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James Sims

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Fighting My Mother's Cancer With Text Messages

Posted: 05/21/2012 8:21 am

Empathy is a strange emotional trait. I had been successful in my avoidance of any deep empathetic feelings towards another person for nearly 30 years. Sure, there were moments of misty eyes when hearing of a tragic story, but nothing that gutted me to the core. That all changed last year. My mother -- a woman that had battled three bouts of cancer, mild heart attacks and a litany of abusive relationships -- phoned me from Los Angeles and announced that she had melanoma. Cancer, again? Inconceivable. I feel defeated when I contract a common cold. I'll mope around for a week, sniffling with agony, barking at our doorman for merely looking at me sideways after schlepping past him in the morning, decked out in mismatched sweats, dragging my dog to piss on the sidewalk.

My mother calls to tell me she has a fourth type of cancer. I'm pretty sure I would have given my regards to the world after the doctor told me there was even the slightest chance that I could have any type of cancer. My mother, always the fighter.

Yet, there was something in her voice, a distant sense of unease that caused a slight alarm to go off in my head as she detailed her latest plight. After all, how much misery can one person endure before finally feeling as though fighting the good fight might no longer be worth the effort? Fight a fourth round in the ring with The Big C, having already lost a few teeth from the uppercut two rounds ago and still sporting a bloodshot eye after an elbow to the head in the final minutes of the third round? Fight a fourth round with cancer. That's what, an 80:1 long shot that you'll escape the ring with your life. Cancer might as well be billed as a death cage battle. Even if you survive the brutal mauling, you'll likely be hobbling for the rest of your life.

There she was, living alone in Los Angeles, calling me in New York City. Nearly six hours away by plane, asking me to provide a shoulder to cry on. A distinctive ring rattled me out of a trance I had been put under by the random episode of Law & Order on the television.

Right as a judge's gavel pounded on the screen, my mother's ringtone blurted out of my phone. Thank god -- a reason to turn away from the blur of a court scene. Grabbing the phone, I paused for a brief moment, forcing a smile onto my face, breathing deeply three or four times, mustering up all of the energy required to put on my usual enthusiastic mask. It was a tone developed years ago, when I was in the military. When a mother calls her enlisted son during a time of war -- I never actually served in combat, but had the pleasure of wearing a uniform throughout the aftermath of 9-11 -- it is a requirement to force a smile, if only for her comfort. It was now a tone that I used whenever talking with my mother, never wanting to worry her about my living on the other side of the country, away from all signs of a family, save for my wife.

"Hey there. How are you?" I asked with my eye wandering back towards the television set. Even though I had surely seen this Law & Order episode, I didn't want to miss the look of defeat on the criminal's face when a Matlock moment occurred. Note to self, never pay with a credit card when buying supplies for a murder.

"Hey," she said, trailing off into some pointless small talk, utilizing that same masked tone I was attempting to employ on her.

Alas, a bull shitter can always spot a fellow bull shitter. It must have been the faint sound of a lump growing in her throat, causing the slightest tightness in her breath, that clued me in on there being another reason for this Saturday afternoon call. It didn't take long for her to start crying. Tears. Typically, that would have been my cue for feigning a sense of empathy.

"Stop, stop, stop," I rapidly said, attempting to manage the situation, which by that time, I realized was quickly going to become a gut punch of some sort.

The last time I remembered hearing my mother in a hysterical state over the phone was the day that her sister died. My aunt was never one that had gotten close to me. In fact, none of my mother's family had made much of an impact on my life, mostly because we grew up in different states. Pam had died of cancer only months earlier. And, less than a year before that, their mother died. Obviously, my mother couldn't ignore the cards stacked up against her.

"I'm pretty sick." She was able to confront this truth in a brief moment of strength, shutting off the tears just long enough for the reality of her situation to knock me over the head. It felt like I was in the ring with her, failing to move as a punch below the belt crashed into me. She was scared. Seriously scared. And I had no idea how to react.

Over the course of the next few months, we developed a routine of daily phone calls and plenty of sobering text messages.

"I love you. Was just thinking how hard my fight has been and how tired I am and that the body doesn't seem to want to cooperate these days. But then I thought about you and it gives me a shot of will power to keep going."

"I am just so tired of being sick and tired and hurting. Need a break somewhere."


"I am feeling a little better today so all good here."


"I hate life it sucks. No valentines and chemo for a present. I hate my life."


"Life sucks."


"Not up to talking very sick today but I am home dying and will call later love you."


Who knew a few characters of data transmitted over an iPhone could carry such weight? Her text messages became a roller coaster of emotions, sometimes rallying for a day or two with happiness, but often digressing to moments of darkness. I could track her health by monitoring the time of day a text message came in.

After a few weeks of struggling through chemotherapy, she texted me a photo of her bald head. She had lost her hair before, after going through this same treatment a few years earlier for breast cancer. I had foolishly hoped that her previous battles somehow prepared her for another round of poison being injected into her veins. Impossible.

Seeing that bald digital photograph, her eyes still puffy from an hour of crying after losing part of her feminine identity, simply put me over the edge. Years of pretending I could manage any empathetic feelings bubbling up inside of me, was all in vain. I immediately tried phoning her. She wasn't answering.

Tears started drowning my eyes. Were it not for my loving wife comforting this 30-year-old emotional newbie, I'm not sure how I would have managed to think rationally. And I needed that rational thinking to kick in, as I had to plan an emergency trip out to Los Angeles. I had spent far too much time exploring a mother-son relationship over a cellphone and via email. Face time was now crucial, and it seemed to give her that much-needed boost of energy for the remaining few rounds in the ring with The Big C.

"Just so you know your visit gave me new strength to get through today."


When I returned to New York, struggling to balance work and a newlywed lifestyle with my mother's ongoing struggles in Los Angeles, I resorted to text messages. Reading her unfiltered and sometimes typo-ridden messages helped me feel connected, despite the physical distance. I imagine she found this type of correspondence as a release. I would pass no judgment while reading her darkest thoughts. Distance made it possible for her to be candid -- therapy in the 21st century.

"I am so cold and hurt so much they will be stopping treatment and I will be going home today. We will continue tomorrow if I can."


"Hey there you won't believe it but this shit is now causing chest pain had to call doctor for that now. Damn it."


After failing to show any signs of response to radiation, my mother's doctor decided to put her back on aggressive chemotherapy. I would read through her text messages, sometimes sent while she is undergoing treatment, imagining a commentator like Howard Cosell narrating the action.

"Here's round four. Sims has taken this kind of punishment before. She's desperately trying to get to her feet. It's hard to see how Sims can last. The Big C is just pummeling her."

With her current round of treatment over, she has found the energy to visit her son in New York, not only for an emotional booster shot, but as a means to escape reality.

My mother is truly the ultimate fighter. There's no telling if Cosell might break in and holler: "Down goes Sims. Down goes Sims. Down goes Sims." But, even if she falls, I have to believe that she'll ultimately walk away from the battle. One last scar to prove her prowess. Hopefully, this will be her last round in the ring. Hopefully, she can finally hang up her gloves, not out of defeat, but through retirement. Retire from the treacherous battle that is cancer. She certainly deserves it. Until that time, I'll continue ending my nights by sending the same text message:

"I love you, mom."

For more by James Sims, click here.

For more on cancer, click here.

 

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Empathy is a strange emotional trait. I had been successful in my avoidance of any deep empathetic feelings towards another person for nearly 30 years. Sure, there were moments of misty eyes when hear...
Empathy is a strange emotional trait. I had been successful in my avoidance of any deep empathetic feelings towards another person for nearly 30 years. Sure, there were moments of misty eyes when hear...
 
 
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06:07 AM on 07/10/2012
Not to be sexist but I think the lack of empathy and defense mechanism is mostly a guy thing. It is socially acceptable for a woman to cry and share her feelings, whereas not so much for a man. I disagree because if you don't address your feelings of sadness at the time and take it out as destructive behaviour, i.e. drinking, fast driving, etc, then it will bite you in the butt years down the road. My mom has stage 4 brain lymphoma and everyday I am sad. Just because I get dressed and plaster a smile on my face at work, doesn't mean I am over it. My boyfriend has no idea and thinks that things are all fine and dandy. Both his parents are alive and well and he has never experienced loss of a parent. I lost my dad to cancer when I was 19 so I had to face that kind of loss head on since then. My boyfriend saw his fiance of 7 years get hit by car and get killed, but he didn't really address the pain and didn't have therapy, but more or less drank away the pain. He is compassionate at times about my mom, but then has no clue of the stress and sadness that I am under. I hate to say, but he will only experience empathy once his parents are deceased and then all the suppressed feelings of his fiance will come back too. God Bless your mom.
06:17 PM on 06/05/2012
I will read back my mother's messages one day... for now though I can't check them for similarity as she died in May 2011; after a year spent 'in the ring' with cancer. I want to read her but haven't yet found the strength... your writing moves me closer to this, thank you x
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SionShankel
My opinons are all done sans pants
02:56 PM on 05/25/2012
Wow, thanks for this article. Doing this with text messages with a close friend now!
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takeachance42
"What is left when honor is lost?" — Publilius S
06:54 PM on 05/24/2012
All I can say is her strength gives me hope! Cancer attacks so many of us....
06:48 PM on 05/24/2012
I can relate to what you are saying. I lost my sister-in-law to cancer. It started as breast cancer and left and returned 3 additional times, but brain cancer is what ended her battle. She fought until the end. I read her text messages daily and like you said, you can notice the up and down days. But before she stopped talking completely, the memory of me walking out of her hospital room and telling her I love her and her mustering up enough strength to say she loved me back will be forever in my heart and my mind. She was such a good woman, wife, mother and friend. With radiation and chemotherapy, she still had a smile on her face and did everyday activities even with the odds against her and being told she wouldn't be able to do it. Love your mother and tell her as much as possible. Cancer sucks! It is really wiping out so many people. It is like an epidemic!
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wickedtwisted2
get a clue, get a life
05:43 PM on 05/24/2012
Until you have been through it, understanding the impact of suffering... is difficult. Especially if someone is suffering from pain. The person may LOOK fine, appear okay... but be suffering levels of pain that are unexplainable in words. I learned this the hard way. You WILL develope empathy as a result, but it is a hard way to learn it. I think this is part of what is wrong with our culture. Empathy CAN BE TAUGHT and SHOULD BE TAUGHT at a VERY EARLY AGE. It will make us better people, better citizens, and a better nation. There is something about empathy that creates compassion and if you have empathy and compassion, it is difficult to be cruel. And so many of our so called leaders and heads of business suffer from this lack of empathy and compassion, to the distinct lessening of America. Dare I say that having empathy and compassion can lead you to belief in a higher being? And... oh, another lesson we can draw from this story... KEEP IN TOUCH... reaching out to family and friends IS what makes relationships.
05:42 PM on 05/24/2012
an old saying: A mother can care for seven sons, but seven sons can't take care of one mother.
05:19 PM on 05/24/2012
Your mother is a trooper. Not many people choose to go on after having gone through so much and what this tells me is that she has faith. God says in Matthew 17:20 that “With faith the size of a mustard seed you can move mountains." She also has you.

You, mother and your family are in my prayers. I hope you'll keep us posted on her progress and write again so you too can get a boost of support here.
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05:04 PM on 05/24/2012
Hmm... well, everyone has hardship and tragedy in life- it's a given. Some more or less than others and some hardly any at all. I'm MORE concerned with the writer stating as IF it's actually a good thing how for 30 years, 3 decades they had managed to NOT feel empathy for anyone- really... sounds like issues and could be part of the mommy's problem- if you can NOT even care about others or FEEL for them and comprehend their situation, especially your own mom, or others- makes one pretty selfish, cold and downright uncaring. Must be GREAT being in a relationship with someone like that- FAIL! Work on the empathy for damn sure- do it before your mom dies and SHOW IT, not see it as a weakness.
05:38 PM on 05/24/2012
I actually felt a connection with him from that moment in his post because I was the same way my whole life until I was 32 back in 2001 and I think it's only because I couldn't relate to someone losing a loved one. Even when I was 17 and my best friend died I felt only a little sadness. But in 2001, when my Dad left, my whole world fell apart and I finally grieved for my best friend who had died 14 years prior. To this day it's nothing for me to feel the crushing nearly immobilizing sorrow over my Dad.

I don't think that my lack of empathy was so much of a selfish thing as it was a coping mechanism. When someone would come to me to share news of a death of a loved one, I must have felt it my duty to be strong for them so I never cried. Now, I listen intently with compassion while figuring out what they need from me ... to cry with them, be strong for them and give them encouragement, to stay quiet and just listen or to tell them a quirky joke to make them chuckle. To have empathy means to have an emotional connection through a likewise experience. I have that now.
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07:48 PM on 05/24/2012
Yeah, it happens to people in tragedies- but when you ARE aware you are a way that is detrimental- not only to yourself, but others- because for whatever reason you are NOT acknowledging stuff or in/from others- you hurt yourself just as much. The selfish bit is in you do know, but continue to stay a way you know isn't good. All people deal with things on their own and in their own way. I gave my take on what I read and how it came across- and you could get 500 other takes from 500 others, you know. Empathy is a good thing- it's a feeling and it's an emotion and it's a character trait to a personality- some people will NEVER have it and know that or don't realize it and some just never care or question it.
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barbarahoward49
08:55 PM on 05/24/2012
I lost my father in a midair collision when I was just 8, so sadly, I learned empathy very young. (I also learned fear of loss.) My kids never really suffered a loss until they were in their thirties, and frankly, as their mother, I'm glad they didn't. Empathy? Yes, I think they all had it before, but when their father died of a horrible wasting disease, all three of them said that before then, they really couldn't know how it hurts to lose someone so important. I don't think it's lack of empathy so much as inability to really grasp the gravity of such loss. And still, I wish they didn't know it, and that their father were here beside me tonight.
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Morgan378
04:41 PM on 05/24/2012
Well Mr. Sims,..Dear Jim, - no matter the difficulty with or ability to put aside empathy before, there are times - whether we even truly understand another's source of pain or the actual pain - we find it comes more naturally in time and that the special people in our lives find it comforting and take strength from it. Your Mom is facing this ghastly concretion of cells in forms we name cancer. Not every one instance is quite the same as the last one - especially with #4. That your Mother sends you these texts shows - as you see too - that she's not down and out yet. But, I imagine more "when is this ever going to end" and "can I do this again?". You're helping her through. Perhaps more than you have before. And telling her that you love her gives her that understanding and "empathic" belief that you're in this fight with her more than ever. My Best to you and your Mom - "Eye of the Tiger!"
04:33 PM on 05/24/2012
Your mom deserves a medal. What a fighter. I hope that she is successfull in her battle against cancer. Your article was very well written and touching.
03:58 PM on 05/24/2012
I won over 2 battles with cancer many years ago. My mom was always with me whether it was in person or just over the phone. having support is the best weapon against cancer and I will always treasure each and every moment with my parents. it sounds like this lady has a very strong will to survive and I wish her and her family the best of luck.
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musicmasterno1
Euthanize the dogfighter, not the dog.....
05:34 PM on 05/24/2012
A big fat Congrats to you! ;-)
03:52 PM on 05/24/2012
Just finished my own bout and my son was my bulwark. Guess I qualify as a survivor for now--everyone seems optimistic, but you know how that goes. I am tearing up, praying and cheering for this lady--sure stops any complaining I have about one bout.
05:11 PM on 05/24/2012
I'm praying for you cp8967 and please celebrate. They say that optimism is very powerful because it boosts our immune system so keep your chin up!
09:36 PM on 05/24/2012
Thank you, dear. I am 83 years old, so the Lord does not owe me anything. lol I am ready for whatever and am happy and keeping optimistic.
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bmitche
03:16 PM on 05/24/2012
Don't write her off just yet. Where there is life there is hope.
03:08 PM on 05/24/2012
Great story and written wonderfully. Cried my eyes out and I haven't experienced cancer in my family or my life. You are so good at story telling.