Dad, OB, David. Thanks for holding moms purse over the years. You are the best :) We love you!!
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Will he hold your purse?
"Everything
I know about marriage I learned in my cancer clinic." I've been known
to say this to my friends, maybe more than once, maybe even causing some
of them to grind their teeth and grumble about Robin and Her Infernal
Life Lessons.
I can't
help myself. I've worked as a breast cancer doctor for 20 years, I've
watched thousands of couples cope with every conceivable (and sometimes
unimaginable) kind of crisis, and I've seen all kinds of marriages,
including those that rise like a beacon out of the scorched-earth terror
that is a cancer clinic.
It's
a privilege to witness these couples, but the downside is I find myself
muttering under my breath when my single female friends show me their
ads for online dating. "Must like long walks on beach at sunset, cats,"
they write, or "French food, kayaking, travel." Or a perennial favorite:
"Looking for fishing buddy; must be good with bait." These ads make me
want to climb onto my cancer doctor soapbox and proclaim, "Finding
friends with fine fishing poles may be great in the short term. But what
you really want to look for is somebody who will hold your purse in the
cancer clinic."
It's
one of the biggest take-home lessons from my years as an oncologist:
When you're a single woman picturing the guy of your dreams, what
matters a heck of lot more than how he handles a kayak is how he handles
things when you're sick. And one shining example of this is how a guy
deals with your purse.
I
became acquainted with what I've come to call great "purse partners" at
a cancer clinic in Waltham. Every day these husbands drove their wives
in for their radiation treatments, and every day these couples sat side
by side in the waiting room, without much fuss and without much
chitchat. Each wife, when her name was called, would stand, take a
breath, and hand her purse over to her husband. Then she'd disappear
into the recesses of the radiation room, leaving behind a stony-faced
man holding what was typically a white vinyl pocketbook. On his lap. The
guy -- usually retired from the trades, a grandfather a dozen times
over, a Sox fan since date of conception -- sat there silently with that
purse. He didn't read, he didn't talk, he just sat there with the
knowledge that 20 feet away technologists were preparing to program an
unimaginably complicated X-ray machine and aim it at the mother of his
kids.
I'd walk by and
catch him staring into space, holding hard onto the pocketbook, his big
gnarled knuckles clamped around the clasp, and think, "What a prince."
I've
worked at cancer clinics all around Boston since then, and I've seen
purse partners from every walk of life, every age and stage. Of course,
not every great guy accompanies his wife to her oncology appointment
every day -- some husbands are home holding down the fort, or out
earning a paycheck and paying the health insurance premiums -- but I
continue to have a soft spot for the pocketbook guy. Men like him make
me want to rewrite dating ads from scratch.
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