Sunday, May 23, 2010

P.S.


I forgot to mention that Terry and Lesley came out in a blinding snow storm in January to attend a bon voyage party by dear friends Lisa and Lynda had for me. Lisa is a wonderful photographer and she caught my beautiful friends for me to look at from time to time to remember again how very blessed I am. Here's Lesley with new growth - simply stunning silver hair - and Terry with her turban. Do you see why I think they're both so beautiful? This is a picture of the CWL Group 5, including Kelly and Ann. I'll treasure this photo, and their friendship forever.

Saturday, May 22, 2010

"I am not my cancer"

There's an ad for some drug related to cancer therapy with the caption, "I am not my cancer." The message is that while I may HAVE cancer, I'm not letting it dominate my life - it is not central to who I am. I have two friends dealing with their cancers right now who are living proof that this is the only way to live, truly live.

I snuck into town on May 1 for my friend Terry's wedding to her beloved Chip. After dating for 10 years in a long-distance relationship (she in Michigan, he in Florida) they decided to tie the knot and be each other's best friend and support forever. My friend Lesley and her husband Bill picked me up at the hotel so we could go to the ceremony and reception together, at The Henry Ford Museum in Dearborn. I met Terry and Lesley 7 years ago when they enrolled in the women's Leadership Development program I was co-facilitating. Ann and Kelly round out the group affectionately known as Group 5 - the first and only Group 5 in all 4 programs we ran. It was a special program, these are special women, and we have a special bond together. I wouldn't have missed Terry's wedding for the world.

Back in 2003, as we were finishing up the program, Terry told us she'd had a recurrence of breast cancer and would need a mastectomy this time. She'd had a lumpectomy, chemo, and radiation the first time. She seemed so calm to me, so courageous but not melodramatic in any way. She showed up at our graduation ceremony just days after surgery, since her being there would mean so much to all of us.

The next year, Lesley was diagnosed with breast cancer and would undergo chemo and a lumpectomy. Lesley has two beautiful young daughters and has no intention of letting this thing called cancer stop her from being the wife, mother and businesswoman she is. I met her for lunch shortly after her surgery and she looked as gorgeous as ever - turban covering her bald head and face fully made up - dressed to the nines. We hugged so tightly - I recall feeling so blessed to have this woman call me friend.

Fast forward to the summer of 2007, July 1, and the call from my doctor that I had breast cancer. With Terry and Lesley as models, I think I moved through that time with a courage and grace that came from knowing that I am not my cancer and that how I reacted was a choice. I chose to bless my doctors and pray for healing. I chose to believe that this part of my journey was crucial to becoming the woman I needed to be in the world. I was working on my master's thesis at the time and also working on coaching certification - both were also preparing me to become the person the world needed me to be. I had a lumpectomy and radiation and am cancer-free. I take Arimidex to keep my hormones in check so they don't provide a nurturing environment to any rogue cells. I'll take that for at least two more years, 5 years being some magic number for survivors.

Last year, both Terry and Lesley experienced recurrence of their cancers. Terry has Stage IV liver cancer and is undergoing continuous chemo therapy. Lesley had a mastectomy and chemo. Last month Lesley was diagnosed with a different cancer in her other breast and will have a mastectomy and chemo again next week.

Last November Terry participated in the San Diego 3-day Walk for the Cure. One of her nieces has been walking in this fundraiser in Terry's honor for a few years now. When Terry signed up to participate, she did so in my and Lesley's honor. Ann and I had dinner with Terry last fall when she told us she was going to retire in the spring and that she and Chip would be getting married in May. Brilliant, I thought. Grab every last bite of life you can grab, Terry.

So here we are, sitting in The Henry Ford, a few hundred of us, eagerly awaiting the arrival of the bride. Suddenly you could hear the click, click, click of an old car and around the bend, here came Terry. Her driver opened the door and out she stepped, looking like a fairy princess. The bridegroom of course, looked very nervous but smiling none-the-less. Lesley and Ann and I squeezed each others hands. Our friend Terry was going to snatch a little bit of happiness and we were overjoyed.

Of course, all any of us have is today, right now, to live the life we have imagined for ourselves. I think I knew that when I decided that the work I was doing for Hewlett Packard wasn't the right work for me. When I began the search for a new job, I made sure to put out an intention for work that I loved, with people I loved, in a place I loved. Even though moving to New York seemed like a pretty radical thing to do, I knew it was the right thing. All any of us have is today, right now.

My thanks, and blessings, and love go to Terry and Lesley. Thank you for teaching me the meaning of courage and grace. Blessings on you and your families. Love to you from the bottom of my heart.

Friday, May 21, 2010

Good Grief! Where does the time go?!!

I can't believe it's been so long since my last post. Some really wonderful things have happened in the past four weeks so let's go back to the beginning....

Phyllis: "My God, Genz, you've landed in Disneyland. No, not Disneyland - Genzaland!"

So proclaimed by big sister when she and Don came for a visit a few weeks back. It especially feels like home when family and friends come to visit. Of course, I wanted my big sister to know I was OK. But she decided I'm better than OK, I'm doing wonderfully! We picked up where Joanne and I left off and hung up the rest of the pictures. Don put up new shower heads (to conserve water). Best of all, they bought me a wrought iron table and chairs for my patio. Putting them together was a project, but we did just fine. We toured the Vanderbilt Mansion and FDR's Presidential Library.

After a tour of campus (on a beautiful sunny day) a student took a picture of us underneath the Wisteria gracing the front door of the school. Phyllis took a ton of pictures all over and when she got home put together an album to send to me. It's a great reminder of the fun time we had. One highlight was lunch at the Eveready Diner - which was featured on "Diners, Drive-ins, and Dives" on the Food Network. Good diner fare! No visit with Phyllis and Don is complete without Mexican Train Dominos - score: Don one, Genz one, Phyllis (well, guess we still need to play that rubber game).

After that whirlwind weekend, I went to the City for a 4-day certification workshop for a course called Crucial Conversations - how to hold tough conversations when the stakes are high, emotions are strong, and opinions differ. I think it's the exact right thing for my organization right now and I got the go ahead to get certified and teach the top 80 leaders. The certification workshop was absolutely fabulous - great instructor, wonderful materials, and the content is superb. I can't wait to teach the course and I've identified 12 leaders to participate in a pilot program with me in June.

I loved being in the City for the workshop too. Every night after class ended, I'd take a nice long walk down different streets. It's absolutely amazing how many people - adults, kids, dogs, strollers, folks on roller skates - are moving back and forth at all hours. Such aliveness. Shops, bakeries, galleries, restaurants - so much to look at. I just walked around with a big grin on my face and said hello to as many people as would look back! The energy was fabulous and I was sorry to see it end. Although, since I have such a great place to come home to, the sadness didn't last too long - just about as long as it took the train to get me back to Poughkeepsie.

Well, that wraps up April. I'll write tomorrow to get caught up on May. I went home (to Michigan) twice in May and gave myself a spa day for Mother's Day. I've started gardening and signed up for two workshops this summer at Omega Institute. I'm so excited to finally be going there!

Giggles and grins,
Hugs and kisses,
Ciao for now!
Vincenza