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Authors: Brendan Halpin

It Takes a Worried Man (10 page)

BOOK: It Takes a Worried Man
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Me and Rowen Down by the Schoolyard

Rowen and I have been spending a lot of time together over the last few weeks. We both get up early, while Kirsten likes to sleep late even when she’s not having her body ravaged by chemo, so we hang out and play, or we go grocery shopping, or we go to the playground. One day we go over to the park across the street and I take the video camera that Joe and Katy lent us so I can practice with it, because the plan is to videotape Rowen while Kirsten is in the hospital. My showing up with a video camera has the happy side effect of driving away the guys getting high on the bench behind the swings, but mostly we just have a great time playing.

Though I never again get to play the accidental crimebuster, Rowen and I have many other fun activities together while Kirsten is feeling kind of shitty. I find it impossible to explain why I have so much fun with her without starting to sound like a precious moments greeting card or something: “DAUGHTER: The time we spend together is so special. I love your laughter and your little smile. I love the fact that you’re my little angel. And I love that you are growing all the while…” OK, not really that pukey, but close enough to make me uncomfortable. So let me just say that she is incredibly funny and I really enjoy her company. One day we go to the Children’s Museum, and in the little kids’ area they have these tables piled high with shaving cream and food coloring, and we spend literally probably an hour there just making little shaving cream mountains, writing in the shaving cream, and laughing our asses off as we gradually get covered with green and yellow foam. It is one of those moments of perfect happiness that I already get misty-eyed when I look back at, and that I will probably talk about when she is sixteen while she rolls her eyes and yanks the car keys out of my hands.

The two of us have a great time together. But all the while, while I am showing her the revolting jar of lamb’s tongues at the supermarket and saying, “should we get this?” and she knows her part perfectly and acts like she thinks I’m serious and says, “No way!” or while we are picking out treats for Kirsten or while we are enjoying a hot beverage and a baked good, I feel like there are two clouds hanging over us. The first one is the cloud of Kirsten’s impending hospitalization. What is it going to be like when I am the only parent around? Will we still have fun, or will it be horrible, like when I pick her up from school without Kirsten and she spends the entire walk home going, “Mommmm-yyyyyyyyyy….Mommmmmmmm-yyyyyyyyy”?

Cloud two, of course, is the cloud of us having to do this for the rest of our lives with no Kirsten. What would that be like? Sometimes I feel that we could get through, you know, me and you kid against the world, but then I remember what it was like being the kid in that scenario, and while I certainly feel like my mom and I got through, I also think it kind of fucked up our relationship. I mean–just the two of us together for nine years after my dad died–it was very intense. By the time I was in college, we were driving each other insane. I am sure that’s true of many kids and parents who haven’t endured a tragedy together, so maybe there’s no cause and effect here, but why do I live eight hundred miles from my mom? Why don’t I feel any need to live closer to her? What if that happens with Rowen and me? It would break my heart. I know it hurts my mom.

The line I use in conversation these days talking about this fear is “I was always so afraid of ending up like my dad that I never bothered to worry about ending up like my mom.” It doesn’t get laughs, except from me, and I’m just laughing nervously to cover my fear.

Powerpuff

While we are waiting for Kirsten to go into the hospital, I suddenly become obsessed with the Powerpuff Girls. Rowen is a huge fan, as is every girl at her school. Basically
The Powerpuff Girls
is a cartoon about three kindergarten-aged superhero girls who kick lots of ass, especially the ass of their unaccountably-Japanese accented nemesis, the evil chimp genius Mojo Jojo. The other girls at Rowen’s school were all very into this and had lots of merchandise, and, fearing that our little angel would become a social leper if she didn’t learn the names of the characters and a few scenarios to act out when they play this on the playground, which is at least twice a day, we went out and bought a couple of videos. The other option was shelling out for more-than-basic cable, and I know this makes me some kind of Luddite crank, but I just feel like a jackass paying somebody fifty bucks a month to deliver me TV with commercials.

So Rowen likes to watch the videos, and one day we subject our friends Joe and Katy to a viewing which includes my favorite episode, in which Rainbow the Clown is doused in bleach, becomes Mr. Mime and turns the city black and white until the Powerpuff Girls restore color to the world by playing a really catchy pop tune called “Love Makes the World Go Round”. Blossom transforms Mr. Mime back into Rainbow the Clown with a guitar solo played on what looks like a Gibson Flying V, which is a guitar so stupid looking that only cartoon characters and heavy metal guitarists (I know, I know, same thing) should play it. After they finish the song, which, I remind you, is called, “Love Makes the World Go Round”, Rainbow the clown thanks them for restoring him to his true self, and they beat the shit out of him.

Anyway, some time after this, Joe sends me a CD of songs “Inspired by the Powerpuff Girls.” (By this time I have put the Carter Family aside for a while and have been alternating between Matthew Sweet’s melancholy pop masterpiece
100% Fun
and the first Stooges album, which has the song “No Fun,” which I play over and over for reasons that are probably obvious.) I am immediately put off by the new CD, probably because I have been burned on compilation CDs a number of times.  In fact I have been burned so often by tribute CDs that I now avoid them like the plague. A bunch of bands with stupid names who think they’re clever deliver inferior versions of songs by an artist you like. Who needs it? But this is not a tribute to a recording artist, so I pop it in and find that I love it. Yes it does have bands with stupid names, (Bis?? What the hell is Bis? )but for some reason I can’t stop listening to it.

I mean, I become obsessed with this CD more than I have with anything else in years with the exception of the Carter Family. For about a week and a half it is all I can stand to listen to. I listen on the walk to work, and as Shonen Knife belts out their ode to Buttercup, the Powerpuff Girl with the bad attitude, tears come to my eyes. I mean literally. I am listening to the female Japanese equivalent of the Ramones sing about a cartoon character, and I start to cry. What the fuck is wrong with me?

Well, besides the fact that my life has completely turned inside out and my best friend in the world is about to go into the hospital to receive a deadly dose of life-giving medicine? I don’t know. For some reason my emotional pendulum has swung completely away from the Carter Family, and I no longer want to hear anything about jilted lovers killing themselves; I just want to hear about cartoon little girls kicking a monkey’s ass. And yet it still moves me to tears. Is it because I associate Rowen with the Powerpuff Girls, and the Shonen Knife song is just this unremittingly positive tune about a little girl who can’t be stopped? I think that’s partly it. I think it’s also just that the whole thing is so appealing: living in a world where your greatest worry is that you’ll have to fight the same psychotic monkey who’s ass you kicked last week again and kick his ass again. It’s so unlike my life right now. And because it is a beautiful vision, or because it is so far removed from reality, I love it.

Making Plans for Kirsten

Elation quickly turns to dread as Kirsten’s hospitalization approaches. I mean, we are still glad that she is going in and getting started on her treatment, but I am starting to think about how incredibly much it’s going to suck to have her in the hospital for three weeks, and how it’s going to make me sad, and I wonder if Rowen is going to freak out.

Kirsten’s mom is freaking out already. Not, you know, in a real emotional freakout way, but in a planning way. I swear she calls us at least three times a day, going , “what’s the plan, what’s the plan?” Once she calls at 9:00 p.m., which is damn close to bedtime around here, and then at 8:00 the next morning. And it’s all Kirsten can do to be civil and explain that no, we still don’t know exactly when Brendan’s mom is coming, we still don’t know all the details of the hospitalization, relax and we’ll call you soon. Again, the impulse is good–she wants to be helpful and she wants to know what’s happening, and yet for some reason it’s annoying.

So I get increasingly grumpy, and I am especially worried about what’s going to happen with Rowen. The day before parents’ night, which I am going to blow off because I’ll be taking Kirsten to the hospital, the five of us who share a classroom get an email from the principal telling us very nicely that the room is a sty and we need to clean it up before parents come in. I think he is very nice to address the email to everyone, because I know that it’s really my fault. I have stacks of shit on top of my desk in ugly, chaotic piles, many of which are precariously balanced on top of two books, or a coffee mug, or some souvenir one of my advisees gave me. Next to my desk is a pile of books I never quite got around to shelving. And the bookshelf where my students’ independent reading books are housed is a complete mess, with books stacked on top of each other, sticking out at odd angles. These are the three worst aesthetic crimes in the room, and they are all mine. And I really wish I could claim that, you know, my wife is sick and I’m not paying the kind of attention to these things that I usually do, but the fact is that I’m just a fucking slob, and it was like this last year too.

So I take it upon myself to do most of the cleaning, and at one point I find an umbrella. “Anybody want an umbrella?” I ask, and one of my co-workers says, “Yeah. Does it work?” so I open it. It does work. One of my favorite students, who is of Haitian descent, is sitting there while this whole umbrella thing happens, and she says,“opening an umbrella inside. Bad luck. Bad luck.”

I look at her and say, “Josette, my wife has cancer. How much worse could my luck get?”

She pauses for a moment and answers, with a totally straight face, “You could turn black…”

And I know that I am her teacher and should spend at least an hour deconstructing the history of internalized racism behind that joke, but all I can do is laugh my ass off. It just paralyzes me.

No Glove, No Love

Wednesday is the big day that Kirsten goes into the bubble. I get a nice card from my advisees telling me that it’s all going to be okay and that they are praying for me and my wife, and I am incredibly touched. I remark on the fact that it’s kind of back-asswards that the sixteen-year-olds are supporting me, when that is what I am supposed to do for them, but they look at me like I’m an idiot. I guess I am. I have tried like hell for over a year to bring this group together, and in some weird way, I think I have finally done it. I’m grateful to be able to see them every day, and my gratitude for their ongoing kindness to me has not, thus far, stopped me from busting their asses about their grades, so that’s good.

I leave work in the middle of the day and walk over to the hospital to meet Kirsten. As I walk, I think about how I have all these positive associations with this hospital. Since Rowen was born here, I sort of think of it as a place where wonderful things happen. I hope something wonderful happens this time. We meet in the lobby, and we head up to the bubble. It’s not really a plastic bubble like in the old John Travolta TV movie, but you do have to go through this airlock to get to the hallway where her room is, and we immediately associated it with that movie as soon as it was described to us, so we have been talking for weeks about,“’when you go into the bubble.” We go through one set of automatic doors and have to stand there and wait for the doors behind us to close before the next set opens.

Inside the bubble floor we meet Kirsten’s nurse, who is very nice and takes us to the sad little lounge. I spy a
People
magazine of recent vintage, but I’m pretty sure it doesn’t count, since this is a patient lounge rather than a waiting room. Odds are a patient left it here. There are also 2 TVs, and as we sit there waiting, a sad-looking older man sits there trying to get the news out of one of them, but neither one seems equipped to pick up any channels. This is a horrible thing that happened to TVs some time when I wasn’t looking. All the sudden you need extra equipment to make a TV pick up TV stations. Strange.

Anyway, I hear the guy say that they are working on his wife so he can’t be in the room, and his wife is here for a bone marrow transplant, and I know I should feel like he is my brother, but I just don’t. I don’t know why. I don’t hate or resent him for being older and going through this, and presumably having had many cancer-free years with his wife. I guess I just look at this guy in his 60′s and figure, well, he’s the guy who’s
supposed
to be here. What the hell am
I
doing here? I feel for him, because he’s obviously sad, but so am I, and I just don’t want to talk to anybody else who’s sad right now. I don’t want to talk to anyone who knows what I’m going through.

The nurse takes 3 vials of blood from Kirsten because, she explains, phlebotomy is delayed and they won’t be here for an hour. I have no fucking idea who phlebotomy is or why it would take them so long to get here. I mean, it’s a big hospital and everything, but it’s not
that
big.

Kirsten is supposed to get “bedside surgery” today to implant a new hose in her chest–this one is a four in one!–and they tell her that the surgeon who was scheduled to do this went home sick. Great. So they are looking for another surgeon. After they leave, I say, “Well, we’re in a hospital, I guess there must be one or two around,” and Kirsten says she thinks it’s not that simple.

They send us off to lunch so they can hunt down a surgeon, so we head off to the local brewpub in search of fries. I don’t mean to harp on the whole Irish heritage thing too much, but fried potatoes and beer just make my blood sing with joy, and I guess that’s as good an explanation as any.

I order the imperial stout, and, since I am somewhat of a beer geek, I know that imperial stout is a special kind of extra-high alcohol stout, presumably because that’s what the emperor wants, needs, or deserves, or something. I guess the serfs drank Bud Light or something.

Anyway, the imperial stout totally kicks my ass, and even though we order an extra plate of fries after we finish the ones that came with my sandwich, I simply can’t eat enough food to compete with the kick this beer delivers.  The buzz will last all afternoon, and I will be damn glad it does. I have no way of knowing this when I place the order, but I am really going to need that extra drunk feeling that a strong beer in the daytime provides.

We head back to the hospital, and I return to the patient lounge while Kirsten gets ready. This involves her scrubbing herself from head to toe with antibacterial soap and getting into the hospital clothes. While I sit there, another patient, a Chinese man in his twenties, comes in and pops a movie into the VCR. It is some kind of Hong Kong comedy/adventure, and I can read just enough of the subtitles from where I’m sitting to see that it’s about some kind of idiot savant guy who becomes this accidental crime lord. In one scene I saw, he asks a rival crime lord to tie his shoes, and everyone is shocked at this blatant sign of contempt and disrespect that’s sure to cause a gang war, but the guy really didn’t know how to tie his shoes. So it’s that kind of movie. I can totally understand why this guy, who is also having a bone marrow transplant or he wouldn’t be here in a fabulous light blue johnny, wants to spend his days watching this. So do I.

But Kirsten is out of the shower, so I will never know how it came out, though I suspect that the fact that the idiot savant guy can shoot a gun with deadly accuracy becomes important later in the movie.

We both enter the bubble room, and for the first time, I go through the ritual I will go through at least once a day for the next three weeks. I remove my coat and bag and leave them in a drawer outside the room. Immediately upon entering the room, I wash my hands. I then put on gloves. I have a choice of 4 kinds–latex free, powder free–I ask the nurse what her personal favorite is, but she’s cagey, so I just pick the ones that say “Vinyl examination gloves.” They are uncomfortable. I am now also officially not allowed to kiss Kirsten on the lips. Feh.

We get Kirsten settled in, we make jokes, we check out the view, the TV stations, and the food selection, and we sit there as a number of people file in–nutritionist, nurse, lady who gives the EKG–this is a weird experience because Kirsten has to strip to the waist to have the EKG, and of course I’m still sitting there, and, you know, she’s my wife, it’s not like I’m going to turn away from her breasts, and the technician is there, and she’s seen it all before, and we are all just hanging out there (well, Kirsten is really hanging out, ha ha ha) acting like this is perfectly normal. Shit like this just happens all the time these days, and I guess it all contributes to this feeling vaguely dreamlike. I mean, if you woke up and said,“I dreamed I sat and watched while you sat there bare-breasted and some woman attached electrodes to you,” your spouse would probably be like, “you fuckin’ weirdo! What a weird dream!” Yep. She’d probably also say you were a perv, but there is nothing even vaguely arousing about this scene.

Anyway, I guess they eventually do rustle up a surgeon somewhere, because this guy comes in and makes a point of telling us he’s doing this while some other patient of his is being prepped for some kind of other surgery, like we give a shit. He asks me if I want to be there, and I say yes, and he kind of hesitates, and I say, “I promise I won’t scream or faint,” a promise I am confident I can keep because of the lingering effects of the Imperial Stout, and then he hesitates again and finds some kind of tactful way of asking Kirsten if she wants me there, and she says, “he should be here if he wants to be,” and in a global sense, of course I’d rather be just about anywhere else right now, but I also feel very much like I want to be here for this.

They tilt Kirsten’s bed to some strange feet-up head-down angle, and this has the effect of cutting off my view of the actual cutting and stitching, which I think is just as well. Kirsten and I are both a little slap-happy, so we are just kind of irreverent and silly the whole time, which the doc seems very disconcerted by at first but then eventually seems to warm up to. I mean, you know they are irreverent and silly about all this stuff when they get behind closed doors. How could you spend all day cutting into people and not be? So, for example, when he whips out this little plastic tub full of iodine with a red-handled sponge, I go, “Hey! No fair! He’s got dunkaroos!”

Kirsten looks at the tub with the red handle and says, “Hey, are you going to spread Cheez Whiz with that?” and the guy just has no response. I guess mocking the surgical equipment and procedure might change the power dynamic for these people in a way that makes them uncomfortable. So they cover Kirsten in a plastic shroud and shove some wires into her chest, and then shove some plastic tubing into her chest, and then remove the wires and sew up the opening, and I just sit there watching this like it’s something normal to watch, and when Kirsten finally sits up, she’s got a four-way hose sticking out of her chest. This is the hose they will use to pump her full of at least four different kinds of medicine in the next few days.

Once the bedside surgery is over, it’s time for me to go pick up Rowen, so give Kirsten a hug but no kiss, strip off my gloves, and head off through the airlock.

 

BOOK: It Takes a Worried Man
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