Lessons from Doctor Who–Part One

This time last year, I was saying a conflicted goodbye to 2012.

It had been a year of challenges for me: breast cancer diagnosis in January, double mastectomy in February, a serious fall down a flight of stairs (knocked-unconscious-bleeding-from-the-ears-major concussion-chin-split-to-the-bone-five-teeth-shattered-ambulance-ride-to-the-hospital-in-a-neck-and-back-brace kind of serious) in March, multiple breast reconstruction surgeries May through October, oral surgeries to repair the teeth in the fall, and surgery to remove a totally random just-for-fun kidney stone before year’s end.

I was pretty convinced that the whole Mayan calendar “End of Days” was predicted just for me.

Mayan Calendar
Mayan Calendar

Last year was also the first time our daughter decided to stay up and ring in the New Year.  We’d introduced her to Doctor Who and it timed out beautifully that she was ready for the Tenth Doctor’s farewell, The End of Time, on New Year’s Eve.  

regeneration

Watch David Tennant’s last moments as the Doctor here: 10th’s Regeneration

So we said a tearful goodbye to one Doctor (our favorite), a trepidatious hello to another, and then we watched the ball drop in Times Square.  As tough as 2012 was for me and my family, it was a year of survival.  2013 was an unknown.

But as the Doctor shows us, time and again, change comes.  TARDIS consoles, companions, the faces of the Doctor–they all change whether we want them to or not.

The trick is how we approach change.

The agonizing departure of the Tenth, who was so obsessed with looking back (the Doctor of Regret as The Moment calls him) that he breaks the rules to take a farewell tour and say goodbye to his many companions, nearly destroys the TARDIS.  And the recent regeneration of the Eleventh, the Doctor of Forget, who constantly rushes forward to something new and lives in fear of “the question that must not be answered,” happens so violently it serves as a weapon, wiping out the Daleks at Trenzalore.

One is constantly looking to the past and the other is running headlong into the future; neither of them is very good at just being in the moment–understandable for a Time Lord, I suppose.

But being in the moment is the secret to accepting change.

Someone says, “You have cancer.” And suddenly you are a little kid again, frozen with fear as you anticipate crossing a dark room.  The prickling at the back of your neck and your heartbeat throbbing in your throat battles the rational thoughts assuring you that there’s nothing hiding in the dark.  Will it snake a gnarly hand around your ankle and snatch you away?

For a planner and control freak, like me, focusing on what might be coming seems natural, logical.  But I learned quickly that imagining the possibilities–surgery, what the pathology might indicate, potential chemo or radiation, prognosis–only choked me with fear.  I don’t know what’s lurking in the dark, and I have absolutely no control over it.

Anticipating the future, living in dread of the changes that might happen or living for the thrill of them, wipes out the joys of the moment.  Likewise, looking back to what was, comparing now to then (which we almost always idealize), distorts our attitudes about change.

I walked into a hospital whole and came out transformed.  When days later I stood in my bathroom and took off the bandages and let my eyes slide from the reflection of my familiar face down to the incisions that stretched across my chest where my breasts had been, I understood vividly the choice I had to make.

I could grieve for what had been, see the ghosts of breasts that made me wait so much longer than my friends that I despaired they would ever grow, breasts that finally blossomed the summer before my ninth-grade year, breasts that nursed my children, breasts that, despite my feminism, I innately associated with my womanhood; I could let those past breasts haunt me.  I could compare my new breasts, also grown (or crafted by the plastic surgeon) over a summer, to those other breasts and forever tether myself to the past.

Or I could embrace who I am now, scars and all.

In this moment, I can find the joy of my transformed body–stronger for what we’ve been through, hopefully healthy, ALIVE.  (And these new breasts are round and firm! ; ))

Despite not wanting to go, the Doctor embraces his new self quickly and sets about the work of discovery.  (Fish sticks and custard, anyone?)

Rather than spend this New Year’s waxing nostalgic for what was or obsessing over what will be, how about we settle in to the moment and make good decisions just now and revel in the joy of what is.

 

3 thoughts on “Lessons from Doctor Who–Part One”

  1. Dana, how did I not know that you’re a breast cancer survivor? You are inspirational–as a woman and as a writer. May 2014 be your most fabulous year yet.

  2. No matter what is cascading around us, whatever pain and chaos, this lesson is such a potent reminder of finding value in the moment. We chose being ALIVE–or don’t chose it–every minute of the day. You and the Doctor have inspired me all over again.

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