*I dedicate this post to the people who I saw each time I spent hours in the infusion room—those who I spoke to and those who exchanged a knowing glance. Those who preferred to be at a distance or needed to be so. We each have our own stories and all, loving tended to by the nursing staff. Your weariness and courage is a mirror for me.
On this last day of chemo, that I pray will be the final infusion of my life, I’m thinking about a moment in the Yom Kippur afternoon service when my voice and my heart cracked. It was when I read the following poem by Tamara Madison called “Sequoia Sempervirens”:
…Some of these trees have been here
Since Vikings drove their boats
Onto the shores of Newfoundland
Some of these trees were seedlings
While the Mayans were worshiping time
While the dire-wolf and saber-toothed tiger
roamed North America
Some of these trees have survived
Lightening strikes and forest fires
Some of these trees house creatures
On the forest floor in burnt out caves
At the base of their ruddy trunks.
Some of these trees have become
Living pipes, chimneys, hollowed out by fire.
They have grown beyond their trauma and focus now
On the daily climb, the adding-on
Of needle and bark, on nature’s drive
To rise above and see beyond
Until the day when death will fell them
And the earth will add them to their riches.
We can be like those trees,
pull on the layers of living
like fine new garments
House the needy in the caverns of our grief,
grow beyond the stories of our scars
Stretch our branches toward the bristling stars.
This poem is my hope and prayer—and captures the powerful confluence of Yom Kippur and the final infusion only a day apart. We pull on new layers of living not to hide our scars, but to grow with them and cultivate comfort. We acknowledge what brings us through fire and storm, letting go and immersing in flowing tears. We bring hard truths and compassion to our pain, stretching to grow despite the unknowns.
I will continue with the next stage of my treatment (radiation), with another surgery after that, and with the waiting to just see what comes. But I am not going to wait by wading into fear and standing rooted in the sludge of regret, rather I choose to live this daily climb as authentically and fully as I can, with the people I love, and with a faith community of soulful practice.
Speaking of faith, I believe our faith is created, affirmed, and renewed, when we know there is a landing place to mark the seasons of our calendar and history, of fire, water, earth and air in our own soul’s journey—what comfort this has brought me when time expands and contracts from the trembling fear that comes with our vulnerability, our mortality.
Thank you, dear ones, for your prayers and encouragement, for helping me and so many others rise above and see beyond, pulling on the layers of the living with steady hope and love.
Rabbi, your writing is lyrical and inspires much thought. You have given us, your congregation, a quite a gift by sharing your progress and most importantly your lessons in courage and optimism. ❤️
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This is moving and powerful, Kim. Thank you for sharing it. I send admiring kudos and much love, Deb/Mom
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