Some Time in the Hospital, a New Diagnosis, and a Tor.com shout for Field Guide to the End of the World
- At August 15, 2017
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
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First of all, thanks to Abby Murray and Lish McBride for writing up Field Guide to the End of the World for this feature on Tor.com! This was a bright spot in an otherwise challenging week
I spent the last three days admitted into a hospital – after a week of repeated trips to the ER, collapsing with dehydration and fainting and cyclical vomiting – hooked up to IVs, getting lots of MRIs (three!) and giving lots of blood. Before that, I’ve had over a month of very strange symptoms – dizziness, nausea, vomiting, inability to keep down food, and strange heavy feeling in my lower legs, with wobbliness and my knees giving out. At the hospital I had a neurologist specialist work me up along with the hospitalist (along with, among others, a nutritionist, an occupational therapist, and a physical therapist.) It should be said here vomiting is one of my most hated things in life and the other is being hooked up to a damn IV. Even at a very nice hospital with private rooms and big televisions and pretty surroundings, like Swedish Issaquah, no one loves being in the hospital.
Several different radiologists and neurologists have decided my symptoms, combined with a rather devastating new MRI of my brain, mean I have probable MS. This has qualified me to be worked up at the best MS Center in Seattle with one of their top doctors. (If these doctors hadn’t interceded for me, there’s almost no way I would have made it in with their doc within two weeks notice.)
A Year After I Received a Terminal Cancer Diagnosis, I’ve Received a Positive MS Diagnosis.
A year and a half after I received a terminal cancer diagnosis at an ER in Redmond, I’ve discovered that my neural lesions, which had been watched for over five years and stayed pretty static, had changed, grown, spread, and generally developed a pattern that looked a lot to the neurologist and radiologist like MS. (The medical terminology is “McDonald’s criteria.”) Because I cannot have a spinal tap – the usual way to get a diagnosis – my diagnosis has been slow to come, even as I developed more lesions and more symptoms. This latest weirdness has been termed an official “MS flare,” which typically last thirty days and bring lots of symptoms on to the unwary MS sufferer.
MS is not as scary a diagnosis as terminal cancer, and MS is treatable – though we don’t know yet what kind of treatment will work for me. Currently I’m on a giant cocktail of meds to get me through the time when the MS specialists will decide what the best treatment for me is (because of my other health conditions, they didn’t want to do the usual throw a huge dose of steroids treatment at me. Though I might have welcomed it!) My brother came to visit me in the hospital, and my parents flew out to Ohio to help Glenn as right now I am termed a “fall risk” and can’t be left alone even if I wanted to be. Getting out of a chair or taking a shower have become huge difficult challenges for me all of a sudden.
Anyway, it’s been more than a month since I could focus on being a friend, a writer, or even a decent human being, so I apologize – – but just trying to survive the constant vomiting – along with a huge decrease in my ability to walk or even stand unaided – has been a real bear. I hope that the new cocktail of drugs will work until they can get me under a more stable treatment plan. Think good thoughts for me as I am dealing with a new reality. I said to a friend that MS wouldn’t even be the scariest thing – or the thing most likely to lead to be death – that I’ve been diagnosed with. But it is still a challenge as I learn the new reality of my body, which constantly morphs. Like Buffy, you learn to defend yourself against one monster one week, and the next week, another pops up and you start all over again,
BookRiot and Poets for People Who Don’t Like Poetry, plus ER trips and Smoke on the water
- At August 06, 2017
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
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First, thanks to BookRiot and Carolina Ciucci for including me on this list of “Poetry for People who Don’t Like Poetry.” Very good company there! Share if you like the article.
Second, I’m sorry if I haven’t been on top of things – I’ve been sick – several trips to the hospital and different doctors kind of sick, where I can’t stop getting – well – no graphics here, but let’s just say I’m having trouble keeping down anything but liquids, and sometimes not even those. They can’t figure out what’s wrong though my white blood cell count is sky-high and other inflammatory factors, they’ve misdiagnosed me twice already and given me a bunch of meds that didn’t help, so I’m a little frustrated (and tired, and having a hard time staying hydrated or doing anything but sleep with all the anti-nausea drugs. Oof.) This has been a month so far, with no relief. Boo. I have things on hold – haven’t been writing and sending out as much, so forgive me if I have been slow to respond.
Also in the weird zone, the British Columbia fires – 500 miles from us – have covered Seattle and the whole state of Washington in smoke, and this along with a bizarre hot/dry streak have left us kind of living in an apocalypse zone, right when most of us would like to be spending time outdoors, the air is literally too unhealthy – not just for asthmatics, for everyone! Now everyone is wishing for rain and wind and lower temperatures. I can look over the valley from my deck, and a weird thick haze hangs over everything. The moon was weirdly orange last night, baleful even.

Sweeptpeas and lavender running wild in my garden
Here’s a quick clip of my garden in bloom. It doesn’t seem to be bothered either by the smoke or my illness, nor do the hummingbirds and stellar jays and flickers. We saw a coyote on our street the night we went to the hospital, and I saw this when I went out to water the garden yesterday – a tiny bunny eating the leaves off my dahlia!
Poem on Verse Daily Today – The Last Love Poem
- At July 21, 2017
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
0
So pleased to have some good news to announce – my poem from Field Guide to the End of the World, “The Last Love Poem,” is up on Verse Daily today!
Sylvia wanted to remind you that summer is sometimes a slow season for poetry sales, so pick up a copy of Field Guide to the End of the World now. She’s so commercial, that kitten!
In all seriousness, it’s nice to have good news to share in a month that has been challenging (besides our dental woes, I had a bout of food poisoning/stomach flu a few days ago, which was un-fun.) It’s been beautiful weather here but I’ve been too sick to do much exploring of the lovely beaches, mountains and woods. Luckily I’ve been able to watch the clouds, birds, rabbits, and our little garden around our house, which is blooming, finally, all the things I planted last fall when I was so worried and gloomy, the lavender humming with bees, strawberries and blueberries, roses and mint. Happy July! I’m hoping to get a few poems written, a few submissions, maybe even a book manuscript sent out, before the end of the month…
New Poem about Middle Age in Contrary Magazine, Things Fall Apart in July
- At July 11, 2017
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
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I’m so glad Contrary Magazine decided to publish this particular poem this week: “April in Middle Age”
It was a good reminder to me about this feeling of falling apart. This is really the first day I could even think straight for the last week. During the July 4 holiday weekend, I managed to knock out part of my tooth and its filling (no pain), got an emergency dental appointment on the 5th, and then spent about six days in so much nerve pain from the temporary crown that it nearly crossed my eyes (apparently the nerve gets irritated, which can cause enormous pain. I was like, why do I try to do anything to my teeth??) Then my poor husband knocked out one of his crowns! We celebrated our 23rd anniversary – instead of picnicking by the waterfalls like we planned – by eating soft foods and with me generally trying not to complain about the pain. I got vertigo from my TMJ (a side-effect of the dental appointment and two sprained jaw injuries in my past) so bad that I nearly passed out taking a walk on Lake Washington. Nevertheless, we saw two sets of little ducklings on the water, and I got dressed up. This is part of getting older – things start falling apart, literally. Here’s a picture of us on our anniversary this year, the ducklings on Lake Washington, and the night we got engaged when I was 20.
- Anniversary by Lake Washington
- Ducklings!
- The night of our engagement – I was 20!
It’s so frustrating when your body slows you down. I was finally able to get some sleep last night after my physical therapist worked on my jaw and recommended a small dose of a muscle relaxer which I had never thought of before (I can’t take many pain drugs, due to the bleeding disorder and allergies.) Therefore my brain is a bit brighter, as is my mood, today. I am still being instructed to take it easy, but I have two packets of poems to look and a review I’m supposed to be working on. Beth Ann Fennelly’s Heating & Cooling, as displayed here by my kitten Sylvia:
I have noticed that my health usually takes a dive in July for whatever reasons – my autoimmune system doesn’t like heat or sun, or just things tend to happen when you have the time to go to doctors and dentists. Anyway, it’s a reminder that this is more of a regular than non-regular occurrence, part of getting older, part of me. I am reminded that summer takes its own toll, though it’s mostly a time for other Northwesterners to frolic outside, I’m usually stuck indoors, avoiding the sun or heat, but also forced into a closer relationship with my books. This is probably a pattern I’ve had since I was a kid in Tennessee, avoiding the midday Southern sun and storms, hiding myself in a tree in the shade or a corner of the house where I would be left alone to read. This is why spring and fall feature so strongly in my poems – and not usually summer.
July 4 Weekend – Apocalypse Poetry, Poetry and Kittens, Summer Submission Doldrums
- At July 02, 2017
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
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Well, happy holiday weekend! And how better to celebrate than with a discussions of Apocalypse Poetry!
Trish Hopkinson hosted me on her blog to do a guest post where I talked about the trend towards apocalypse poetry. Books by Dana Levin, Jessie Carty, and Donna Vorreyer are discussed (I got Apocalypse Mix by Jane Satterfield too late to include, but it certainly falls into this category as well, and is a really fun read!) I discuss everything from Cold War angst to neural lesions to the current political climate and Murakami. Check it out!
I’ve started a new Twitter called @literarykittens where my cats Sylvia and Shakespeare pose with literary materials – new books, literary magazines. At some point the cats might even start doing microreviews. Hmm…Here’s Sylvia with the new American Poetry Review and Shakespeare with my new load of books from Open Books – Kirsten Kaschock’s Confessional Sci-Fi, Scorpionica by Karyna McGlynn, and Kim Yideum’s Cheer Up Femme Fatale (with translations by one of my fave writers and translators, Don Mee Choi, as well as Ji Yoon Lee and Johannes Goransson.) I made a less-television-more-reading goal for this summer, and so far, so good!
I also got to meet up with charming President of the Science Fiction Poetry Association, Bryan Thao Worra, at Open Books, where we talked all things sci-fi and poetry. It’s been so nice to get to meet up with literary friends as they travel through lovely summertime Seattle! Then some local scenes – Seattle’s Japanese Garden and some Woodinville scenes of roses and hummingbirds.
- Bryan Thao Worra and me at Open Books
- Japanese Garden, iris and water lilies
- Japanese Garden, iris and water lilies with heron
- close-up of bathing blue heron
- Glenn and I in the roses
- a local hummingbird gets curious
Are any of you experiencing summer poetry doldrums? I always, always have a hard time getting motivated during Seattle’s three summer months. Maybe the sunshine that lasts til almost 10 PM is part of the problem – it throws off my biorhythms so I’m sleeping in and staying up later. I have been reading more and writing at least a little but sending out? I’ve been seriously slacking off. Here is a wonderful list of places to send in July: https://entropymag.org/where-to-submit-june-july-3/ It’s not an endless list, which makes summertime submitting harder, too – so many lit mags take the summer off! What are your tricks and tips? Ooh, if you’re around and not out barbecuing, come share them as the Twitter #poetparty is on tonight at 6 PM!
Port Townsend and Poet Trips, Rain Taxi review
- At June 13, 2017
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
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Just home from a several-day trip, I woke today to see that there was a wonderful review of my latest book, Field Guide to the End of the World, in the very esteemed journal of reviews, Rain Taxi! The Summer issue, which just came out, contains a review by Sarah Liu of the new book. “In Gailey’s field guide, the language of the body is subsumed in that of the apocalyptic and vice versa. The speaker-as-guide of her poems provides a dialectic of tension and comfort…” Thanks Sarah and Rain Taxi! There’s also a great interview with Denise Duhamel in the issue. Here’s a picture of the kitten, Sylvia, posing with the summer issue. Check it out!
Just got back from a trip out to visit my poet friend Kelli Russell Agodon in her beautiful sea-view home over the water, then on to a couple of days in Port Townsend. It was wonderful to spend some time out with a poet friend and then in nature, enjoying the ocean, watching the heron, seals, deer, eagles, goldfinches, and observing everything in bloom along the journey – from roses to rhododendron to red hot pokers and cherry blossoms. Travel is a little more difficult for us these days than it used to be, but it’s good to sometimes have a change of scenery. We used to live in Port Townsend – now it’s been about ten years – but the town still feels like a former home, with all the nostalgia. Of course, since we got caught in a ferry backup on the way out, and a Hood Canal Bridge closure on the way back, the irritating realities and isolation – and the fact that I seem to be allergic to everything in town, from the picturesque historic old buildings to the local paper mill – it also helped us remember why we moved away. Coming home to the much less exciting scenery of Woodinville, I felt peaceful – happy that we had made the trip, and that we were home again, where we belonged. But if you want to see what makes the Northwest beautiful, Port Townsend isn’t a bad place to start. Also, the shops – including the Imprint Bookstore – are a bonus in an area where you could spend your entire time outdoors. There are colorful umbrellas, great book selections (I think I came home with about ten more books!) and more to browse through if it turns grey and rainy.
I also re-read The Egg and I by Betty MacDonald, about the trials of chicken farming in the thirties in the Port Townsend area. Betty MacDonald was a rarity in her day – a woman writer who was fairly financially successful – she also wrote children’s books and even sold movie rights and created the characters “Ma and Pa Kettle” – and was also sued several times. It was 1. way more racist than I remembered and 2. while I delighted in the descriptions of the towns and the gardening and the seasons, the book became much more for me the sad portrait of failed marriage and failed farm than the lighthearted humor book I had remembered. I had bought the local book “Looking for Betty MacDonald” for my mom, which had rekindled my interest in the subject.
- Glenn and I at Fort Warden
- in front of Discovery Bay view
- Roses at Chetzemoka park
- Glenn and me at North Beach
- Under inexplicable cherry blossoms
- Pirate Ship in thre Bay
- Poppies
- Glenn and me in the rhododentdron garden at Fort Warden
- Discovery Bay Sunset
- Port Townsend deer
- With Kelli, waterfront
Reading Tomorrow in Tacoma and Writing Poetry in Dark Times
- At May 24, 2017
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
0
Reading in Tacoma
Tomorrow I’ll be reading with San Francisco poet Kendra Tanacea, at King’s Books in Tacoma at 7 PM. I hope to see some of you there! I’ll be reading some end-of-the-world poems from my latest book, Field Guide to the End of the World, and Kendra will be reading from her new collection A Filament Burns in Blue Degrees from Lost Horse. I haven’t read in Tacoma for a while, so I’m excited abou tit!
Poetry in Dark Times
I can tell you I’m troubled when I read the news lately, and you probably are, too. The Manchester bombing in particular was so upsetting, I think because so many of the victims were young girls and boys. I did notice on Twitter a dramatic positive response from people in Manchester – offering to look for people, offering rides and cell phones and food, offering places to stay.
I have a poem in Field Guide to the End of the World called “The Narcissist’s Apocalypse,” in which the speaker, on learning she may be about to die, imagines the world ending as well. I actually think that the opposite happens with many people – when confronted with the worst things possible, their tendency is to reach out and help others. There are many stories of people going to the aid of the injured at the concert in Manchester, homeless men helping injured children, children helping each other, parents helping other people’s children. When I was told I had cancer last year that might be terminal, my instinct wasn’t to destroy, but to celebrate the beautiful things around me – the flowering trees, my loved ones, animals. (I have often joked that my camera became strangely full of tree pictures last year.) But I think when people are confronted by too much bad news, however, they have a tendency to either go into denial, try to hide from it, or become callous to it. I think poetry is one way to fight against that tendency to shut ourselves down or turn our emotions off.
Maggie Smith’s poem, “Good Bones,” has been making the rounds as a kind of comforting example of what poetry can do in a crisis, as does Adam Zagajewski’s “Try to Praise the Mutilated World.”
The act of writing poetry itself can be an impulse against darkness, towards creation and healing, even if the tone is angry or hurt or despairing. A poem can be a thing that connects the writer with an audience, something that connects one person to another with a tremulous strand of empathy, perhaps part of a healing web we can spin around each other all the time, this empathy, this desire to connect instead of severing connections, to celebrate and reach out instead of destroy. What can we do to help heal our mutilated world, or to try to make it more beautiful? Instead of tearing each other apart with apathy, hatred, prejudice, how to help build each other up, build a world that we can imagine being…better? Can we respond to terror and despair with more scientific achievements, more stories, more beautiful work of art or architecture, even computer code that might help the world rather than wreck it?
Part of the theme of Field Guide to the End of the World was about my own response to catastrophe, how we might imagine surviving the worst possible scenarios, how we might respond to chaos and disaster. This is how I ended the book, with “Epilogue.”