My Week in Hospital.. Continued

72 hours and 1 blood transfusion later..

The further I got into my bedridden holiday on the Costa del Colostomy, the more I seemed able to observe, record in my notes and recall from memory.

DAY 4

I found myself suddenly awake while it was still pitch dark, feeling so dizzy and shaky it was like I had just tumbled out of a washing machine, mid cycle. I had woken from a dream so vivid it had felt as though I had been reliving something that had actually happened. I was genuinely frightened that I was about to go into some kind of arrest as my chest was thumping so rapidly. I pressed the buzzer and called in a nurse, who also asked me to tell her what my name was and where I believed I was, so I told her clearly. “My name is Kurona Dargarth, I am in Heath Hospital, I have had surgery for Cancer.” she did a blood pressure check and said that it was all normal, so I put on a guided meditation and managed to get myself back to sleep, without anymore strange impactful dreams. When I woke again, in morning light, I still felt spaced out and “not all there”. The fourth day was Monday, and I had spent the weekend waiting, quietly nervous, to see my surgeon for the first time since the Op. When he came in to see me that morning, I was in for something of a surprise.

Mr. Ansell said he was impressed by the speed of my recovery, and he had thought I was going to be “alot worse” at this stage.  He also wasn’t expecting baby stoma to be working as well as she was already. I was taken aback a bit. If this was such good progress, what on earth would I have had to have endured if I had been at the stage he expected me to be? The last few days had gone by like living through ten years, not 72 hours. I felt like I had barely scraped through, but Mr Ansell’s enthusiasm and positivity stirred something. I must have monumentally underestimated my body’s own strength. Its own resolve. I knew at that point I owed something to my body. I realised a need to put more faith in my own self and quit the destruction I had been so accustomed to for so many years. My body deserved more respect than to keep abusing it. I needed to use that point to garner as much direction as possible. No more crap in my body. No more crap in my brain. Start now. I underestimated myself, and possibly my faith too. I had certainly underestimated my surgery team, expecting them to further ruin an already ruined life. Thank you Mr. Ansell and Team. Thank you Science. Thank you God. Thank you Goddess. Thank you Crystals. Thank you Body.

That wasn’t the only significant lesson I learned by day four. After Mr Ansell had wished me a good recovery day and gone on his way, I let my mind tick over the past 72 hours and how, even in my most helpless state, I found myself still thinking about the feelings of others and putting all my effort into being a good person to them. The Nurses, for instance, how difficult it had been communicating what I needed and despite not getting it, I was still concerned with being a good patient and not putting them under more stress. The last thing they needed was another difficult, obstructive person to have to deal with. I honestly wasn’t happy with how I had been pushed around too fast or left to largely manage myself, but an inherently bad person would have kicked up more than just a fuss about it without a single thought, and not given one crap what effect it had on anyone else. That just isn’t me.

I also realised that for spending the last several days feeling utterly helpless and dependent on others for even the most basic functions, I hadn’t felt all that undignifed or humiliated despite all my fear of it pre-op. In these moments you are far too exhausted from the round the clock job of healing and in far too much pain to really care all that much. Etiquette has no place or importance during this time.

My catheter was taken out that morning and there was talk of me going home before the end of the week. I couldn’t believe what I was hearing. I had improved so fast I wasn’t needing to be kept in even a full week, let alone the two weeks I had prepared for. The challenge for me that day was to be able to get myself from the bed to the toilet in time when I wasn’t sure how well my pelvic floor muscles were going to work. Washing myself was still hard work, and that morning I tried out the hair washing cap I had packed. It worked out fairly simply, but perhaps not the best thing for hair as long and thick as mine. I still managed to get it into a tidy plait without the aid of a mirror. Not ideal, but better than how dirty I had been feeling. I also still couldn’t sit properly, having to lean far forward which made my remaining drainage tubes and new Stoma sore, or prop myself up and put all of my weight from one side to another.

Got my hair into a tidy plait, despite not having a mirror

By the afternoon, the weather outside was bright and spring-like. I had got up and walked around the room a bit in some uplifting sunlight and even made it to the loo, confirming that my bladder hadn’t got too catheter happy and was showing no issue in resuming normal service. I also managed to get to my bags and suitcase and get out a few more of the comforting things I had brought along, like my new fluffy dressing gown. My colorectal nurse Angel dropped round for a chat, and we had a lengthy heart to heart about moving forward from here. She seemed pretty enthusiastic towards my new outlook and that I want to use this as a point to turn things around. She said she never wanted to see me in the position I was at diagnosis again, and we both agreed that purgatory was truly over. I think she was focusing on the cancer-based purgatory that I had hauled through in the last five months, but I was quietly thinking about the purgatory I have been in for the last 10 years. I needed to get out of hospital and heal first, but once that was out of the way I knew it would be the perfect time to start over from scratch, a fresh new stoma-life. I even caught myself going online and buying new goth clothes, despite everything I had feared about not being able to keep my signature style anymore, by this time I just thought, “screw it. This teeny red thing on my waist isn’t going to stop me wearing the clothes I love,I can adapt instead of quit.” Maybe losing my bum was the price I needed to pay to untangle my brain.

Despite the pain, I’m still standing with Ukraine

DAY 5

That was the first night where I had a decent sleep since being put under for the Op, a night that wasn’t disturbed by ward activity, observations, weird dreams, drugs or pain. The highlight of my fifth day on Costa del Colostomy was that the toilet in my room decided it was going to leak, and subsequently drip into the room downstairs. And here was me worrying I was going to be the one leaking!! I couldn’t help but have a silent, wry laugh at the irony.

It was a more painful day, despite the decent sleep. My first drain tube was removed and I could actually feel it moving inside me as it was pulled out, an excruciating experience that I never want to have to go through again, but knowing that I have another one that has to be removed in less that 48 hours time. I’m surprised I didn’t scream the whole place down. I also had my first walk out of my room and down the Ward with the physio team, and up and down the stairs a bit, but that felt like trying to conquer a mountain in the Himalaya with the amount of pain I had plummeted into. My backside was aching right into the bones, as if I had been sitting for hours on a concrete floor, and I had a very quiet Stoma for hours but sharp pain all up that one side of me from belly to ribs, and it was verging on impossible to find a position to sit or lie where I was comfortable for more than a few minutes. Fortunately that pain subsided a little after the stoma decided to get active after dinner, so it was likely bloat or trapped wind from having had that tube removed. I was able to settle and resume watching “Get Back”, charting in excruciating detail the attempts made by The Beatles to return to live performances but ultimately culminating in their final, strange performance on the roof of their recording studio. My fondness for the Beatles (especially as a symphonic metal and dark ambient loving goth!) is a massive example of Neuroplasticity in action, where I had gone for hating that twee, overrated band of yesteryear to finding that their uplifting songs and lyrics helped get me through the original pandemic Lockdown and now through major surgery.

DAY 6

The most painful plumbing system.. Ever.

I had got so high on things improving so quickly that this day was something of a crush. It was like going 2 steps forward and one step back. I was having the same pains as the day before but this time they wouldn’t subside, and I could barely stop myself crying at even the most insignificant thing, even taking my blood in the morning was leaving me in tears with no explanation for why. I also bawled like crazy when I finally got to see the Dietician in the afternoon, listing in detail all the reasons why I am so fat and why I can never lose weight and why I utterly hate myself for having no control and failing all the time despite trying practically every diet solution going and hate food and drink for making me so fuck-ugly. I told her in desperation that I don’t want to be fat with a stoma and my body deserves so much better than what I had given it over the years. Her advice was to focus on healing over dieting, as dieting becomes all consuming and has the complete opposite effect.. Making you hungrier and wanting to eat more rather than less. I hadn’t really thought of it that way before and was a completely different and fresh perspective.

The effects of boredom by Day 6 were truly kicking in and not even something as engrossing as Get Back was absorbing enough of the hospital vaccuum. I finished that, watched a docuseries on the Clydach Murders and started watching Desperate Romantics (only 12 years too late!!) the BBC Drama on the lives of the Pre-Raphaelites, my heroes of the Art World, but still the day dragged on, lying from side to side relieving my arms from pins and needles and cannula cramp and my hips from aching, then trying again to sit up.. No chance. I was about ready to leap pout of my wind by this time, even though I wasn’t able to actually do anything other than what little I was already doing. I was also really beginning to feel the effect of almost a week without a proper shower. As someone who usually showers every day, just a basic wipe down over a sink simply was not enough to keep me from feeling utterly filthy, nevermind having to do it all on my own while in possibly worse pain than I was at the start. Whoever thought that doing so little would be so exhaudting. I several times had to pause what I was watching to take a cat nap, but I was so frightened that I wouldn’t be able to get comfortable again I didn’t want to put my head down to catch any real sleep.

By the evening, I had been seen by Tracey the Stoma Nurse and had been changed over from clear stoma bags to the closed ones I was going to use from now on, and knowing me oh so well, she went straight for the goth ones..Salts Confidence Be in black. I even managed to change bag by myself later on, unsupervised as I wanted to test how much I had learned so far. I was still very much in two minds whether I would be going home the next day or not, given just how much pain I was in and how my emotions had suddenly taken such a dive despite all the things that were apparently going so well, but as daylight disappeared on that possible final night in hospital, it left a beautiful parting gift through my window.

Sunset on my last night in hospital

The Romantic Wasting Disease

Cancer, Colostomy and my Goth Identity

R. Cooper, 1912 Wellcome Collection

I have an identity that is surrounded by elements and ideas that deal in darkness and death. How is it possible that I can continue with my following of Goth culture now that I have been dealt my own, chillingly personal, taste of real mortality? I honestly don’t know. I am not Kurona the Goth anymore. I am Kurona with Cancer. Kurona with a Colostomy. My diagnosis has robbed me of my identity.

Its easy to think of Goth as a subculture dominated by a music genre and a fashion following. So why would my diagnosis interfere so much with that? Because for me, it is something that goes far deeper than simply wearing black and listening to loud music. During my time studying cultural history, I have discovered the roots of Goth culture go back far further than a music based revolution of the 1970s and 80s, all the way back to the latter years of the 1700s, and the beginnings of the Romantic Movement, and of the Gothic Revival. It was a cultural explosion born of the French Revolution, caused by a desire to reject the cold, hard science of the Age of Enlightenment and to rediscover and embrace a love of the past, for the beauty of the picturesque and the mystery and magic of the sublime, and the allure of darkness and beyond. It covered all corners of Art, Literature and Architecture, and spilled into the veins of the Romantic Movements of the 19th Century. The wave ran throughout the 1800s and crashed after the First World War, it was abused by the Nazis during the Second World War, it found a hiding place in The realms of Middle Earth, Narnia and Gormenghast, ridiculed by the modernists of the 50s and 60s, until it was reborn through the music and alternative art movements of the 1970s and 80s.

In those times, death was a constant presence in the outside world, not hushed up and hidden away like it is now, despite our stereotypes of Victorian prudishness. It was loud and it was vivid and it had its own place and belonging in Art. 19th Century Gothic is filled with references to death. In fact, an entire culture all of its own sprang up around it. From ideals of “the good death” to burial customs, a “Cult of Mourning”, Cemetery Architecture all of its own with its own unique messages and symbolisms, to Memento Mori Photography and Keepsakes of departed loved ones, to whispers of ghostly activity, séances and contact from the “beyond”. A long, slow, “romantic” idea of death and of mourning dominated art and literature and fashion.

Ophelia. Elizabeth Siddal’s 12 hour pose in a bathtub of cold water for John Everett Millais’ painting affected her health and contributed to her early death

Its easy to imagine a sick gothic maiden of 19th Century Art and Literature. Perhaps even beautiful to imagine her. It’s anything but beautiful to BE her. I am not reading this story, I am living it. Conjuring the mental images of reclining into a chaise longe, falls of untamed pre raphaelite hair and flowing pseudo-medieval gown, a pale face with a heated tint of rose, coughing blood into a hankerchief, regretting the opium heavy lifestyle and the mortal pricetag that it carried.. That is no challenge for me. I could easily invent that character as much as re enact her. she is ready to die the good Victorian death and be loved and remembered by all, forever.

But is that going to happen to me in my reality, in the modern world? I think not. The reality of dying with Cancer is ugly, messy and terrifying, far removed from the Victorian ideal associated with a long and drawn out wasting disease. Plus I highly doubt a life trapped in the benefits system is going to grant me the Gothic funeral or gravestone I want.

While my identity is not limited to the music I listen to or the clothes I wear, they still feature very heavily in my expressing of it. My fashion following ideally is something of a Medieval/Victorian hybrid, with a little Industrial and Cyber for good measure. Though it is difficult to find gothic clothing that both caters to my size, shape and sensory comfort, let alone poor budget, so ordinary days are often spent wearing very ordinary clothes, just with a strict gothic colour scheme of black with a hint of maybe purple or red or teal. I don’t tend to go crazy on makeup much either, no chalk white cheeks here. Just a little black lippy will do just fine. My music taste is far removed from the likes of Siouxsie or The Damned, favouring more Symphonic Metal and Dark Ambient, Neo Medieval, Viking and Industrial/EBM.

My 34th Birthday in 2019
Cybergoth-ing at my regular Industrial Club, pre Covid
Sabaton in Wembley Arena, Feb 2020
Dead Space Chamber Music at St John On-The-Wall, Bristol, January 2020

My interpretation of Goth having been born of the Gothic Revival influences the books I read. And those I write. The Art I produce. The places I go to in search of inspiration and peace. The way in which I decorate my personal space. Even the mental “safe space” I am being trained to create is itself a gothic edifice. I love the darkness of nighttime, as darkness seems to possess so much more truth. I love the Art and symbolism found in Cemeteries, Churches and Graveyards. They’re peaceful, beautiful places far removed from the chaos and noise of the living world, As well as losing myself in the perfect atmosphere for althe kind of chilling tales I revel in. I love Autumn and I am a bonefide Halloween Queen. I love broken things and abandoned places. I listen to stories of true hauntings, true crime and unsolved mysteries to go to sleep. It is the heart within my heart. And Cancer has broken it.

I’m in love with the darkness of the night

I’m in love with all that’s out of sight

I’m in love with the magic of the moon

And the darkness loves me, too

Xandria, “In love With The Darkness”.

There is more to be said for embracing darkness and shadows. Something that goes beyond even literature and art and finding inspiration. It gives me somewhere to hide. I have CPTSD. I have failed to get anywhere further than square one for my entire adult life. It has been a ride of constant struggles, illness, conflict and hitting brick walls and dead ends. Life seems to want to show me lovely things, then take them away again. What are you to do when you feel that life doesn’t want you? You embrace Death. I became Goth because I am grieving for a life I couldn’t have. I embraced Goth as a trauma response as much as an inspirational calling from the night. I am Goth because I am angry, with myself for failing at life and at life for failing me. There have been many times where I have seen Death as the only alternative to living through what I was experiencing. I feel for the things and people and places that have been broken and abandoned and forgotten, because I have been there too. But now I have Cancer, and Cancer could kill me. Everything has changed. Where I once chased beauty in darkness, where I had surrounded myself in beautiful associations with death, they aren’t so beautiful anymore. They make me feel sick.

Is it a prerequisite of being Goth to love death? If so, I will have to count myself out. I feel I am on the verge of abandoning my following of Goth altogether. when faced with my actual mortality all references to death, to horror, to all those things that once filled me with inspiration now make me feel sick and frightened. The music i once loved now triggers me, and the thoughts of permanent, inescapable darkness, stirred up by cemeteries, skulls and coffins fill me with dread instead of inspiration. I feel like a hypocrite, a contradiction. One half of me wants to be healthy and prolong life for as long as possible and has an irrational fear of just ceasing to exist, while the other half has had enough, too exhausted to fight anymore and just desperate for it all to be over with. I can even say I hate being alive because I am being forced to endure death. That long, drawn out, slow death so often depicted in the Gothic Art and Literature that I love is what I truly fear the most. Far more than my fear of falling out the sky in a plane crash, getting mangled by a car or just suddenly dropping dead in the middle of watching the TV. I had long hoped that it would be quick, painless and doing something I loved.. maybe a bizarre urbexing accident. I don’t want a finite amount of days where I can count them down with acute awareness, where every minute I will be desperately seeking pleasure, desperately making the most of what I experience for the final time, and hanging on to any scrap of hope but knowing all too well that it is too late. Can I even call myself Goth when I am clinging this tightly onto life? Was I ever truly Goth? Or just a fucking joke?

Should I be lucky enough to survive this, Am I going to owe life some kind of debt for my second chance? Perhaps paid for in abandoning Ghosts and graveyards and embracing sunshine and butterflies? Will I ever feel comfortable again, let alone comforted, drifting through graveyards and ruins?

And should I somehow survive this Cancer and this surgery and hold on to my Goth identity through this, how am I going to live as a Goth with a permanent Colostomy.. A Gothstomate? How will I be able to wear goth clothes with a Stoma and a bag full of poo to accommodate? I don’t know how I will be able to show my face in my clubs or at my concerts without the fear that I am being constantly looked at and judged, knowing what gross things are going on under my clothes. I don’t know anyone in my Goth Community with a Stoma that I can reach out to, to ask how they cope, how they can wear their clothes and go to their clubs without feeling like they stand out with their disability. In fact I don’t know any Goths with Stomas at all. I feel utterly isolated.

I have caught myself daring to dream of one day perhaps being able to model Goth fashion as plus size and disabled, be a representative for Ostomates in the Goth Community, as so far I just haven’t seen any to help me feel less alone, to give me any confidence that I can carry on wearing my signature style, that I can continue to identify as Goth. But that may only come from surviving cancer first.

The Nuclear Fallout

One day, I might be able to tell the story of what I have overcome and how. But until then, this is the story of how I can barely cope with what is to come.

Even though I had long ago foreseen that I would eventually have Cancer, I never considered THIS CANCER. or THIS EARLY. Couldn’t I have at least got to the age of forty first? Why not one that was in a less embarrassing place? Colorectal Cancer is something that happens to old men. Colostomies are for the elderly. They lurk in the sleazy dark corners of life, unspoken, dirty, secret things that only crop up in crude humour like Cards Against Humanity and sly jokes about incontinence. Even an old sketch from BBC’s “Dead Ringers” has repeated over and over in my head:

Well, I had a bit of trouble capturing the water, but I’ve adjusted my colostomy bag and it’s fine now..

Watercolour Challenge Sketch, Dead Ringers, BBC1

After all, there’s nothing like a little snickering about someone who can’t control their toileting.
I lost my childhood to Bullying. I lost my Twenties to Mental Illness. To Abusive relationships. To Poverty. I couldn’t keep a job, let alone find a career. My original job saw me thrown out after five weeks and I still to this day don’t know why. My second job alongside my MA degree landed me with my first Mental Health Diagnosis and what turned out to be massive Burnout, from which I still haven’t recovered. No employer wanted someone with useless knowledge and no experience, let alone someone with Mental baggage and behaviour that looked brattish, over dramatic and self centred. Now I’m losing my Thirties to Cancer, and the real chance I won’t even make it to my Forties.

I instantly felt old. Like 2 thirds of my life had suddenly dissolved into history, wasted and irretrievable, and the last third brutally visible and finite; dominated by hospital appointments, tests, further diagnoses and further treatment, languishing in bed and in pain instead of going out there to make the most of whatever is left of myself.

I saw my whole life as if I had already lived it.. And the inertia of my life, plunging ahead and me, powerless to stop it. “

Rose DeWitt Bukater, Titanic (1997)

How am I ever going to progress from this? I don’t know anyone with this that I can relate to, let alone anyone who is goth, or female, or as fat as me. How am I supposed to tackle this on top of all my existing conditions? Isn’t severe Anxiety and Depression, Autism and Complex PTSD enough already? What about my dignity? What about what’s left of my self worth and self confidence? My coping mechanisms that are utterly dependent on food and drink? My sensory issues that mean I can barely tolerate tags in clothes? The prospect of facing a life of being constantly dirty, smelly, incontinent, uncomfortable, paranoid and utterly humiliated? How am I ever going to show my face anywhere again, constantly aware of people feigning sympathy while quietly sneering at my disgusting disability? I wam never going to leave my flat again. How am I going to live in a society that is already angry with me for being mentally defective and unproductive and now having a taboo physical health condition on top? How am I going to live with this? Am I even going to live at all?

Everything running through my head was how a Stoma was going to ruin my life, and even darker, how it wasn’t even going to be worth it because the cancer was going to kill me anyway. My life was going to be measured in months, not years. Having my entire GP surgery saying how they were all in shock at the diagnosis didn’t exactly fill me with confidence either. After the diagnosis, the Stoma Nurse had given me a Colostomy Starter Pack to practise with and get an idea of what a Stoma and a bag was going to feel like. I was instantaneously repulsed. It made a horrible crinkling sound like a crisp packet was shoved down my Knickers. It looked and felt just so intimidating and medical. And it fell off. The practise Stoma lost its stick and fell off. The bag filled up with water when I tried practising with it in the shower, and it too fell off. I couldn’t find the gel that was supposed to mimic poo ((oh, I now have to call it “Output”.. My bad)) so I first tried with water, which leaked everywhere. Then with rice, which made it fall off yet again. If I can’t even manage the practise ones, how am I ever going to cope with the real thing in less than a few months time, forever.

Trying the practise Stoma bag. I looked and felt vile.

I didn’t feel safe anywhere, not even in my own body. The inside of me felt contaminated, and I wanted to tear myself open and escape. I don’t want it taking me down with it. I felt guilty. I felt like I deserved it. Like I had put it there with my bad attitude and bad choices and bad temper and bad habits. And once again the Bullies had been proved right. I was the one in the wrong, the one that needed teaching a lesson, the one that deserved all these kicks in the head year after year instead of progression or success. I wasn’t good enough for that. I hadn’t worked hard enough. didn’t deserve it. A problem instead of a person. And I felt stupid. Stupid for all those months spent terrified and hiding from Covid when I had Cancer the whole time.

I thought of those who had been so cruel over the years and would actually celebrate in my death. We told the kids not to tell their Mum and her new partner about my diagnosis because they would be delighted that I had finally got my comeuppance. Those that had said they wanted me to die from Covid. Said that I was beyond help. Those who called me a home wrecker. A man eater. A gold digger. A leech. Those who hate me for the inappropriateness of the things I love and how I express my fascination. Those who find me an endurance test, those who I physically and mentally drain of energy. Those who believe I am an abuser or I am manipulative and play games with their lives. And of course the government and society who see me as a drain on their resources and a miserable statistic that would be better off gone.

The things I love now brought me no joy. The things that had once been so special to me and had brought me comfort like my pretty things and sensory things and favourite clothes and foods and makeup and jewellery. What was the point in them anymore? It’s not like I could take anything with me into that darkness of non-existence, cold under the ground. The things I enjoyed doing the most all faded to nothing. My history studies. My specialist subjects like the Titanic and Chernobyl and Crystal Therapy. My religion that I had not long rediscovered. Watching true crime Documentaries or quiz shows or horror movies. Photography made me feel particularly sick, as did any of my associations with the goth culture I had made myself home in for so many years. My whole identity had been eroded, and that impact warrants its own post. Many of my beloved things even became triggers. I still can’t listen to music as it reminds me of better times that I will never experience anymore, or become associated with this darkest point in my life. Even my Cats became difficult to be around, with my knowing full well that if I end up having Chemotherapy in the future I may have to Re home them all as they can affect the treatment.

Nothing mattered anymore. I started on the self deprecation jokes. I always knew some a*hole would try and kill me, never expected it to be my own. I’m done looking for life goals, now I should start thinking if afterlife goals. What do I want to be when I’m dead? Maybe become a Poltergeist and smash the crockery in No. 10 Downing Street. Sounds like a fun career move.

Pulling jokes could only go so far. My self care went to pieces. And the self harm started. I couldn’t eat. I couldn’t face food. And then I was so ravenously hungry that I didn’t care what I ate or how much. During the first Lockdown for Covid I became borderline alcoholic due to being unable to adapt, and that crutch was once again the only thing propping me up where my friends and family couldn’t reach. I stood in my destroyed kitchen drinking wine at 10am. I would sit and stare. Or stand and stare. Nothing got done unless it involved drinking to dissolve the thoughts and numb the feelings.

Wherever I had to go I broke down. I had to go to the GP for a routine blood test and I broke down there. Had to get David out of work to come and pick me up and I had to be given an emergency GP appointment because I went straight into a panic attack. I broke down in front of the local council campaigners when they knocked on my door with their leaflets. I couldn’t bear to be awake but I also couldn’t sleep. The nightmares and the morning Anxiety attacks were intolerable. I wrote to the Colostomy UK Facebook Group that I wanted to cancel the surgery because I couldn’t go through with it.

About as much as I could face eating..
It can fit a whole bottle.
Kitchen chaos as I failed to keep on top of the chores

When I finally kicked myself out of the flat to try and go for a walk, I walked miles with Wine in my water bottle and all my mental health meds in my purse. I wanted to go to Cathays cemetery or Llandaff cathedral graveyard, but somehow I ended up at the blackweir bridge. It was freezing and desolate despite the presence of cyclists and dog walkers and joggers. I didn’t take the pills this time. I thought of my surgery team and the effort they were making to try and save me. I felt I was throwing their care and commitment back in their faces, the epitome of all those accusations of selfishness and ingratitude over the years. I felt abhorrent.

In the end I had to give in. I knew I couldn’t look after myself, especially when David started his new job and I had to face hours completely on my own. I couldn’t make decisions by myself. I couldn’t function. I couldn’t cope. The last thing I wanted for David was for him to lose his new job because I couldn’t hack it on my own. So I bought a train ticket and ran away, back to my parents and the place where I was born.

I felt awful for dumping myself on my parents. Yet again I come home with my tail between my legs because I have utterly failed to live in the outside world. Just a frightened, helpless kid in an adult’s – now failing – body. They had to do all the psychological heavy lifting. Help me to eat properly again. Cut down drinking. Keep on top of hygiene and the simplest self care. They took me out places so I wouldn’t languish in my bedroom. They had me get into some TV dramas – Chloe and The Killing and Peaky Blinders – to distract me from my brain. They even paid for me to get my hair cut and re-coloured so I would look and feel just a little less of a wreck. And they have had to tough their way through all of my breakdowns, constantly repeating over and over again the same things that my head refuses to digest. That I’m not on death row. That I’ve not been condemned. That I’m not going to be a messy embarrassment.

Just after having my hair done. I am still asking this question.

The surgery team, Mr Ansell and Angel, said the chances of the cancer still being there after the surgery were small. But the chances of it being this form of Cancer were also small, so I just don’t believe anyone anymore. And the horror stories I have since been exposed to of living with cancer, of life as an Ostomate.. Well, they will have to be given a post all of their own.

I was supposed to have been turning my life around. I was meant to be blogging about my travel adventures and photography. But instead I am blogging about Cancer and a life with a prosthetic bowel.

Another Life, Another Cancer

Today is World Cancer Day.

I feel like just another unimportant person writing about yet another Cancer diagnosis. Yes, it is real. Yes, it is serious. Yes, it is life threatening. Not to worry, hey? So many people get it these days and so many survive. So many go on to live full and healthy lives after Cancer.

But.

But those lives carry the scars left by Cancer. They carry the changes. They carry the consequences. They carry the effects. And not all of them were normal, successful and straightforward lives to begin with. Mine certainly wasn’t, and isn’t now either, and won’t be in my hopefully Cancer-Free future.

I identify as a Goth. A lover of darkness and broken things. Of things that most people tell me to avoid for the sake of being happy, of being sane. So how can I, who never saw life as made of rainbows and butterflies, embrace and accept the cold, real, visceral darkness of Cancer? I am being forced to find those answers alone.

I never want this kind of loneliness to happen to another Goth. So here I am writing and documenting my journey to perhaps serve as guidance for other Goths who also have to tread this darkest of dark paths.

I should warn that this will come with its own index of trigger warnings. To join me you will get to know me, warts.. tears and fury.. bitchcraft and cuss words ..and poo and farts.. and everything else. I will be baring all during the lowest moments of my life, those that have gone and those that are still on the horizon. You might not like what you read. If Cancer is teaching me anything it is to screw politeness and denial and embrace brutal honesty. These are my opinions and my experiences. At times its going to read like a tirade of anger and self pity, but i believe anyone facing a life threatening illness is more than entitled to that. If what you read isnt to your liking, stop reading. The last thing a Cancer fighter needs are trolls. I can’t be anything more than human, especially when I will soon be a human with vital bits of me missing. At the same time, you will get to know my humour, my best support network of friends and family, my willingness to be a doormat to Cat paws. What makes this Two-Thirds-Cat One-Third-Human tick might hopefully resonate with you too.

Lastly, I don’t want Cancer to be a blind and lonely road whatever the outcome. I am Kurona, Lady Midnytemare, and I am no Cancer Warrior. This is my Long Hard Road Out of Hell.