The Week My Case Was (Supposed To Be) Presented a Second Time

One week before I got the call that my case for heart transplant would be presented for the second time, I said goodbye to my beloved cat. The end came quickly for us. He was old, it is true, but he was also a complete mad man. That was until he woke up from a nap one afternoon and it seemed like he couldn’t use his back legs. Things only got worse from there. It seemed my sweet boy had a stroke.  I will spare you the details of the decline of my fabulous feline. He deserves to be remembered as the majestic beast he was, but it was easily the most heartbreaking week of my life. I understand now what they mean when they say “soul” pets. Gus was certainly mine. I have loved all of my pets, but there was just more with Gus. He was my friend and confidant. He was my nurse and companion through the biggest changes I have ever gone through mentally and physically. I have never met a cat with so much personality, and while we didn’t speak the same language, he always seemed to know when I needed a cuddle or laugh. I can’t see the future, but knowing what I know now, I think maybe he could at least feel it. You see, one of the biggest things I worried about with the possibility of transplant looming was my buddy Gussy. Gus was extremely bonded to me, and exclusively me. He tolerated other adults who would feed him but he was truly only nice to me. I worried about the amount of time that I would be away from him for transplant and recovery and more than that I worried about how to manage after transplant when it is recommended to not be near cats. I believe he took that worry away from me, and knew this next part of my journey I had to go alone. I will miss my Gussy, my Wussy, my baby, my wayby, Fatness Neverlean, Bubs, Bubbers, Chubs McGee, Auggie, Chonk-a-donk, Triple G, and all the other nonsense names I called him daily. 

The Monday before my heart transplant was presented for the second time I woke up with a blue tongue. If you do a cursory Google search for “blue tongue waking”, you will find that the internet believes that you may be suffering from a congenital heart defect (check), heart failure (check), asthma (check), perhaps acid reflux (also check), or the ingestion of a blue food dye. I could not remember eating anything blue, as I do my best to follow the rules and the third rule of CHD club is no blue food. (The first rule is don’t die, the second rule is no faking heart issues for any reason, even if you hate your PE class). Anyway, I didn’t eat any blue food, so mild panic set in. I took a photo and sent it to the team, not my medical team mind you, my home team, my family, it was 7 a.m. someone had to be awake. My sister must have done the same quick Google I did and concluded I had a congenital heart defect. Shocking. What is a girl to do but check her O2 (it was fine), and then try brushing her teeth. Sure enough, the blue started to come off. I swear I didn’t eat anything blue…but I did have Christmas Nerds, red and green Christmas Nerds, the night before and while they aren’t blue and thus not technically against the rules, it’s the only thing that I can think of that would have caused it. All this, before 8 a.m. on the Monday before my case was presented for a second time. 

On the Tuesday before my heart transplant case was presented for the second time, I said “see you later” to the therapist I have been working with for seven years. Like Birdie said in Hope Floats, “Beginnings are scary, endings are usually sad, but it’s the middle that counts the most. Try to remember that when you find yourself at a new beginning. Just give hope a chance to float up.”  Endings are sad, but notice she didn’t say “bad”. Nothing bad here. For the last seven years I have had the best therapist I likely will ever experience. She was who I needed, when I needed her. I showed up in her office broken and without a toolbox. I am leaving knowing who I am, how I roll, and with a toolbox brimming with ways to not only help myself but effectively help others without sacrificing myself (they’re called boundaries have you heard of them?).  I have grown so much as a person it is time for me to test the wings she helped me build. I hear what you’re thinking…now? Yes. Simple as that. It is time. Sometimes you find yourself at a fork in the road in the middle of a journey and you get to choose a new way forward. Our paths don’t go in the same direction anymore, but how cool is it to be able to look back and see just how far that path has taken you. You know me, you know I am like an adorable fungus you cannot get rid of, a see you later is not a good-bye. You’ve seen the photos of me with my childhood cardiologist, even professionals keep me around, just like you they want to see what comes next. I just as much cannot wait to see what is next for her, she has so many new things happening in her life and practice, she changed my life and I can’t wait to see how she changes others. 

Early in the morning, on the Wednesday before my heart transplant case was presented for the second time, I took a small box containing a tiger tipped vial to my local hospital lab. A sweet woman named Loli drew my blood so it could be sent to Nebraska for antibody testing. This is an important part of the heart transplant process, and a vital piece of matching me with a heart in the future. Loli was so sweet and must have been able to tell that I was nervous about this precious vial arriving in time for Friday. She kept telling me how she did this all the time and how they would process the blood and get it on it’s way. She asked if I had a transplant, and I explained I was hopefully getting one. “Kidney?” she asked. I get that a lot, I think it must be more common for a person my age to need a kidney than a heart. I told her it was a heart and that this was my second try. She told me that she knew she probably shouldn’t say this, but it is Christmas time and miracles happen at Christmas. She will pray for me to be listed. I thanked her, and she told me again that she would make sure that this got sent out quickly. Through this whole process I keep having encounters like this one, my family too. I don’t know what I believe about what happens when we die, but I will tell you this, I am shown almost every day that there are people looking out for me on the other side. 

Later that same morning (the day I am writing this), I got a message from my clinic letting me know that my case won’t be presented this week. Unfortunately, they wouldn’t have my antibody testing back in time to discuss my case. I was crushed. I can handle waiting for a heart, and the unknown of when it will happen. I can handle them saying it isn’t time again, they will know when it is time. What is killing me is being told I am going to be put up for consideration again, and being delayed time and again. They knew they would need this test. They knew how long it takes to get results. They knew where I lived. I was just there doing other tests for this presentation, and they didn’t do it then. They didn’t use overnight mail, they didn’t ask me to come back to do the test there. They just told me they were presenting me, and they were sending a kit to collect this blood. I called on Monday to express concern I didn’t have the kit yet and I was told that it would not be a problem, I could be presented without it and to let them know if I didn’t have it by Wednesday. I received it Tuesday night and went immediately to have it drawn in the morning. I triple checked that it would be sent that morning. To have done what they asked and then be told it wasn’t enough within hours of each other was soul crushing. It is my goal to do everything I am asked by my team. If they had told me I needed to come there for them to draw one vial of blood, I would have. We are talking about the literal rest of my life, we aren’t talking about an annual physical, or an ingrown toenail, we are talking about heart transplant, this is something you drop everything for. I understand WHY they need this test first, but I can understand and still be disappointed in the way things went. Trust can be shaken but not broken, so right now, my trust is a little shaken, but not broken. 

Now I don’t know when I will actually be presented. Next week being so close to Christmas seems unlikely, the next being the week of Christmas seems less likely. I have felt hopeful the last week, that this would be the time, and I would be listed. Things seemed to be working out. I hope they still will. Right now, I am just sad and angry. I am tired of being tired, and I am tired of waiting to know what comes next. 

You should know I am okay. I really am. I am nothing if not resilient, and my mom has come to be with me while I go through all the emotions. She was coming to be with me when I found out if I was listed and she came early when I was crushed to find out everything would be delayed. I am lucky that either way, when I need my people, they show up. This will get sorted out, and sometimes even the best people in the medical complex forget that there are real people and big emotions behind the test results. 

I share all this because this process is not linear, and because of what is on the line it is incredibly emotional. I share this because you are someone close to me and I want you to know what is on my mind when I seem like I am a little less cheery than usual. It is important to share this because, you might be going through something like this, you might know someone (me) who is or will be, it is important to know that it isn’t a plot against you or me when things don’t flow neatly from point A to B. If you are one of my people thank you for your support and love through this, I continue to be amazed and humbled by the amount of kindness and love I have been shown. If you are on your own journey, I wish you health and ease as you put one foot in front of the other. 

Enough

I have struggled much of my life with the feeling of enough. Being a sick kid I was always worried that my contribution to my family wasn’t enough to outweigh the cost of time, money, and mental bandwidth my illness required. Once upon a time, and more than once my father remarked off the cuff that I was “more trouble than I was worth” to him the comment was a joke, it was innocent, it was a throwaway remark meant to tease me about my clumsiness, and my tendency to end up in the ER. To me it was an admission, he confirmed what I was sure I knew, I was not enough. 

Therapy has helped. I have learned that my worth is not derived from others. The concept of enough however seems like it is ever-present. Lurking. Cruel. Being enough. Not having enough. Having ENOUGH

This transplant journey has brought up its own enough. Is how I am living enough? Have I truly had enough? Am I sick enough? Am I worthy enough? 

One of the hardest things about being an adult with a congenital heart defect that is being considered for a heart transplant is that a lot of the usual ways of determining candidacy don’t align with the issues that we have as our health declines. To look at me, most people wouldn’t believe I am in end-stage heart failure, but here I am, crushing it. The thing with people with CHD is the decline in our health is often so slow, over a lifetime, that in ways we almost don’t notice our quality of life slowly slipping away. Tests meant for acquired heart disease don’t always accurately measure how sick we are, or how sick our hearts are, because the very structure of our hearts isn’t typical, and neither are the ways in which it can fail us. For a long time, doctors told me that a big indicator of whether or not it was time for me to have a transplant would be my ejection fraction (the amount of blood your heart can squeeze out each time it constricts), when last “measured” my EF was 25. In a typical heart, an ejection fraction in this neighborhood would put you on track for a transplant. For me? I got a defibrillator and resynchronization therapy. That has worked fairly well for me for the last 10ish years, during which time the medical community has decided that ejection fraction is actually not a useful or accurate measure for people with a systemic right ventricle (the one that does the bulk of the pumping) like me. More recently I failed with flying colors a different test that would indicate heart failure and transplant, but my heart cath looked “good” for someone with my defect. The question now is, am I sick enough for a transplant? A question and answer that is way out of my hands. 

The caveat of “for someone with TGA…” has been thrown around a lot in my life, it is often used to curb enthusiasm and lower expectations. It often feels like  “Don’t ask for more than you have because, for someone with TGA, you should be thankful just to be alive. That should be enough.” Do not mistake me, I am incredibly thankful for the series of events, and miracles even (and there have been many) that have led to me being alive at 40 but, I am no longer sure that not being dead is enough. I miss living. I miss the freedom of a more healthy body. There are things that I don’t even know that I miss because they are things that I have never known. It isn’t that I am not happy, we all know that I am a generally happy person. It isn’t that I couldn’t possibly continue to coast. It is that it isn’t enough anymore. As Albert Einstein (or maybe John Shedd) said “A ship is always safe at the shore, but that is not what it is built for.” it is true that I might be safe, but this isn’t what I am meant for. 

On the other hand, there is the magnitude, the cost of the gift I am asking for, the desire I am putting into the universe, and the price of taking my ship out of the harbor again. Could anyone easily say they are worthy of such a gift? I have been uniquely close to both sides of organ donation. So many of my friends have received the gift of life and in my second-hand experience receiving an organ is a solemn celebration. I have also known the pain that comes with losing someone I love dearly tragically, and the heartbreak of letting them go. It is true that knowing when I lost my friend others were given a chance at life through the gift of organ donation was comforting and the choice made by those that loved him was absolutely the one he would have made himself. Knowing that isn’t enough though, it isn’t the same as being able to laugh with my best friend, hug him tight, and listen to all the ways what I am writing right now is valid but in the end, doesn’t matter because I deserve to be happy and healthy both at the same time. Dammit. This is not where I thought this entry would end, but I feel like I reached a conclusion, with the help of my friend. I deserve to be happy and healthy at the same time, anything less than that isn’t enough.

The Ugly Truth

The ugly truth is, all of this is easier without him. Something I have finally allowed myself to admit, to say out loud, to take the first steps to work through. I am not 8 years old anymore and hindsight truly is a gift to vision, and I see clearly that no matter how I wanted him to be different, he simply was who he was. 

I have debated writing this, wondering if this crossed the line of what I am willing to share publicly. I also know that I have many reasons for writing these excerpts from this time in my life and I want to tell this story fully. Letting this stuff out is helping me, but I am starting to see that it is also helping others. Lots of isolating feelings grow in the dark, the best way through them is to show them the light, and if showing some of those feelings the light here helps others, all the better.

My father was a simple man that in many ways was complicated. If you knew him you would probably describe him as the type to give you the shirt off his back. I can’t disagree. He likely was like that –  to you. It wasn’t so much like that with his family, at least not his daughters or their mother. There is a whole lot to that story that isn’t just mine to tell and so I won’t, I will only tell the part that is mine to tell. 

I don’t know if dad ever really knew how to cope with being a parent much less with being a parent of a “sick” kid. All I know is that every memory I have of my early life in hospitals, when my parents were still married, is of just my mom and I. Every doctor appointment, every hospital stay, every surgery. Just mom and I. I can’t say that is 100% accurate, I am sure there was a time or two he was there or it was him but I don’t remember. I know he took me to the ER twice with a broken arm, just he and I, once the first time I broke it on my roller skates and then again the day I got the cast off and broke it again falling off a horse he put me on. That was dad. 

Once my parents were divorced however dad made my medical appointments a spectacle. He had to attend every one and make sure he was as much the focus as possible.  He didn’t usually come into the room with mom and I, preferring to stay in the waiting room and play his favorite game “my kid is sicker than your kid” the prize?  The sympathy of strangers. I hated that game. If you know me at all you know, the last thing I want from anyone is pity or sympathy. Still, he played on. Every single appointment, I would come into the waiting room to some random person telling me how “strong” or “brave” I was. All I could think was how much I wanted to stomp on his foot and run to the car. I hated feeling like his little trained monkey. It was the same act with women he dated. It would come time for me to meet them and the only thing they would know about me is that my heart was backward. It seemed that was the only thing he knew about me either. 

As I became an adult our relationship became more and more strained. For reasons I no longer remember (likely spite), he wanted me off his insurance the moment I turned 18. It was really great insurance, I could have stayed on it until I was 26 but he wouldn’t have it. My mom took the insurance over. Even though my medication and medical care was extremely expensive, and he was financially very secure he rarely helped. He could buy all kinds of “toys” but it took near groveling to get any help with such expenses. He had this fun habit of waiting until the very last minute when there weren’t a lot of other options so he could swoop in and be the hero, strings attached of course. Always strings. 

In an effort to not sound like all I wanted from him was his money, allow me to elaborate further. I had many hospitalizations and surgeries through my 20’s and 30’s. I always made sure he knew about them. I made sure he knew what was going on, what hospital I was trying, what surgery, what medications, etc. I kept him in the loop, even if he wasn’t invited to be there because I was over his behavior when he came, he was always informed. Beyond the moment I informed him of what was going on, I wouldn’t hear from him. He never called, text, sent a card or a carrier pigeon. He never checked up to see how I was. Never. 

I had my first major surgery since I was a baby in that time frame. My chest was opened in three places, recovery was incredibly tough with a collapsed lung. I was in rough shape. He knew what was happening, my sister had called him. He never called me. My sister told  him how rough it was for me and still I did not hear from him. He did not call me. He did not check in. 

In the final years of my fathers life, as angry as I was about these moments I swore I would be the bigger person. If he was having surgery, I would drive the hours to where it was happening and I would visit. If he had a heart attack I would be there. I showed up. Every. Single. Time. And there were a lot of times. Those visits were not conditional, I was not going so I could say to him, “Hey I came and checked on you, you need to check on me.” I was going because I wanted to make sure he didn’t feel the way he made me feel when he didn’t at least check in and see if I was okay. I wasn’t going to let who he was change who I was. I was the kind of person who visited their dad in the hospital even if he wasn’t the dad who did the same. 

So the ugly truth of the matter is, all of this is easier with him gone. I don’t have to have my heart broken by his callousness. I don’t have to worry about him using my situation  to gain other people’s sympathy without my knowledge or consent. I don’t have to manage my disappointment when he isn’t the dad I always wished him to be. The kind of person most people would say would give you the shirt off his back, but wouldn’t pick up the phone for his own daughter. I don’t have to endure another heartbreak at his hands. 

There aren’t a lot of people who understand the complex feelings that come with having a father like mine. I get that. I am glad for that. Let me make one thing very clear, for anyone who may feel like this post is mean, or even cruel. I loved my dad, to the very end I loved him. Our relationship was complicated, and broken, and in many ways so was he. I know that. I have spent a long time and a lot of therapy  coming to grips with that. I have also learned that two things can be true at once. I can love my dad, I can even miss him, and still be relieved that I don’t have to endure more heartache. I can still be mad as hell for the way he let things play out, I can still be so sad that he never seemed to understand that I was trying to show him how to love me, and he just never seemed to be able to do it. It may be ugly, but it is the truth.

One of the biggest lessons I have learned in therapy is that sometimes people teach us really important things in really negative ways. My dad more than anyone taught me how to forgive. He taught me how to keep a cool head in the moments his was not. And most of all he taught me to remember what comes back when I give away my love, because it isn’t always the love you want or deserve.

“But most of all
He taught me to forgive
How to keep a cool head
How to love the one you’re with
And when I’m far into the distance
And the pushing comes to shove
To remember what comes back
When you give away your love”

Brandi Carlile – Most of All

Surprise! You’re sad.

Lately my feelings have been a jack-in-the-box. Life just keeps turning the crank, and I think I am keeping it all together until suddenly, when I least expect it, pop-goes-my feelings. Usually this happens in the quiet moments before sleep. You know that time, if you’re like me, is some of the only time in the day where you give your brain a moment to get quiet and wander. Wandering minds can be a dangerous thing for people who are trying really hard to keep their thoughts and feelings in check. Even more dangerous are sleeping minds, minds that are beyond our control completely, minds that do whatever they need to do to draw our attention to the issue that we are ignoring. 

Let’s start with Monday. Monday of this week I woke up with a thud, a jerk of my head and body that was so extreme I thought for sure I had just experienced a shock from my ICD. I was absolutely certain of it. It is not a fun way to wake up, but it also was not the first time I have been awoken like this. I did a body scan. My chest didn’t hurt. My heart rate felt normal. I grabbed the blood pressure cuff I keep on my bedside table (doesn’t everyone?) and took my pressure, low but in the normal range. My head hurt pretty badly, but other than that, everything felt normal. I text my sister. She was present the last time this happened. We talked it through and decided that I should probably be very sure before I attempted to go to work. I messaged my work, it was 5 a.m. the doctors wouldn’t be in for hours still and I was exhausted, a little freaked out, and did I mention my head hurt? 

When I woke up and only my head hurt I was pretty certain I had a phantom shock. A real shock would leave my body feeling much worse for the wear. I slowly get myself going, I took a long shower, ate breakfast, and got dressed. I waited, did another body scan (when I say this I just mean I spend a moment or two in silence really feeling how my body feels by concentrating my attention on different areas) I felt okay. No shock detected. Why do phantom shocks happen? “They found that the phenomenon primarily occurred in patients with a history of traumatic device shocks, depression, anxiety and PTSD. They conclude that memory reactivation of traumatic events seems to contribute in the pathogenesis of phantom shock.” Clin Cardiol, 1999, vol. 22 (pg. 481-9) Basically, I have PTSD and somewhere squirreled away in my subconscious is the memory of the shock I received so many years ago and that I didn’t even earn but scared the life out of me just the same. Now, sometimes when I’m “fine” but not so secretly carrying around stress, that memory finds its way into my unconscious mind and rears its head forcefully, and convincingly. 

I mentioned this incident to my therapist I said “They say these phantom shocks are brought on by stress and anxiety. I thought I was doing okay, but maybe I’m not.” Her response? “Maybe parts of you are okay, and parts of you aren’t.” Shh. I’m fine, remember? She followed up, “My take is that you are feeling understandably vulnerable”. Ugh. I reminded her that to me that is the worst of all the feelings and quickly changed the subject. It is much easier to duck and weave from your therapist when you aren’t actually in their office where they can play defense or maybe it is offense…more directly. Also, she was right and I was in the mood to hate that. I feel like I spend a lot of time dealing with my feelings, I’m just not the greatest at truly feeling them. I have good intentions, and I mean to but when it comes down to it most often feelings have to catch me off guard and attack. 

Case and point an understandable but odd bit of sadness that struck me last night as I was falling asleep (I told you it is always sleeping or bedtime). I have a heart cath coming early next week and I was thinking of the things that I need to get in order beforehand. Suddenly I was completely overwhelmed with sadness. If things move the way my cardiologist predicted this is very likely the last heart cath this heart will have done. I am not particularly keen on heart caths or anything, they certainly don’t hold a lot of happy memories. Though there is that one time that Charlotte got to be my nurse and my femoral artery wouldn’t clot so we got to spend quality time with her applying direct pressure to my groin, that was kind of funny. That same visit Julie was the last nurse standing and we got to hang out until way past her shift ended because they wanted me to have a bed for overnight but one never came so Charlotte vouched for me that this wasn’t my first rodeo and I would return if I started to bleed out, (I did not in fact bleed out). So while I don’t have any particularly fond memories of heart caths it was just the thought of this being the first “last” for this heart. It struck me harder than I would have imagined. Lasts are hard, even if they are for the best.

It doesn’t help that you are talking to the person who personified everything in her youth (and maybe still has that habit). No stuffy slept on the floor for fear that I would hurt their feelings, when my mom got me a “pet net” for the corner above my bed deciding who went up there and who stayed on the bed might as well have been deciding who lived and who died. I guess in a not so subtle way I still feel like that now, this heart has been loyal, it has been through hell and back and done everything that was asked of it and more, replacing it feels like a bit of a betrayal and facing this first, “last” just really drove that thought home. So, the jack-in-the-box popped open and the feelings jumped out. It wasn’t so much the feelings, but the when and why that surprised me. I knew more feelings would come, I think it will continue to be a mystery what causes them and why I react to them. I will meet them as they come, and I will deal with them as they do. I have a target to work with, I have to start looking at the hard thing a bit more, so I can come to terms with what it means to say goodbye to the heart that has carried me when so many said it couldn’t. I have been given the gift of time to grieve and thank my spiteful, spitfire of a friend while it still beats in my chest. Perhaps, like most grief it won’t be something I completely get over, but something that dulls as time passes and acceptance sets in. 

Broken Hearted

feea86610fe37034b00ea7bd253431c8I talk about my heart a lot. I talk about how it works, and how it doesn’t and all the ways it is not typical. My heart is a special heart, it is it’s own little science experiment, my personal Frankenstein’s monster. People ask me about my heart a lot, they wonder about how it works, how it beats, the blood it pumps, the way it pumps it, how it sounds, what it looks like hooked up to all the wires inside my chest. They ask all these questions about my heart, the organ that sustains my life, but it is rare they dig in to that question. Currently my heart is broken. I am not talking about my physical heart, though yes, that one is broken too. I am talking about my metaphorical heart, the one that cares and loves and needs other people to make it content. A few months back it was shattered when suddenly I was faced with a world without one of my very favorite people in it, one of the ones who knew me and loved me best. The breaking was instant, the shock an explosion, the heartbreak more than I could have ever imagined.

I am not a cuddly person. No one would describe me as either touchy nor feely. I am an introvert. I like my space. I have crafted a bubble so big and well decorated I would never have reason to leave it. I am content in my bubble. Happy even. I was perfectly happy to live there in my bubble, with a few people allowed in from time to time, but no one ever invited to stay. Then in walked Nick and he took a pin to that bubble within moments. No bubbles allowed with him. He was a “Sorry, you’re rad, I’m rad, we’re best friends now.” kind of guy.  That was how it was going to be and that was how it was, from the moment that red headed riot walked in to my world there was a strict no bubble rule. If we were within 5 feet of each other we were hugging, or laughing, or talking about things that I am not sure either of us ever told anyone else on this planet. Our bond was a little different than all of my other friendships, there was a kind of unspoken rule that whatever we shared with each other was ours and not for public consumption. I’m not sure if it was because we only saw each other one week a year at camp, or if it was just because somewhere down deep our souls seemed to know each other, but it was like having a priest, a therapist and an insult comic for a best friend all at once. We were going to be there for each other, talk about everything, keep it honest, keep it between us, but we were also going to take any opportunity we had to bust the other one for being ridiculous, and I loved him for that.

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The morning that Charlotte called me and told me that there had been an accident and Nick had suffered a gunshot to his head was the start of this period of time that has felt like it was moving in slow motion. I erupted in a screaming wail of a cry, the likes of which I hadn’t experienced since I was a child. I am normally able to stifle my emotions, hold them in, keep them to myself and process them on my own but this pain was too big, the shock was too overwhelming. Sweet Charlotte sat on the phone with me and comforted me as best she could while being extremely real with me. While he was technically still alive there wasn’t much hope that he would be able to survive this. I remember her telling me “But I am talking to a miracle, so I believe they happen every day” and that made me cry even harder.

It had been a year and a half since Nick and I’s tearful goodbye at camp. He was moving to Hawaii and I was convinced I would never see him again. Sadly this time my anxiety was correct, I would never see him in the flesh again. The last time we spent together we had one of the hardest and realest conversations of our friendship, we talked about that thing that we never really allowed ourselves to talk about, we talked about death, more specifically the likelihood of my death or that of one of the others at camp. Nick had been coming to heart camp for years, but he wasn’t a “heart kid” he was healthy, he just really loved us and even after the summer he volunteered for his confirmation hours, he wanted to come back, over and over again. He loved us, and he made us laugh, he grieved with us, I never thought about what it must be like to be the guy who didn’t have a time bomb in his chest, surrounded by people he loved deeply all with time bombs in theirs. I took him to Taco Bell after we ran a camp errand and the conversation turned serious. Another counselor wasn’t looking good that year, and we openly wondered if they would be with us in a years time. It was then that Nick told me how it felt to be the one who would likely outlive us all. It broke my heart. He cried. I hugged him. He pretended to be mad at me for making him love me so much. I assured him that I was going to live a very long time. I guess I wasn’t wrong about that. Here I still am. We couldn’t have possibly seen this plot twist coming.

In four days I go back to camp for the first time without Nick on this planet, there will be no texts, no phone calls, no FaceTime. If something is funny, or sad, or frustrating, he won’t be the one I tell it to and it is the worst feeling in the world. I miss him every day. He made me more “me” than I have ever been by being a safe place to be whoever that is. I don’t know if I ever will have that kind of friend again, and if I am honest, I am not sure I want to, I feel so lucky to have had the time I had, even if it was cut much too short. It feels greedy, and a little bit like a betrayal to hope for it again. Maybe one day, when the hurt isn’t quite so deep, and the grief so close to the surface, but for right now I am just happy to have ever had a friend like him at all. I hope you have a friend like him too.