Scars

When I was in elementary school, we had an indoor swimming pool. A few times a week our classes would get to put on our bathing suits in the middle of the school day and take swimming lessons from our PE teachers. I was never a particularly modest child, in fact it was all my mother could do to keep clothes on me as a little thing. I was forever standing in front of the television in my training pants making muscles for my family to see. I was comfortable with my body, and I really didn’t have any thoughts about the still pink scars that graced my chest. They were as much a part of me as my fingers or my toes. So when one day sitting on the edge of the school swimming pool a little boy in my class asked me what happened, gesturing to the scar on my chest, I froze, and after a million thoughts ran through my six year old head I told him, “I fell on an ax.” I could live another 100 years and still have no idea why those were the words that escaped my six year old lips, but they were. 

My relationship with my scars has always been complicated. I spent many post-bath moments observing my scars as a child, they were to me, the only thing I had as proof of the time I was told I spent as a baby fighting for my life. While everyone around me remembered that time, all I had were the scars. I spent a lot of time in my teens doing all I could to hide my scars, believing they were ugly and not wanting to show anyone what I thought of as a weakness. As the years have gone by I have come to feel pride in my scars. I still spend time observing them in the mirror, (clothes still aren’t my thing if I can help it) and thinking about where they came from and where they have gotten me. Many nights to this day I trace each bump and curve in the scar that sits center of my chest, until I fall asleep. 

It shouldn’t have surprised me then, how today I was suddenly overcome with sadness at the thought of the eventual reconfiguring of my scars. When the time comes for transplant the incision will be on top of my current scar. It will be larger, and likely much gnarlier than the scar that started on a one year old baby and grew with me over time. I have never minded new scars joining the others, but this one will change the topography completely. And while I have thought frequently about how many emotions are tied up in my actual heart and saying goodbye to it one day, I don’t look in the mirror and see my heart. My heart isn’t the outward reminder of why I am who I am and what I have been through. While it is true that I have never let my heart condition define me, it has certainly shaped me into who I am. So today I felt my feelings, first in my car, out of nowhere, then on my therapist’s couch, and later as I shed a few tears in front of the bedroom mirror. I have carried these scars since before I could remember. They have been the things that remind me that if I could do it as a tiny baby, I could do it as a teen, or an adult. I imagine there are more of these kinds of things that will come up as I sit here in the unknown. Minds wander as they wait and I have never been good at waiting. 

I am glad this all came up today, it gives me a chance to think about what I can do to come to terms with this change as much as I can now, so it won’t be as hard later. Until then I will continue to observe in awe of the landmarks of my life that adorn my chest. Each glossy white river of mended flesh a testament to the strength and perseverance of the me who came before today.

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