This weekend marks five years since I was
working at my job in the South Pacific territory of American Samoa and had a
seizure that announced unequivocally that something was wrong with my brain’s wiring. Ten days later, after an emergency
medical evacuation to Auckland, New Zealand (the “nearest center of medical
excellence”), I was diagnosed with a tumor on my right frontal lobe. Emergency brain surgery and a six-week course
of radiation soon followed.
By all accounts, I’ve thrived over the intervening years, with no new tumor growth. I am nurtured, supported, and encouraged by family and
diverse, ever-widening circles of friends, and I do my best to nurture,
support, and encourage them all in turn. I have a job that pays me enough to
occasionally buy frivolous things like dahlias at the farmers’ market just because it’s a gloomy day. I snuggle with my cats and read
good fiction and watch some clever (and some dumb) TV shows and look at praying
mantises in my garden and play Macklemore’s
“Downtown” on repeat at high volume. I travel to new distant countries and
traipse around museums and ruins every chance I get.
This "anniversary" weekend has
been wonderfully full: cheering on my daughter at a martial arts tournament, laughing
and drinking beers around a campfire, walking on the beach, getting ice cream
and paletas as a reward for a long
bike ride. Spotting herons in marshes. This is the life I have with the people
I love. Five years out, I rarely envision my dying self hooked up to
morphine in a hospice, although that day may well come.
But increasingly, especially at large
public gatherings, I envision gun violence. I fear that someone I care
about, particularly my daughter, will be in the wrong place at the wrong time,
having the gall to go about what should be an everyday routine of attending
school, or church, or shopping, and all of a sudden the day, and that life,
ceases to be routine forever.
I let my beloved girl bike alone around our neighborhood
but pause when I drop her off at the roller rink to attend a birthday party. It’s a place characterized by squealing children and
blaring pop music competing with laser tag and disco lights and the pings and
bonks of arcade games. 30,000 square feet with no windows, staffed
entirely by teenagers. It’s the kind of
venue where, increasingly, I expect an angry man with access to a personal
arsenal of firepower will choose to enact his deranged version of vengeance on
a bunch of unsuspecting people before anyone even realizes what is happening.
Certainly, I never expected that at 39 I’d be diagnosed with brain cancer. Of course, I
never expected that as a citizen of the US, I’d see repeated gun massacres in public spaces. In
churches. In malls. In movie theatres. In fucking elementary school classrooms.
Candlelight vigil, Lafayette, LA
Despite how unfortunately common cancer
of every type is, we always look upon someone’s diagnosis as a surprise, something that couldn’t have possibly been anticipated, despite a
person’s individual risk factors. For far too
long, we’ve treated the risk of gun violence the
same way: something unexpected. But gun violence and mass shootings have become
anything but a surprise. Spend a few minutes looking at this chart from The
Guardian and you will probably realize, as I did, that mass shootings – let
alone the many instances where fewer than 4 people are killed or injured – are
now so sickeningly common that you probably weren’t aware of most of them. Such violence is now a routine, nearly everyday occurrence, as President Obama
reminded us after the violence in Oregon.
Candlelight vigil, Roseburg, OR
Cancer has certainly taught me that death
is inevitable, whether from bad decisions or fluke accidents or old age or
rogue cells that divide and host intruders. Stuff happens. Yet while my brain
tumor wasn’t predictable, many cancers ARE
considered preventable, and so we tackle cancer risk, by screening,
vaccinating, wearing sunscreen. We put mandatory warning labels on packs of
cigarettes and aerosol cans and alcoholic beverages. We acknowledge that there
is compelling evidence that certain substances and exposures are more likely to
increase the chance of getting cancer.
Cancer exists in nature and is not a strictly
human creation, but we recognize it as a public health risk and devote
intensive resources to its prevention. Guns don’t occur organically, and are purely designed and
used by humans. And still we fail to
identify them as a public health crisis.
Prayer vigil, Charleston, SC
Candlelight vigil, Tucson, AZ
I thought hard about my mortality the
night before my brain surgery. It’s a terrifyingly
deep well, one I am grateful not to have fallen into yet. Too many others
suffer and die violently from guns before they even have the privilege of
contemplating their lives.
This is not simply a call to carpe diem and tell people you love them. (Although do that
too.) Five years ago and at every subsequent MRI and oncology appointment,
friends and family across the globe, from many different cultures and faith
traditions, have lifted me up in prayer and demonstrated what is good and
unifying in the world. I am ever grateful. But right now, I want to ask for a
different kind of support, one that requires more than bowing your head or
lighting candles, like the grieving people in these photos attending vigils in the wake of gun violence. Those are good and worthy actions, but rather than simply celebrating
my 5-year milestone, please, do something to promote gun control in America.
Call your elected officials. Attend
rallies in support of reasonable gun control laws. Donate to one of the
many organizations fighting the uphill battle against the NRA and its elected
puppets at every level of government, including:
And if you think I’m way off base, that gun violence isn’t the issue, mental health is, then for God’s sake, take some action on that. Donate to the
National Alliance for the Mentally Ill (https://www.nami.org/) or one of those good organizations in your neck
of the woods that serve those with mental health problems.
“Stuff happens,” Jeb Bush told listeners
at a campaign event in South Carolina the day after the Oregon shooting. Five years since my diagnosis, and I’ve always shied away from identifying myself as a survivor, perhaps because a good chunk of the tumor still lives in my skull. But I think our collective survival as Americans depends upon reclaiming the narrative about guns.
I am not naïve enough to think that we can eliminate all gun deaths, but
I do think we can take reasonable steps – perhaps mandatory background checks
and waiting periods for purchasing, a national gun registry, liability
insurance for legally purchased guns, and closing purchasing loopholes – to
limit angry people from getting and using guns, and in doing so, take our
country back from those who have us cowed into submission and inevitable future gun violence. This kind of stuff doesn’t have to happen.
[Note:
I hadn’t even finished my final draft of this essay – begun on October 1, 2015
after the Umpqua Community College shooting - when I heard the news of yet
another mass shooting on October 9, 2015 at another campus, this time Northern
Arizona University in Flagstaff, AZ.]