Montreal Gazette

It’s luck, not pluck

Don’t call Alex Dvorak a ‘fighter’ because she survived the complexiti­es of cancer.

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I am not a “fighter” because I survived Hodgkin’s lymphoma at 19. I am lucky among the unlucky. In the face of serious illness, especially cancer, we immediatel­y declare patients as “fighters,” or talk about “winning” or “losing” the battle with the disease. That stock phrasing shows up in news headlines and charity campaigns; it’s spoken by politician­s, celebritie­s and well-meaning acquaintan­ces alike. Each person has the right to describe their experience of their disease as they see fit, but it often feels impossible to avoid terms like “attack,” “invade” and “fight.

For me, military language was a way for the people around me to evade the complex realities that accompanie­d my diagnosis. It put the grey areas of living with cancer — the physical anguish and the existentia­l uncertaint­y — into stark, confrontat­ional terms. That vocabulary stamped me as brave and heroic when I felt most weak and defenceles­s. I was convinced that I would let everybody down.

With the news of my diagnosis, my community forgot I was the same person. They saw only illness, and it showed in their words. One family friend confided, “I’m close with a woman who had a breast growth and worked full time during treatment, didn’t even lose her hair.”

Within days, I had dropped out of college and moved home to get chemothera­py full time; my eyelashes and eyebrows fell out. I couldn’t measure up to cancer prodigies like that woman.

But I did the best I could to muster the energy and composure that these words demanded of me. I tried to hide the atrocities of my daily life from the well-wishers who seemed unable to accept life’s impermanen­ce with me. I hid my IV pole in my bedroom closet, along with a bag of pill bottles and the needles I used to give myself shots of white blood cells. Despite my best efforts, my basic presence, a walking reminder of death, could darken the mood in the room. I lifted a hood over my cancer tell — a shiny head — exchanged the word “cancer” for “sick” and shoved down my anxiety to appear put-together.

People wanted me to be the face of cancer — upbeat and optimistic, despite my suffering — while lymphoma acted like a tornado in my life. In others’ eyes, my diagnosis had put me on the fast track to sainthood, but on the inside, I was an angst-filled teenager, feeling singled out and misunderst­ood. Eventually, my dad had to act as a gatekeeper, politely telling friends I wasn’t up for visitors.

When a fellow patient died, people would say, “She lost her battle, but you’ll win yours.” They thought that this metaphor would uplift me. But the implicatio­n that someone else died because they had, in some way, failed, or not been persistent enough to survive, put more pressure on my own health.

After my course of treatment was finished, my parents threw a dinner party, inviting family friends who made us weekly meals and drove me to chemo, through blizzards, in their fourwheel drives. I wanted our loved ones to enjoy their sense of relief, but I didn’t understand why I was the focus of celebratio­n. Unlike a soldier given an external enemy, mine was internal — when it came down to it, the enemy was me. I was to blame for my family’s unrelentin­g fear and sleepless nights. Every congratula­tory “You won the battle” just reminded me of what I’d really, privately won: post-traumatic stress, agoraphobi­a and addiction to morphine. I didn’t feel victorious. Now, I had to piece my life together, wracked with guilt over why I’d lived, while others hadn’t.

Yet despite this experience, when I was in remission and learned my friend was diagnosed with leukemia, I fell back on the euphemisti­c language I’d rejected. I rushed to the hospital to spend time with her. “Nurses walk in and out, these IVs are stuck to me, there’s no privacy,” she said. She asked if I knew anyone with the disease. I said yes, and then clammed up. I didn’t want to divulge that he’d died.

Reading my expression, my friend told me, “Alex, I know people die from what I have. We can say it out loud.”

Even as a survivor, I’d tried to shield her through language. From that moment on, we had an understand­ing: no tiptoeing allowed.

What we both craved most during our treatment was openness. We didn’t want people to hold us up as brave warriors; we wanted them to face the discomfort with us. The sick and the healthy are on the same side — all scared of the same malady. But the destructiv­eness of cancer can’t be glossed over with clichés.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES/ISTOCK PHOTO ?? Black-and-white words like “attack,” “fight” and “win” are clichés that gloss over the many grey aspects of living with a difficult disease like cancer.
GETTY IMAGES/ISTOCK PHOTO Black-and-white words like “attack,” “fight” and “win” are clichés that gloss over the many grey aspects of living with a difficult disease like cancer.

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