CPT Cancer

A journal about the intersection of military life, cancer, and being a single dad.

Tag: god

  • Remission 2 – Part 2: The Choice

    (Warning: This is another long entry. There’s a lot to unpack here, so bare with me. Some of it is related to cancer, but skippable if that’s solely what you’re here for.)

    I’m lost, but I know where I’m going.

    This is a continuation of the last entry because things happen in here that pre- and post- date the hunt, but did not fit with that narrative, at least not cohesively, and I thought it important to tell that story as a whole instead of jumbling the absolute mess this entry is going to be. This one is going to be heavy, and you have time to bail now if that’s not the space you’re in right now to be reading it. Sorry, but you’ve been warned.

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    Fuck it, We Ball

    The day after I dropped the kids back off with their mom I went to a drop-in skate (a scrimmage, for those that aren’t wholly familiar with hockey) to see what I was made of on the ice against live competition. 

    I did this once in July and it was a train wreck. I was extremely winded, and didn’t even make it a whole hour before skating to the locker room, going home, and sleeping for ten hours. My goal was to make it at least an hour of the 1:15 session. When I showed up I ran into a bunch of old teammates and friendly faces that were happy to see me out there and giving it a shot. There were some less than stellar moments, but overall I managed to keep my feet under me against far more skilled players.

    I knew at some point I’d be able to play again, but I didn’t expect it to be this soon; I made it to the hour mark thanks to some deep benches and short shifts. I burned through my water at remarkable speed but I expected that. Shifts at drop ins tend to be longer because there are no set lines, just a rotation from the bench, so I could take short (45 second) shifts and rest without guilt knowing some gomer was going to take a four minute shift without a second thought.

    Fast forward two weeks.

    Originally I’d killed and buried the idea of playing in the league at all this season: the cost outweighed the benefits; I could never make enough games to make it worth it. Then the fuckers did it. They released the October league schedule and of course, right on cue, it was actually a makable schedule for me with weeknight and late Sunday games. It took very little encouragement for my old team to start cheerleading me into playing another season, so the night before the first game I could make I signed up.

    The primary rink my league plays games in is less than ten minutes from my house, so it’s not a major logistical movement to get there. I can leave 30 minutes before a game and still have time to get dressed and ready if I don’t waste any time. The locker rooms on one half of the building are comically small though and we were using that sheet of ice (there are two under one roof) so I decided to give myself some cushion and work my way into the room. Some of my old teammates, now on a different team, were playing and they waved at me as I walked down the corridor beside the glass to the rooms. It felt good to be back among friendly faces doing something I love to do.

    My team was composed mostly of new faces this season. Some of the “OGs” were there and were very happy to see me on this side of the dirt, and some of the new people had only heard of me as “the cancer guy.” Either way, I was ecstatic to be there, and a little apprehensive about what the night would bring.

    I’m a defenseman. If you’re not familiar with hockey, it’s basically what it sounds like. When my team is on the offense, I am supposed to prevent the opposition from breaking the puck out by camping on the blue line or being deeper than the deepest cherry-picking dickhead that is hanging out in the neutral zone looking for a cheap breakaway goal. This can involve a “footrace” of sorts where we find out who is faster and confident enough to stop once at terminal velocity, so as you might imagine I was a little worried about having too many footraces in the game from a stamina standpoint.

    Fortunately the team we were playing was roughly our skill level, and the match was tilted evenly enough where I didn’t find myself in a sprint often enough to put a significant dent into my overall fatigue level in-game, and only once did I rotate myself to the end of the bench for extra rest (in league games we have pre-determined lines, I was in the first line of defensive pairing, a “starter” if you will).

    I made a couple bonehead plays, and a couple of really good ones, but on the whole I was having a blast- even when I was doing really stupid shit on the ice like accidentally screening my goalie or leaving someone from the other team alone on the ‘back door’ (the back door is the side of the net that the goalie is not actively defending).

    We ended up winning 5-3 after holding onto our lead, and we bumped fists with everyone on the ice before retiring to the locker room. I was given “defensive player of the game” despite the fact that I think I was -2 or -3 but hey I’ll take a sympathy ballot over nothing, and now I have this Mjolnir hammer that’s colored like a Rainier Beer can in my hockey bag until next week.

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    Let’s go back to Part 1 where I mentioned… her… because she plays a pretty big part in this entry. We’ll call her Sarah for the purposes of this blog out of the interest of her privacy (and mine). Me and Sarah have known each other for a while, and were always strictly platonic friends. We’d started speaking more toward the end of the summer about the trials and tribulations of life, relationships, my recovery, and anything else you can think of.

    I was in the process of trying to set her up with Thomas when, while trying to sell the idea to him over the course of the hunt, I’d realized that I had actually had strong feelings for her right in front of my face that I’d previously not acknowledged. I’d never thought of her that way before, but it was like the Titanic hitting an iceberg– slowly each compartment of my mind began to spill over with her likeness until I was drowning in turmoil over it.

    Those of you who have fallen hard for someone who was previously a close friend, but you’d never seen as anything but, know that it hits you like a sledgehammer: the stress of the weight of the decision to act… or not. It’s like a stone on your chest that gets heavier with every passing moment.

    For two weeks I’d wrestled with the consequences of telling her. I tried to talk myself out of it, I tried to convince myself that she’d never go for it. After all, I am largely still a broken person– medically speaking– and nobody my age wants to jump into the middle of this renovation project, right? Fatigue, brain fog, drymouth, dietary restrictions, random lightheadedness– I’m a mess! Oh, and if that wasn’t enough, the baby-mama drama is enough around these parts to push anyone away. Right…?

    Well. Maybe not… at least, not as far as God is concerned. Or my psychologist at behavioral health, or my cognitive therapist…

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    Woo Woo Shit: Revisited

    So, for the first time publicly, I’m going to make a huge confession that is probably going to shock the people that have known me well for years: I am making an effort to get right with God. My recent posts have hinted at this a little bit, but I’d made a promise to myself before treatment that if I made it out from the other side of this thing that I was to “get correct with the lord” as it were.

    Over the Labor Day holiday I finally decided to call the only person I’d trusted at the time to help me dip my toes into this world: my uncle.  It was known to me he was getting more involved with the Catholic church recently and it seemed logical to bounce all this off of him and ask his thoughts on how I was to get started down this path.  Religion was largely foreign to me– my parents never raised me in it despite being raised in Catholicism themselves; I had no foundation to build on.

    After talking to him for about an hour, I was completely relieved: he did not try to recruit me, and even told me to make sure I approached this with care. He recommended a Bible podcast and answered all the questions he felt qualified to answer, and I was on my way.

    Shortly thereafter I made contact with the Army chaplain that blessed my throat as mentioned early in this story, and we sat down for lunch one day to discuss how I should move forward. Like my uncle, he agreed that it wasn’t prudent to just whole-ass jump right into it. It would take lots of study and even then, there were still some big milestones I might not ever choose to pursue (within the Catholic faith).

    Me and the chaplain discussed how to reconcile logic, reason, the scientific method, and faith– there was no way I’d be able to approach it any other way. I am a firm believer in science, always have been, always will be, but the gap between what science tries to explain and what is unknown is still too wide for me to just buy into the big bang. Why and how??? “Trust me bro” is basically what science says, which has at least equal footing with the idea that there is a divine spirit engineering this gong show.  

    Deciding to believe in God is how I’ve chosen to rationalize so much of this unknown. Without going too much into it in this entry, he has very much made himself known to me in very plain, very obvious ways lately. I struggle more and more with believing in coincidence, and the further I drift from that, the closer I drift toward the belief that maybe, just maybe, he has big plans for me. Or, at the very least, some sort of plan– to be determined, I’m sure my guardian angel will hold an IPR with the Saints sometime soon to iron out the next quarter of FY26.

    More to follow on this development in a future entry, but that’s where my head is at right now (my atheist/agnostic friends would probably argue my head is firmly up my ass right now, which, ok, fine, but new year new me– you’ll get over it; I’m still gonna send you unhinged shit on Instagram).

    Ironically, I have played hockey with a guy that looks just like this in goal.

    The views and opinions presented herein are those of the author and do not necessarily represent the views of the Department of Defense or the U.S. Army.

  • Prologue Part 5: Eat. Pray. Puck.

    Woo-woo shit.

    There are going to be topics we circle back and revisit out of order from time to time, because when you don’t decide to write a cancer blog until eight weeks after first detection, things are lost in the whirlwind of activity that happens during the opening salvo of medical intervention.

    Rewind to 1 February. In Ireland, and places with other strong Irish-Catholic communities, there is the “St. Brigid’s Eve” tradition.

    “St. Brigid’s Eve, celebrated on the night of February 1st, which is the eve of the Feast of St. Brigid. In Irish folklore, St. Brigid is considered one of the patron saints of Ireland, and her feast day marks the beginning of spring and the Celtic festival of Imbolc, which celebrates the coming of the lighter, warmer days.

    One of the customs associated with St. Brigid’s Eve involves hanging cloth or rags on a tree branch or a bush. This is often done as part of a ritual to honor the saint and invoke her blessings for the year ahead. The act of hanging the cloth is meant to symbolize the blessing of the home and protection from illness and misfortune, as well as a way of asking for a bountiful year.

    St. Brigid herself is often associated with healing and fertility, so people believed that by hanging cloth on the branch, they were invoking her powers for good health and protection. In some variations of the custom, people also would tie pieces of cloth to the branches and leave them for the night.” -ChatGPT

    One such place that this tradition is celebrated is Newfoundland, Canada, where Addison is from. We were walking into my house the evening prior to the Vancouver visit and she said, “Shit, I almost forgot.” and proceeded to take off her cloth wristband and tie it to one of the shrubs in front of my house.

    Me, puzzled, “What are you doing?”

    “It’s Saint Brigid’s Day, we are going to leave it on this bush tonight and in the morning you are going to wear it for the rest of the year to bring you healing. It’s Newfie Irish-Catholic woo-woo shit,” she said, matter of factly.

    In the morning, as we headed out the door to go on our trip, she took it off the shrub and put it on my wrist.  I figured at this point I’d take all the help I can get and, if nothing else, it would make her feel better.

    Fast forward a day. 3 February was like most other Mondays where I roll into the office and get hammering on whatever task I was dealt for the week. My boss had already begun to slide things off of my plate and had all but cancelled my two-week trip overseas happening later in the month, so my task list was shrinking with every new piece of medical information coming to me. I kept chipping away at my inbox when I got a text from my mom: a link to some sort of Catholic site describing Saint Blaise Day.

    Mind you, just prior I’d found out my official diagnosis and biopsy results, so I’m fully invested in getting as much help from every dimension possible, including the spiritual one. I clicked the link and uttered, “No fuckin’ shit?” when I noticed that this day, 3 February, was Saint Blaise’s Day.

    “St. Blaise’s Day is celebrated on February 3rd and honors St. Blaise, an early Christian bishop and martyr who is the patron saint of throat ailments. He is also associated with protection from diseases of the throat, and his feast day is marked by a special blessing known as the Blessing of the Throats.” -ChatGPT

    I knew what I had to do: I had to embrace the woo-woo and unknown mysteries of the universe. The coincidence was too real for me at this point, I was on a mission from God.

    I walked to the staff duty desk and asked where the command Chaplain’s office was. It was just across the parking lot in the basement of another building. Much of the “Special Staff” in my unit exist in such circumstances, and the man with the connection to The Man was apparently no different in this regard. The only Chaplain in the office that late morning was The Command Chaplain. As in, a full-bird Colonel, but he’s a Chaplain, and like most, very affable despite our rank disparity.

    I knocked, and with a big smile he welcomed me into his office.  I gave him the elevator speech about my cancer, the holiday, and that I needed to find a Catholic Chaplain by close of business (COB) today.

    Understanding the serendipity of this encounter, COL Chaplain went to work tracking down a Catholic Chaplain. About an hour later I get a text from an unsaved number:

    “Kyle, this is Father Houseman, COL Chaplain sent me your number. I’m sorry to hear about your cancer! What times work best to meet?”

    God may not always be responsive, but his staff sure is. We worked out a time to meet that afternoon to perform the blessing at the Main Post Chapel.

    Something God’s staff also does particularly well is physical security. Every fucking door on that chapel was locked at 1630. I found a door that was open in the office wing of the chapel, however, and roamed the halls of the empty wing of God’s cubicle farm before finding the main hall with the rows of pews, pulpit, altar, the whole shebang.  It was eerily quiet. I expected my presence would draw out Arnold Scwarzenegger like it was the last scene from End of Days.

    See, I’ve always, at best, had a rocky relationship with the almighty. Unknowable things have never really sat right with me and I always treated the religion with a high degree of suspicion. Like, if this dude really exists why doesn’t he show himself? What is he hiding? What’s he have to lose by making it obvious to us that he exists? This skepticism has served me generally well in life, but the older I get the less other explanations previously thought more plausible by my scientific mind start to make sense. My relationship with spiritual things now can best be described as, “Hey, listen, there are a lot of things we can’t explain, will likely never be able to explain, and however you interpret that is fine so long as you aren’t infringing on the rights of others to believe what they like.” That’s how I’ve sort of found peace and balance with what some call spirituality.

    I digress. Father Houseman entered the building from… somewhere, perhaps he materialized like the nun from Blues Brothers; I’m not sure- I didn’t ask how he got in. I approached him and we got right to chatting. One of the first things I noticed was his age: He was incredibly young. Easily ten years my junior. It was sort of odd calling this man Father, but I understood the assignment.

    He pulled out the candles, the appropriate literature, and uniform items needed to make St. Blaise’s throat blessing a “Go” at this station. We got down to business and he instructed me on when I needed to speak and what I needed to say. He completed the ritual and we chatted some more. I walked out of the chapel feeling like I did one of the few things I could do without the help of a doctor to fight this thing: I enlisted the entire might of the Roman Catholic church through St. Brigid and St. Blaise. Fuck yeah, winning.

    ============

    The Tube.

    Continuing from the end of the last entry, MAJ Rafferty wasn’t quite done grinding my view of the phrase “quality of life” into dust by explaining the back-end of long term consequences of the chemo & radiation tag team.

    “So, because we don’t like to operate on you while you’re being treated due to the risk of bleeding, we’re recommending you get your chemo port and feeding tube placed immediately,” he said, looking at me to gauge my response.

    My. WHAT?

    Because my throat is going to turn into a fiery red hellscape of pain and misery, they were concerned I’d stop being able to eat by mouth and lose a tremendous amount of weight, an unhealthy, dangerous amount that would significantly lengthen recovery. A feeding tube, pre-installed, would nip this in the bud by cutting out the middleman (my mouth/throat) and giving me life while simultaneously destroying my will to live, because if you are 38 years old with a feeding tube, the plan you had for your life has gone horribly wrong.

    They explained the feeding tube was only temporary, probably, and I’d be able to get it removed early in recovery if I managed to maintain my weight through and after treatment.

    Alright boys, fucking bet, challenge accepted. Feeding tube is up there with a colostomy bag on the checklist of shit-gone-wrong that would cause me to volunteer for the Ukrainian Army. I will maintain my weight so hard.

    I walked out of that meeting with a parade of referrals to schedule, and a horrifying outlook on life. Life before, during, and after treatment was going to be radically different and I had four days to live my best life.

    I spent three hours of that time wandering around the hospital scheduling referrals. See, when you are an active duty cancer patient, appointment hotlines and long wait times don’t exist. You can walk into any office, announce you have cancer, and shit all over the plebs with routine illnesses. You’re the king shit of hospital mountain. It was so backwards from anything I’ve experienced with medical scheduling in my entire military career up to this point, and it was glorious.

    I went back to the office after that because my coworkers had, to my complete pretend-surprise, barfed Party City all over my desk and coaxed me back into the office long enough to sing happy birthday to me and feed me cake. I don’t even like cake or most baked goods, but it’s bulking season, remember? They’re good people, so I played my part with a smile, even though my soul had been absolutely dismantled that morning after the Tumor Board.

    Oh yeah, I forgot to mention. My birthday was also that weekend. Whoo, party. #lastbirthday?

    ============

    Like a sheet of glass.

    After leaving the office party, I hit the road to get my kids. I travel about 700 miles per week, almost every week, to get them from their mother in Oregon. Why this is the arrangement is for another day, but we tolerate it pretty well, so it is what it is for now.

    My tube and port installation was scheduled for the following Tuesday morning, 11 February, so I knew this would be the last of the fully-normal Dad time they’d be getting. 

    As I drove down Friday I spoke with my mom on the phone, who is another hero of this story up to this point. She said she was coming out to take care of me and help with the kids during my treatment, the only question was when she was coming out.  We deliberated and decided it would be best if she flew in on Sunday or Monday so she could join me for the installation, recovery, and battery of pre-treatment appointments leading up to that time. She booked a one way flight to Portland on Sunday evening so I could get her on my way back to Washington.

    The kids were still blissfully unaware of anything at this point, not dads illness, not grandma spending a few months with him, nothing. At the time of this writing, they still don’t, but that time is quickly approaching.

    I was able to get them an hour earlier than normal so we got home in time to do their normal bedtime routine and prepare for the next day. On Saturdays my daughter has hockey, so we woke up and went out to that as we always do.

    By this point the word was out to my extended circles. I was wrangling my toddler son, talking with friends about my condition, and watching my daughter play (watching her skate out there is the joy of my life). I was starting to experience some fatigue talking about it again, for what felt like the 50th time in two days, so I started to isolate myself in the corner of the rink to watch my daughter. 

    Curiosity and concern are very natural human conditions, so I don’t blame the people close to me for wanting to know more, but it does get taxing having to have these conversations over and over again after having just lived them. Now I live in this weird space of, “how can I show this person I appreciate their concern without having to make this stump speech again?”

    After getting home my daughter baked some cookies, as has sort of been a little tradition of ours every few weeks, and we played the tic-tac-toe bean bag toss game in the living room. Some friends of ours hosted us for an hour or so that afternoon so I could get the kids some outside-the-house social interaction, and since these friends had already heard the cancer spiel and knew I wouldn’t talk about it in front of the kids, I knew that was a space of time I was safe from having to think too much about it.

    Me and the ex agreed to meet outside PDX at a later time so the kids could see Grandma for a little bit and I’d be able to spend some quality time with them on a Sunday at my place beforehand. See, Sundays are normally a, “ok, get up, eat, get ready, go somewhere like a playground for an hour or two, then hit the road by lunch” routine, so it was nice to be able to relax and eat lunch at our house here before getting on the road.

    The kids were elated to see Grandma for the first time since the summer, when she stayed with us for two weeks to help me not have to find childcare for my block of summer break visitation. We wandered around the Target right outside PDX for almost an hour waiting for their mom and it was relatively stress free- it was Super Bowl Sunday and Target was a ghost town. I could let them run wild in the store and not be that parent because there was simply no one else there to be bothered by it.

    I knew I had less than 48 hours of freedom when we returned to my house on Sunday evening, and I intended to do the one thing I knew I’d miss doing the most: play hockey.  I found that my local rink would be having a “stick and puck” (open skate specifically for hockey players) session Monday morning and I hit up my team’s group chat asking who was in for the “last skate” before I started treatment. In reality this will likely have been my last skate until well after recovery begins due to the ramifications of this specific treatment regimen.

    Monday morning rolled around and I drank my last cup of coffee for a few days, grabbed my bag, my sticks, and went to the rink. Four of my teammates showed up and something fantastic happened: No one else was there. We had the whole sheet to ourselves. What’s more, the rink staff actually cut the ice the night prior. It was smooth as glass and ready to be carved up. No divots, no cracks, no grooves in sight.

    Me and the boys dumped a crate of pucks and began fucking around with skating, shooting, handling, and eventually they started to indulge me by letting me 1 v 1 and 3 v 2 them on defense (I primarily play defense). It was going to be the best hour of my week, which sounds great… but the week had just started.

    The views and opinions presented herein are those of the author and do not necessarily represent the views of the Department of Defense or the U.S. Army.