Pinned
face-down in a tiny tunnel, hands bound, lower body covered in a heavy blanket,
immobilized. I could feel drugs move hot across my back, up my neck. My face
flushed red, my nose itched, but breathing deeply just made me more aware of
the weight pressing on my back.
I have
nightmares like this, but this was real. This was for my own good. People do
this every day, and they don’t break down. They don’t freak out. Just breathe
softly, I told myself. Close your eyes.
If I wanted
to keep breathing, I had to be perfectly still. If I wanted this to end, I
could not move.
The noise
started, ticks and thumps, then a steady beat.
Holy holy holy Lord God of power and might,
Heaven and earth are full of your glory
Hosanna in the highest
It was set
to go on for 20 minutes. I didn’t know if I would last that long. I had to.
Early today I had a Magnetic Resonance Image experience at Hospital Rio Carrion in
Palencia. I had an MRI before, but it was just my face, my sinuses. This was
the whole chest, the whole body-inside business.
I was not prepared for the
panic. I was not ready to be overwhelmed by irrational fear. I thought I’d outgrown claustrophobia. But now
I see I’ve just developed ways to avoid small, tight spots. I use coping
strategies to handle booths and crowded elevators, and crowds in general. They
are excuses, dodges.
The MRI
dropped me face-down and head-first into the horror I keep deep down.
Starting
out was the worst. Settling into the bonds. Feeling just how deep a breath I
could take without bumping against the arc above my shoulder blades. Feeling
things shift in my sinuses, hoping nothing moved in there to block my breathing.
These
people are professionals, I told myself. They know what to do if you can’t
breathe. Stop. Noble thoughts. Prayers.
Padre nuestro que
estas en el cielo
Sanctificada sea tu
nombre
Soon time
stopped meaning anything. I had to stop thinking about when it would end,
because it might just be starting. If I was going to get through this, I had to
stop thinking.
I relived the drive down to Palencia, the dawn breaking red and orange over a hillside studded
with windmills. There was a pilgrim out there already, hunched in the cold,
dark on the path, moving fast. Just at Calzadilla I saw a dog running alongside
the road, down on the camino – it leaped and twisted like something joyful. I
slowed, hoping it didn’t dart into the road. I looked down and into its face.
It was not a dog. It was a fox, with a mouse in its mouth. Its fox-tail was
thick and lush, its eyes looked through their white mask and right into mine.
Where can I go from your presence?
Where can I flee from your spirit?
If I go up to the heavens you are there,
If I lie down in the depths, you are there
You have searched me and you know me
You are with me always, even unto the ends of the Earth
I thought
of my sister Beth, who reassured me this week that this problem is common, she
went through this before herself, it hurts but it’s not cancer.
Not cancer.
Not cancer. That means a lot to me, it’s why I am in this machine, so I can
find out. So many of our family get cancer, and so many of us are dead now. I
don’t want to be dead. I don’t want to be sick, even. I don’t want to hurt. I
want to breathe. I want to walk in big
broad steps and wave my arms around and shout at bad dogs, and laugh out loud.
I thought
of the low bright sun outside, and Paddy probably out on the campo with all the
dogs at that very moment, throwing ridiculous long shadows down into the
fields. The walk up to the tumberon, all that sky and air and space ahead and
behind and above. The music in the house, the morning music, ridiculous witty
Cole Porter music
While tearing off
A game of golf
I might make a play for the caddy
But if I do I don’t follow through
Cause my heart belongs to Paddy
The music
started moving to the pulsing deep rhythm of the machine, and I saw myself
dancing to that, like I danced many times in the past, arms and legs, hips and
fingers, all in motion all at once, to that music. Techno. Deep house. In my
head I boogied down, while my body stayed utterly, perfectly still, while the
magnets whirled round my carcass and somehow shot dozens of photos of what’s
inside.
Here am I, sitting in a tin can
High above the world
Planet Earth is blue
And there’s nothing I can do
And then it
stopped.
And I was
freed.
And I went
home.
On Tuesday
afternoon I will know what they saw.
Meantime, I
will celebrate Thanksgiving. I will walk under the big sky and take great deep breaths.
12 comments:
Glad you made it through o.k. Hugs, love, Beth
You had me gasping for air, but then your calming thoughts were beautiful. Holding you in the Light and hoping for all things good.
Those fears from deep within are well earned, ancestral protection. Not so easy to shut them off. I hope the news is good.
Glad you made it through and sending you Light and Love.
Even in fear you are brilliant! Your words are alive as you are alive! You inspire...I'm so glad that you were able to get through this. You are in my thoughts and prayers always my sweet sister...
Thinking of you my friend. Remember, He is by your side with every step you take. I extremely dislike MRI's myself.
Please know that all of us out here in the "world" are keeping you in our thoughts and prayers. You will persevere and get through this.
MRI's are never fun. I have had a few. You just need to take a nap while it goes on. I use ear plugs. That helps.
Keep on keepin on... All the best to you, Paddy and the menagerie.
Hope your results are good. Nothing like irrational fear. Recently I had a mammogram and a cortisone shot in the heel, and for each of these I had to prepare like a marathon runner because I am so terrified of medical procedures. Your 'soul" really resonated with mine!
From an Australian reader- I love your strategies - imagination recreating places, beauty, connections, music. They work for me too, and are why have got involved in arts and health projects and journals, and see spirituality as the web of connections to all these. Jean
Once again I stand in awe. Twenty minutes??? I lasted three and a half and had to be let out because I couldn't breathe. Wow. Scary times, and I wish I had something to say that could help. My daughter had something like this a few months ago, turned out she needed surgery, but it wasn't quite cancer and it's over now. Just know our thoughts and prayers are with you. You are recios to so many you never realized you touched. Vaya con dios.
precious!
Hope all is well and Thanksgiving was full of joyful celebration! Thanks for sharing your MRI experience - I had one this past year and have claustrophobic tendencies too. Got through it by closing my eyes tight before going into the tube -- opened them again once finished and all the way out -- knew that if I saw the enclosed space I might freak. Tried to drift off and focus on pleasant thoughts (like walking on the Camino!). A big sigh of relief afterwards!
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