As Simple As That.

She cupped her hands together and looked down at her dark brown hair. Two elastic bands bound the smooth strands of each of the four pony tails, each one exactly eight inches long. She gently stroked it for a while and then tucked it all into a clear zip lock bag and snapped shut the seal. Tomorrow she would mail it to the non-profit organization that claimed to make wigs for women with cancer.

Moments later she dared to look up again into the bathroom mirror. Her second look at her new appearance. A face stared back at her. Just a face. A bare face with not a single lock of hair to frame it, nor the shades of expression or emotion to color it. She leaned forward to peer at the top of her head. A brown fuzz with jagged ends, interrupted by silvery white patches where she had held the scissors too close to her scalp. She tried to run her hands through it but realized that there was nothing left to run them through – it was a soft rounded surface now without any depth or volume to it.

Her face remained as expressionless as it had been for the past week. Or perhaps, it was the expression her face had plateaued to when she had reached some midpoint between her depression and her newfound sense of tranquility. It had been two weeks now since she had heard that her friend’s wife had terminal cancer, and finally after two weeks of calling exprets around the country and researching possible clinical trials, she had hesitantly waded toward an acceptance. Acceptance that at the mere age of twenty-six, his wife would die within months or weeks or days; acceptance that there was nothing that she, or anyone else, could do to change this reality.

She had changed a lot in the past two weeks – a change that she had felt only internally so far, but now she could see it and touch it as well. What now, she wondered as she continued to look into the reflection of her eyes. Was this moment of transformation to be filled with tears or with laughter?

How does a tree feel when it loses its leaves at the end of autumn? Or the sun, when it sets at the end of a day? What emotions does a caterpillar experience when it becomes a butterfly? With each moment and each day nature continues to renew itself – the end of one stage bringing forth the beginning of the next. This moment was no exception to the rule, as yet another being passed from another end to another beginning.

She dusted off the top of her head and walked over to the balcony of her apartment. A tremendous feeling of lightness took over as the wind tickled the top of her head as it rushed on its course. The word liberation came to her mind. Yes, it was real. Yes, she had truly done it. She had found the courage within her to do something that she had never thought she would have dared to do. It was crazy and selfless and empowering and rash – all at the same time, and much more. But what about regret – any of that? Of what necessity was an action that would never benefit the person that it was done for?

But this was not a moment to regret or have second thoughts, she decided. She could have passed through this moment again and she would not have chosen any differently. Every action has its own special moment and place in the sequence of events in this universe, and out of the many actions that she could have chosen upon reaching the acceptance of her utter helplessness in this tragic situation, this was the action that was the most fitting for this moment. It was as simple as that. There was nothing more to it.

* * *

Three weeks went by. Slowly nature took its course. Slowly her dark hair started to cover her scalp again. Slowly, in another part of the world, her friend’s wife withered away till she balanced very precariously at the brink of life and death. Then there came the day when his wife lay still and not a breath came from her lips, not an expression on her face, nor any warmth left in her skin. The day when her friend was suddenly all alone – more alone than ever before, more alone than anyone could ever have imagined someone could be just a year after getting married. The short-lived bliss of married life was now followed by a very bitter cold loneliness that nothing could ever change.

She peeled off the scarf that she had tightly tied around her head each morning ever sine that day weeks ago when she had cut her hair. She didn’t want to hide it anymore. It didn’t matter what anyone thought or said now. Her action had not only been done in honor of someone beautiful – it was more than just that. Her action had helped keep the spirit of a young woman alive. Her action had proven, once again in the sequence of events in this universe, that even once nature takes its course and people end their material existence in this world, their essence can continue to live on through the actions of those left behind. It was as simple as that and there was nothing more to it.

* * *

Another five weeks went by and finally her thoughts and her emotions found their way to an empty white piece of paper, transforming its whiteness within moments into several lines of dark cursive script. Her hair had grown to be more than an inch long now, yet through her written words she had immortalized that transforming moment when her head had been covered by only a brown fuzz and silvery white patches. That moment weeks ago when she had found a way to hold on to the essence of an ephemeral being. A simple moment somewhere amongst the many others in the ongoing sequence of events in this universe.

Just Because

I’ve decided.

Soon after this exam, I’m going to get a tatoo.  It’ll be a beautiful colorful butterfly at the top of my right arm.

Why?

Just because…

    Just because we only live this life once.

         And because butterflies remind me of how beautiful life is.

In Your Bed

Today as we talked to a pediatric oncology patient, my thoughts drifted faraway…

Imagine if the positions were reversed and I was lying in this frail 22-year-old’s bed in his place, with him standing above me with a team of doctors.  Imagine if I was the one feeling feverish, nauseated, and in pain, with bleeding gums and diarrhea.  Imagine if I were the one who was told that I had anaplastic large cell lymphoma for the third time over and that all we could do was hope that this new treatment would work.  Imagine if I was the one looking up at him from that bed, with silent eyes that were begging him to find some way to make me feel better. 

“You’re so healthy,” I would think, as I lie there looking at him standing in his shining white coat.  “You’re so very healthy and I hope you really do cherish that.  I hope you work hard to achieve your goals in life and I hope that every dream you’ve ever dreamt comes true for you.  Did you say that you once dreamt of reducing the suffering and pain of others, of healing the ill, of giving hope to those who have no hope?  Well then I hope you use every ounce of good health that you have in you to do it.  Because that’s what life is – the celebration of people doing good things for each other.  I can’t do anything for you now – look at how little I can do for myself! But I can let you know that I’m counting on you.  We’re all counting on you actually – you have the energy, the means, the ambition to do something special for us.  So then what are you waiting for, what are you wasting time for?  The path is laid out and there are lights all along the way.  Each step of the way has been spelt out for you and there are people cheering you on at the sidelines.  Then really, what are you waiting for?  Time’s running out, don’t you see that?  Just do it!”

Veerji’s Generosity

Generosity never ceases to amaze me. There’s a special person here, and I told him he was like a big brother to me – my Veerji (which means big brother, in Punjabi). His med school subscribes to Kaplan so they can order review books every year for usmle exams. When he heard that I was studying for this exam, he ordered a fresh new set of books for me, and this morning he passed them to me.

It brings tears to my eyes – the 7 brand new books sit near my little puja corner, ready to be used in their full capacity. My heart hurts when I think that someone I’ve only known for two weeks has it in his heart to give me such a precious gift of knowledge. It’s not something I could ever return, but perhaps one day I will get the chance to pass it on to another person and give them the same hope that he gave me today.

Certainly, the biggest tragedy in life is the person who knows exactly where he wants to go and has a map of the entire journey, along with the means of getting to his destination, but doesn’t end up making it just because he didn’t give his ambitions enough priority.

There are so many people who just want me get through this exam and to be satisfied with whatever effort I put in it in the end. That’s really all that matters now – it’s really not about results, it’s really not about where it’ll get me. It’s all about me realizing that this really is my only priority for the next three weeks – I can’t spend the present worrying about the past or the future – there’s just too much to do in the present, too many more things to get done in order to make the present as fulfilling as possible!

A Perfect Start

I’m so excited!  I signed up for Punjabi lessons yesterday.  Yup yup, I get to learn the coolest language in the world!  (I mean if Bhangra is the coolest music, then by extension, Punjabi’s gotta be the coolest language. Ok ok, it’s my mother tongue, so I have that sense of overwhelming pride.) Lessons start on Sept 10th, a couple days after the date that my usmle is currently scheduled for.  Only thing I worry about it that the age range in this class starts at age 5. And they give us My Khalsa School school bags and IDs…. hehehe… I will laugh out loud if I end up being that one goofy 24-year-old amongst a huge class of 5-year-olds.

Yesterday was a fun day, I also had a mini-med school reunion with two other med school friends. We ate dinner at a nice Italian restaurant and then watched an outdoor movie sitting on the grass. Familiar faces of the past… it meant a lot.  How often do I come by familiar faces each time I move on in life? I’ve yet to meet even one of the friends that I left behind in Singapore six years ago!

I went to the Sikh temple yesterday – the Gurudwara. What a perfect way to start the week!  The nice thing about religion (or indeed, my own interpretation of all religions that I know of!) when it comes in the AM is that it makes you start your day with a huge reminder of how there are bigger forces at work in this Universe. And how the world doesn’t revolve around me me me.  And how I’m one amongst billions. And how I need to really focus on my goals if I want to make even that tiny speck of difference that I’d like to make in the history of the Universe.  I repeat, what a perfect way to start the week!