Internet, I need your help

Barbara on Apr 25th 2010

In a few weeks, Dave and I will be heading to Vegas for a week of punk rock and debauchery. My BFF’s are coming too and we couldn’t be more excited. They are doing a road trip starting from New Jersey all the way to Vegas. They’re planning to hit a few places the week before we fly out, then meet us in Sin City for the week.

Dave and I have done our share of road trips (not together, yet) and know that sitting in a car for 12 hours can kind of suck, which is why we thought we’d try to help make it more fun for them by organizing a scavenger hunt for their trip. Ya know, something to help pass the time. This is where you guys in.

I have plenty of my own ideas for weird stuff they can find throughout the week, but I’ve never actually been to any of the places they are going. So if you live, have been to, or know of and interesting scavenger hunt items my friends can pick up in these places, please share. This is where they are stopping:

Cleveland
Toledo
Chicago
Iowa
Rocky Mountain National Park
Denver

Remember, the weirder the better!

Filed in friends,fun | 10 responses so far

How Cancer Changed Me- Part 2

Barbara on Apr 22nd 2010

First of all, I personally want to thank all the people have that been so sweet and supportive after hearing about my Grandma’s passing. I read all your messages, emails, Facebook and Twitters. It amazes me how people that I may have never met in real life can be so incredibly caring. You guys are so wonderful and thank you so much.

I am the bitch that broke up with the guy that had cancer…

“I need to tell you something” he said. “Remember when I went to the doctor and they told me it was more than likely nothing to worry about? Well, they were wrong. I have cancer.”
The words hit me worse than a punch in the gut. This wasn’t happening. Why?
We had just broken up, again, about 2 weeks ago. I was going through a whole new chapter of my life and I was prepared to move on without him. I had just moved out of my parent’s house into my own place and my first quarter at AI was starting. This was too much too soon. I just started crying.

“What”, was the only thing I could manage to get out. When it came to health, he was the unluckiest person you’d ever meet. He was in and out of the hospital more than people 3x his age. Statistically, it seemed almost impossible that he could have another life threatening disease, but that was his luck.
He asked if he could come over to talk. I had just left work and was on my way home. With tears streaming down my face, I told him to meet me at my house. The house we were supposed to live in together, before we broke up.

He told me he had testicular cancer. For the next several months, he’d have to go through surgery and chemo treatments. I had been through cancer before, but chemo treatments were something that I didn’t have much experience with. The only cancer I’d had any experience with was with my Grandma and a few of my parent’s aunts and uncles. Older people had cancer. Young people didn’t get it.

He told me he wanted to get back together. That he missed me and needed me to get through this. And I said yes, even though I was reluctant. Our relationship was a roller coaster ride. I had finally accepted that the life I thought we were going to have together wasn’t going to happen, but then I saw his face.

The look on his face was something that I will never forget. He was scared as hell. He had no idea what he was going to do. He didn’t know if he was going to get through this. And there was no way I could say no.
The next few months were the worst months of my life. I watched helpless as he threw up from his chemo treatments. He tried to be normal, 20 something year old kid, but most of the time he just slept.

Due to him having no immune system, he couldn’t be around his friends a lot. A lot of the times, I even kept my distance for fear I might get him even sicker. For all he was going through, his attitude was always positive. He started losing his arm hair first. The day he realized, he jokingly started pulling it out saying “watch, it doesn’t even hurt!” When he lost the hair on his head, he nicknamed himself “cabbage patch”.

Friends and family stuck together to help him through it. His buddies all shaved their heads when he started to lose his hair so he wasn’t the only bald one. My sister and I made him food that he could manage to hold down. His family was amazing, taking him from doctor to doctor and still managing to work their jobs. He had people and we were determined to get him through it.

Surviving a life threatening illness changes people. He survived physically, but the person that he once was had completely died. He wouldn’t listen to the music we used to see live in concert. He stopped drinking and looked down on me when I wanted to have a beer. He suddenly decided that he wanted to stop going to school for computers and become a youth pastor. Instead of going to movies, we were going to bible studies. He wanted me to open my eyes to something that all my life I wasn’t sure about. As much as I tried to be supportive, I could see how far we were drifting apart. The person that I was once so in love with wasn’t the same person anymore. I wanted HIM, not this new person.

We stretched it out, painfully, for as long as we could, but there was no way I was getting that old person back. We spent more time fighting with each other than doing anything else. We went around in circles trying to get each other to see things from the person’s point of view. I was so angry, but not at him, at the cancer. I blamed the cancer for everything. The cancer took him from me. If it weren’t for the cancer, we wouldn’t be going through this.

I finally realized it wasn’t the cancer at all; it was us. I couldn’t blame the disease anymore. It wasn’t cancer’s fault. If anything, cancer opened my eyes to the fact that we just didn’t work. Although he got through it stronger than ever before, cancer killed our relationship for good.

Filed in friends,life,me | 2 responses so far

Small World

Barbara on Apr 20th 2010

Tonight I had dinner with an old high school friend who I haven’t seen since I graduated (back in 2001!). It just so happens that she lives 5 minutes away from where I work. We’d been talking on Facebook for awhile now and decided to get together to catch up.

It’s wild how much things change over the years. You don’t see the people that you were once so close with anymore. A lot of my high school friends are married with children. They have jobs, houses and responsibilities other than taking care of themselves.

We spent a few hours sipping margaritas and talking about old friends, work (she is a first grade teacher), our families and living in Florida. Although we’ve chosen very different career paths, our lives are similar. Not married, no children and enjoying each day as it comes. With so many of my friends living completely opposite lives as me, it’s nice to know that I still have a few that are going down a similar path. I hope to get together again soon.

Filed in daily,friends | One response so far

Next »