
Jess wrote a post on her own blog today. It’s beautiful and here it is:
Castro avoided over 600 assassination attempts throughout his life, but even he couldnβt hide from 2016.Β
2017 is the year of the Rooster and the year that a person who has never held public office is slated to become the 45th President of the United States of America. It was supposed to be the year that I traveled to Red Square with Caitlin. The year of Harry Potter lungs and silicone implants. The year that we emerged with our matching clamshell scars. But itβs not and it wonβt be.
This is my first time writing in months. Usually it helps to express and manifest the inexpressible but, in this case, it wasnβt helping. I have tried to make sense of what happened, to play each and every scenario over in my head. Also, everything that I ever wrote, I always sent to Caitlin with the flagrant subject line βDRAFTβ β and she would quickly respond with candid feedback. She was my editor.Β
When I returned from India in the middle of December – from the cacophony of Jaipur and the undulating hills of Udaipur – I immediately flew to Pittsburgh. Caitlin had been on life support for a few days while she waited for lungs. I arrived in the city of bridges, home of the Steelers and quickly enmeshed myself into the daily routine. We – Maryanne, Nick, Andrew, & I – took shifts, ensuring that one of us was always by her side in the CTICU. We held her hands, we massaged her feet, and we read Mary Oliver passages aloud β a small act which seemed to perk up her waning blood pressure.
Last week, I had this terrible moment where a dear friend that I met while living in Kenya texted me after returning from several weeks in Cuba. She wrote, βDid Caitlin get her transplant?β I froze. I slowly typed,βYes, she didβ and then added βbut she diedβ after that. So awful. Little things like that keep happening. I donβt want time to move on because I am so afraid of forgetting. The only image in my head is of Caitlin in the ICU and I am having such a hard time remembering anything before then. There is a dichotomy β as Caitlinβs situation has made me less afraid of dying because I know that she is there (whereverΒ thereΒ is) paired with this unyielding desire to live, to really live β for her.Β
I left Pittsburgh on the morning of December 20th. I had to fly back to San Francisco for chemo but I planned to be in California for just a day or so.Β I left UPMC – the hospital –Β and texted the other three, βIβm en route to the airport with Jim but I will see you all in a few days for five little pig Christmas. Iβm just a phone call away if you need anything at all. Donβt let leather jacket man steal my chair-bed, keep writing in the chapel book, and keep the sails upβ¦β
Later that afternoon, Caitlin died.Β She was supposed to live. She should have lived. She should have had the chance to use her new, perfect lungs; to see her oxygen saturation at 100%.Β But she had to wait too long for her transplant, and her body had been through far more than any should endure.Β
Below are the promises that I made to her when I spoke at her memorial service: Β
- I promise to do something extraordinary. I promise to make you proud and I promise to keep your light and your spirit alive.
- I promise to do all that I can to fix the organ donation system
- I promise to plant a garden that will mean for many what Prouty meant for you
- I promise to smile at sad looking strangers and to address little pups in your Henry voiceΒ
- I promise to always be kind
- I promise to learn more about astrology and its intricacies
- I promise to trust my intuition; to listen to my own voice and to be in a state of non-resistance
- I promise to take care of your Mom and Dad and Andrew
- I promise to order Watermelon Sherbet in July
- I promise to always say Rabbit Rabbit
- I promise to do something – once a day – in your honor
- I promise to advocate for those who are unable to advocate for themselves; to always be aware of the plights of others.
- I promise to listen to Joni Mitchell and to text you when Losing My Religion just happens to play on the radio
- I promise to finally see a movie by myself. A good movie. None of that junk.
- I promise to keep wearing giant pearls and continue adding to our tribal wrist collection
- I promise to find the magic; the unsung beauty.
- I promise to attempt to write a Modern Love that tells the story of our friendship; our matching clam shell scars.
- I promise to have a day where the only words that I speak are βcan I have a water and a muffin?β
- I promise to live; to really live; to stay away from the surface and to go deep; deep where the lobsters go.
- I promise to keep having faith. Faith that there is beauty in this sometimes tragic life.
- I promise to never take my lungs for granted. I promise to cherish each and every breath.
And so, 2017 will be the year of Caitlin O’Hara. My ruby slipper, my person, my heart.

