Things I Didn’t Know I Loved by Jamie Rose Connors
October 14, 2008
Jamie Rose Connors of Readville passed away on Sat, 10/11/08 after a long battle with leukemia, she was 17 years old. Jamie wrote this poem 3 years ago at the beginning of her cancer battle.
Jamie is survived by her parents Thomas W. & Maureen A. (Cullen) Connors and her loving sister Taylor Connors. Jamie is also the grandaughter of Elizabeth A. (Potts) Connors of Readville & the late John Connors, the late William J. & Mary (Houton) Cullen (full notice below). She is also survived by many aunts, uncles, cousins and friends. Donations in Jamie’s memory may be made to The Jimmy Fund, Cops for Kids with Cancer and Save Darfur!
Please keep Jamie and her family in your thoughts and prayers and be sure to hug and squeeze your children extra today.
Things I Didn’t Know I Loved
by Jamie Connors
Fourteen years old, I’m sitting in a wheelchair
Being pushed by a nurse down a stark white corridor, She stops to get my chart
I close my eyes, I’m running, Muscles flexing, adrenaline pumping
Sweat trickling down my forehead as the sun beats down on my back
Laughter
Screaming
No one can catch up
Speedy Gonzalez
Pure ecstasy
The best high in the world…
I open my eyes to the cold, harshly-lit hallway before me
My blanket slips
I adjust myself,
It’s extremely difficult
I’m practically out of breath
All seventy five pounds of me ache
Only skin and bones
I knew I loved running
I never knew I loved muscle,
Never knew I loved fat
My nurse comes back
She starts wheeling me again
We’ve been passing so many people
They’re all staring, but I ignore them
My mind is wandering
I never knew I loved daydreaming
I’m everywhere and nowhere all at once
The chair is still moving
But my mind comes to a complete halt
Boys.
I feel myself flush
Don’t look at me, don’t look at me…
They look at me
I smile and look at something else, anything else.
I close my eyes
I’m walking into a crowded room,
Feeling all eyes upon me
I smile humbly, but it’s a lie,
I’m hot
I know I look good
I open my eyes
People are staring
The boys aren’t smiling back
Children, not knowing any better, point
Like I’m some animal in the zoo…
I never knew I loved blending into anonymity.
I fiddle with my hat
I know I look strange
I’m bald,
I have no eyebrows,
No eyelashes
To be honest, I don’t think I look that bad bald
Some people encourage me to embrace it
When I’m out in public
With everyone staring
I wish I could hide all of me under the hat
But when I’m all alone
I’ll look in the mirror and smile
I always knew I loved my hair
I never knew I’d love it gone
I never knew I loved fresh air
I take a deep breath of artificial oxygen
Trying to remember the taste of happiness
A cool refreshing September morning
Leaves changing
Dewy grass
Hospital air tastes horrible.
Turning a corner, I rub my eyes
The florescent lights are so harsh
I never knew I loved the sun
I close my eyes
I’m on a picnic
My mother is making sandwiches
Singing the wrong words to a Beatles song
My sister is cheerfully picking dandelions
The breeze is cool
But the sun is so warm and protecting
I feel so content,
Serene
Everything is right in the world…
I open my eyes
Nothing is right.
A lady walks by with a tray of food
A hot dog and french-fries
The smell makes me nauseous
I try to hide my disgust, but it’s hard
Cafeteria food, no,
Worse…
Hospital cafeteria food
I never knew I loved my mother’s home cooking
Pans crashing
Earsplitting screams
Smoke and flames
But finally a delicious meal
I don’t think I’ll ever beg for pizza again.
My nurse leans over
She asks me how I’m feeling…
Horrible
Anxious
Lonely
Distressed
Angry
Aggravated
“I’m fine, thanks”
She smiles
So sweet and caring
I feel so safe in her care
I lover her;
I love all of my nurses.
I never knew I’d love lying to a nurse
I see a little boy
He has cancer
So small and skinny
A little Red Sox cap covering his little bald head
He looks up at me and smiles
Beautiful
Innocent
In so much pain and still smiling
It makes me smile.
They’ll do that to you,
Those kids with cancer…They know when you’re scared
When you’re in pain
Feeling insecure and all alone
That’s when they sneak up on you
And smile their beautiful innocent smiles
I never knew I loved how much a smile can say
It’s going to be okay
I know what you’re going through
Be brave
Be strong.
They give me strength
I hope I’m able to give someone
What that little boy has just given me.
I look up at my mom and dad
My mom is fighting back tears…
Her big green eyes
You can tell everything about her from those eyes,
When she’s happy
When she’s mad
They always tell you the truth, even when she isn’t
I usually love that about her
But not right now,
Right now I don’t want to know what she’s feeling
My dad looks exhausted…
The man has worked three jobs all my life
And could still come home and wear me out
He wakes up every day at 4:30 in the morning
Forever running
Always busy
Never complaining…
I have never seen him look so tired
Like Superman holding kryptonite,
My poor Superman
I love them so much,
I never knew how much
I never knew how much they loved me.
We get to the end of the hallway
Double doors,
“You ready?”
Ready?
No I’m not ready!
I’m terrified
I want to go home and hide under my pillow
I wish this was a dream,
A nightmare,
I want to just wake up…
“Yeah, I’m ready.”
My mother kisses me
I look straight into those eyes,
But I already know.
My father wraps his arms around me
So tight, not want to let go,
He lets go.
I close my eyes
Not trying to picture anything
Not trying to be anywhere else but here,
Trying to fight back the tears.
This is it.
I knew it was coming.
But it was surreal
It wasn’t really happening…
I open my eyes as the doors open up
Nothing has ever felt more real
I’m fourteen years old
I’m sitting in a wheelchair
As a nurse is pushing me down a stark white corridor
Just me and the nurse
Nothing to look at
No one to think about, but myself
I never knew loved myself
Never knew I’d love doing whatever I could to save myself
Because I love myself so much.
Connors, Jamie Rose, age 17 of Readville, October 11, 2008. Beloved daughter of Thomas W. & Maureen A. (Cullen) Connors. Loving sister of Taylor Connors of Readville. Grandaughter of Elizabeth A. (Potts) Connors of Readville & the late John Connors, the late William J. & Mary (Houton) Cullen. Niece of John Connors of Readville, Virginia LaFaucci of Groveland, Maureen A. Mattos of Plymouth, Daniel Cullen of Marshfield, Frank, Rose, Kathleen and James Cullen all of Jamaica Plain, William J. and Eileen Cullen both of Roslindale and Kevin Cullen of Brighton. Also loved by numerous cousins, friends and other relatives. Funeral from the Brady & Fallon Funeral Home 10 Tower St. (Opp. Forest Hills MBTA Station) JAMAICA PLAIN on Thursday October 16 at 9:15 AM, followed by a Funeral Mass in Our Lady of Lourdes Church 14 Montebello Rd. Jamaica Plain at 10 AM. Relatives and friends are invited. Visiting hours Wednesday 4-8 PM. Interment St. Joseph Cemetery. Late student at the Academy of Pacific Rim, Hyde Park. In lieu of flowers, donations in Jamie’s memory may be made to The Jimmy Fund, 10 Brookline Place West, 6th Floor, Brookline, MA 02445-7295 or COPS for Kids with Cancer, P.O. Box 850956, Braintree, MA. 02185 or www.savedarfur.org.
Comments
6 Responses to “Things I Didn’t Know I Loved by Jamie Rose Connors”
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Thank you so much for sharing this wonderful poem. It really touched me. Rest in peace Jamie Rose.
i thank ben berman for assigning this and i thank whoever it was that remembered it to share it with the world.
rest in paradise, jamie.
When a girl of 14 has learned so much of life as Jamie had there is no doubt that like Jamie we can and should seek out the “Things I didn’t Know I Loved”. My thanks to Jamie for her words, her friendship, her beauty, her kindness, her gentleness, and most of all her love. I will never forget Jamie and her loving smile, her delicate approach, her demure nature. Jamie Connors will be missed by all. I hold my memories dear as that is how I will again feel her embrace. May God and Jamie watch over us and guide us through our days.
What an insightful well put and deeply meaningful poem this incredible young girl wrote. Cancer and all it’s ugliness has affected me in more ways than one, and reading this poem puts it all into words. PEOPLE….LEARN FROM JAMIE, DON’T TAKE YOUR LIFE OR THE LIVES OF YOUR CHILDREN FOR GRANTED. Stop and smell the roses and hug and kiss your babies everyday….
Jamie, I know you are an angel, I want to thank you for such eloquent beautiful words….spread your wings, Jamie….spread your beautiful beautiful wings.
God Bless You….
you touched my heart, I am ready to love again.
Jamie just like you your poem is amazing i am sooo sorry this happened to you! Your were an amazing person and friend throughout elementary school i wish i hadnt have moved away so i could have helped you! Rest in peace Jamie i love you baby girl!!