Sunrise sky |
A portal I passed through
this week has surely been another stage of accepting my mortality, which has
continued to be largely an abstraction for me until now. I am beginning to let
go of an expectation that I can persist in a routine of reading, writing
reviews, and blogging, while actively participating in an online community of
like-minded virtual friends.
In recent weeks, as the
latest round of chemo has slowed me down again, I have become aware of the
effort required to do all that. I have been surprised by a falling off of
interest in reading and a diminished ability to write coherently and at length
about books and films that I can relate to what has been a focus of my
blog—frontier fiction as it originated and continues to evolve and flourish.
Sun in the morning sky, with vapor trail |
This shift has happened as my
wife and I consider options for travel, which I have resisted until now from a
belief that travel for a cancer patient is an admission that time is running
out for it. While results of chemotherapy indicate that treatment has been
doing a good job of buying time, I can’t know how long I’ll hold out against
the inevitable. The day will come when anything as ambitious as travel will no
longer be as doable as it is for me now.
Meanwhile, I spent an hour
with the psychologist at the Cancer Center this week discussing the more
immediate need to get around on my own closer to home. This will take some
experimenting to find out whether it’s feasible, but a bus will pick me up
about five minutes from my house and take me to Palm Springs, where I can meet
up with a friend or two for coffee, or get to gatherings of the Center for Spiritual
Living, which has interesting events and meditation sessions.
New stock pot |
Another big shift for me this
week took place right under my own roof. Following recipes from a new cookbook,
The Cancer-Fighting Kitchen, and
another called just Soups, I shopped
for organic ingredients at a Clark’s Natural Foods Market, which is 2-3 exits
away on I-10. Afterward, back home, I made a batch of vegetable broth and two
soups, one of them using a new 16-quart stockpot that my wife found at Costco.
The pot is big enough to cook whole chickens for soup with homemade chicken
broth, which compared to what comes from the store is far superior and
redefines the words “taste” and “flavor,” both of which have been compromised for
me by chemo treatments.
Cooking doesn’t exactly replace
reading and blogging, but it reduces the time my wife and overworked caregiver
needs to spend in the kitchen. It also gives me a feeling of accomplishment.
Plus, for someone with a mostly sedentary life, with all the food prep
(slicing, dicing, chopping) and being on my feet crisscrossing the kitchen,
kneeling, stooping, reaching to get into cupboards, not to mention cleanup
(when I’m done with a kitchen, it looks like a disaster area), cooking is a much-needed
physical activity.
Sky at sundown |
Add to that one other perk
for the cook. Working in the kitchen, I can also listen to my music—not an
option for the writer in me who needs silence for concentration. Sorting
through a big collection of CDs to donate to the library, I’m finding jazz and forgotten
mixes of rock and country songs downloaded from iTunes and burned onto discs
for the car stereo, each of them representing another portal passed through over
the years in other far different times and places. (More of that next time.)
And so life goes on, chicken
soup chasing away the “kinda blues.”
I’m closing again with a jazz
video suggested by a reader. In response to a couple of requests for Thelonious
Monk, here is his entire album, Monk’s
Dream, recorded in 1963. The quartet is made up of Monk (piano), Charlie Rouse
(tenor sax), John Ore (bass), and Frankie Dunlop (drums). First tune, “Monk’s
Dream”; second, “Body and Soul.”
Any other readers with jazz favorites of their own, links to
them are welcome.
Previously: Kinda blue
Sending you thoughts and prayers, Ron.
ReplyDeleteGlad you're considering variety in your activities. Does chemo dull your taste buds as they say smoking does? Or is it that you just don't feel hunger, the way a person doesn't when grieving? Do we get a photo of your wife, even from the back or side. Then we can fit her into the 'big' picture. And the dog, too.
ReplyDeleteRon, as I have said earlier, your journal entries are truly motivating. For instance, "Portals" is telling me to value the simple pleasures of life such as walking, reading, writing, meditating...doing things that bring joy and peace. I cook occasionally and it relieves stress in spite of the clang of pots and pans.
ReplyDeleteYou are always in my heart, Ron. I value your journal of discovery.
ReplyDeleteI tend not to listen to music while I write either. I need to focus. and I indeed find cooking to be a fairly 'active' behavior. It sounds like you are experiencing some natural ebb and flow of interests. Nothing unusual in that.
ReplyDeleteYou're cooking reminds me of the publication Chicken Soup for the Soul. I tried cooking a chicken in a pot of water with added spices and veggies and it came out pretty good. The chicken was nicely cooked and the soup was soothing to say the least. A diversion is always fun as long as it is not overdone. I enjoy a little travel when the urge hits. Good luck, Ron.
ReplyDeleteTravel for me, even if it isn't far, is something I always enjoy, a nice diversion after cleaning up the kitchen.
ReplyDelete