Make Room

When my daughter was a toddler, at Montessori school, she learned many important life skills. Lately, I’m reminded of one in particular.

It is the ability to “make room.”

When the children would crowd up trying to see something, start a new activity, or gather around a snack table, one child might be behind the others, trying to get in, but blocked or pushed aside. “Let’s make room for our friend,” the teacher would gently say, and the little group would part to include the new person.

The lesson wasn’t shaming, as early childhood lessons can sometimes be, depending on who is delivering it. This cue was gentle – a reminder that the space was not fixed or rigid. Everyone could fit if there was willingness and flexibility. Nobody had to be left out.

Make room.

This is not a phrase I grew up knowing. I grew up in a competitive, achievement oriented environment that did not value vulnerability.

There were no adults gently saying “make room.” It was more like “You snooze, you lose!” “No pain, no gain,” “Finders keepers,” and, well, you know the rest.

Of course, focusing on a goal inspires action and toughness and hard work.

But the gentleness of making room for others is such a tender practice for me to learn with my daughter. Anytime I say it to a child, they do it with grace and eagerness. It acknowledges the legitimacy and right of everyone to participate. It grants the choice to be generous and inclusive.

Making room is also an important part of healing emotionally and physically from the effects of cancer and cancer treatment.   People struggle tremendously with so-called “negative” emotions – anger, pain, loss, fear, grief, and often are convinced that it they allow a “negative” thought, feeling, or sensation to have space at the table of awareness, it will take over and destroy everything.

We squelch these feelings because they are uncomfortable or painful.  But you simply cannot outrun (or out squelch) yourself and your experiences forever, as much as many of us would like to be able to do!

I’ll admit it. I’m on a mission to encourage people to begin to make room inside themselves for their feelings, instead of attempting to repress, deny or escape them.

Imagine there is room for everything to be present. Don’t feel like you have to push anything away. Imagine that your thoughts and feelings have the right to be here with you, whatever they are, part of your human experience.

Take a few long deep breaths.

 Have the intention of spending a few moments observing and allowing the feeling to be present, just one of the crowd of thoughts and feelings. Experiment with not pushing it away for a few moments.

It’s a simple, subtle, practice, this making room inside yourself.  Simple, but not easy.  Eventually the goal is to befriend the difficult sensation, thought or emotion, so that it’s not an enemy at the gate.

But you don’t have to move so quickly.

You can begin by entertaining the idea of generously making room at the table to include a more vulnerable part of yourself, just as the children make way to include a new friend.

 

 

 

We Have a Beautiful Mother

We have a beautiful mother

Her hills

are buffaloes

her buffaloes

hills.

 

We have a beautiful

mother

Her oceans

are wombs

Her wombs

oceans.

 

We have a beautiful

mother

Her teeth

the white stones

at the edge

of the water

the summer

grasses

her plentiful

hair.

 

We have a beautiful

mother

Her green lap

immense

Her brown embrace

eternal

Her blue body

everything

we know.

 

Alice Walker

Reality Check

Lauren is 65 years young, a beautiful woman with soft medium length curls and a keen wit and intelligence.

Recently, she was diagnosed with lung cancer and prescribed a radiation treatment. A few days after it was complete, she noticed a large bruise forming exactly where the radiation was administered. Growing concerned, she called her oncologist’s office and was told by the woman answering the phone that it was unrelated to the radiation, that this was not a side effect. When she was recounting this to her group of friends, the cancer survivors in the group were appalled. What?!  How could it be unrelated when it had never before occurred and was happening right at the site of recent radiation?

All of us could relate and perhaps you can too. At the end of chemo, I was told by an oncologist, substituting for my regular doctor, that the falling away of my fingernails and toenails was unrelated to the chemo. She said it was probably a skin condition. Later, I heard from countless people that this was a normal and expected side effect of chemo.

Mistakes happen. There may be times that professionals, as well as friends and family, are unknowingly misattuned to what you are experiencing, both physically or emotionally.

But what’s most important is that you do not accept the dismissal. You should not dismiss your own concerns, your needs, your questions, your feelings, and you shouldn’t stop until you get a clear answer and understanding.

You know your body better than anyone and your intuition is important. Being dismissed out of hand is what others might do to you, but what you should never be content to do to yourself.

It’s one of the first principles I’m writing about for my upcoming online course Healing Well: Reconnecting with Your Life After Cancer.

Be unafraid to see reality and work with others to see it too.