daring the waves to come closer. The undertow is powerful, so I keep careful watch. His presence anchors me to the moment, won't let me drift too far from what's real. And like it or not, Gina is real. The baking pan I saw on Ted's counter last week was probably hers; I suspect she made a cake for his birthday. The casserole dish beside the pan was mine; I made strudel.

I close my eyes and try to visualize the woman I've never met, but with whom I share so much. I stop wondering whether she would outshine me on the dance floor, upstage me at a party, outdo me in the kitchen or the bedroom. Instead I envision Gina standing in the middle of a tall ring of grass, protected from the wind.

I admit that I have often wished she would simply disappear. In moments of jealousy turned to spite, I have even wished her ill. But I never wished for this -- not for Gina, nor for any woman, ever.

 

 

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Comments

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Of course you didn't wish this for her, or for any woman. It sounds like you and Gina have more in common with each other than either one of you has (or had) with Ted. "....we're settling -- possibly for less than either of us deserves, possibly for more than either of us would otherwise have." You both deserve more, not less. I'd like to know what's transpired in the twelve years since you wrote this. I hope neither one of you "settled."
Thanks for responding, Margaret! And yes, much has changed in twelve years. I don't regret the relationship I had with Ted, which was eight years long and very meaningful/worthwhile for me. But it did end, and for the past almost ten years I've been in a wonderful relationship with my now Significant Other -- five years of dating (while being next door neighbors!) and then five years of living together in a house that we found, together, and that we are still happily ensconsed in.
It is hard to share a boyfriend and it is hard to be compassionate when you are competing for love. I am happy that you have a meaningful relationship now. Everyone deserves good health and happiness. You have had a remarkable journey.
This is a beautifully written piece. I love the imagery of the reeds and the metaphor of the kite. Very nice!
What happened to Gina? And Ted?
Well written. It makes me think of the tv series "Sister Wives" that i watch like a train wreck when Im passing by. But that show has so much to tell us about being alive and human. Did you ever meet Gina? She sounds like a friend. I don't mind sharing a man. I just want it to all be out in the open. Jealousy is a green monster. Im glad you are happy now.
Interesting situation.

Like GeeBee, I'm wondering what became of Ted and Gina.

It gave me a bit of a start since my name is Gina. THAT WASN'T ME, THO!
It's interesting to read the responses to "the love triangle" aspect of the story, which for me, now, is long past. I am more interested in what my response was to Gina's breast cancer. . . how I mused about it, what I imagined it would be like. But in answer to the love-triangle questions, I don't know what happened to Gina or Ted, other than that Gina was okay when Ted and I went our separate ways, and Ted was okay too, the last time we spoke (years ago). He and Gina were still good friends but I think he ended up with someone else entirely...and I have no idea whether they are monogamous or not. I agree with Zanelle's take on it: "I don't mind sharing a man. I just want it to all be out in the open. Jealousy is a green monster." For me, it WAS all out in the open, and although I experienced jealousy, I also cared deeply for Ted and never saw our relationship as a "bad" thing. It was rocky, yes, but also wonderful in many ways. AND...that said, I have moved on to greener, calmer pastures.
Very well-constructed, honest and bold piece. Fearless piece. When we allow ourselves to dig a bit deeper.
A brave piece only time passing makes so palatable. I'm glad you found happiness and with a one woman man. Continued happiness and thanks for sharing.
This is hard for me to understand because I must be the top girl always or no relationship. Also, I would not want Katherine Hepburn's neck and neither did she. The last part of her life, she wore scarves around it to cover. I am glad you are happy with a new love, though.
This was amazing. I hope you have found happiness. r
This is an amazing, multi-layered piece, Jane. Although I've never been in this situation, I could imagine myself there.
This is powerful writing on so many levels. Many of us have been dating someone, knowing there are others. I can feel the unease and confusion. And the irony of the cancer, and the honesty of your feelings add even deeper levels.
Why (?) this didn't make editors pick is beyond me. It is so eloquently written. So sad and so troubling.

Rated

d
I used to enjoy Playrooster for the writing, partly. I enjoyed this piece for the writing - oh, OK, and for the fascinating peek into the feminine heart.
What a beautiful and generous piece. My daughter's godmother died of breast cancer in 2001. She was the inspiration for the main character of my book From May to December. I wish you continued health, Jane.
Your writing is breathtaking. I love how you weave together the flashback and present, the metaphor and the beautiful imagery. Masterfully done, and poignant. Thanks for sharing.
Thanks so much -- Ande, Susie, GeeBee, Zanelle, Myriad, Beth, Buffy, Miguela, Bellweather, Lea, Dianne, Chicken Maaan, Pat and Liz -- for your generous comments. I am so happy to have found OS.
Jane - what a lovely, honest piece you have written here. I'm quite sure that Gina would, perhaps against her will, have liked you. *Did* you meet?