journey

Broken

I’ve just gotten off the phone with the Member Appeals department at Kaiser. The very nice woman on the other end of the line told me my appeal to get my MRI has been denied; even though I meet all the criteria on the list except one. Even though she tells me it is the best appeal letter she’s ever read.

Denied.
This is after my orthopedist put in the first request for the MRI.

That was denied.
Now my appeal has been denied.
My blood is boiling. I feel rage and desperation welling in me.

The thing is, the sharp shooting pain through my left groin that radiates down my leg is so intense it makes it hard to focus, to get anything done. It has its way with me on a daily basis and has me hobbling around holding on to walls and railings, counter tops, and door handles.

I can barely lift my breastbone to stand up straight in the morning because each time I do searing pain invades my body like a bayonet. For the first hour of the day, I stoop like a 90-year-old and hope that slowly the sensations will subside so I can stand up straight.

I ask her, “well, what can we do now? I am in so much pain and because I don’t check the box of having had physical therapy in the last three months, my appeal has been denied. I understand that Kaiser needs to have policies and rules, but there is an exception to every rule, and I am that exception. Let me tell you why.”

She tells me she can write a second appeal to an outside source that will review my situation and perhaps overturn the appeal.

“Ok,” I say. “Well, I’d like to tell you why I am the exception and why I should get this MRI approved.”

She listens.

I launch into my 24-year journey of healing after the car accident. Hit by a car as a pedestrian. I won’t bore you with all the details, but let me just say, I flush out the big picture and urge her to weave into her report that I think it is inhumane to deny people who are in so much pain access to an MRI because they don’t check one box, but they check all the others.

She’s compassionate. She’s listening. I feel it.

When I get off the phone, I feel confident that the second appeal will overturn the first. If not, I will do a sit in in my doctor’s office until I get that MRI. I am determined. I have no choice but to make this happen.

All week I’ve been fantasizing about having a cane to lean on and I have one. It’s at my mother’s in Oakland. It’s an African cane with a beautifully carved handle. I used it as I healed after my accident in my 30s. Now, I want the cane. I need the support. It will be a relief to lean on it.

A friend of mine does me the favor and packs it up and sends it to me. She sends it UPS and it arrives just after I get off the phone with the Member Appeals lady.

I’m so excited to get it. I open the package and pull it out, and the handle is broken into 5 pieces. I look at it and a tidal wave of grief hits me like a tsunami and the dam bursts, and I am wailing like my mother died. This broken cane tips me over the edge.

“Noooooooooooooooo,” I wail. I sob and heave, wander from room to room. “Noooooooooooo” The sobbing lets the grief go. It floods my body and rushes through like a raging river.

I hobble from room to room crying.
I feel broken.
I feel the loss of not being an able body.
I feel the brokenness of the system, the injustice, the lack of care.

I feel for the people who aren’t good advocates for themselves because they’re in too much pain, too sick, or can’t speak up for themselves.

I feel for the overworked doctors who have no time to advocate for their patients.
I feel for the world, the senseless killing.
I feel for the brokenness of humanity.

I wail for the world. I wail for myself. I wail and let it all run through me like a river of grief.

Once the storm passes, I look at the cane and imagine putting it back together. Healing it. Fixing it. I imagine my own body healed, stitched back together in whatever ways possible so I can live pain free.

I imagine peace in myself and in the world.
May it be so.

Ode to India

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Oh India, mirror of mirrors!
I walk more easily now in your crooked streets and craggy sidewalks.

You are my teacher.

You beg me to let go, to watch my step, to soften my judgment.

I walk as if in wonderland, enthralled by your jeweled colors, billowing saris, bobbing turbins. I am a child in a candy shop and you gently show me my greedy nature.

I want….
…to take a photo.
…to take the jewels home.
…to capture the flavors, smells, scents and sounds.
…to take, to have, to hold and to keep.

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But there is no taking, keeping, holding or “mine.”

There is only flow.
Letting go.
Relaxing into what is.

Oh India, your dust lines my lungs, your dirt a second skin on my body.

My heart aches seeing your brilliance….
…the Taj Mahal
…the snow dusted Himalayas
…your fantastic festival Holi painting people purple and pink
…your plethora of temples honoring the gods….Ganesh, Shiva, Krishna, Kali….

My heart aches seeing your pain…
…the bride burnings
…the man with a deformed arm reaching for rupees into my rickshaw
…the shanty towns butted up against millionaire apartments
…the heaped garbage…

How do you manage?
How do you keep it together?
How does it work?

My heart starts to get the joke. It all works out in the end.

The electricity works.
             For a while.
The hotel room is mostly clean.
The horns ARE the traffic system.
             You must be the flow. No room for doubt.
Squatting and having no toilet paper IS an option.

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I’ve come here to practice.
To open my heart.
To be present.

I practice breathing.
I tell myself, “Let go, let go.”

I remind myself the driver wants to live.
I remind myself they’ve done puja for good luck.
I remind myself I am not in control.

Is this why your people pray so much?
Light incense, roll sandalwood beads between brown fingers?

There are so many paths to God in your vast land, from the Himalayas to the beachy shores. Why are some lives so filled with so much struggle while others flash and sprint around in Lamborghinis?

“Only one rupee, only one rupee,” she says, hand moves towards mouth. The baby needs feeding.

Black hair is matted, her feet dry and crusty.

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Another woman’s craggy face reflects the 100 years it has turned up towards the sun. Brown, with rivulets running through the valleys of her cheeks, she radiates warmth from inside her stooped and bent body that has traversed the Himalayas to find safety in India, away from her homeland, Tibet. She has no teeth. She gently suggests we give her some rupees.

We take her photo.

We take.
We give.
India gives.
India takes.

Give. And
Take.