bleodswean: (Default)
bleodswean ([personal profile] bleodswean) wrote2025-06-20 07:25 am

Wheel of Chaos - Wk 1 - Quality

He’d been sick for a week. Summer cold they called it when he was a boy, but he didn’t think it was hay fever. What would he have been allergic to? Mold and dust? They’d mucked out the barn late, a mid-spring chore but time had wandered away from them and it was nearer to summer. The horses had already been turned out into the lower forty, hock deep in an abundance of growth and greenery, noses hidden in carpets of bluebells.

The barn took the both of them two days and just after that he’d fallen ill. Sick as the proverbial dog. Racking coughs, lungs that sounded like cedar being kindled. She was fine as houses, and they hadn’t been to town nor had a customer up from town for the mill. But he couldn’t breathe. Literally, figuratively, the physicality of inhalation and exhalation becoming an emotional toil. His lungs didn’t hurt; they were just not working the way they’d worked for the entirety of his life. She’d teased him good and hard about it. He was two decades her senior and he allowed the ribbing, deciding it was a good-natured lambast, but alone thought slantways about the distance measured by an ageing body and knew at sixty-eight he was old and at forty-seven she was not. Or not near as.

But he didn’t couldn’t spell out in words the extent of what he was experiencing. Later realizing not telling her was fear borne from a deep childlike belief that he could possibly jinx the very ability of his body to keep him bodied, ensouled. He tamped down his symptoms, dismissed the idea of going into the clinic. Waved away even a hint of diagnostic concern.

Naming a thing doesn’t always give the namer power. Some things acquire a name, and the power becomes all theirs, monstrous, overbearing, overarching, made real and whole.

The first sense of hardening, something lodged, something stiff inside his chest had woken him out of an already bad sleep and came at him with an existential dread so fathomless that he knew in those darkly pre-dawn hours that God had reached inside his body and touched the unseen organs toiling in their mysterious viscera at keeping him earthside. He knew he had been beckoned, felt that finger quirk within the twinned grey lobes, filters of the very air itself. A whisper come home son.

But he didn’t. Heed the call, respond. In another aeon without medical choices he would have acquiesced, quickly bent a knee to such a godly mandate, and within the year dutifully laid his stoved-up body down and not gotten himself back up again. He was astonished at how his corporeal self, pavlovian began to slaver at the command of fate.

It was hard work, to flee, to turn away from the lure of the abyss, the echo coming back emptied of his pleas, hauling great mouthfuls of air into his hardened lungs, willing them to soften beneath his will, to generate as though it were an act he understood or had any sort of control over oxygenated blood. His mind committed to a marathon, but he learned the body does not work that way.

Acquiescence. An exam, then labs, then quiet pronouncements from white coated analyzers.

ILD. Interstitial Lung Disease. There came the naming, the christening he’d gone to such extremes avoiding. He did not feel empowered. Identification did not lead to compartmentalization. The panic of it made it more difficult to breathe.

Accusations or recriminations were never part of the conversation in the sterile examination rooms. Neither courtroom nor pulpit. Regrets only his. All their probing and prodding, questions and answers.

But. Had he done this to himself?

Cemented his own lungs? The bronchus, bronchioles solidified inside the yeasty lobes. The deflated sacs, gummed closed. He wasn’t a smoker, leaf or grass. No childhood asthma, no rheumatoid arthritis. His heart was steady, his arteries clear. Occupational dust or fibers.

Years at the sawmill, whittling a figure of a man close to earth, organic and respectful of the mighty conifers, the broad-leafed hardwoods. Riven down to the heartwood, the splitting and the milling. The board feet of his daily grind, the blades, the growing mounds of sawdust, the smells and soils of a hard day’s work. The labor of the felling and the bucking, the chain dragging, and the ripping. The packaging, boards and stickers, and the redolent incense. The perfume of his own wood lot, his own lumber yard. It lined the inside of his sinuses, and he relished it. Tasted it on his tongue, scraped it out between his molars.

Fibrosis, necrosis, pyrosis.

One year. Into the second wearing oxygen but his strength was sapped. His vision swimmy, his ears ringing with the labors of his breathing.

Double lung transplant.

Now that was a thing to give a body the shakes. He quivered like a strung bow as charts and diagrams were shown, then the contractual agreement and he wanted to make a dark joke but could read the room. These men did not see themselves on a side other than that of a clinical, mathematical God. This for that. One life for another. Interchangeable beneath the skin that pretends a difference between one or the other. All scientific progress and supposed presupposed human gain. He signed and jested silently, inside his head about blood and souls bartered for a bit more of this and a lot more of that.

The waiting and the worsening. The dizziness brought on both by his body and his thoughts.

The loneliness ached him more than the faltered breath, the straining ribcage, the sinking realization, the bartered understanding. She tried to comfort or strengthen him up by relating the stories of her two births. It’s like birth, she said. It’s entering a room in which there is only one exit. He could not grasp the concept. For him the room was not a room, but a box fitted to the width and breadth of his shoulders, the length of his skeleton head to toe.

After after afterwards. Sitting wrapped in a blanket he’d pilfered from the months’ long stay at rehab on a rocker on the deck he had built when a younger man a different man a man breathing through his own lungs staring out across the land he owned had bought for her wanting not just one thing but all the things for her for her for them such a short allowance we are given he measured the length of a thing against the weight of a thing and wondered. And could simply not decide.

[personal profile] krispykritter 2025-06-20 02:41 pm (UTC)(link)
Wow! Having seen someone experience similarly I could envision this man. Very realistic and powerful. Great job!
kizzy: (Default)

[personal profile] kizzy 2025-06-20 03:04 pm (UTC)(link)
For him the room was not a room, but a box fitted to the width and breadth of his shoulders, the length of his skeleton head to toe.

I'm in the middle of reading a book about the Cocoanut Grove fire. Most of the patrons died not of burns, but of ILD because of the smoke and particles emitted from the wall and ceiling coverings. It was because of the fire that research into ILD and everything that can cause it (baker's lung, anyone, LOL?) skyrocketed.

But it's this particular sentence that crushes me and I mean that in the best possible way because it speaks the truth.

(no subject)

[personal profile] kizzy - 2025-06-20 21:05 (UTC) - Expand
marjorica: (Default)

[personal profile] marjorica 2025-06-20 04:29 pm (UTC)(link)
Oh my word this is powerful. It’s virtually poetry, an ode to mortality and humanity, with each phrase and choice of word sliding into place like it grew there.

I wish I could do this.

(no subject)

[personal profile] marjorica - 2025-06-20 17:06 (UTC) - Expand

[personal profile] serpentinejacaranda 2025-06-20 05:22 pm (UTC)(link)
Gobsmacked by the line, "...the length of a thing against the weight of a thing." The paragraph starting with "Years at the sawmill" is the weight, and the length is the drawn-out treatment in the shadow of it. And I love how the word quality, as it relates to "QOL," is embedded everywhere, even when it's not written.
adoptedwriter: (Default)

[personal profile] adoptedwriter 2025-06-20 05:58 pm (UTC)(link)
My FIL had pulmonary fibrosis. Yeah. He lived squeaky clean too. So well depicted here.
simplyn2deep: (NWABT::Scott::brood)

[personal profile] simplyn2deep 2025-06-20 07:20 pm (UTC)(link)
This is breathtaking in its intimacy and depth. A meditation on mortality, labor, and the silent negotiations we make with our bodies until they rebel. The prose aches with grief and grit, the kind that lingers like sawdust in the lungs and soul. I felt every inhale, every moment of resistance, and the quiet, unresolvable wondering at the end hit like a whisper and a blow all at once.
dadi: (Default)

[personal profile] dadi 2025-06-20 07:31 pm (UTC)(link)
How magic this is! Fantastic!
earthspirits: (Gary reading)

[personal profile] earthspirits 2025-06-20 08:08 pm (UTC)(link)
Beautifully written, E. and so, so heart-breaking. This man came alive through your prose, I could visualize him, as if he stood in the room with me.
used_songs: (Default)

[personal profile] used_songs 2025-06-20 09:40 pm (UTC)(link)
This is so true. It's devastating in the way that seeing someone be destroyed from within is. We make all of these plans, we go about our lives, and in an instant everything changes.
lookfar2: (Default)

[personal profile] lookfar2 2025-06-21 02:55 am (UTC)(link)
Beautiful prose, beautiful ideas. I love this.
fausts_dream: (Default)

[personal profile] fausts_dream 2025-06-21 06:31 pm (UTC)(link)
Wow, Jeez pace yourself a little, it's week one and you're already in final four form.

This is extremely powerful, well done.
erulissedances: US and Ukrainian Flags (Default)

[personal profile] erulissedances 2025-06-21 08:24 pm (UTC)(link)
It's obvious that this past year has deeply influenced your outlook, and I like where your character is coming from in this. It will be nice to have you writing something contemporary, if that's the road that you've chosen this time around. As always, beautifully crafted.

- Erulisse (one L)

(no subject)

[personal profile] erulissedances - 2025-06-23 15:52 (UTC) - Expand
halfshellvenus: (Default)

[personal profile] halfshellvenus 2025-06-21 09:25 pm (UTC)(link)
I almost thought this might be hantavirus, based on when he first started to experience problems. But ILD is the kind of thing no one used to think about. People died younger, heart attacks and other more common things carrying them off. They didn't usually live long enough to find out that miners weren't the only ones who could die from lung disease. The thought of all that sawdust and the fibers from ruptured greenchain bark is horrifying when you think of it building up inside your body.

the months’ long stay at rehab on a rocker on the deck he had built when a younger man a different man a man breathing through his own lungs I liked this line especially. The irony of yet one more wood project and what all of them cost him, the innocence of those earlier dreams he'd had for both of them... How could he have ever known?
muchtooarrogant: (Default)

[personal profile] muchtooarrogant 2025-06-21 09:47 pm (UTC)(link)
Your language was beautiful throughout this piece. Admittedly, I felt an affinity for your character since allergies have had me hacking all week, but still, your words were so expressive throughout.

"Naming a thing doesn’t always give the namer power. Some things acquire a name, and the power becomes all theirs, monstrous, overbearing, overarching, made real and whole."

Exactly! I hate going in to see a doctor, and will generally refuse until I'm running a 101/102 fever.

Fabulous work, I really loved this.

Dan
roina_arwen: Darcy wearing glasses, smiling shyly (Default)

[personal profile] roina_arwen 2025-06-22 12:22 am (UTC)(link)
You have a way of writing that is visceral and sensual and full of sensory input that I just adore.
drippedonpaper: (Default)

[personal profile] drippedonpaper 2025-06-22 05:00 pm (UTC)(link)
I considered this to partly be an ode to "the working man." Too many jobs have health consequences :(

I really liked this line: "The loneliness ached him more than the faltered breath." I do think loneliness hurts more than anything and there always seems to be an aspect of loneliness to any health "journey." There are parts in this path in life that one must walk alone.

I am curious what inspired this (if you want to share)?

I was also very struck by how you conveyed, he used to revel in it: "The perfume of his own wood lot, his own lumber yard. It lined the inside of his sinuses, and he relished it."

So often we humans revel in something that ultimately becomes our downfall or at least harmful to us.
rayaso: (Default)

[personal profile] rayaso 2025-06-22 08:20 pm (UTC)(link)
This was so wonderful and thoughtful, as always. I love to read where you take prompts. Your description of ILD was so accurate. We have a relative who suffered from cystic fibrosis who had a double lung transplant, which changed her world.
murielle: Me (Default)

[personal profile] murielle 2025-06-22 10:47 pm (UTC)(link)
So hauntingly beautiful, E! Oh, the aching of the soul and the loneliness of not knowing, then the knowing.

Some things can be witnessed, supported, but not shared.

Your description is exquisite. Reading you again, after so long without, is like that first breath we take coming up from under the water.

((Hugs))
Edited 2025-06-22 22:47 (UTC)

[personal profile] legalpad819 2025-06-23 01:00 am (UTC)(link)
You wrote this beautifully. I'm not really familiar with ILD, but a good friend of our family died from mesotheleoma (I'm probably spelling this wrong) because he was exposed to so much asbestos at his job, and this was reminiscent. Thank you for bringing back his memory for me in such a poetic way.
gunwithoutmusic: (Default)

[personal profile] gunwithoutmusic 2025-06-23 01:32 am (UTC)(link)
Stunning and full of ache of yearning; you're so good at this type of story.

I was struck by, "Naming a thing doesn’t always give the namer power. Some things acquire a name, and the power becomes all theirs, monstrous, overbearing, overarching, made real and whole." There's so much truth in that, for me, at least. I suppose it depends on the type of person you are, but it's much easier to pretend something isn't serious if you don't know it's not. I relate quite heavily to this.

I've missed you! I'm so glad to be in this with you again. :)
adore: (alice reads)

[personal profile] adore 2025-06-23 08:05 am (UTC)(link)
I'm devastated that he'll always wonder whether his livelihood, the thing he enjoyed doing and dedicated his life to, speedran him towards his death.

For him the room was not a room, but a box fitted to the width and breadth of his shoulders, the length of his skeleton head to toe.

This line!!!

tonithegreat: (Default)

[personal profile] tonithegreat 2025-06-25 12:41 pm (UTC)(link)
OMG. This is so true. This line in particular: "Later realizing not telling her was fear borne from a deep childlike belief that he could possibly jinx the very ability of his body to keep him bodied, ensouled." This rings so true to some experiences. Beautiful, haunting writing. A crazy read with which to start the day (and in a coffee shop with Johnny Cash playing, no less!), but I'm glad I read it!
xeena: (Default)

[personal profile] xeena 2025-06-25 01:50 pm (UTC)(link)
Ahhh as usual your piece is just beautiful and sensory heaven for me! <3 This piece of writing is exactly why I look forward to your entries each week <3
mollywheezy: (Default)

[personal profile] mollywheezy 2025-06-25 04:18 pm (UTC)(link)
Very powerful descriptions! I was moved by his indecision about whether to fight the illness or give in and die. Great job!
alycewilson: Photo of me after a workout, flexing a bicep (Default)

[personal profile] alycewilson 2025-06-25 09:09 pm (UTC)(link)
This is so fine-tuned and amazing. The way you get inside his very sinews and relate not just the thoughts but the experience itself, through the pace and selection of words. I'm in awe.

(no subject)

[personal profile] alycewilson - 2025-06-25 22:04 (UTC) - Expand

Page 1 of 2