While I was going through treatment for Lymphoma I made the decision that once I was in remission I would get a tattoo. The image I wanted was a Charles Schulz character named ‘Number Three’ who dances onstage in the Charlie Brown Christmas Special. She’s one of a pair of twins (her sister is named, ‘Number Four’) and as they dance they reverse the steps so they’re mirror images of each other. (Apparently there’s an entire family within the CB world that are named 1, 2, 3, 4 & 5)

Beautifully said!
Wonderful memories of Gerry, he’d be happy to see you dance!
Hugs and best wishes
Your entries always touch me deeply. Keep on dancing, he’s watching.
I love your tattoo! I’ve always enjoyed how the twins throw themselves into that dance.
When I was in chemotherapy, I hated the warrior trope with a fiery passion. If a military metaphor was needed (and I’m not sure one was), I would say that I felt far more like a battleground.
Love this! Humor is how I make it although many would find mine a bit warped. You explained it so well. I’ll be 83 on Tuesday and am relying on humor more all the time!
Thanks for this, Annie. Early in our relationship, my husband shared his own objection to the warrior/fighter metaphor: if you “lost” your battle, that must because YOU were weak, because YOU didn’t fight hard enough, because YOU didn’t use the best strategies. When I was diagnosed with cancer a couple of years ago, I kept those words in mind. I am doing very well, and I was lucky to have a treatable cancer, caught early. I was also glad not to feel like my family expected me to engage with the rhetoric of fighting.
Dancing with life: a far better metaphor than “fighting” with cancer, or with death. That fight metaphor just sets us all up to lose in the end. Dance on, dance on, everyone.