Still Walking With Rhetta
by katherine bryce
Rhetta and I met in 1995, when we were both
students at the University of Toronto. She was
a linguistics major, and I was studying engineering.
Our paths crossed at Varsity Arena, where we
ended up playing on the same intermural hockey
team. As I got to know Rhetta better, I felt
that I had surely found a true friend and foil
with whom to travel on this journey of life.
Five short years later I learned that we were
destined to share a much different journey -
a much shorter journey - as her exhaustion and
headaches were found to be the result of a brain
tumor. It was after the surgery that I heard
the name "glioblastoma multiforme"
for the first time, followed by words "this
is a terminal cancer, but we'll try to control
it as long as we can". I was numb. The
internet provided cold clean facts - 14 weeks.
Three months. Six months. When I did hear the
prognosis I actually felt some relief - one
to two years. In comparison it seemed long.
In my heart I knew better.
In the end Rhetta lived for almost 23 months
from the date of her initial diagnosis. Twenty-three
months containing two surgeries, five weeks
of radiation therapy, nearly a dozen rounds
of chemotherapy, about 10 MRIs, several CT scans,
steriotactic radiosurgery, and innumerable blood
tests. But also many trips to the cottage, more
than half a dozen trips to Nova Scotia to see
her family, witnessing her first niece learn
to walk and talk, living to see her second niece
born, and knowing that another niece or a nephew
was "on the way", a snowboarding trip
to Whistler, summer hockey, mountain biking,
three completed triathlons, and many, many walks:
in our neighborhood, in the peace of Mount Pleasant
cemetery, and at the cottage. Twenty-three months
of anger, sadness, joy, exhileration and fulfillment.
During the last trip we took to Nova Scotia
together, in May of 2002, we hiked the Cape
Split trail. It is a beautiful trail through
widely varying landscape to a rocky bluff jutting
out into the Bay of Fundy. As we hiked back
to the trailhead she stopped me: "Just
promise me that you will never forget you're
alive", she said. I will never forget that
moment. It's a harsh reality that it is only
through loss that we truly realize how much
we take for granted.
In July 2002 I drove to Nova Scotia once again,
bringing the ashes of my sweetheart home to
be buried in Berwick cemetery with her ancestors.
When I returned to Ontario I decided to spend
a week at my cottage. One day I was up in our
wooded lot with my binoculars, watching the
birds. I came across a fallen ironwood tree,
which is not unusual because there are many
ironwoods, and quite often there are several
dead ones lying around, waiting to be picked
up and thrown into the BBQ pit. I saw this one
- it was very straight with few branches, which
is usual for ironwoods - and I thought to myself
"that is the perfect size for a walking
stick".
There really was no reason for me to fixate
on making a walking stick, something I've never
done before, out of that particular ironwood
tree, other than it seemed to beg for it. So
I dragged it down, and plopped it behind the
cottage where the wood shed is. I left it there,
and the next day my dad commented on it, saying
that he was going to cut it up to use it for
the BBQ that night.
I debated with myself whether to say anything
about wanting it for a walking stick, or just
letting him cut it up and forget about the idea.
But for some reason, I felt obliged to make
the stick. I felt silly about it. I even said
to myself, "this is ridiculous, that tree
has nothing to do with Rhetta". But because
I believe that those strong feelings we sometimes
get are deeply rooted messages and ought to
be heeded, I felt I should follow through with
my plan. I went inside and told my dad I wanted
the top part for the walking stick. I helped
him cut the rest up for the BBQ, and had him
stop a few inches above where I wanted to make
the cut for the handle. There was a good bulb
there which would make a perfect grip.
I went and got the handsaw and cut it where
I wanted it. When I was finished cutting, I
looked at the cut face, and honestly, there
is a perfect heart shape in darker wood in the
middle of the face. I swear to you, it is perfect.
I have never seen anything like it. I suppose
it had everything to do with Rhetta. I'll never
know. When nature smiles at you, there's nothing
you can do but feel blessed.
I finished the stick and varathaned it so it
shines. I kept the top portion of the cut too,
because here is the unusual thing: where my
dad made the cut with the chainsaw, there is
no heart shape . Clearly the message was meant
for me.
One of my favorite writers is Wally Lamb. He
wrote a great book called "I Know This
Much is True". In the last paragraph he
cites as one of those things which he knows
to be true is that "the proof of God exists
in the roundness of things". I like this
statement because, though I am not a religious
person and do not believe in God as a divine
being, it allows a certain degree of flexibility
in an interpretation of God. God may "simply"
be a pattern or fluidity or interconnectedness
in what often appears to be a totally chaotic
world. I think that this curious occurance is
a great example of the roundness of things.
What I know for sure is, I will carry her words
and my promise with me for the rest of my life,
and when I carry those words and my beautiful
stick, I am still walking with Rhetta.