Photo by Elizabeth Halt
Photo by Elizabeth Halt

a little tenderness

January 14, 2014

for most of my life, i was allergic to cats.

one christmas morning, a cat came into my parents’ cat-free house as a christmas present for my youngest sister. i didn’t see the cat arrive, but i knew as soon as it was there; within seconds of its arrival, i couldn’t breathe.

cats and not-breathing were familiar.

when i started practicing reiki, my cat allergy began to heal.

eventually, with only one exception, one house, it had vanished.

when i moved back to michigan, atlas and i moved in with my parents.

my sister is here. so is her cat.

the last time i visited my parents, i brought steroids, just in case, but i never needed to use them. as a result, i was excited about the prospect of living with a cat for atlas’s sake and i wasn’t worried about my breathing at all.

the day after i arrived, my breath left me.

i was devastated. i thought i had healed my cat allergy, and it felt like i was right back where i started.

i was also worried. i was going to live here for a while, and now i couldn’t breathe in the house.

atlas and i slept in a tent in the backyard for more than a month.

i spent most of every night coughing until i thought my lungs would burst.

when the cold rains came, we moved inside, into a cat-free room. i spent most of those nights coughing too.

i remember going to the beach one day to take pictures. the pictures made it seem idyllic. it was. but the thing that the pictures didn’t say was that my lung capacity was so limited that i was at the beach because it was all i could do. i couldn’t even walk up the tiny hill that led from the beach to the parking lot without wheezing.

slowly, slowly, my breath came back.

now, most days, i don’t cough too often and i don’t breathe too shallowly.

i was wondering how to circle you in tenderness when this story came to me.

i think this is why:

most of the time, i really was ok with an iron band across my chest, with wheezing, with not being able to catch my breath.

healing had taught me – and meditation reminded me – presence, and acceptance, and how to relax instead of panic.

but i realized that the rest of the time, when i wasn’t ok, the problem wasn’t so much that i wanted my breathing to come back as it was that i wanted to know why.

why.

i think that if i know why, i can change something.

i think that if i know why, it will make something easier to bear.

(why can’t i breathe? why did they leave? why isn’t this working? why did i fail?)

but we often don’t know why (at least for certain), or can’t know why, or maybe there isn’t even a why at all.

i remember the moment other than in deep stillness when i felt the most relief.

i had left the dinner table because i couldn’t breathe and i thought that my sister could tell i couldn’t breathe and i was worried that she would feel bad because it was her cat and i didn’t want her to feel bad so i went upstairs and i sat on the bed and i cried.

my mom came upstairs to check on me and i told her that i was just so frustrated that i couldn’t breathe and i cried.

i sat on that bed and i felt all of the frustration and the fear and the sadness and i cried.

when i was done, i went downstairs and ate the rest of my dinner.

maybe that’s what we need most of all.

to let it out, to let it flow, to be witness/ed.

to be with the frustration and the sadness and the pain and the longing and the loneliness and the grief with all of the love and tenderness and compassion we can muster.

and when we can’t, to be with that too, with as much love and tenderness and compassion as we can muster.

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4 comments... (add a comment)

  1. You are what you eat.

    All her life, one of a our daughters has been bothered by allergies. She and her husband even moved to Arizona to help relieve her discomfort. It did not help.

    The one day she read about the benefits of a vegan diet and tried it. Within a month she was off all her medications.

    It is not that she was allergic to what she was eating, but what she was eating affected her sensitivity to allergens.

    Are you eating differently now that you are home?.

    • elizabeth

      So appreciating the care + consideration behind your comment. I’m glad your daughter found just the right thing for her!

  2. when my mother was dying of lung cancer …
    during one of the worst moments ~ fighting for a breath – she said between gasps …
    “oh darling. i hope you can always breathe.”
    there is nothing more frightening on earth
    than not being able to get a breath.
    it is what we are. our life.

    my heart to yours e. and your own blessed heart in feeling the pain your sister might or must be feeling in causing you suffering… well. that is dear. and like you.
    jerry has a very good point.

    though there are enough people allergic to kitty fur that they’ve even mentioned it in movies! james stewart in ‘bell book and candle’ had it. his throat would close up when he was around kim novak(the witch’s) siamese cat. so it’s well known to be dangerous for some people.
    just like peanut allergies for some can even be deadly! just the way we’re arranged i guess. nobody’s fault either way.

    • elizabeth

      Totally off-topic, but I’m pretty sure that reading your comment made me wander through my “request from the library to read” list looking for fairy tales. I do love stories about witches!

      Breath is life. It is so wonderful how our breath comes through us, without us having to do a thing. I feel so appreciative of it – when it is here and when it is not.

      Sending a hug to you and your memory of your mother.

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