This week’s post presents a brief excerpt from my novel, The Bandaged Place. It goes
without saying that this scene is fictional, but it could just as
easily be part of a memoir. It connects the reader with a
moment she may have experienced in her own life--when she had to share bad news with friends, when she needed their support, when she knew how hard it would be for them to come to grips with her predicament. The fact that it is fictional
does not diminish its impact, suggesting there is more than one way to tell a
story.
"One of the most valuable things
we can do to heal one another
is to listen to each other's stories."
~Rebecca Falls~
"One of the most valuable things
we can do to heal one another
is to listen to each other's stories."
~Rebecca Falls~
In this scene, the protagonist, a physician, has just told her two closest friends she has been diagnosed with breast cancer:
My kitchen is as silent and as still as any place on the face of Earth has ever been—the deepest cave, the holiest shrine, the eye of the storm. I have just finished explaining to Sophia and Barb why I need them here today. It’s one thing to sit at your desk with a patient and break the news to her, “You have breast cancer.” It’s another thing entirely when you are seated at your own kitchen table with your best friends, saying to them, “I have breast cancer.”
They’re sitting across from me stunned, expressionless, struggling in vain to access whatever words they need to say to me right now. But there are no words for this. Silence reigns.
I am tracing the pattern of the grain in the wood on the tabletop. Sophia is looking out the window, her chin resting on her hand, gazing as far away as possible. Barb is staring at me, searching for some sign, some indication that would explain how she missed it, as though she should have known something was wrong. And I am having second thoughts as I watch both of them wrestle with this—as I watch everything change for them—knowing what I just unleashed in their lives.
I break the silence, “Well?”
Sophia slowly turns her attention back to the present. “Well what?”
“Well, what’s going through your heads?”
Barb turns to Sophia for help with this one.
“Me?” Sophia sits forward and braces herself as if she’s preparing for turbulence, in full upright and locked position. “If it were my decision, Kate, I’d have them both off. And I wouldn’t bother with reconstruction. I mean, what purpose under heaven do they serve anymore?” She waves her hand as if she were scooting the dog away. “That’s what I think.” She sits back as if the voice-of-reason has spoken. Clearly, she doesn’t understand.
Barb stares at my chest as though the answer is scrawled in capital letters across the front of my sweater. True to form, she sums it all up, “You know what I think? I think you're going to need a puppy. And lots of wine. Red wine. For medicinal purposes."
Sophia closes her eyes and wags her head. “You’re impossible.”
I have to giggle. I can’t help it. Barb would come up with something like that. Why is it, I wonder, that the worse you feel, the better bad jokes sound—silly, stupid, crude—as far from reality as you can get?
“When I was ten,” I tell them, “I went crying to my mother because I had this little sore bump on my rib, right about here.” I point to my heart. “Mimi had just died and I knew that she had breast cancer so I was convinced that I’d caught it from her. At ten! I was so sure of it—so scared—I waited a month before I said anything. And by then it was even bigger so I was certain I was doomed. But Mother just smiled and told me, ‘It’s part of growing up, is all. It’s perfectly natural.’”
“That was natural,” Barb quips. “This is not.”
Nor is it fair. Nor is it even conceivable.
*
And so the narrative begins with the physician as the patient.
"Stories are not material to be
analyzed;
they are relationships to be
entered."
~A.W. Frank~
analyzed;
they are relationships to be
entered."
~A.W. Frank~
The fact is that scenes like this unfold all the time in real life. If you have shared bad news with your closest friend, you know how hard it was. If someone made you smile on the worst day of your life, you witnessed a miracle of sorts. If you have a friend who was willing to sit quietly and patiently at your side, she helped you heal.
The
point is that each of us has a story to tell. If you write, you can translate what
you experience, think, and feel into words. But if what happened is too painful or too difficult to chronicle, try wrapping it up in a story or a poem. If you are an artist, you may be able to express
yourself better on the canvas. If you compose, in your music. If you act, on stage.
There
is more than one way to tell a story, but tell it you must. Which way is right for you?
"Everybody's got a different way
of telling a story, and
has different stories to tell."
~Keith Richards~
jan