Poetry anyone?

Options
SISKimberly
SISKimberly Member Posts: 762
Poetry anyone?
«13

Comments

  • SISKimberly
    SISKimberly Member Posts: 762
    edited January 2008

    I have not found a place to share creative outlets like original poetry, so I thought I'd start a conversation.



    I was diagnosed 10/10/07 and had my bilateral mastectomy 12/6/07.



    I wrote this poem on December 3rd. It was one of those moments where the poem came to me and said, "I have something to say." Who am I to deny her a voice?



    Born Cancer, Won't Die of Cancer



    Cancer slinked in quietly dressed in black… unnoticed,

    acting all nonchalant so as not to draw attention to itself.

    Never suspecting its eventual discovery, it made itself at home.

    Caught like a thief in the spotlight of modern medicine, it was

    extricated from my breasts and sentenced to death.

    Reclaiming what has been stolen from me is impossible,

    nevertheless, I am content, for I have emerged the victor.

    I have survived to tell the tale.



    I'd love to hear original works of others out there. Writing is such a healing tool.



    Your SIS(Sister In Survival)

    Kimberly

  • SISKimberly
    SISKimberly Member Posts: 762
    edited December 2007

    Seems after starting this conversation another poem was forming. It has requested to be heard, so here it is written minutes ago 12/22/07:



    As I lay quietly in the dark before sleep,

    I imagine this beautiful healing golden light,

    thick as honey,

    slowly running through my body,

    caressing each and every organ

    filling each and every cell;

    coursing through each and every artery, vein, and capillary,

    ending its journey in my heart where it is received with love.



    They all sigh, the children of my body, and giggle with joy

    as if being tickled by a loving parent.



    Poor Cancer…I know it is only doing what it knows how to do,

    and I know I must help it to alter its behavior

    by surrounding it with this healing golden light…

    like a big ole bear hug

    thick as honey.



    Your SIS(Sister In Survival)

    Kimberly

  • TenderIsOurMight
    TenderIsOurMight Member Posts: 4,493
    edited March 2008





    Oh those are beautiful poems, Kimberly!



    While I never once wrote poems, I have found they spring forth here at bc.org as an inner voice often needing to be written. So I thank you for starting this thread.



    I simply love your 12/22 poem: "children of your body" etc.. You are so loving, and I hope this dampens those cancer cells down too. Why should it not, as love ramps up our immune system?



    SIS,

    Tender

  • SISKimberly
    SISKimberly Member Posts: 762
    edited December 2007

    Thanks Tender. I agree...love is powerful medicine.

    And thanks for using SIS...I was hoping that would catch on.

    PS Just read your post on Bimmer's thread...your poem was so sweet. I am sure he appreciated it.


    SIS

    Kimberly

  • SISKimberly
    SISKimberly Member Posts: 762
    edited December 2007

    Not exactly a poem, but a tale I wrote within another thread. It started with a comment about who would want to be the guy taking care of septic tanks...then lots of other things were tossed into the conversation...and someone said we had all the makings of a country western song...so I took on the task.



    My Septic is Erupting



    Good afternoon my dears, and welcome to my tale (alas I’m not a Country Western Song writer) woven together with all the bits and pieces of life shared here:



    It is quiet here on the eve before the New Year,

    and I vividly imagine that all around the Earth,

    people are waiting anxiously the stroke of midnight,

    and the much anticipated Twenty-08’s birth.



    Out on the ranch, I hear the train’s whistle hail its arrival,

    and am delighted by the glistening blanket of dazzling white.

    I am content as I take stock of the season, but unaware,

    oblivious,and in the dark about our poor septic tank’s plight.



    All the children, now gone, had come home as they do every year,

    each with their significant others and ‘kids’ in tow,

    a motley crew of canines, quite a sight to behold,

    happily romping and chasing one another in newly fallen snow.



    Our sweet ole deaf pup, who can be grumpy and pee indoors sometimes,

    mothered the newest batch of kittens with the greatest of ease,

    and from her warm bed, watched a death-defying circus act

    featuring Momma Cat and her siblings on the Christmas tree trapeze.



    I toast to the experiences, which have made me who I am,

    but instead of champagne, I drink momma’s recipe for a coffee martini,

    which I try to rationalize should keep me awake to greet 2008,

    when I will once again emphatically resolve to fit into my bikini.



    Simmering slowly all day,the potato soup makes my tummy growl, and

    this simple meal reminds me to meet each day with gratitude,

    not having what I want, but loving what I have,

    like being alive and loved, and nurturing a positive attitude.



    Although still on vacation, the cat has not let me sleep in,

    and before the magic hour, my sleepy eyelids begin to droop,

    but just at the stroke of midnight there is a deep rumbling outside;

    the septic tank has erupted, and my yard smells like…well… POOP.



    Well, Happy New Year to us all, I laugh,

    the saying, Shit Happens, has never been truer.

    I’m thankful I can call my septic guy

    to clean up this smelly sewer.



    I do believe we’ve come full circle ladies…and it all started with the thought of who would want to do such a yucky job! TaDa!!!



    Your SIS(Sister In Survival)

    Kimberly



  • AlaskaDeb
    AlaskaDeb Member Posts: 2,601
    edited December 2007

    I write poetry all the time and love to read it too...thank you for sharing.  Here is one of mine

    Handmaiden of all I survey

    By Debbie C.

      

    I am in charge of piled papers like towers.

    Archaeological digs of

    mail, newspapers, circulars.

    Rearranged ad infinitum.

    Breeding in slippery stacks on the kitchen counter.

    I am in charge of molehills

    and the corpses of small dead insects

    that reside in the cracks of the kitchen floor

    rustling like paper when the wind blows.

    Of the red paint in the cupboard

    and the bowl of fruit that stands on the kitchen table

    sweating honey flavored dew.

    I am in charge of the photos

    hanging on the wall

    in the darkness of the hallway

    of dead relatives and old dogs.

    And the one of a girl child

    dressed in a white sailor suit and a pout.

    Bought from the junk man

    because I coveted the oxblood frame

    and her butter soft curls.

    I am in charge of shoes with black buttons

    and blue glass bottles

    old holders of vile medicine

    now sitting triumphantly on the window ledge

    gloating at their good fortune.

    I am in charge of the plant in the corner

    with the name I forget.

    Arrow shaped leaves

    brown and curling at the tips.

    It is slowly dying

    for reasons I can not fathom.

  • SISKimberly
    SISKimberly Member Posts: 762
    edited December 2007

    YEAH!!!! Thank you Alaska Deb for posting on this thread. Maybe now it will catch on.

    I loved your poem...the things you're in charge of...great use of sensory details...Interesting how all the things are inanimate and often an old treasure...and yet the only living thing you're in charge of...you really aren't in charge of...it has its own agenda. Thank you for sharing, Deb.



    Your SIS (Sister In Survival)

    Kimberly

  • AlaskaDeb
    AlaskaDeb Member Posts: 2,601
    edited December 2007

    Maybe we should link to a few of the sites like the moving beyond or friendship threads.  I'm not sure many folks come to this thread....I only saw it in active conversations....

    There have to be other poetry lovers out there :)

    I liked your poems too.

    Thanks for sharing

    Deb C

  • newvickie
    newvickie Member Posts: 3,939
    edited December 2007

    I love poetry...not very good at writing it though.

    Here is one of my current favorites.

    All her hours were yellow sands,
    Blown in foolish whorls and tassels;
    Slipping warmly through her hands;
    Patted into little castles.

    Shiny day on shiny day
    Tumbled in a rainbow clutter,
    As she flipped them all away,
    Sent them spinning down the gutter.

    Leave for her a red young rose,
    Go your way, and save your pity;
    She is happy, for she knows
    That her dust is very pretty.

  • newvickie
    newvickie Member Posts: 3,939
    edited December 2007
    A thousands days have come and gone,
    a thousand wishes spent.
    The child she was so long ago, I wonder where she went?
    Through the guise of womanhood a space is there to fill.
    waiting for the chance to be the child within her still.
  • newvickie
    newvickie Member Posts: 3,939
    edited December 2007

    Maybe tomorrow I will give the writing one a try.

    You are all very talented...I'm impressed...more for my collection!

  • SISKimberly
    SISKimberly Member Posts: 762
    edited December 2007

    AlaskaDeb- Good idea about getting this out to other threads...but alas, I'm not very computer saavy...how do you do that exactly?



    Newvickie-Thank you for sharing some of your favorite poems by other authors...and I'm pleased you are going to give writing your own a try...there are no judgements here...only a place to allow your own creative juices to flow.



    I'm working on a new poem...should be ready soon.



    Your SIS(Sister In Survival)

    Kimberly

  • SISKimberly
    SISKimberly Member Posts: 762
    edited January 2008

    After much needed rain,the sun is shining

    on this final day of twenty-07,

    and I think of the many dear ones

    watching over us from heaven.



    Massive pearly gates and golden-winged angels

    isn’t exactly what I imagine in this place,

    but rather somewhere souls give dissertations,

    accounting for their time in this Earthbound space.



    I imagine much hearty, deeply felt laughter

    as each recognizes their many mistakes,

    and the futile agonizing they’d done

    causing their hearts to physically ache.



    I try to listen for my loved ones’ messages,

    but sometimes the mundane gets in the way

    as it screams over persistent loving whispers,

    making it difficult to understand all there is to say.



    The message that always comes through though,

    no matter how loud the man-made din clatters,

    is truth... we are all of the same human race,

    and acting always in love is all that really matters.


    It matters not what religion we hold dear,

    nor what political party we call our own,

    for we can all agree we bleed the same red,

    and will ultimately reap what we each have sown.



    So as I go into this newest of years,

    that message kept near to my hear,

    I will aspire to treat all with love,

    knowing of this universe, we are all a part.



    HAPPY NEW YEAR!!!!

    LET US ALL ASPIRE TO MAKE

    2008 MORE THAN GREAT!!!!
    Your SIS(Sister In Survival)
    Kimberly

  • SISKimberly
    SISKimberly Member Posts: 762
    edited January 2008

    As I wait for my chemo date, I've been inspired yet again to write...



    1/2/08



    Ode to My Body



    The dictionary states

    the whole

    is the sum of ALL of its

    p a r t s.

    I do not think I should be able to argue with that,

    for that is true,

    isn’t it?

    However,

    I want to argue!

    Does that hold true for humans,

    more specifically

    for me?

    If parts are removed, then

    does it follow,

    I am not whole?



    Others have argued

    the whole

    is GREATER than

    the sum of its

    p a r t s,

    and as I look at myself…

    my physical vessel…

    newly battle scarred

    and looking

    nothing

    like its former self did

    just twenty-eight days ago,

    I want to kiss whomever said that,

    for I wholeheartedly agree.



    Two…

    horizontal scars

    run across each mound

    of discolored flesh from underarm to sternum.

    Signs of previous biopsies,

    and each suture still visible,

    yet, not there, dissolved,

    are stretched tightly over

    expanders,

    that have yet to reach

    their potential glory,

    meant to begin the reconstruction

    of my formally lethal breasts.



    Beneath each mound,

    close to the rib cage,

    and off slightly to the side,

    though not exactly in the same spot,

    (symmetry isn’t the goal)

    lie small scars still struggling to heal,

    where long tubes once

    drained lymph and other fluids

    needing to escape the trauma.



    Just above where my right shoulder,

    if moved forward

    would crease,

    is a thin diagonal incision,

    where a port has been placed,

    threaded into my blood stream,

    easily felt

    round and hard

    just beneath the skin.



    A port…

    an interesting term,

    for it denotes safety in a storm,

    but I fear my storm has yet to begin...

    its formation is lurking

    in a ferocious mix of chemicals

    to be fed into the mouth of this port

    sending a man-made tornado into my body.



    No,

    my body looks

    nothing

    like it used to

    just twenty-eight days ago,

    and I rejoice in its abstract art-like visage,

    and in its resilience,

    for I now see

    how much GREATER

    I am

    than the sum

    of my parts.















  • twink
    twink Member Posts: 1,574
    edited January 2008

    I love this thread.  Thank you for sharing. 

    Here's a little sonnet I wrote earlier this year...

    Sonnet for Olfactory Cilia

    Let me talk of olfact'ry cilia

    Those little hair-like cells which line your nose

    To fill a role you may call trivial

    By keeping at bay all ilk of nasty foes

    ~ * ~

    Filtering bugs and dust and dirt all day

    Prevent the snot from dripping unconstrained

    Beating strong to draw mucous up and away

    Saved the embarrassment by flow contained

    ~ * ~

    Soft humidity of nasal passages

    Maintained with trapped moisture from our air

    Become painful dry openings ravaged

    As barren as those distant deserts sere

    ~ * ~

    What of all these indignities endured?

    Perhaps grow stronger or at least inured.

    ~ * ~

  • SISKimberly
    SISKimberly Member Posts: 762
    edited January 2008

    Twink,

    We must have been posting at the same time...I just plugged in Ode to My Body. I love your Sonnet to Olfactory Cilia...nose hairs never get the respect they deserve, do they? No one really pays attention to all they do. Bravo!!!!!



    SIS Kimberly

  • twink
    twink Member Posts: 1,574
    edited January 2008

    Love the Ode SIS.  You have real talent, I can tell.Wink

  • SISKimberly
    SISKimberly Member Posts: 762
    edited January 2008

    Twink-thanks for your compliment. I'm working on a new creative piece...hopefully I'll be ready to unveil it soon. SIS Kimberly

  • SISKimberly
    SISKimberly Member Posts: 762
    edited January 2008

    Ok, so as I anticipate my first chemotini tomorrow...this little creation has been simmering...it's ready to serve up now.



    Club Survival - 1/07/-08



    I imagine my cancer cells

    impeccably dressed in

    don’t care

    how much it costs

    dramatic designer black.

    I picture them,

    analogous

    to the rich hip twenty-somethings,

    the ones who have no sense

    of responsibility,

    only feelings of entitlement;

    the won’t happen to me indestructible crowd,

    all gathering at the newest club in town…

    Club Survival.



    It is one of those

    red-velvet-roped-

    can’t-get-in-

    unless-

    you’re-one-of-them-

    kind of places.

    Club Survival is

    where everyone,

    who thinks they are anyone,

    is drinking copious amounts

    of the newest martini craze,

    introduced by me,

    the club’s owner

    and bartender.



    This can’t get enough of it drink-

    The Black Cat Chemotini.

    And not wanting to be

    on the outside

    of the in-crowd,

    they all drink up.



    The Black Cat Chemotini,

    so named

    for the superstitious belief

    it is bad luck

    for a black cat to

    cross your path,

    strongly appeals to

    this fate tempting defiant crowd.



    The Black Cat has a splash of Decadron,

    which has a stimulant affect

    and keeps the in-crowd wired,

    like those energy drinks

    they are addicted to,

    allowing them to stay up all night

    drinking more than they might otherwise

    as they mingle

    superficially

    with one another.

    To that splash is added equal parts

    of a few secret ingredients,

    hard to pronounce, so

    I just call it adding the CAT,

    and viola!



    The fact that they go home,

    and don’t feel the effects at first

    is the beauty of it.

    It lulls them into

    a false sense of security

    convinces them

    they really are in charge.

    But,by the time they realize

    what’s really happening,

    it is too late…

    they are completely addicted

    to the lure of the Black Cat.



    These impetuous youth

    sell their souls

    to get their next fix,

    which I gladly serve

    shaken, not stirred,

    with a twist of lemon

    and a smile

    before sending them

    on their way…

    Ta, Ta, dahlings.

    Kiss. Kiss.

  • twink
    twink Member Posts: 1,574
    edited January 2008

    Oh...shaken, not stirred...

    This does evoke a clear image of that kind of club...  So pretentious and ultra-cool...Je ne sais quoi....

    Well done, once again.

  • SISKimberly
    SISKimberly Member Posts: 762
    edited January 2008

    So, I woke up yesterday with a poem or something that needed expressing about my life and survival. I wrote out some notes, which helps me focus, then left it for the day. This morning...this came out...

    I've been a survivor since birth...and I don't intend to stop now.



    Since Birth 1/13/08



    June 28, 1961

    9:28pm

    Three pounds…

    Three ounces…

    Two months early.



    “What an ugly baby,”

    “She’ll never survive,”

    I hear whispered.

    Outside of me,

    or in my deepest self?



    I am confused. Lost.

    I know there is someone

    I have to find.

    I know I have to reach her.

    Where are you?



    No human touch.

    No human warmth.

    No human bond.

    Just me… and nothing

    but the desire to reach her.



    Two months.

    The amount of time needed

    to complete what was started,

    spent in my own little world.

    I know how to leave my body

    without anyone even knowing.

    I have visited her.



    This gift will serve me well

    later in my life,

    when those words…

    whispered in the halls

    and in my soul

    come back to haunt me.



    Even when I am finally rescued,

    it feels foreign,

    like everyone else knows

    the customs and the language,

    but she’s there...



    ...and I breath

    deep breaths of her

    in her presence,

    knowing I am where I should be,

    as uncomfortable as it all is,

    at last with my Twin B.





    Dedicated to my twin sister, who I can't even imagine living upon this planet without. I have come such a long way since the 'haunting of those words' and so much of that is due to having her...my anchor.



    SIS Kimberly

  • SISKimberly
    SISKimberly Member Posts: 762
    edited January 2008

    The January Jewels asked me to write something about Side Effects...so here it is...





    The Side Effects Circus 1/15/08





    Ok, you’ve all been there.

    You know what I mean

    that morbid curiosity,

    that little part of you

    that wants to see the freak show

    even though you know it isn’t polite

    to look…let alone stare?

    Well, have you been to the

    Side Effects Circus lately?



    Ladies and Gentleman,

    people of all ages,

    welcome to the only show on Earth

    that will gladly exploit misery

    and encourage you to watch…applaud even.

    But more importantly…to laugh!



    In this ring, with her posse of Pugs,

    our very own juggler, Mucus Maiden.

    She’s a veritable contradiction.

    Her nose runs

    and yet is so dry it bleeds.

    Her eyes water,

    and yet she needs eye drops to keep them moist.

    Her mouth and throat

    are filled with sores

    and…well…there is no opposite of that.

    Notice her tool belt, and how deftly she manages

    everything she needs with flawless effort.

    Let’s ooohh and aaahhh everyone.

    She’s sponsored by Kleenex, the makers of

    saline nose spray and eye drops,

    Blistex, and Biotene.



    Overhead, on the flying trapeze,

    Our Dame of Digestive Distress.

    Look at her pale complexion

    and how it morphs into a lovely

    shade of green when she’s nauseous.

    If you haven’t put on your rain poncho,

    you may want to do that now.

    You never know when she’s going to blow.

    Be glad she’s overhead,

    she’s so bloated from constipation

    and the build up of gas,

    she’s being studied

    as an alternative energy source.

    Give her a round of applause.

    She’s sponsored by Colace, Gas Ex, Preparation H,

    the makers of Compazine, and Pepcid AC.



    Performing with the clowns,

    our Ambassador of Annoying.

    Her skin itches

    and has become so dry,

    she looks to be aging before our very eyes.

    Her nails are brittle and discolored, and

    her taste buds have left her in a state of blah.

    But there is good news…

    there is a rumor that she will be the spokesperson

    (make up and soft focus lighting can do wonders)

    for what advertisers are calling the next diet craze…

    The Chemo Diet.

    Isn’t she a site to behold?

    She’s sponsored by Gold Bond lotion, Bare Minerals,

    and the manicurist’s and pedicurist’s union #356.



    And now…

    The one you’ve all been waiting for…

    Our main attraction in the center ring

    riding the elephant,

    our very own Heiress of Hair Loss.

    Notice her bald head…isn’t it great?

    There isn’t a hair on her head,

    or anywhere else for that matter.

    Smooth as a baby’s butt.

    She’s been known to drop handfuls of hair,

    like Hansel and Gretal dropping bread crumbs.

    What is most amazing about her

    is the fact that she’s a master of disguise…

    we never know who will appear

    from her dressing room after the show.

    And can she tie a scarf…

    like a Navy Seaman can tie knots!

    Give it up for our Bald Beauty everyone.

    She’s sponsored by the makers of DustBuster

    and Draino, the Wig Makers Association,

    and Scarves Are Us.





    Thank you all so much for coming in today

    to see the amazing Side Effects Circus.

    Please stop by our gift shop on the way out

    to sample all of our sponsors’ products

    and to get a closer look and maybe an autograph

    from all of our amazing circus performers.









  • SISKimberly
    SISKimberly Member Posts: 762
    edited January 2008

    This poem woke me this morning at 4am. I jotted down the message, then went back to bed, only to spend the last hour helping it realize itself.



    Lighten Up 1/18/08



    Lighten up on life

    because there is no

    race to run.

    First place is not

    something you want to claim.

    Those things you are collecting,

    what a waste,

    will amount to nothing worthwhile,

    I guarantee,

    got no value

    like those dreams you never chased.



    All those hearts

    you’re passing by without a thought,

    afraid they will distract you

    from your goal,

    are the gems of your journey

    slipping away

    because getting ahead is

    all you can see.

    “Pushing hard,

    can’t look up,

    no time today.”



    It’s a trap,

    can’t you see it there

    ready to swallow?

    It doesn’t care if you

    Are at your most productive

    You’re fair game

    as long as you choose

    to run the race.

    The myth has been woven

    into your ‘should do’ script.

    You didn’t read between the lines;

    there are alternatives in place.



    There is still time,

    my friend,

    to make a change,

    if you will just stop

    long enough to hear.

    You can slow down,

    just take a deep breath in,

    and pay no mind

    to those who gain the lead

    because in the end,

    there is no big prize to win.



    Step off the racetrack

    you call your life

    and look up

    instead of at your feet.

    Take notice

    of what the world has

    to offer to you.

    See the faces

    of those who want

    only your time

    because its how you

    live and love that counts,

    not the job you do.



    Lighten up on life

    because there is no

    race to run.

    First place is not

    something you want to claim.

    Those things you are collecting,

    what a waste,

    will amount to nothing worthwhile,

    I guarantee,

    got no value

    like those dreams you never chased.



    SIS Kimberly

  • karla42
    karla42 Member Posts: 9
    edited January 2008

    What a way to express your self. This is a  place to post it.  Thanks to all.  will post my poem soon.. Hug Karla

  • SISKimberly
    SISKimberly Member Posts: 762
    edited January 2008

    Welcome Karla...I'm so glad you found us and can't wait to read your poem. SIS Kimberly

  • karla42
    karla42 Member Posts: 9
    edited January 2008

    MY MAMMOGRAM

    I REMEMBER THAT THEY REALLY WENT FLAT,

    I TRY AND FORGET ABOUT THAT,

    THEN I REMEMBER IT’S FOR THE BEST,

    SO I GO AND GET THE TEST.

    IT JUST TAKES A LITTLE TIME,

    TO CHECK OUT THOSE BOOBS YOURS AND MINE.

    TO MAKE SURE EVERYTHING IS FINE.

    SELF CHECKING JUST ONCE A MONTH IS ALL IT TAKES,

    WITH PEACE OF MIND WHAT A DIFFERENCE IT MAKES

    Sharon(c)

    Hi ladies here is a poem that I wrote before the BC.

    I send this to all the gals in my address book.  If you would like to copy and paste that would be fine. 

  • SISKimberly
    SISKimberly Member Posts: 762
    edited January 2008

    Excellent message Karla...I just reminded all of my friends in my last email update that if they hadn't gotten their cancer screening tests and physicals in the past year to get it done.



    SIS Kimberly

  • ravdeb
    ravdeb Member Posts: 3,116
    edited January 2008

    I just found this thread. I write poetry. Haven't found new words for a poem in a long time. Maybe this will inspire me. But for now..one I wrote for my bc sisters last year. Now for all of you, written on one of my beach walks. Some of you know that I walk the beach daily (except recently because of the weather):

    Change...

        The essence of our lives.

                 Today.

                 Now.

    What was

       will never be.

    We are now like

    the waves of the sea

      and the ever changing shoreline.

    The waves crashing onto the rocks.

      Excited

      Angry.

      Rushing in full of life.

          Or

    Sleepily lapping along the sands.

         Sad.

         Or satisfied.

         Or in contemplation of what lies ahead.

    Some days I can hear the music...

         Water over seashells.

         Seagulls laughing.

    Some days the noise of the waves

        overtakes all else.

    Some days the sands are strong and sturdy.

    And some days they are soft and treacherous.

    Change...

      It is what we are.

      It is what we embrace.

      It is what bonds us.

      And like the seas and the sands...

      It is good.

    (by me..Jan 2007)

    edited: when I write poetry, I lay it out on the paper and well..it didn't lay out on the post the way it should..sorry!

  • sahalie
    sahalie Member Posts: 2,147
    edited January 2008

    Wow~

    I just wandered here this morning.

    What an "upper" this thread is!

    Kimberly and all, keep on keepin on. 

    This is wonderful. 

  • SISKimberly
    SISKimberly Member Posts: 762
    edited January 2008

    RavDeb- Wow...love the whole imagery of the ocean being analogous for life...how cancer changes our focus. Beautiful. Thank you so much for sharing.



    Sahalie, haven't seen you in the threads I've been hanging out on lately...good to see you here. I'm so glad you like the thread and find it an "upper".



    SIS Kimberly

Categories