Prepared Yet Not Ready

It makes you want to give up, to stop the flow of thoughts, that of words, closing it in a golden vase, of course, but hidden among many similar ones so as to be unrecognizable.
How far and where can we accept pushing the cure, how far and where can we allow the body to be exposed in the demand for the cure? A treatment that does not cure but “tries to chronicle” as if all the consequences of this attempt on that same body that is increasingly deprived of energy mattered nothing.
You can be prepared but not ready for what is approaching. Prepared, because I know the procedure, the therapy, its consequences. Prepared, because I know the limitations of having to wear a PICC to allow the chemotherapy to more safely pass through my veins. Prepared, because I know what it means to lose your hair, eyebrows, eyelashes. Prepared because I well remember the gaze of too many and the climate of suffering within that circuit that in the therapy room is unable to unite one with the other even if with the same discomfort and pain. Prepared for tiredness, lack of appetite, total or almost total loss of taste, for continuous analyzes and blood tests to probe how much chemotherapy is destroying my body as much as, and more than, the cancer itself. I am prepared for all of this and I know that I will face it, and yet, I don’t feel like I can say that I am ready.
I’m not ready because precisely the knowledge and awareness of experience makes it more complicated to prepare oneself to re-live all that external and internal chaos that makes one feel at the mercy of a nothingness with no aim and only an apparent direction. I’m not ready because I know what awaits me, I know the sacrifice in every little fold or crack, I feel the weight of it in my heart and mind even before my tired body.
After all, you are never ready, you can’t be, since even what is known can take on different nuances depending on the moment. Perhaps it is a good thing that this is the case, since attention to that new thing that hides in the small known spaces of the abyss can stimulate the audacity not to give up and to face with new and not just renewed courage what life has in store for me.
The little monster has been renewed into a little monster, I still have to ask myself to preserve the dignity of the smile in pain and to entrust to this every moment of the known but new time of which I will be the protagonist with all the good that I keep in my heart.