{"id":1318,"date":"2015-03-16T19:50:25","date_gmt":"2015-03-16T19:50:25","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.buzzfeed.com\/ericak4a403379f\/losing-my-boyfriend-to-cancer-at-29"},"modified":"2015-03-16T19:50:25","modified_gmt":"2015-03-16T19:50:25","slug":"losing-my-boyfriend-to-cancer-at-29","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/effectsofanxiety.net\/archives\/1318","title":{"rendered":"Losing My Boyfriend to Cancer at 29"},"content":{"rendered":"
\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\tSoon after we fell in love, my boyfriend was diagnosed with stage 4 cancer.<\/b> Over the course of the next year and a half, we learned what we could — and couldn’t — control.\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t<\/p>\n “Is your flue open?” he yelled, carefully poking his head through the gold-rimmed doors of my fireplace.<\/p>\n “My what?” I shouted from the kitchen.<\/p>\n “Your flue. Is it open?”<\/p>\n “I dunno,” I called. “Probably.” I was preoccupied, surveying the sad contents of my fridge for the hope at a meal. While bringing a pot of water to a boil, I watched the windows fog over. For a moment, save for the occasional rustlings echoing from the next room, I forgot entirely about the cold, about the flue, and about the company of my friend, who, for weeks leading up to this evening, had resided within nothing more than a platonic context.<\/p>\n I served us both. “Look, it’s all about the kindling,” he continued. I gazed past him, noting his apparent decision to shred a recent New Yorker<\/i>. “You stack a few pieces on top of the tinder. A crisscross pattern usually works best. But you gotta make sure to leave space for air circulation.” A sly smile crept over his face. He read my amusement from across the room, picked up on my probably not-so-subtle, flirtatious mockery.<\/p>\n “I’m enjoying this. Truly,” I laughed. “But do you mind letting me take it from here?” He scooted back, still smiling, and offered up a clear shot between the stack of wood I had adopted as a mid-meal backrest and the nearly ready-for-action fire pit. Without skipping a beat, I chucked several logs sloppily into the grate. The tinder he had so gingerly assembled, alongside the kindling he’d meticulously planned for and prepped with, scattered. He held his stomach in hysterics while I dramatically struck a match and flipped it into the fireplace, and — as the sparks caught and the flames slowly spread — he wiped tears from his eyes from laughing so hard. “You,” he sputtered, “are a fucking trip.”<\/p>\n A trip. The trip. Our trip. “Oh! The mushrooms!” I disappeared into my room and returned with a clear plastic bag brimming with psychedelics.<\/p>\n By now, our bellies were full. The dishes were cleared. The sky had darkened, and the rain outside, as well as the fire within, had picked up in intensity. “Are you ready?” I asked, divvying up our drugs over the red area rug stretched before my fireplace.<\/p>\n “Always,” he smiled.<\/p>\n A hazy warmth began to wave across our space. Barely visible energy flumes pulsated from my pillow-clad couch, traced a fern-lined window, toyed with the blaze itself. We lost track of time. Music throbbed. Our existence swayed and rocked. At some point, mid-giggling-fit, I pulled a collection of glitter pens from the deepest bowels of my storage closet. We crouched on our shins, backs curled over our knees, and painted glimmering geometrics and sparkling abstracts along the cut-up backsides of paper grocery bags.<\/p>\n Faces mere inches from the flames, we conducted typical hallucinogenic conversations such as “What totally mundane household appliance would you pinpoint as the key signifier to your ‘successful adult life?’” Mine: a juicer. His: a waffle iron. With a proud nod toward the flames and a playful nudge, I reminded him “I made this fire.” It was here, long after the embers died and our psychedelic visuals mellowed, long after weeks of our own slow simmer, our own gentle unfolding, our own gradual build, that we kissed. We kept kissing. Not long after he told me he loved me.<\/p>\n While we settled into this initial, delicate phase of our relationship, a morning run suddenly sent him to the emergency room. Cramping in his abdominals triggered a bit of blood in his pee. A bit of blood in his pee led to the discovery that his system was shutting down. The culprit pulling the trigger: a very large tumor wrapped around his right kidney. Several scans showed worse news. The cancer had already metastasized. There were additional tumors in his lungs, questionable spots on his liver, and other “we’ll cross that bridge when we get there” concerns.<\/p>\n I had just turned 27. He was 26.<\/p>\n