If reading me so far has overwhelmed you, I invite you to stay on a bit longer. I decided to stay a bit longer as well and that’s why I’m here sharing this with all of you.
As I said, I had SJS/TENs at 21 and cancer at 29. However, the years between these two crises were spent not only in recovering and gathering but also in sowing seeds for a future. Although I didn’t realize it at the time, I was creating a foundation for my life ahead. In those years of recovery from SJS/TENs, I went back to university and wrote 14 papers in two summers and finished my Bachelor’s degree. I studied French, trained to be a yoga instructor, trained in body conditioning and movement at a dance school and became a freelance photographer.
A year before my cancer diagnosis (my life will always be marked by these milestones of before/after), I spent a year studying photography on a generous scholarship provided by Maine Media College, USA. The chair of our program, Brenton Hamilton, says that I went there as a photographer and returned as an artist. I agree with him. My art gives me voice, witness, and courage. My art allows me to express through energy and touches realms that my intellect cannot access. I created hundreds of self-portraits during my program in Maine and unwittingly documented my cancer even before it was diagnosed. That’s the clairvoyant power of art in my life.
Only in hindsight can I see all these seemingly fragmented and unconnected accomplishments I made in between hospital visits and being bedridden. Through them, I actually managed to “make” a life.
Making a life calls for immense courage in the face of judgments and stigmas attached to being seen as someone who is broken or weak. Making a life requires a mountain of patience that will weather every storm of uncertainty and fear. Making a life means having your heart broken wide open and then choosing to keep it open to feel more instead of less. Making a life means trusting your love for yourself so you can allow love to flow in your life.
Over the years, I have often seen pity in people’s eyes when they would meet me. It’s because they could only see the parts of my life that terrified them. The thought of experiencing anything similar would scare them. They saw no hope for me. I am glad I never believed this for myself.