When I was a girl, every Saturday morning breakfast was punctuated by my father pushing his chair back from the table, standing, and announcing that he was headed out to “survey the estate.” Our “estate” was quite small — the size of an average back yard in the city — but luscious, with tended perennial beds, brick paths, a secret Japanese garden with a winding stream and waterfall, a couple of small brick terraces, climbing vines, tall hedges, a fig tree, and a hand-carved grape arbor. I loved this garden because it was cool and beautiful and welcoming, but more importantly, because it lived and breathed a family. Not only did we spend summer days and nights here, but it existed because we existed. Every flower and blade of grass, every scraggly shrub starter, every brick, every hand-patinaed piece of statuary, every pond liner and edging stone and wooden arbor joist had been planted and carved and laid and edged and watered and tended by my visionary parents, with the aid of three fledgling wheelbarrow drivers. I’ve lived in gardens ever since those early years, but my first remains the gold standard. Not because it was prettier or more lush or contained a magical variety of flora, but because watching an ordinary family create that garden taught me just how much influence we have over the landscapes of our lives. I grew up believing that anything was possible with a little sweat, imagination, some scavenging, a tool or two, and someone to help with the wheelbarrow.
And my life has been very much like this. When I’ve acted on this belief, some pretty magical things have happened. I’ve always claimed to be lucky, to be blessed, to have escaped turmoil, despair, poverty. I’ve been pretty good at remembering that I have everything I need to live, create, and love, even if I can’t immediately remember which drawer or which recess of my brain has it safely tucked away. It has been, most certainly, a wondrous life and, despite a few sorrows, I could hardly have penned it any better.
And now at 57, too old to be tragic and too young to be inevitable, I have cancer, and though I am quite often irritatingly adept at seeing things coming, I did not see this.
Today will be hot, but the sky is dishing out a soul-stirring bluster. Yesterday I watched a tree throw her leaves in an arc that crossed a lane, fluttering madly in a last dance. This morning the walnut and elm on opposite sides of the garden are tossing their dual ingredients into the tango in swirls like fall, and it feels both happy and sad to see a summer breeze awash with still-green leaves. No longer green myself, I still feel the flutter and recognize change.
And so I look at the bountiful landscape of a life and wrestle to place my changing self into the life I’ve loved. Though my prognosis is good, I’m irritated that my future, which should map out genetically at a good thirty years (still peanuts!) will now be measured and celebrated in five year increments — barely time enough to make a bucket list, especially one scheduled around chemo treatments. And I’m irritated that my gurus, carefully chosen by the matching of heart to soul, will now be peopled with strangers selected by paper credentials and calendar availability, and that they will have as much say, and perhaps more, in the way I live my days from sunup to sundown for the rest of my life. And I’m irritated that cancer so often attacks women in the very organs that give and sustain life — Karma, wake the hell up!!!
Of course the bottom line is that the landscape of my life has also changed, and shockingly so. The way I look at my days has changed. The way I think and experience has changed. In a way, I’m okay with that. But I need to start over like a child with my trowel in the dirt, learning the feel of both peat and clay, the difference between nectars and nettles, how to map paths around this sinkhole or that hornet’s nest. Landscape, I want to look you full in the eye with my colored lenses off and my antennae roused. I need to know you intimately so that I can meet you on my terms. And yes, I will bitch and moan. I will withdraw. I will snap. I will be preoccupied. I will cry. I will cling. I will write more than I will speak. I will not wear the smiley face. I will be unpredictable, just like this disease. Just like this changing landscape that looks so foreign to me in this moment. But in the end, there will be beauty.
I want to be Zen again, one day, but make no mistake that this time I will be Zen with a dragon tattoo, really good hiking boots, and backup. So please pardon me while I raise a little hell and clear the nettles.

Landscape of Rousillon, France
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create, create. the only way to deal with this bastard. i created my way out of much colon cancer years ago. do everything, but also create.
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Thank you Lee — we have MUCH in common!
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just found your comment. i am so lame with this venue. we must know people in common as close as we are. i loved your description about your dad pushing away from the table and going out to survey the gardens. i do the same thing too, but in the evening with a glass of wine.
i am thinking of penland people that i know, and who you might know. edwina and ??? the twins, one was textile, one in clay.
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Hang in there, baby. My dad is a 15-year cancer survivor. We have the tee-shirt. Love this writing, your writing. –Paige Ponder Monaghan
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Thank you, PG. We have the Tee-shirt too and dad is going strong. Wooohooo. Love ur writing too. –PPM
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I bow to you. Amazing writing, and I am anxiously poised for your inevitable book contract. Agree with Ashley, the best. Sending love this week to you and your family.
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XO L.
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Eloquently said Pam!! Hugs of healing strength and love being sent your way!! Keep writing Pam…it is so healing in itself, but your writing…well…it is healing to others as well!
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Powerful, Pam.
I want cancer to be a slug that you could bathe in salt or beer and be done with.
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I gots the wheelbarrow Baby!! and all the love we need to fill it!..OxOx
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Oh Pam, you are such an amazingly loving woman…and now I discovered, a talented poet too! I am thinking about you and hoping you stay strong. Big warm hugs, dear Pam
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This entire piece is my absolute favorite thing you’ve ever written. I especially love: Yesterday I watched a tree throw her leaves in an arc that crossed a lane, fluttering madly in a last dance. … No longer green myself, I still feel the flutter and recognize change. I’m glad you see the beauty in these leaves, but you are not even remotely near your last dance. I do enjoy seeing your fluttering every day, though 🙂
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