14 December 2008

W&M Alumni | Reluctant to Reconnect...

Below, you will find the text from a blog posting I submitted for my William & Mary Alumni Association Website Member's Profile. I decided to set up this profile in an effort to re-establish a connection with my College community—friends & classmates that I haven't had contact with since leaving the University just weeks after my HIV diagnosis, in April 2002.

I have been "reluctant to reconnect" with this community of my peers for reasons that are explained in the blog posting; mainly, because I feel that I have little to show for my life's accomplishments since graduating from what once was the "Number One Small Public University" in the Nation, according to the U.S. News & World Report's College/University rankings.

Especially, now, during this period of immense struggle in my life, I feel rather ashamed of my failures & shortcomings, but I still hope that my connection with a cyber-community of my alumni classmates will prove fruitful in fostering new friendships & effective professional & social networking. We'll see...

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New Beginnings & New Connections


Interruptions & awakening seem to happen in alternating patterns in life,
as in the hills & valleys of tepidity, turmoil & bliss that syncopate periods of mind's poverty & prosperity. Frankly, though, for a "Fagged-out, Funambulist Freak Show" like me, there are ofttimes solely treacherous, lamentable lows in life, like the recent raucous tragedy that I've lived though.

Sadly, those who think themselves forever forsaken oft have faithlessly forgotten the opportunity for restitution & rewards born of rest-stops, recovery & re-examination of rationale & reason's whys & wherefores.

Presently, I am poised in such painful perplexity, trying to salvage a sense of salvation after sufferance severe. Here so, I plan to push off from a point of calamitous misfortune with my mind bent on building & bolstering a connection to the more beautiful occupations of my past, wherein I once triumphed & found peace. Such is to begin again, but better! So, I blog a bit & begin to build... [MB12.14.2008]

Reluctant to Reconnect...

Here I am at the onset of an ostensibly rewarding journey
through the complex, entangling worldwide web of social networking, ready to re-establish some sort of worthwhile connection with the College of William & Mary : my classmates, my community. Thus begins a new endeavor to retrace my roots & reconnect with friends & colleagues form my time as a student at William & Mary.

I was a little reluctant to initiate this cyber-experiment on wmalumni.com, fearing abrupt, insensitive rejection and negative reprisal from new people or old acquaintances that I might meet in this particular social networking space, because of my harrowing, tragic situation. You see, I regret the myriad of impulsive, carnally-driven, daunting (though determined) choices I have made in life ever since my final year at William & Mary—choices that have led to nothing much of great merit or worth. Life has been a nightmare never-ending for me. And, as if to shirk & stumble over the serendipitous calamity of my situation, I am here trying to make the best of things. What better way to work my way toward wisdom than by sharing honestly of my reluctance & my shame.

Yes, life has been ridiculously rotten & difficult for me. I came to San Francisco, CA at the abrupt end of my college education in hopes of finding safety, sanctity, solemnity, sanity and (sure as hell!) good health. But I have little to show for myself academically, professionally & socially.

I have not yet had the courage, poise or opportunity to continue my education in directions that would be meaningful & challenging to me. I am unemployed and am living on the measly sum of Social Security Disability Insurance and SSI benefits, as I have been so living since early 2007, when my health began to deteriorate for a second time. I have few friends that I can depend on for turn, unburdened sympathy & support. I am a head-spun, home-bodied homo, who bides his time by sleeping the days away & rarely venturing out into the World. I would be an absolute recluse, if it weren't for the company of & some compassionate support from paid personnel, like my in-home nurse, my peer advocate & my priest.

As I described in the final section of my wmalumni.com profile, I have in the last year experienced such intense tragedy & suffering that I have not been able to live fully to my potential—the sterling, elite potential for which W&M so nobly groomed me. I don't want to be ashamed of my circumstance, but I am! AS a student at the and while studying abroad in College of William & Mary and while studying abroad in Paris, France and Florence, Italy, I truly envisioned myself achieving great, triumphant things in life—championing the amazing altruism and social & political activism of my most beloved friends, mentors & heroes. But, I have failed; I have stumbled. I have suffered!

It is such a burden to look back on the major events & milestones in my life, because while much of my life has been bleak & awful, there have been brief periods of perlexingly positive, peaceful development & accomplishment. However, I can not say that I have lived my life yet to its fullest. I fear that if I had already accomplished all in that God put me on this Earth to do, then he would not have allowed me to survive my recent illness & injury. There's something still remaining in the World for me to do; of that, I am sure. Survival has convinced me that I have an immanent, pressing responsibility to pursue all possibilities for peace & perfection in life: Enlightenment, or so my Buddhist brethren would conclude. Alas, onward...

I am here; now, ready to begin again my life's adventures by first reconnecting with my amazing, accomplished, positive past-life. I am asking any classmates, colleagues & community that I might connect with here riding the wistful, whimsical cyber-waves of wmalumni.com to judge me sensitively & sympathetically and not to be afraid to confront & react upon the misery that Matthew's mind has led him to.

I am not a pariah! And, I am not perfect. I am a survivor! And if there's only one thing to say in closing, it's that my successes as a student of the College of William & Mary prove that I still have a great potential to positively affect the World. My face might be gruesomely disfigured; my life might be harsh, but my beauty, my brains, my beatitude & my betterment all still survive within.

So please, I invite all of you who may come across this listless, lousy lamentation of life ill-lived & ill-loved to connect with me & respond to my postings. Any thoughts from other more hopeful, happy souls would be worth the world to me! The reward of any remarks form other members of the worldwide William & Mary family is that they all would be very empowering, as they each have the distinct potential of promoting change & growth & learning in my life. What a remarkable reward for me—a reckless, raucous remnant of disaster, doomsday and (just damned nearly) death!!

I look beyond my shameful reluctance & forward to the moment when I may realize that I've made many a rewarding connection through these "blog-ilicious" ramblings & reason. Thank you for encouraging me with your words & interactions. I offer my best, beloved blessings to you all!! May bliss be yours! Until next time...

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AUCUNE ILLUSION N'ADOUCIT MON AMÈRE SÉRÉNITÉ!
No illusion will ever soothe my bitter serenity!
— Charles de Gaulle [Mémoires de Guerre, Le Salut (1944-1946)]

ATTACHEZ VOTRE CHAIR À UNE ÉTOILE!
Hook your flesh to a star!
— Anonymous





11 December 2008

"DRAWN TOGETHER" | Healing Arts Project

In March & April 2008, while I was a patient at Laguna Honda Hospital & Rehabilitation Center (LHH), I participated in a Healing Arts Print-Making Workshop, entitled "DRAWN TOGETHER" and organized by an LHH Visiting Artist: Helena Keeffe, under the auspices of the dedicated volunteer organization for the hospital (i.e., Laguna Honda Volunteers, Inc.). Mrs. Keeffe single-handedly organized the entire project, applying & receiving grant monies, supervising budgets, purchasing materials & tools, recruiting participants, and facilitating the twice-weekly workshops. The project began with yarn & cloth block print portraits created with photographic portraits of the participants as templates. Then the participants began sketching landscape & foliage designs from photographs taken from off the LHH campus to prepare for the design of rubber block stamps & printing.

Because, the majority of the participants were elderly and infirm, many had trouble grappling with the delicate tools for carving the rubber block. To my amazement though, some very striking stamp images were designed by the more senile of patients. It was an interesting experience for me as an observer, as I discovered the innate artistic talent of some of the least obviously in-tuned participants.

Personally, for myself, I drew four sketches of foliage & flowers from the photographs provided and developed two of the images into floral print rubber stamps. I then printed the stamps in repetitive circular patterns and dual tones of color, creating an assortment of striking, original designs for stationery (See images below). Various original prints by the workshop participants (including my one of my floral prints) have been incorporated into two distinctive designs for hospital garments, to be sold to the Nursing Staff of Laguna Honda Hospital and distributed to numerous residents of the facility.




























I left Laguna Honda Hospital to return home to my studio
apartment yet was able to continue my association with the LHH Visiting Artist. Upon my bequest, Helena Keeffe agreed to collaborate with me on a Healing Arts Portrait Project, chronicling my physical transformations after my disfiguring facial injury and multiple reconstructions. Our work on this independent collaboration is scheduled to be exhibited in the foyer window kiosque of the Plug In | Institute of Contemporary Art (I.C.A.) in Winnipeg, Canada later this month. Helena also invited me to assist her in facilitating the summer session of the "DRAWN TOGETHER" Workshop at Laguna Honda Hospital.


Assisting in the facilitation of a Healing Arts Project offered me the opportunity to further discover the curious, innocent, selfless artistic talent of the aged and sickly participants. I was able to escape once in a while from my own anguish & suffering and to inhabit the guise of Teacher, leading workshop participants through the more complicated exercises of carving rubber block and print-making. I realized that I had long ago lost or forgotten my own profound passion for the fine arts. It was all-in-all a very rewarding experience: the workshop & the collaboration, alike. So much so, that I dearly hope that the collaboration continues past the terminal end of the Winnipeg exhibit and develops into a deeper, more intimate & challenging exploration of my artist talent in the midst of recovery from further reconstructions, as I acquire a new face.

For the Press Release, announcing the Final "DRAWN TOGETHER" Workshop Reception to be held on Saturday, January 24, 2008 from 2:00PM-4:00PM in the third floor Moran Hall of Laguna Honda Hospital, Helena requested that I write a personal response to my experience for her to cite in conversational text snippets. The following text is my extended citation, written on December 8, 2008, in response to my experiences with the "DRAWN TOGETHER" Healing Arts Project at Laguna Honda Honda Hospital & Rehabilitation Center:
« Helena Keeffe brought to the residents of Laguna Honda Hospital more than just the gift of artistic expression; she brought inspiration, escape, quietude and discovery! The "DRAWN TOGETHER" experience was for her an enunciation of humanity and grace. For the workshop participants (including for myself), the experience was a blessing! To be drawn together out of the humdrum sterility and monotony of clinical rehabilitation and into a brief but engaging creative withdrawal—where art is used as another more potent mechanism for healing—engenders a renewed sense of youthful exuberance and strength in the minds and hearts of the elderly and infirm.

« The joy and spiritual fulfillment of those patients that were drawn together by this project was profound! LHH residents were challenged and inspired to practice a little bit of spontaneous, liberated self-expression—corralled around crayons, cutting boards and blank blocks of rubber that were begging to be sketched on, scraped at, sculpted and stylized into timeless works of art. And what a gift we now have for the nursing staff that is so selflessly dedicated to our care! Mrs. Keeffe and her students have proudly fashioned an artistic legacy that is meant to be shared with and admired by the entire LHH community. I hope each and every member of the LHH nursing staff will wear with equal pride the gorgeous garments we have had printed for them in limited edition, with our original facial and floral designs. Much tremendous gratitude goes to Mrs. Keeffe for her creativity, generosity, ingenuity and initiative. Thank you,
Helena! »

— Matthew Blanchard
Former LHH Patient & Resident
"DRAWN TOGETHER" Participant
(December 8, 2008).
I appended my personal response with remarks about my "pedantic verbosity" and "crippling, adolescent perfectionism," hoping that Helena would be able to find some phrase or words from this text suitable for the Press Release. To my chagrin, Mrs. Keeffe simplified my words into quotidian, uninspired statements to better conform to the conversational tone of her Press Release. In return for losing my integrity of authorship, I proposed that I could read my personal response in its entirety as a prologue or prelude to the Final Workshop Reception, figuring that it would be a fitting, powerful introduction in words to the "DRAWN TOGETHER" experience for the LHH community to hear. We'll see if this is the format she'll decide to take for the program.

I only hope that she was fully able to appreciate the honesty and depth of my remarks, all of which "were meant from the heart—from my uplifted, inspired poetic soul!" I am eternally indebted to Helena Keeffe for all the wonderful experiences she has brought into my life. She has been a saving grace for me this past year, fostering my altruism, creativity and artistic talent in everything we do together.
I hope she knows that!


10 December 2008

BIOGRAPHY : Delusions & Disfigurement

The past six years have been marred by treacherously tumultuous hilltops and lamentably low, vehemently voracious valleys, all a torrential watershed result of my HIV/AIDS diagnosis in early 2002, which catapulted me into a stormy sea of relentless depression that has not ceased to drown me time and time again since temptations of suicide came creeping into the forefront of my thoughts.

Highlighted escapes from this extended, ongoing depressive period have to be my one-year scholastic sojourn abroad, when I studied Graphic Design and the Italian language in Florence, Italy at L'Instituto delle Belle Arti - Lorenzo de'Medidi, and my first two years in San Francisco, CA, when I was deeply involved with HIV/AIDS activism/advocacy and the theater arts. In Italy, I succeeded academically and was awarded highest marks for all students in my classes, winning first runner-up in the student design competition for my brand/logo design of invitations and brochures for the student art exhibition at the end of the year. Thanks to my innate capacity with language learning, I also advanced from third level intermediate Italian to eighth level advanced after only one semester of study.

My arrival to San Francisco, after Italy, was a difficult one, for I had no money, knew no one and was encumbered with all of my earthly possessions (i.e., three suitcases, a duffel bag, a carry-on, a laptop computer, a 35mm camera, a portfolio, etc.). After two weeks of meandering from one anonymous gay abode to another, sleeping on strangers' couches or in their beds, I linked up with a HIV/AIDS youth advocacy organization (i.e., Bay Area Young Positives) and a homeless/runaway youth advocacy organization (i.e., Larkin Street Youth Services). The two organizations together linked me to free medical care, free food, free housing and resources through which I was able to begin the process of applying for Social Security Supplemental Security Income (SSI).

Immediately after getting situated in my own Section 8 subsidized studio apartment (through LSYS, Tenderloin Neighborhood Development Coorporation [TNDC] & SF Housing Authority), I signed up for the "Hire-Up" Employment Development Program and the HIV/AIDS Prevention & Care Services Internship through Larkin Street, during which time I interned at Magnet Gay Men's Health Center in the Castro and became the first HIV-positive youth advocate member of the San Francisco Department of Public Health AIDS Office HIV Prevention Planning Council. Peter Carpou, the Art Programs Coordinator for Larkin Street and a member of the Board of Directors for a small, but very well-reputed alternative arts/theatre space organization in the San Francisco Mission District, call the Intersection for the Arts, awarded me a full scholarship to participate as the only amateur performance artist in a program there called "The Hybrid Project," where I studied in an ensemble setting the contemporary arts of acting, dance and spoken word or hip-hop. Combined, all of these activities kept me very busy and engaged, so busy in fact that I wasn't paying much attention to my deteriorating health. I was, however, regularly practicing yoga and seeing an acupuncturist as an alternative to medicine and as a way to keep my health primed.

Come to find out, a meek and measly common cold that I had let go unnoticed, had progressed into PCP pneumonia, and the night of the final performance for "The Hybrid Project," I got a major, wrenching pain in my neck (apparently from stress and too much activity). After the performance, I went home and stayed up all night practicing yoga, trying to get the creek out of my neck. At 6:30AM the next morning, I even went into my local gym to participate in the supervised yoga class, but the instructor was not there that day. The gym personnel opened the studio for me anyway, noticing that I was in dier need of some relaxation, stretching and exercise. I then continued to practice yoga there for three hours, until, when I was releasing from an upside down back bend, I felt my neck crack into a line straight against the studio floor.

At that moment, I saw a bright, glowing, blissful light and a tree with three branches and no leaves (a scenic device I recognized from Beckett's Waiting for Godot, which I had studied extensively in college). I was having an enlightened, spiritual awakening. I cried tears of joy and giggled in delight all at the same time. It was a beautiful experience. Then I left the gym and walked the streets of the Tenderloin for what seemed like hours, until I found "Felicity Fetiches," a lingerie & fetish boutique that sold drag-ware. I went in and spent five hours there, trying on various drag ensembles and discovering my hidden, unrealized passion for the transqueer art of drag.

After that, I went home, ransacked my studio apartment looking for God, and letting myself believe that I was a "Gift from God," sent to the world as a young AIDS-stricken, drama queen, gay prophet to announce salvation for the world's sickly and the second coming of Christ. I was experiencing a schizo-delusional psychosis that proceeded to last six months, until the pneumonia was defeated and I found the right combination of psychiatric medication to counteract the psychotic tendancies.

The psychosis continued until January 2005 and then was followed by a year-long, very serious bout of clinical depression. I became overr come with greif and anguish, wanting so badly to once again experience the bliss and creative enlightenment of my delusions but not wanting to lose my mind. While I was in the hospital for the pneumonia and the psychosis, my doctors were convinced that my sickness was the result of excessive use of crystal methanphedamine, but I swore up and down that I had never used drugs before in my entire life. I attributed the psychosis to the infilitration of HIV into my brain resulting from the tantric yogic experience I had had at the gym that one morning post-performance.

Unfortunately, the doctors continual heeds that I was a meth addict intrigued me about the drug. When I got home, after the psychosis was finally over and I had regained a sense of reality, I immediately began to seek out the drug, in hopes of reinstigating the blissful delusions. I found an attractive gay man who offered me crystal meth, and I was introduced to surreally intense sexual experiences. I immediately became addicted. The sex was incredible...unbelieveable, but the feelings of euphoria did not last. Eventually, meth just became an escape from my depression, a way to ignore my problems as I hoped again for the delusions to return. They never did.

In January 2006, I was going through withdrawal and the effects of my depression were seriously heightened, to the degree that suicide seemed a simple and easy way to end my suffering. I realized in a moment of saving grace that it was not the meth or the depression that was keeping me down, but it was my inactivity, do-nothing-ness and boredom that was troubling me. At the bequest of Curtis Moore, Executive Director of B.A.Y. Positives, I applied for a job as Administrative Coordinator with Folsom Street Events™, the producers of San Francisco's no.# 1 public event / street fair: the Folsom Street Fair™, as well as Up Your Alley® & Magnitude®. Because of Curtis's professional recommendation and my sterling interview skills, I was immediately hired for the position and began working there on February 3, 2006.

My career at Folsom Street Events lasted only a year, because I was letting my addiction and my deteriorating health seriously affect my job performance. On January 31, 2007, my employment there was terminated, but only after I had single-handedly grossed record earnings for FY2006, independently achieving a 115% rental sell out of the FSE Exhibitors Division, acheived superior standards for in-house desktop design of vital publications (e.g., Sponsorship Packet, Invoices, etc.) and independently produced a pivotal celebratory event with over 135 attendees: the 2006 Beneficiary Awards Reception, implementing striking innovations, including with regards to venue coordination, catering, invitations, entertainment and awards.

After working for Folsom Street Events for a year, I again fell deep into a cataclysmic depression which eventually lead to my deteriorating health. Just after my birthday, on September 18, 2007, I experienced once again what seemed to be an insignificant common cold, so I didn't go to the doctor's office with concerns that I might have a problem. The illness lasted 2 weeks, until one night while I was watching Robin Williams on Late Night with Conan O'Brian, I feel asleep and didn't wake up for what my doctors now estimate was between 10 to 12 days. I had PCP Pneumonia, was deathly ill and fell asleep unconscious to the world until I was discovered by the San Francisco Fire Department on October 7, 2007, when they came and busted down my door.

My Larkin Street Youth Services Residential Case Manager, Liz Longfellow reported me to the Fire Department missing or dead, as she had not heard from me in three weeks, and I was not answering my phone. The Fire Department discovered me in my bed, face down in a pool of my own blood and urine, my face blacked by a severe, necrotizing bacterial infection and my teeth falling out. The rushed me to the hospital where I stayed for four weeks in a coma. During the coma, the doctors at Saint Francis Memorial Hospital tried to defeat the pneumonia and control the bacterial infection but were unsuccessful. They then decided to transfer me to USCF Medical Center for an emergency debridement surgery, to remove the necrotic, infected skin and bone of my face.

The debridement was successful at eliminating the infection, and two weeks later, I woke up from a coma to discover a giant hole in my face. My mouth and nose had been amputated, and thus began the tedious, heart-wrenching, horrifying and lonely period of waiting for multiple maxillofacial reconstructions. On January 30, 2008, I was transferred from long-term, acute medical residency at Laguna Honda Hospital & Rehabilitation Center to San Francisco General Hospital for the first and most significant of my nine-to-ten facial reconstruction surgeries. A team of plastic surgeons, headed by UCSF Professor of Surgery, Dr. David M. Young, set out to begin reconstructing my upper mouth, by removing a large 12"x5" slab of flesh from my lower left leg and a piece of bone from my fibula and grafting it onto my face. This surgery kept me in intensive care for two weeks. The pain was severe and intense; I could not move out of my bed, sit up, turn around or lay on my side. There was a pouch connected to my chin and my leg by a plastic tube to collect blood and drainage. I was connected to a live-feed morphine drip that I could activate when ever I needed pain relief. I used it as if it were candy. Then I was returned to Laguna Honda Hospital, where I continued to recieve morphine injections for one month and remained bound to a wheel chair for three months.

On April 18, 2008, just five days before my second operation, I was released from Laguna Honda Hospital to return home to my studio apartment, where I would be receiving in-home nursing care three times a week, through until the end of my acute recovery. The second surgery was a mere "revision of the flap" and was not cause for much pain or suffering. The waiting period until my third operation: a "first-stage nasal reconstruction with forehead flap to nose and possible cartilage from either ear or chest," was the worst. The surgery was postponed three times due to unforeseen circumstances (i.e., a life-threathening emergency with another patient and a death in the family of my new plastic surgeon), and during that time period, out of sheer reluctance and bored, I turned once again to crystal meth to quell my worry and anguish.

On September 15, 2008, I finally had my third reconstruction, which was a great success (according to the doctors), albiet leaving me with a severely disfigured visage: a sausage-like flap of skin hanging from my forehead down the length of my nose and a noticeable scar and severe open wound on my forehead. My fourth reconstruction: a "second-stage nasal reconstruction with cartilage from either ear to form left nostril," would have been scheduled for October 23, 2008, were it not postponed after I told my surgeons that I was a crystal meth addict, and they gave me a urine test. The demands of my doctors, concerned that the cartilage graft would not take if my immune system were further compromised by drug abuse, were that I remain sober for one month before my surgery could be rescheduled. I have made it through one month and 27 days of sobriety. By the time of my next surgery, now scheduled for December 22, 2008, I will have been clean and sober for two months and ten days. That's quite an accomplishment, seeing as how all the monotony and terror of waiting is extremely trying on the psyche and is quite a trigger to use.

Since I awoke from a coma in November 2007, just before Thanksgiving, life has been marred by significant, earth-quaking tragedy for me. I am frightened by what I see in the mirror every day, and according to my doctors, who say I "will never look normal again. People will stare, but you will psychologically adjust," my face will always be a little horrifying to look at. I rarely go out in public, and when I do, I always were a surgical mask to cover up my unsightly visage and a scarf to cover up my tracheotomy tube, so innocent but cruel, curious but insensitive bystanders won't stare and ask questions, but; nonetheless, they do stare and make comments, and I just shrug it off, return home and cry myself to sleep in the dark, with my shades drawn and the lights off, so even I can't see my horrifying face.

I have however been blessed to be involved in a portrait arts project with a professional artist I met while she was in residence as the Visiting Artist and facilitating a print-making workshop, "Drawn Together," at Laguna Honda Hospital. By participating in the "Drawn Together" workshops at LHH, I was able to create some beautiful, original floral prints from rubber block stamps that I fabricated into professional style, hand-made stationery.

Helena Keeffe has lead me through a creative process of exploration and discovery in which I have been able to grapple with the demons of my disease and disfigurement, intimately confronting the contours of my deformed, injured face. The portrait project has been a healing process, allowing me to come to terms with my tragic experiences and to learn to appreciate better the beauty I have within me. The designs we collaborated on (i.e., photographic portraits & sketches), along with an audio recording of my oral history, will be exhibited in a window kiosque at the enterance of the Plug In ICA (Institute of Contemporary Art) in Winnipeg, Canada throughout December 2008 & January 2009. I am looking forward to how the project might further develop past this exhibition and into the future. I know that the entire process has been integral to my recovery, and I would not want to lose the opportunity to continue working with Ms. Keeffe.

Every day, I am faced with the forbearance and frightfulness of facing disfigurement, and I am challenged to calmly overcome the calamity of damnèd chemical dependency. Life is a harrowing struggle of sanity versus sanctity versus solemnity & single-mindedness. Life is frightening and foreboding. I am fearful of another mighty fall from grace: the lack of fortitude or my succumbing to fragility and feebleness. But, I am, above all things else, a survivor! My dysthymic, bipolar, alcoholic estranged mother says she is proud of me, no matter what I may have lived through. She says, "I do not judge you. I love you too much to judge." Perhaps it is that type of love that I am longing for; love that could be rewarding, healing, happy love: the foundation of a new and long-lasting relationship based on complete empathy and understanding and discretion and censure, again with a mother who once for so long forsook me. With or without that kind of love, I will survive beyond the deformity and illness, to discover once again that which is beautiful inside me: my potential for good, as a "Gift from God."