My mother’s thyroid biopsy came back empty. No cancer! One of my parents doesn’t have cancer! I would have thrown a party when I found out if I hadn’t been about to leave for a weekend in DC.
Mr. Ben and I Vamoosed for a mere $25, and if you’ve been craving an alternative to the Chinatown bus, I recommend it highly. Clean, roomy, with working televisions (even if all they did was inform me How To Lose a Guy in 10 Days if you’re the reasonably charming Kate Hudson). Plus, they drop off in Bethesda, close to where my ailing parents reside.
As to my ailing parents, I do wonder a bit what’s to be done. Though my mother was found to be out of danger, the surgeons who removed her thyroid left her with a scar that makes her look like Juno, the chain-smoking caseworker in Beetlejuice played by Sylvia Sydney. For some reason I can’t find a picture, but you remember her — the afterlife expert who exhales through the slash in her throat.
My mom’s had her throat slit, my dad’s been disemboweled. What a year for my parents. My mother is rocking it, though. She looks great — and when she asked the doctor what the condition of the scar would be in early August, he said, “Well, I can tell you one thing that would help.”
“What’s that?” asked my mother.
“A really striking diamond necklace.”
I fear that my father might need more than some frost to distract attention from his situation. Chemo hasn’t been sitting well with him after all; he’s hardly been able to eat or sleep. I can only hope he adjusts soon, or something? What can I hope for?
Probably to keep us from thinking such mopey thoughts, when Mr. Ben and I were in town, they wouldn’t let us stand still for a moment. The weekend whirled by & all I recall looking back are flashes of my wedding dress, about a hundred pairs of silver slippers, a much amended song list, a stack of stamped invitations, a strapless bra, the Rabbi in his office, some really terrific strawberries, and faces made up to look pretend Japanese for a spirited if a bit silly production of the Mikado at Wolf Trap.
I made it back in time to catch the Sopranos with my next door neighbor. David Chase really knows how to gut a viewer, doesn’t he? Except for that overdone bit with the model train, it was an amazing hour of suspense; I think I was whimpering from start to finish. Idly it occurred to me as I watched that it was ridiculous to get all emotionally involved with the deaths of these fictional monsters, whereas I’ve managed to stay relatively calm about the sickness of both of my parents. But I guess that’s what art is for.
What you say is all true. Also, I forgot to tell you that on my rainy dark Peter Pan trip back to NY, they showed Miracle, the hockey movie about the 1980 U.S. olympic team. It was surprisingly not bad, as far as these things go.