Monday, April 7, 2014

I Love You Mom

I was reading one of my plant books one day at Colorado—my boss Jose’s farm nestled between the Cerro Hoya National Park on the Azuero Peninsula and the Pacific ocean—when the book told me one the most obvious facts about plants: that they heal.  They heal in many ways; they clean the air of nasty chemicals like benzene and formaldehyde, their presents brings good energy, a healing energy to a room and they provide fruit and vegetables to nourish and give our bodies the chemicals to heal ourselves.  This is all very obvious and bears little worth in mentioning it unless the case be that hospitals do not have many or any plants in them.  Sure a few hospitals have gardens but how many are designed with prolific greenspace? So that there is natural light to support plants live indoors, to clean the air and make the patient feel more comfortable and provide the patient with better quality food than they serve in prison.
                This subject is of particular import for me today because April 7th is my departed mother’s birthday.   She passed away almost 2 years ago but she is always in my mind.  She was an anesthesiologist by profession after completing a psychology degree in 3 ½ years from Notre Dame, and a medical doctorate from the University of Oklahoma.  They say human nature is determined by environment and my passion for health may be explained by the fact I was born during one of her finals weeks in med school. It is a funny thing however that I could not truly chase my passion until she was gone forever.
                My mom had breast cancer first when I was 14.  She had a mastectomy of the infected breast and the coast was supposed to be clear for life to proceed as normal.  Skip ahead 4 years, she was diagnosed with stage 4 breast cancer that had metastasized to her brain, liver, spine and lymph nodes.  Apparently the operation had not removed it all and had grown unchecked for 4 years.  WOMEN ALWAYS FOLLOW UP!!!!! This was crushing news for my family; even more concerning was I was meant to depart for the Netherlands to be a Rotary Exchange Student in August.  I was encouraged to go through with it and choose to accept the honor knowing that when I went through security I would never see her face again.  Would you I did not even look back to wave?
                My relationship with my mother is complicated.  She was an intensely practical woman always focused on security.  She worked two jobs most her life to have spending money, pay her way through college—still graduating early—and to put food on the table.  Even when my mom was a resident physician she entered the Army reserves to have a bit more money and as a fully practicing doctor would moonlight at another hospital 45 minutes away to save up for her retirement and pay off her loans—for the record she still had outstanding medical school loans when she died.  Oh I should mention she was honorable discharged due to medical issues as she had a broken neck from a water skiing accident and could not wear a helmet—did I mention my mom was a tough cookie?  However this practicality led her to look down on me, the dreamer, who loved picking caterpillars to see what butterfly they turned into and pretending to have my own nature show.  My vision was always to the future, what would I study in college? History? Archeology? Biology? Nothing fit into her idea of success: money.  She told me I would be poor my whole life and though I had no concept of money—still don’t—I decided I could not chase those dreams until at the age of 12 I had no more dreams, only hate and cynicism for the world and my mother.
                My cynical and loveless nature continued through middle school, and high school.  I had only a few good friends and my best bud from childhood, Shane Foye, and I would observe the world as outsiders and have deep philosophical discussions about why things are and how to fix it.  All this time I was the most passive aggressive 90’s bitch ever created.  I would lie like a mat—I suppose my dad choose a good name for me—telling my parents what they wanted to hear and scoot by in school from my genetic intelligence as my dad has a Ph.D. and yea you know my mom’s education.  Like I mentioned, when I found out about my mom’s condition I was devastated.  I had thought this whole time that I would not earn her respect until I was secure on my own dime, then she would love me and I could return the feeling. 
                In the Netherlands I became a new person; I took every cliché in the book and put it to heart.  “You only live once” “Life is over before you know it” “Dance like no one is watching” “No Regrets” All that jazz.  I transformed under pressure from suffering and without boundaries in a country where weed, prostitution and beer at school dances is legal—yes it is as awesome as it sounds.  I did not read books, preferring to philosophize with my own thoughts; each night I was alone a thousand miles away to think.  I organically developed Buddhism in my own mind, knowing that expectation and desire were the root of all suffering and I had to find a way to let go.  My behavior has never been the same since those days; the dreamer in me was reborn like a phoenix rising from the ashes even more vibrant than before and would earn me a new nickname from my college rugby team: ‘Dutch’ was born.
                Would you know it, that my mother survived 4 years with her disease—wait did I mention she was a tough cookie?  I saw her when my family visited me in the Netherlands and we went to Scotland.  It was amazing really how long she was able to battle cancer but at a cost.  I have to mention my father and brother and how incredible they are; while I was rebirthing myself they had to help my mother through the worst of her battle.  Every day they would help her, to weak to even move, and comfort her but I cannot do their experience justice as I was not there and they have not been explicit with their hands on suffering so I will not try.  When I returned she was still her practical self and sensing the end only pushed her harder and made her worry even more for me.  For now I was different, I was a near adult who had contrived logical arguments for how the world should be led and it was never very practical. 
                I will skip ahead again through college because that honestly was a drunken blur that I disliked most of and was still sad 90% of the time—sophomore year involved a lot of drunk crying in public places—waiting for the impending call that my mother had passed away. I could not let myself live under the weight of worrying her, that everything I said or thought was not ‘how the world worked’ and I could still feel no love between us.  I was immobilized by her disregard for my dreams and ideals so with no path to follow besides the old get a job, marriage, kids bs I sunk again back into apathy. 
                I remember walking out of the tv room June 31st and saying goodbye to my mom, like it was the last time I would see her as I had thought so many times before, as I left for a friend’s birthday party.  On the morning of July 1st my brother and grandpa came to pick me up and bring me to the hospital to see my mother lying in a bed, having suffered a heart attack she was brain dead and on life support.  By the afternoon she was dead, I was out for a walk in the woods where I found comfort where a family friend Ernie picked me up by a stream to take me to see her and say goodbye…her heart had stopped.  There were no words to say, I felt her cold hands and soft hair and let go.  I began to let it all go.
                At first I was very angry for how unnecessary it was, they said she was fine that she would never have cancer again.  Then I blamed her lifestyle, she was overweight, ate crap processed foods and never exercised.  But I have come to see that it may have been my fault, I failed to show her the love a mother deserves and understand she was who she was because of her experiences.  My lack of empathy and selfish ego had clouded my judgment and closed myself off from her.  There are a lot of superstitions about love curing disease and perhaps it’s a two way street.
                This realization did not happen so quickly as 4 sentences however.  It took me many months to see my hand in her departure.  All the while senior year was under way and I endeavored to make it my best.  I had an amazing professor Dr Pogo for biochemistry that really opened my eyes to just how important diet is in preventing cancer.  It may have been because I saw everything through the lens of a victim, of someone who wanted to fully understand the enigma that is cancer.  I would like to say here that first off calling something a ‘genetic disorder’ is horseshit.  In Bio101 they teach you scientists do not understand what 98% of DNA is for so how do they understand ‘genetic disorders.’  Second cancer is as genetic as playing an instrument, if you may have an aptitude for an instrument but you become a maestro by practicing 5 hours a day.  For cancer ‘practice’ is gene transcription, if you eat a diet that causes inflammation and free radical damage while your body constantly needs to make enzymes to deal with the amount of sugar you are eating then your statistically more likely to have a screw up and then BOOM!!! cancer.  For example, Ras is an onco gene—gene related to cancer—that if your DNA transcriptase screws up 1 amino acid I REPEAT 1 MOTHER LOVING AMINO ACID!!!! The enzyme no longer can shut itself off and the cell goes into a constant cycle of growth aka cancer aka capitalism…oops there is the dreamer again.
                So with this knowledge and no dissenting words from my mother I choose to dedicate my life to the greatest impact against diseases of lifestyle.  I saw that supply of those good-good chemical-free whole foods we all want was in short supply so I would become a sustainable farmer.  I WWOOFed the summer after I graduated—barely SUNY Geneseo is tough—in Pennsylvania (Goodness Grows) and Texas (Fresh Pasture Farms) to learn how to grow veggies and raise livestock.  I was obsessed with aquaponics, that newfangled contraption where fish poop fertilizes hydroponically grown herbs and veggies.  I saw that upstate New York had a lot of abandoned lots and warehouses from the bygone industrial era that could use a face lift and people in cities need veggies as ‘food deserts’ are a huge problem these days.  My dad did his best to discourage me but I could not be dissuaded I had to complete my mission, the love for my mother that I had not known during her life kept me going.  I even attempted to get an internship at Growing Power one of the largest aquaponics urban farms in the country located in Milwaukee. 
                Its funny though since it was my dad who told me to pursue opportunities abroad.  I think he meant WWOOFing but he ended up paying 2.5 grand for a natural building internship in Costa Rica.  When I left the farm in Costa Rica I had a plan to become a naturopathic doctor because they actually treat the person as a whole and not by parts; I had also seen the effects of allopathic treatment of cancer and it doesn’t work too well or at all for heart disease and diabetes.   Its funny how the world works, my best friend Josh Vics had an internship at Kalu Yala—a sustainable community in the mountains of Panama outside a town called San Miguel—where he build a barrelponics system at their Panama City location.  Kalu Yala just happened to be hosting a TEDx: Adventure talk and needed volunteers so with a foot in the door I was able to attend.  I had a lot of fun in the jungle at TEDx; I met so many amazing people who were so happy to be alive, who loved what they did and most were helping move society forward by disseminating knowledge and progress throughout the world.  There I heard this power phrase ‘social entrepreneur’ for the first time from Game Changers 500 own Andrew Hewitt; people who created businesses for the good of humanity needless to say I finally had a label to call myself. 
                My friend Josh met a fantastic guy named Jose Goldner.  He saw the internship at Kalu Yala and thought they could use a more graduate type of program.  He already had much of the infrastructure to create an entrepreneurial program, an old tourist fishing business “Pedasi Fishing,” a cattle breeding business “Hemingway Hacienda,” and a real-estate business “Ocean Legacy SA.”  He just needed some bright individuals to help him breathe new life into his businesses and a new internship would be soon to follow.  So since the New Year Jose has put me up and helping me build my own business as I help him build the “DreamSpear” entrepreneur program.  Jose had the idea of “MindSpear” but I am the forever dreamer so I interjected ‘dream’ and the tag line “spear your dreams” is just too good.   The program is an immersion entrepreneurial experience focused on ecommerce digital strategy—Jose’s specialty—like online marketing, search engine optimization and business plan development.  He has taught me these last few months that you do not need to delay gratification, that you can live the lifestyle you want while making an impact and changing the world.
 It happened rather organically, Jose wanted a few hectares of orchard planted and I started researching tropical fruit trees which turned into a permaculture landscape business focused on edible landscaping to maximize the health benefits the land has to offer.  My tentative business—as I have clients lined up but no check yet—is called “Earth Investments” with the mission to design, implement and maintain holistic, functional and sustainable landscapes using permaculture and the organic method to promote health, fertility and biodiversity for the residence of the Azuero peninsula.  I am on the verge of starting an organization that will promote health far beyond the reaches of one farmer; by designing edible landscapes bursting with the most delicious chemical-free fruit available to the tropics I will ensure that at least those on the Azuero Peninsula will have access to healing whole foods.
Now I told you that story to tell you my idea; I want to help the people back in Utica,NY.  I do not feel any particular geographic loyalty to Utica but I feel I must change the place that may have contributed to my mother’s early death.  The Faxton-St. Luke’s hospitals are not too terrible as brick buildings go but they do not represent progress.  The cafeteria where I ate as I spent more than a few nights while my mom was on call served the same processed poison that they serve in college cafeterias and prisons.  There is no greenspace with few plants located throughout the building and if there is a gym then it is not well advertised.  I read an article about a hospital in Detroit that had a greenhouse to provide ‘real medicine’ as the article said for the patients.  So my idea is to raise money for a new hospital, a hospital of the future: that provides delicious pesticide and herbicide free fruit, vegetables and fish using aquaponics with a greenhouse rooftop garden and plants in every room and a gym for doctors to stay fit so that they do not have to suffer the consequences of poor design for our nature is defined by our environment after all.  The Cynthia Renee Memorial Hospital is just an idea in my head but I will return to my home of 13 years one day to see if I can drum up support and be sure that anyone that I can save will be saved in Utica itself or by the example I create.

I am just a dreamer, a hippie capitalist, a philosopher scientist and a highly logical yet irrational person; I am a dichotomy much like my favorite wave-particle the electron.  I have watched a lot of flasks boil over the years being a chemistry major and bubbles are fascinating creatures.  At first one molecule gets excited and bumps another one, losing a little himself but now both are more excited; if you keep adding energy then they a lot of molecules get excited in one spot and break the liquid phase and rise up.  I am only one water molecule but my passion and the love for my mother has given me unending energy to excite those around me to rise up for what we believe in, to save this planet for in a very practical sense the Y generation must or we are doomed.   It can start with a smile or a shocking loss but we must all hear the call to action. I will leave you with my own catch phrase that only those who know me will understand “Have fun and don’t do anything I wouldn’t do.”