"So what's wrong with being a girl?" she suddenly asked after we had been working at the puzzle for a good quarter of an hour |
Part 6
I lay in my bed, studiously ignoring my Mother who was sat in the chair next to me. I was listening to some music by Andy Palacio, and was lost in the Caribbean/South American rhythms.
In the four days since my unwelcome gender changing operation I'd refused to communicate with my family. They'd tried to talk to me on many occasions but I'd refused to answer any questions or respond to them in any way.
I felt completely violated by the whole experience. They'd said that they'd had to make a quick decision to save my life, but maybe given the choice I would have chosen to stay in the hospice and be remembered for what I'd been. Now I faced maybe two or three years extra, living with a mutilated body.
Out of the necessity of personal survival and comfort, I'd responded on a basic functional way to the nurses and doctors when they'd asked about any discomfort that I might have and other aspects of my medical care but otherwise I didn't feel like talking to anyone.
That morning they'd removed the drains, catheter and packing from the new hole in my body, that they called my 'vagina'. The first visit to the toilet to try out my new 'equipment', or as I considered it my 'lack of equipment', had meant further humiliation as I sprayed over my pyjamas, body and the area around the toilet seat.
To add to the humiliation of having to change my clothes and see my appallingly bruised and battered groin area I was then introduced to the joys of 'dilating', or sticking a lump of plastic in my new hole. I had been told that I would have to do this unpleasant chore on a very regular basis if I wanted to have a normal sex life!
I reached over to my bedside table for a new magazine to read. My Mother looked up at my movement.
"Please honey, talk to me, tell me what's wrong" my Mother pleaded.
For the umpteenth time I didn't respond. Tears began to slowly well in her eyes and soon there were streaks along her cheeks. I felt strangely satisfied by this.
A short while later it was time for the evening drug doses. I was taking a mixture of anti cancer drugs and some female hormones. The doctors had explained to me, as if I really cared what the justification was, that this treatment had an unfortunate side effect.
It feminised the body to a lesser or greater extent, depending on age. In my case, since I had hardly started male puberty, it would give me a completely female body shape within a relatively short time. The doctors and my parents had considered that it would be a lot harder to live successfully in the role dictated by my body without the change to my genitals.
The sudden influx of non medical people into my ward announced the arrival of visiting time. Since I didn't expect or want to see anyone, I lay back and closed my eyes. I tried to take myself back to some of the sports events I'd been involved in.
I thought about some of the memorable goals I'd scored in football, some of the races I'd won in athletics and cycling and some of my performances in cricket. All things that would now be denied me in my extended but pointless extra years. I was almost asleep when something landed on top of me with a thud. I opened my eyes to see a big jigsaw box.
"It's Cardiff Castle, and it's 2000 pieces, want to give me a hand," said a familiar voice.
I looked to my side to see Heulwen, the 10 year old jigsaw maniac from the hospice. She was in a wheelchair with a drip attached, pushed by a middle aged nursing assistant, she looked very ill. Despite her obvious frailty she had a big grin on her face.
"Hey Heulwen, how did you get here?" I asked
"Jane brought me," she replied, turning her head towards her companion, who smiled at her.
"Yes, you div, I can see that, but how did you manage to come here?" I asked again, grinning back.
"Well you left before I could finish all the jigsaws so I badgered Mrs Harris to let me come so you could help me do this one," she replied, "the eyesight is beginning to go, I'll probably be blind in a few days and I haven't finished all of them yet. When I explained how good you were at doing jigsaws she jumped at the idea. I think your parents liked the idea too"
"Oh, I'm sorry about your eyes. I'll be happy to help"
With Jane's assistance she set the jigsaw up on my bedside table. She'd already completed a quarter of it. As we began working through it I could see how much her eyesight had deteriorated.
"So what's wrong with being a girl?" she suddenly asked after we'd been working at the puzzle for a good quarter of an hour.
"What do you mean?" I responded.
"They told me that you had to become a girl to beat your cancer," she continued, "and that you were having a mega sulk about it"
"I'm not sulking! They violated me, they forced me to have this operation. Nobody asked me what I wanted", I responded, turning away from her, annoyed that she had brought me from our little escape back to reality.
"Yes you are sulking," she continued," don't you think I wouldn't happily become a boy if I could live longer. I don't want to die Celyn"
I didn't know how to respond to such a comment, but somehow I felt that all my anger had been dissipated by Heulwen's sad situation. She was obviously in pain and it must have taken a huge effort to come to see me. I felt humbled and felt tears begin to roll down my cheeks.
"I'm so sorry Heulwen. It's not fair, you should be the one to live not me," I said after wiping my eyes. I returned to helping her with the jigsaw.
A while later we had finished and high fived. Heulwen looked exhausted.
"Will you come to my funeral, Celyn?" she asked in a quiet tired, voice.
"Of course," I replied as more tears appeared.
"But you must promise me one thing"
"What?"
"You will come as a girl"
I paused, thinking about what to say. But how could I refuse her?
"Yes"
"You promise?" she asked looking directly at me
"Yes Heulwen, I promise"
The sun shone brightly on an unusually warm early April morning. I felt uncomfortable in my black medium length dress, black tights, black flat shoes and black hat, trimmed with white and pink lace. The unfamiliar bra and knickers itched. How did women ever wear bras I thought to myself as I adjusted the straps of my padded undergarment for about the hundredth time. It was almost three weeks since Heulwen had taken her last trip out of the hospice to visit me. By the time I'd left the hospital and been able to return the favour she had lost her eyesight completely.
I visited her every day for as long as I could, We spent the time holding hands and talking. She'd told me about her short life and the years trying to fight the brain tumour. A life focused around hospital visits, treatments that made her feel awful and disappointments at failed surgeries. She'd said goodbye to me a few days before her death when she knew that her mind was almost gone and that she wouldn't know me again. That night I'd cried and yelled at the cruel fate that had spared me but taken her, someone who had not had anywhere near the quality of life that I had.
The service in the Hospice chapel of rest had been well attended by family and friends as we celebrated her life of bravery and spirit with the music and pictures she had chosen. Finally it was time for the short journey to the graveyard.
The coffin bearers lowered her small coffin into the grave and people came up in turns to throw some soil and say words of farewell. When it was my turn I avoided the pile of fresh soil and instead opened the little package in my hand.
"Thank you sweet Heulwen, you've been as good as your name and brought the sunshine back into my life*" I said softly, as I threw the jigsaw pieces.
*Heulwen is literally 'sunshine' in Welsh
End of Part Six
Comments
So Sad
I was reading this and my mind flashed back to my namesake. Her name was Jennifer Isbell and she had spinal cancer. The
last time we spoke, she told me to live my life and promise never to forget her. I chose my name in memory of a brave and
wonderful woman. You are a wonderful and gifted writer!
Hugs,
Jennifer Danielle
Sad
It is hard to watch this happen to some one you love, as I have.
You have handled this beautifuly.
Your story shows how one persons short life can start ripples that can alter the flow of many others lives.
Keep it going.
Sooooo Touching
Alys, cariad, you brought tears to my eyes with this trimmensely moving piece of writing.
Of course it was an appalling shock for Celyn, but at least she has her life, and as we know she comes to terms with her new gender, whereas poor wee Heulwen had such a short life. I'm pleased that Celyn was able to make the little girl's final weeks as happy as possible.
Hugs,
Gabi
(whose Grandmother was a north Walian, so she can claim to be attached to the BC Welsh Mafia!)
Gabi.
The youth sometimes see...
... clearer than their elders. There are so many ways to face the future. I'm glad you provided the hero such a good example of how one can approach things to get the most out of it. It shows that sulking doesn't help nor does it better ones position or outcome.
Now, I guess you deal with HER girlfriend... How will she take to the changes in her "bo" ???
Annette
Heulwen Lived Her Name For Celyn
She brought her gift Sunshine and lifted the darkness from her friend. In her final days, she gave Celyn back her life. There are Angels that come into our lives when we need a miracle, Heulwen was Celyn's.
Alys, you made me cry for the moppet. Even though she is a character in a story, she touched my heart with her selfless living. Thank you for a FEEL GOOD CRY.
May Your Light Forever Shine
May Your Light Forever Shine
Congratulations
Alys very few works of fiction can bring tears to my eyes but yours did.I am like many of us who are TS/tg that can't or choose not to have kids.So when I can I donate money to ST.Judes it's a place that helps children with cancer.Thanks for reminding me why I do.Amy
*sniff*
Poor poor Celyn, and that girl who's name I can't pronounce. T_T
I know who I am, I am me, and I like me ^^
Transgender, Gamer, Little, Princess, Therian and proud :D
It's Not Fair
To make me cry like that, Alys. You owe me a box of tissues,
Hugs,
Joanne
Wonderful Bittersweet Goodness
That was a wonderful chapter. Thanks. *sniff*
Heulwen is one of the best brief characters I've ever read. She caused Celyn some grief but saved her a lot of future misery. So sad and so good. *sniff*
I've got tears of joy mixing with tears of sadness. They run down to the corners of my mouth and they taste ... bittersweet. *sniff*
Hugs
- Terry
Very Effective
An impressively moving chapter.
Eric
She was on the edge of depression and a dying girl saved her
Some of the early lines in this chapter are chilling. Beyond her refusal to talk to her mom there is ..
Quote
They had said that they had had to make a quick decision to save my life, but maybe given the choice I would have chosen to stay in the hospice and be remembered for what I had been. Now I faced maybe two or three years extra, living with a mutilated body.
Endquote.
She is very pesimistic. She was told the people in the experimental treatment had all lived two years with no recurance of the cancer. That suggests at five years that will be tha same and further out, maybe proof of a *cure*. All she can see is her lost chance to be a man, her never having had sex -- I assume from the way her girlfriend was talking they were going to in the near future.
Why didn't the girlfriend or her male friend come to the hospital? Do they still think she is in hospice dying and it's too much for them? Or they have been told not to come until Celyn is better?
Great stuff, the dying girl life had cheated was a saint for doing what she did for Celyn.
I wonder what her doctors will say to her. It sounds like she thought the cancer was only in her testicles and after treatment she could become a man again with testoterone, thus her bitterness.
I supect the doctors told her/his parents that not only would the treatments give her a female shape that surgery and massive doses of male hormones could only somewhat overcome but that testosterone might fuel a return of her tumors just like estrogen or is it progreserone can accelerate some female cancers.
I suspect there was no safe way to make her male and at best she would look effeminant and her equipment might not work well or at all. What all was cancerous and had to be removed? Her prostate in addition to her testicles? and so on. Was there any attempt to recover any sperm so she might have her own child via a surgate or was she so diseased that could not be done? Celyn needs to know why her parents chose as they did. If she can understand, now with her new will to live she got from the dying girl, she will make it as we know she has.
Fun to speculate, more fun to read.
John in Wauwatosa
John in Wauwatosa
A reason, a season or a lifetime
People come into your life for a reason, a season or a lifetime. Heulwen's visit was so brief but so life-changing. It's a good thing I recently stocked up on tissues. Even though I know how this story turns out, still it's an emotional ride.
Thank you so much for a great read.
Susie
a terrible lesson in priorities
For Celyn do anything other than to chose to live & try to find purpose & happiness would dishonor her friend Heulwen; An angel, in the timing of how she appeared in our hero/heroine's life, and I would like to think
now in fact. My own experiences with hospice situations makes this all too poignant. incredibly moving...
~~hugs, Laika
What borders on stupidity?
Canada and Mexico.
.
Cruelty
When I read this I had to begin to ask myself why si world so cruel place. The people who wants live suffer with terminal diseases, and people who don't want to or just has no reason to live, has to live their lives. Why? Difficult question on which I am not sure if I ever find answer.
Omg! that was so sad.Alys
Omg! that was so sad.Alys you tell a story so well... hugs kirri
I was sure I had commented on this before. Alys
This chapter is one of the saddest and most moving things I've ever read.
Probably why I only thought I'd commented.
It's true. Heulwen is the sunshine. She lets all see so clearly. But,
Sunshine, no matter how bright and beautiful,at the ending of the
day must always fade away. Even the brightest lasts but a single day.
Whenever I stumble on this, Alys, I can't stop reading, and I can't stop
crying.
Masterfully written, Alys
Sarah Lynn
I saw the comments and reread this short chapter and tears came
This is right up there with Bambi's mom getting shot off camera in the animated Disney clasic by the same name.
The power of a few well chosen words is astounding.
John in Wauwatosa
John in Wauwatosa
Yeah, I hated that part, too
This is right up there with Bambi's mom getting shot off camera
I mean, they don't show ANY details! Was it a head shot or a body shot? What caliber? Was it an extreme reload, or just standard OTC ammo? What did she dress out at?
DETAILS!!!!
KJT
"All lies in jest, still a man hears what he wants to hear
And disregards the rest"
The Boxer - Simon & Garfunkel
"Life is not measured by the breaths you take, but by the moments that take your breath away.”
George Carlin
Ever thought about...
...getting Kleenex to sponsor you?
Crying
I cry when I read this too, everytime.
Isn't that strange, even though I wrote it.
Hugs
Alys
re:story
wait let me find my kleenex.
robert
The Price we pay, Sunshine
Many of us have trouble being whom we are for one reason or another. I am glad for others in the BC/TG community.
GOOD STORY
JessieC
Jessica E. Connors
Jessica Connors
I'm re-reading this
and it's rather poignant that three of the commenters from the original posting have since died.
When my elder brother had a stroke, which affected his right side, he was very depressed and spoke of his plan to do away with himself because he felt he'd be a burden to his wife. He was taken to meet a woman who'd had a similar stroke but was completely locked into her body, only able to move her eyes. After realising his depression involved a degree of self-pity, he decided that he'd been relatively lucky and that life was still possible and enjoyable. He never looked back.
Angharad