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Posts Tagged ‘steroids side effects’

Third Game Plan

Marty Linsky is unimpressed with my ambition to join Donald Trump on The Apprentice and his slightly raised eyebrows indicate only marginal amusement with my stand-up comedy endeavors.  I had not planned to tell him about either during our informational interview, but now, over coffee in the Portland International Jetport, I seem unable to stop talking.

We had arranged for me to pick Marty up at the end of his training engagement and drive him here before his flight home to New York.   Since the moment he climbed into the passenger seat of my Jetta wagon, I have talked nonstop.  I blurted about adaptive leadership, the connections I saw with my consulting.  “I am a fish who has found my ocean!” I gushed. “Adaptive leadership is a perfect framework for all the diversity work I have done!”

I downloaded my entire career.  Domestic violence work to United Way to domestic violence again.  A stint with public radio and television before working for an AIDS organization.  Preaching the gospel of condom use across Maine.  A graduate degree in social work and building a nonprofit organization for gay youth.  By the time we stood at the American Airlines ticket counter, he had heard how the gay youth organization became the foundation of my organizational development consulting.  As we slid upstairs on the escalator to the coffee-deli bar,  Marty heard about my favorite consulting gigs – the seven weeks in Micronesia (they honored me with a pig roast when I left) and the four years with a college athletic department (Ramona has a lot of great sweatshirts now).  Somehow, I had refrained from actually tugging on his coat sleeve like a five-year old child and shouting “Notice me! Notice me!”

Now, sitting over coffee, I am telling Marty about The Apprentice and comedy classes.

The point of an informational interview is lost.  Marty should be the one speaking.  I should be the one listening.  Somehow, I know it’s the steroids. But I am powerless over my mouth.  I am beginning to suspect, but no one has told me, that steroids cause the equivalent of a manic PMS.   When I had a functioning uterus, I could count on every frustration or sadness being magnified for one week each month.  Big tears, big sadness, emanating from a real, but small kernel of disappointment.  Each month provided a hormonally-induced opportunity to examine and accept or discard what the kernel could reveal. Talking at Marty, I feel the sinking awareness that this steroid-induced mania is right this moment magnifying an anxious insecurity way larger than a mere kernel.

Marty listens patiently to everything.  His bright blue eyes, unnerving behind his spectacles, miss nothing.  He manages to convey detached yet empathetic interest.  He is intrigued by my culture change work with the college athletic department, so he asks questions about that.  I confess the crux of my call to him.  That consulting was fun at first – it  paid the bills and no one was getting beaten, thrown out of their homes, or dying.  I was good at it.  Competent.  “But now I’m bored.  I’m looking for more. Competence is not passion.”

An airport worker, in his fifties or so, approaches our table.  I finally stop talking.  “I noticed your ‘CHEMO BITES’ button,” he says awkwardly.  “May I ask what kind of cancer?”  My hand reaches up to my hat, fingers brush the button.  I’m so used to it already that I forgot it was up there.  I look at Marty, who smiles at me and sits back in his chair, interested in the exchange.  “Ovarian cancer,” I tell the man, “but my prognosis is excellent.  I should be fine.”  I always add the I should be fine. Ovarian cancer is a heart stopper and I don’t want people feeling more concern for me than they need to.  It’s hard to witness, over and over again.  His eyes well up anyway. “Really,” I assure him.

“My sister died of that,” the he shares.  “She suffered for years. She’d have liked that button.  God bless you.”  I reach into my coat and pull out an extra button for him.  Wonder if I should stand up and hug him or not, then choose to shake his hand from my sitting position instead.

“Does that happen often?” Marty asks after the man leaves us.

“All the time.”  My life is out of control, I want to say. I am supposed to be having a coffee about my career and instead I am comforting the bereaved and passing out CHEMO BITES buttons.  Instead I am being a good-cancer-soldier with a plucky, survivor attitude.  Instead I am nattering on about The Apprentice and stand-up comedy when I want to be, oh I don’t know, something different and better than this!   That’s why I called you!

I drink my coffee.  I’ve talked enough already.  I feel overexposed.

Marty returns the conversation to our work lives.  He has listened (what else could he do for the last forty-five minutes?) and informs me that his current career began in his forties.  He reminds me I am still young, there’s still time to explore and find meaningful success.  He tells me about the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University and outlines their MidCareer Program.   It would be a good fit, he says, for where I am right now. Two hundred middle-aged students from all over the world, all on a path to discover what’s next, who enroll for a year to earn a Masters in Public Administration.  A degree they don’t necessarily need.  Just like me, many of the students already have advanced degrees.  It’s not the courses, he emphasizes, but the people and the connections and, literally, the world of opportunities that being in the program opens up.  It’s life changing.  Plus, he adds, as if life changing hasn’t caught my attention, there is more opportunity to study adaptive leadership.  Marty tells me I should really think about it.

After our coffee, when Marty gets on his plane back to New York, I think about it a lot.

© 2011 Cathy Kidman

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First Bra

The decision to get a bra was cinched on Friday night when Stacy London and Clinton Kelly, the hosts of TLC’s What Not To Wear, my favorite television fashion make-over show, told me that “lifting the girls” with the correct size bra will hide (or at least minimize) the tummy bulge.  Most weeks, the show features a fashion challenged woman whose body looks like mine.  Lumpy.  Maybe her increased breast size and lumps weren’t steroid-induced like mine, but we share the same beauty aspirations.  By the end of each show, these CEO-teacher-barista-artist-actor-moms are confident and sassy, “girls” raised and unfortunate belly roll disguised. I peek down at my new breasts and the belly supporting them.  It’s time to “lift the girls.”

Since middle school, I have worn tanks and cotton tees, my miniscule breasts blissfully unaware of the bound existence endured by other breasts on other women.  This freedom came with occasional complications.

In high school, I flipped burgers on the back grill at the local McDonald’s.   All the other girls worked the front counter, their hair and make up perfect for the customers, but I was out back with the guys, battling french fry grease and sprouting acne.  I think I was a gender experiment, because other than me, there was no mixing of gender roles.  Girls out front, guys out back, and all the managers were men.

Employees wore thick blue polyester uniforms, wrinkle-free and indestructible. The guys’ tunics sported a half zipper, flat fronts and clean lines.  The girls’ tunics zipped up the front and were shaped to fit a womanly form, seams parallel to the zipper in order to accommodate breasts.

Several times each day, I trudged to the meat cooler, hefted a twenty-five pound box of frozen burgers up to my chest, and lugged it out to the grill area.  I’d look around to see if anyone in the small kitchen space was watching before I dropped the box on the stainless steel counter, revealing the crushed inverted seams of my tunic. I’d rush to pluck the seams back out before one of the guys noticed.  It was an impossible routine to keep private for long.

“Hey Cath, whatcha doin’?”

“Pluckin’ out my breasts, Jeff.”

“Cool.”

I begged the head manager, an eager company man in his early twenties, for one of the guys’ tunics.  I even demonstrated the inverted seams and pluck.

“No can do, Cathy, that’s not possible.  Guys wear guys’ uniforms and girls wear girls’.  Those are the rules.”

After awhile, I stopped plucking.

Twenty years later, I lived and worked by different rules. So I was prepared when Casey, profanities flowing, slammed through the office door Portland’s gay youth organization, seeking assistance from me, the Executive Director.

Casey could have been the fashionable high school girl from any teen television series – tight jeans, platform heels, expert makeup, styled hair.  Snug shirt across full breasts. Six feet, two inches of gorgeous emerging womanhood.  Pissed-off womanhood.

Except Casey was a boy.  Or at least the body was.  What pronoun to use remained unclear.

“The principal kicked me out of school – she said ‘my breasts are a distraction’.” Casey emphasized with air quotes.  Then paused, forehead and eyes wrinkled with thought, and gestured with French tipped nails to the offending breasts. Said with unblinking sincerity, “I think it’s the stripes. Stripes make breasts look bigger.”

I laughed out loud. I couldn’t help it. “Casey, I could wear that shirt and I wouldn’t look like that.”

We both looked down. Clinically observed the area of my chest where we both knew my breasts were hiding.

“It’s not the stripes,” I gently said.

“No,” Casey exhaled the solemn syllable, head tilted in consideration, “I guess it’s not the stripes.”  A moment of silence followed. “It may be time for smaller boobs.”

Now at forty years old, I stand shirtless in the apricot fitting room of JC Penney, being measured for my first real bra by an older than retirement age saleswoman who was quite patient the first two times I inquired, “Okay, tell me again how you decide what size is the right size?”

Intrigued by this elderly saleswoman, I wonder what this experience is like for her.  In the fitting room, hat off, my bald head is exposed.  Shirt off, my stomach bandage is front and center. She can’t look up and she can’t look down.  She is focused like a laser on my chest and her measuring tape, which she lays with precision across my nipples.  This efficient, white haired woman sees an awful lot of nipples in a day.

In the midst of the measuring, I burst into flames.  A hot flash begins at the back of my throat, fast and scorching, like a struck match in a tight space. In nanoseconds, the fire has surged through my body, an over-efficient furnace in a small house.  My eyes go wide as my ears start flaming.  Perspiration drops turn to rivers of rolling sweat, dripping down my hairless scalp, my back, and between my now present breasts.  At this, the saleswoman looks up, meets my eyes.

“Hot flash,” I explain as I reach around her to grasp the bottle of water, the only permanent accessory I carry.  “Happens when I’m stressed.”  Happens when I’m eating, sleeping, or breathing, too, but she doesn’t need to know that this is an every twenty minutes occurrence that I am trying to figure my life around, just like I’m trying to figure my life around the idea that I used to go braless but now I have breasts and I used to have cancer but now I have chemo and menopause.

Measurements complete, we take a break so I can mop up before we select some bras.  I’m a buxom 34B.  I already miss my flat chest.

At least the tummy bulge will be disguised.

© 2010 Cathy Kidman

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Steroids

Everybody talks about chemo. Nobody talks about the steroids.  I was prepared for nausea, hair loss, and constipation.  I was not prepared for raging, homicidal hunger, manic decision-making, or outsized courage.

After my second treatment cycle, the steroids hit my veins.  Pizza-Hut on speed dial.  Pop and bake Pillsbury cinnamon rolls lining the inside refrigerator shelf. I crave meat.  Ramona and I are frequently seen at restaurants around Portland, Ramona dining on a salad and me devouring oversized, redder than medium rare hamburgers.

If it were only food that steroids affected, I might not have found comedy.

A three week span interrupts the chemotherapy treatments.  I am not working.  Hard to ask clients to hire a bald headed consultant who is functioning at less than full capacity.  I turn my attention to television.  It isn’t hard.  Even before cancer, I could spend days on my big purple couch watching Law and Order or sci-fi marathons.

I become addicted to reality TV.  My neighbor, Mary, comes over each Tuesday and watches American Idol.  If she feels like staying home one week, she calls over and we stay on the phone commenting through the show.  “Oooohhh, she needs to stop singing now.  That’s horrible!” “Is Paula high?  She looks high.”  “Simon is an ass.”  Sometimes we realize we have not spoken at all, because we are caught in the unexpected moment of a song well sung.

On Thursdays, I watch The Apprentice, Donald Trump’s show in which remarkably untalented business people (all in their twenties and thirties) battle each other for the chance to work for The Donald.  Week after week, I watch as The Donald dismisses one inept contestant after another.  “Your fired!” he declares to the contestants who can’t run a lemonade stand, or can’t play well with others, or can’t raise money for a cause. They are pathetic.

My path is clear.  I can win this show.

The show needs a forty-year old lesbian cancer survivor former nonprofit executive director consultant and social worker. I am a missing demographic.  I download the audition materials and pour through them.  There is no clause prohibiting forty-year old lesbian cancer surviving former nonprofit executive directors, consultants, and social workers.  The stars are aligning.  I look at the dates for the New York and California auditions, thinking that, of course, New York would be easier, but people are nicer to Mainers in California and I will seem more exotic.  I look closer at the dates.  Pull out my calendar, horror settling in.  I calculate and recalculate but no matter how I work the schedule, I will not be finished with my chemo treatments before any of the audition dates.

I am pissed.  God has thwarted me in so many ways.   It is not fair.  I have worked for this opportunity, this moment.

I call my partner Ramona at work.  “The auditions for The Apprentice all happen before I finish chemo! This season is out of the question.  And there may not even be a next season!”

There is a small pause on the other end of the phone.  “That must be really disappointing, hunny bunny.” Another minute pause. “What time is your therapy appointment today?”

The Apprentice defeat has blown all else out of my mind.  I look at the clock, it’s 12:15 pm. The appointment is at 1:00. “Shit. Thanks, Ramona. I have to get ready.”

Getting ready takes very little time. There isn’t a hair ritual before going out and wiping down a bald head takes a nanosecond.  I apply the Bare Minerals make up purchased last week after watching the infomercial six times.  It seems to air in the mornings, while I have coffee and before the first marathon episode of Law and Order Criminal Intent gets going.  The company’s founder and CEO promises my skin will look younger and healthier.  My theory: if my face looks good, the scalp is less noticeable.  As advertised, the stuff goes on quick.  I start to put on mascara and remember, “You have no eyelashes.”  I am angry about The Apprentice auditions all over again.

In the car on the way to the therapy appointment, my mind is a pin ball machine, my thoughts pinging against the ongoing barriers that are in my way to success. I could really win that show.  I’d write my memoir, go on the speaking tour.  Working for The Donald there’d be security, health benefits. Ramona wouldn’t have to work. I could support both of us.

The radio is turned to a pop music station.  Ramona must have driven the car earlier.  When I’m driving, it’s usually NPR or just silence. Reaching to change the station, my hand is stopped by the opening lines of a commercial.

“Do you think you’re funny? Do people tell you you’re funny?  You could be Portland’s Funniest Professional.”  I think, “I AM Portland’s Funniest Professional!”  This is the promotion for the annual amateur stand-up comedy contest hosted by the Comedy Connection.  I never go, but each year I am aware that it is going on.  The commercial tells me to go to the Comedy Connection and sign up.  The pinging in my head stops.

I turn the car toward Commercial Street, down to the wharf where the Comedy Connection is located across from The Harbor Fish Market, where the fishermen still bring in their daily catch and the feral cats greet the patrons.  Parking the car in front of the door, I rush in, afraid that I may be too late and other contestants got here first. Once inside, I realize I was the fastest.  The interior is dark, smells of beer and fish, and a guy in his late twenties is taking reservations by phone, behind a glass counter that could use a wiping down.  This place is glorious.  I can totally rock this.

The young man behind the counter gets off the phone.  “Are you here for tickets to a show?”  I’m here to be the show, I think, but don’t say.  I haven’t won the contest yet.

“I came to sign up for Portland’s Funniest Professional.”

“Ohh.” He does an unsubtle appraisal of me so I do too.  We both are looking at a middle aged White woman, a little bloated around the well made up face.  She’s wearing tortoise shell colored glasses, blue flannel pajama bottoms and LL Bean boots, a battered down coat, and a funky black hat that cannot hide her baldness and has a “CHEMO BITES” button pinned to it.

I’m stylin.  I look at the young man expectantly.  Let’s get this on.

“Have you done the contest before?” He seems perplexed.

“No, this is my first.”  I tell him about The Apprentice and the commercial and how I know this is what I’m supposed to be doing.  I tell him about ovarian cancer and treatment and my good prognosis.  I refrain from telling him about the bandaged, open wound along my scar.  That seems like over sharing.

“Okay….Sure. Let’s sign you up.” His name is Rich and he has done the contest a couple of times.  He works at the club to pay the bills while he “picks up five minutes here and there”.  “Five minutes”, I learn, is the maximum length of a comedy “set” for newbies.  It’s coveted time.  The order of appearance COUNTS, he tells me.  You want to be last up, last with the laughs.  First means you are not as good as what’s coming later and the audience knows this. Sometimes, Rich relates with a wisp of awe, a headliner will give you five before their set.  That’s gold.   Rich is explaining all this and I drink in his every word.  I learn how the contest works on Thursday nights and what to expect.

After consulting my calendar so we don’t conflict with the chemo schedule, I am confirmed for a night in the contest.  I turn to leave.  On the table near the exit sign I spy a flyer.  “Comedy Workshop”, an eight week course in writing and performing standup.  I pick it up. Here is my tutor!  God is providing the support I need.  I’ll be calling Tim Ferrell this afternoon – after therapy, for which I am now really late.

I arrive at the therapy appointment thirty minutes late for the fifty minute hour.  This leaves twenty minutes to fill Vicky in on the new life plan.  Vicky, I notice, is listening closely as I describe The Apprentice defeat and the comedy contest.  It takes the whole twenty minutes. She seems mesmerized. “God,” I conclude as I write the check and hand it to her for this appointment, “is clearing a path for me.”

“Yes,” Vicky laughs, “You are indeed on a path.”

That afternoon, I’m on the phone with Tim Ferrell.  Tim sounds like he spent a lot of time in New York City, which he informs me he has.  He talks fast, sharp and big.  I learn that he writes for Jon Stewart.  I’m impressed.  I’d give my first born, if I could still have one, to write for Jon Stewart.   I explain the situation. I’m talking fast too.  Background in diversity.  Always wanted to do smart comedy.  Want to find funny ways to talk about race and gender. Cancer.  Chemo. Apprentice. Comedy Contest.  Need a tutor.

I’d like to take the workshop, I tell him, but I can’t commit to the classes because of my chemo schedule.  Tim listens.  Everyone is listening to me today, I realize.  I must really be in some kind of God zone.

After a moment of quiet in which I wonder if the phone is still working, Tim provides direction. “Cath, take my classes.  You’ll learn to write and perform.  Good comedy is good writing.  I hate contests.  Don’t get me wrong, a lot of my people end up in the contests and they win, in fact the last three winners were mine, but they do it to get the stage time.”

“Their five minutes,” I say, eager to look like I’m in the know.

“Right.  Yes.  So, here’s what I think.  Skip the contest.  It’s a lot of stress you don’t need. Plan on attending the workshop.  If you’re sick and can’t come, no problem.  Pay for what you attend.  At the close of the workshop, we have a performance.  I don’t let anyone fail, so you’ll be all set.”

I’ll be all set.  That’s all I needed to hear.  I hang up the phone, exhausted.

© 2010 Cathy Kidman

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