Category Archives: Scars

New Scars, New Stories

After laparoscopic surgery, performed by the walking Goddess of things “hyster-”, Dr. Catherine Allaire, involving only four little incisions that will leave much tinier scars than those that I ripped myself, into my arms and legs, five and a half years ago, I am uterus-free! This means I will be pain free for the first time since I was fifteen years old :D .  Once I’ve healed, I will never need to take an opiate painkiller again…well, hopefully not until I’m much, much older.  I have a Lupus antibody, but not full-blown Lupus – I learned this when the bloodwork was done pre-surgery, along with the fact that my blood-type is “A+” – so I might get arthritis early, but I’ve got one perfect grade that no one can take away from me, literally :razz: .

As mentioned in my last post, my dad is here to take care of me.  Yes, our extended visit got off on a rocky start.  However, after a mini-breakdown, he has come to realize just how much I think and care about him, even when I’m not always in touch with my family.  In turn, I’ve realized the same is true of him.  Together, we’re a damn strong team ;) .

I emote through emoticons because I feel a whole lot right now.  Primarily, relief.  I can get on with my life now.  I can go to college this fall and not worry about having to be absent for a week each month because of crippling pain, due to endometriosis and uterine myomas.  Women of British Columbia – if you suffer from a fair bit more pain than most during your periods, ask your doctor for a referral to see Dr. Allaire at the UBC Centre for Pelvic Pain and Endometriosis.  I was uncannily lucky to be referred by a physician at Simon Fraser University’s health clinic as soon as I moved here, to Vancouver – I now see this as one of the only positive things that came out of my attendance at the business, I mean, educational institution :rolleyes: .  Dr. Allaire and her colleague, Dr. Williams, have opened the third centre in the world that women like me, and perhaps like you, can get help at.  Women should not have to suffer inordinate pain.  These women physicians know how to help.  Surgery is always a little scary, and sometimes a lot, but it is far, far better than suffering through decades of pain.  The centre was founded on this value, and if I ever have enough money to donate to a hospital, I know where it’s going.

There will not be a whole lot going on in my life for the next couple of weeks.  I want desperately to walk to the dollar store five blocks away, but I’m under strict orders not to walk farther than to the other side of my apartment…to the magick garden, where plenty of magick is blooming.  I managed to get my hands on three of the pots of the twenty or so that I had to leave behind with nasty roommates when I made the egregious and expensive error of leaving Vancouver temporarily last fall that ended in disaster – evidently, those roommates were evicted (I was warned not to sign a lease with them by my building manager when I moved in – I saved them from one eviction notice, but after they kicked me out, they were not able to keep things under control, I suppose, “things” being domestic disturbances ad nauseam :roll: ) and left behind three of my big pots.  Magickally, one of those pots held the “Shirley” tulip bulbs I planted last fall (white with purple veins, to commemorate my mom, who shared their name during her time on Earth) that have now sprouted up next to some of my favourite plants in my new garden, my new garden, permanence – another new feature of the life of this 26 year-old who is giving up her nomadic ways.  I’ve found home in my beautiful little bachelor suite, and I plan on keeping this address for several years.

Permanence, stability, and the absence of pain.  These three elements of my “new life” – and anyone who has had major surgery will probably get this, how life feels quite “new” afterwards – are certainly not easy, they’re slippery.  However, I plan to cling to them as hard as I can, as both my garden and I keep blooming.

Your support (I’ve gotten a whole lot of it on facebook from long-time readers who have become close friends – you know who you are!  – where, as I’ve said before, you can look me up – Scars Are Stories – last I checked there was only one!  ) means the world to me, and is no doubt helping me along with a speedy recovery so that I can walk a little farther each day, until I do not have to count my steps anymore, walk into my future with the lessons of my past in my back pocket, along with a camera and a pen.

scars XO

I’ll show you mine if you show me yours…

Or, I’ll just show you mine.  Scars are not only stories of survival, but they’re damn sexy.

Why I won’t erase my scars.

On December 29th, 2006, after disappearing from my home for three days after a bout of depression (the one I naively believed would be my last :( ), I came to in a motel room with my pants and underwear off.  Two men hovered over me, and threatened that they would kill me if I left.  I ran for my life.  Magically, there was a taxi cab in the parking lot of whatever establishment in Winnipeg this was, I was still too drugged to speak properly or recognize where I had ended up.  Somehow the driver took me to my Father’s house, probably for free, as I realized when I got to my old home and logged onto the internet that my bank account had also been emptied out.  I had managed to save up close to $1000 while on social assistance, so this was a huge blow, aside from whatever happened to my body in that hotel room.  I was all too familiar with rape.

The next morning, I held a single razor blade between my thumb and forefinger and cut my arms down to the bone, also trying to find an artery in my leg to sever, when my arms did not bleed as much as I suspected they would.  I felt no pain as I did this, and had written suicide notes addressed to my dad, sister, and a former partner.  I believed I had shamed my family, and was doing them a favour by ending my life.  I eventually passed out, in the bed I had slept in throughout my teenage years, and was awoken to my dad running about the house yelling.  ”I’m okay dad, I’m fine,” I groaned.  He does not react well in “emergency” situations, and I can only imagine the pain he felt as he found his daughter with her arms dismembered, lying in blood-soaked sheets.

I was still Earthbound, much to my dismay.

As an ER physician stapled my arms and legs back together, he complained that I was monopolizing his time.  ”DO YOU SEE THAT OUT THERE?  THAT IS AN EMERGENCY ROOM, FULL OF PEOPLE THAT ACTUALLY NEED MY HELP.”  I muttered something about how I knew he didn’t go to med school to help “people like me” and that I had expected to die, not to end up in an emergency room that evening.  The police that I reported the possible “date rape” to laughed at me, even the female officer, and a rape kit was never performed, although I was given all of the usual antibiotics given to rape victims/survivors, the H.I.V. tests, etc.

The goddesses spat me back out in the psych ward for the fifth time, and as I lay sleepless for 72 hours – it was the New Year’s Holiday and my doctor was not reachable, and the nurses refused to give me any of my medications, so I went through severe withdrawal on top of all things before he returned from whatever Pfizer/Astro-Zeneca-sponsered vacation he had been on.  I realized that this was not the place for me, and that I belonged in school.  I would have to throw all of my energy at school, having faith that it would take me somewhere.  And it did, it took me to Grad School in Vancouver.

The scars on my arms caused me to be treated much differently than others in a multitude of situations in Winnipeg, such as during interactions with shopkeepers, who were friendly until they saw the scars, upon which time they would rush me out of the store/rush through my purchase without speaking another word to me.  At school I wore only long-sleeved shirts, so none of my classmates there saw the scars.  A big moment in the revealing of my scars to society was when I arrived to visit my beloved undergraduate supervisor during the summer in a tank top.  She did not stare or treat me differently.  I remembered a quote that had prefaced a novel I read many years ago:

“Scars are like stories, history written upon the body.”  I regret that I do not remember the author of the quote, or book, although I think it may have been one of Vancouver-born author Evelyn Lau’s brave autobiographies about her own experiences with sexual and emotional abuse, drug addiction, and depression, all of which I read as a teenager.

My ex-boyfriend, in addition to calling me a whore before our break-up, also told me that “No other man would ever fuck me when they saw my scars.”  I responded that, “Maybe I don’t plan on fucking men anymore.”  He retorted, “That’s kinky.”  Another man that I had dated in the past said of my experience, “Not many people can start a sentence with ‘I woke up in a hotel room with my pants off…’” in a failed attempt to insult me.  He was wrong.  Let’s take a moment to reflect on the fact that one out of three women in North America will be raped during there lives, and that the truth is that many more women are raped, as so many incidences are not reported to authorities.

When I moved to Vancouver in May, I sweated through several get-togethers with two old friends, one from high school and one from first-year university, wearing long-sleeved garments during a heat wave.  Then one day I just stopped.  The scars told the story of my survival.  They looked like rivers streaming down each arm.  They were sublimely beautiful.

Those friends suggested that I have them removed via plastic surgery.  Others were worried that they would have an impact on my career.  I considered these propositions for a few days, before deciding that my scars were precious, and should not be removed or covered up in any company.  I found that storekeepers at businesses in the Commercial Drive/Hastings-Sunrise neighbourhoods in Vancouver treated me no differently than any other customer, and new friends thought that they were indeed beautiful in a way, as does my fiancée, who constantly reminds me of this.  My students and professors showed no disrespect for the scarification.

So I will never again hide my scars.  I will never have them erased by a surgeon.  I wear them with mad pride, in honour of what I have survived, and in solidarity with all others who have survived rape, abuse, “mental illness”, stigmatization, and self-harm.