Honour My Grief

I have celebrated your faith.
This year, honour my grief.
Do not mistake my exhaustion for indifference.

I have stood beside you every year.
I have honoured your festivals.
I have shown up for your faith even when it was not mine.
I have lit the lights,
shared the meals,
folded my disbelief into respect —
because love does that.

Love makes room.

But this year, my house smells of antiseptic and fear.
This year, celebration tastes like blood from a tumour that will not stop bleeding.
This year, I am not simply “busy” or “moody” or “withdrawn.”

I am bracing.

On 26 January, I buried Zach.
Before my heart has learnt that new silence,
I am watching Xena fade.

Cancer does not wait for calendars.
Grief does not consult festivals.

You say I celebrated Christmas when Zach was terminal.
No.
I hoped Christmas would lighten my grief.
But there is a difference between lighting a tree and feeling light.
There is a difference between attending a party and inhabiting joy.
There is a difference between functioning and celebrating.

I took that tree down before the year even turned. You didn’t remember that, did you?
I smiled because promises had been made.
I showed up because responsibility demanded it.
But inside, I was already saying goodbye.

And now you ask why I cannot summon the same performance again.
Because I am tired of performing strength.
Especially not for you.

Even if you are not an animal lover, you know what they are to me.
You have seen the tumours.
You have seen the bandages.
You have seen me kneel on the floor dabbing blood past midnight.

You have watched me carry the quiet terror of “will today be the day?”
You do not have to love dogs the way I do.
But as my partner, you must know what this love costs me.

This is not about Eid.
It is not about a tailor.
It is not about a birthday cake.

It is about capacity.
Grief shrinks the lungs.
It narrows the world.
It makes joy something you sip carefully,
not something you pour freely.

My therapist tells me: take it a day at a time.
Take the smiles when they come.
Do not drown in tomorrow before it arrives.

So yes — I may laugh at a birthday.
I may sit with someone I call sister and feel warmth.
Because survival sometimes looks like borrowing light.

But that does not mean I am available for spectacle.
As my spouse, I do not want comparison.
I do not want accounting.

I want empathy.
Not understanding in theory.
Empathy in practice.
Empathy that says:

“You do not owe the world festivity while you are fighting loss.”

“Your grief is not inconvenient.”

“I will not compete with your sorrow.”

“I will stand beside it.”

I have celebrated your faith for years.
This year, I expected you to
Honour my grief.

Sit with me in the antiseptic silence.
Hold me when I break at 2 am.
Let me be inconsistent.
Let me be human.

Because partnership is not tested in festivity.
It is tested in funerals we see coming.

When the Body Breaks Before the Heart Does

I am afraid of losing Xena.

And my body knows it before I allow myself to say it aloud.

We have organised our lives around her illness. Anand and I orbit her like anxious moons — checking tumours, adjusting dressings, watching if she paws at the wound, fitting the cone, giving  her with food, measuring medicines, studying her eyes for discomfort. Love has become vigilance.

And now I have fallen sick.

Acid roars in my stomach like a pit of hellfire. It burns up my chest as though grief is rehearsing its entrance. A cold sore blooms at the corner of my lip — a painful eruption that feels like accusation. As if my body is saying: you cannot control this either.

I hate the helplessness.

I hate that my immune system falters under fear. That I am shivering while she lies there with a body at war with itself. I can take paracetamol. I can swallow an antiviral. I can ask for help.

What does she do?

She paws at the tumour that offends her skin. She endures.

I just lost my son. And I am strangely relieved that I believe in no higher power to blame. There is no heaven to petition. No prayer to bargain with. There is only flesh. Biology. Cells that turn rogue. Love that cannot prevent it.

But hell — hell I feel. It sits in my gut, acidic and churning.

I hate death not because it exists, but because it rarely comes gently. It arrives dragging pain and anticipatory grief behind it. It makes you rehearse goodbyes before they are required. It makes you ill before anything has even happened.

And still, she eats. She looks at me. She responds. She plays.

So perhaps this sickness is not prophecy. Perhaps it is fear trying to outrun reality.

I am trying my best. This has to be enough?

The Weight of Love

On Monday, I took Xena to see Dr Dipti. She has always been steady and clear with me, never dramatic, never vague. She told me that the mast cell cancer may have reached her lymph nodes. She saw new tumours forming around Xena’s right eye. The large mast cell tumour on her chest — the one we have been monitoring so closely — has grown from three centimetres to four.

She said Xena’s pain would likely sit at four or five out of ten. Not sharp. Not acute. Chronic. A quiet inflammation spread through the body. Not the kind of pain we recognise with a cry — but the kind that lingers like background static.

I see it. The tumours are multiplying. Three on her chest. One large one on her hip, exactly where the nappy used to tie — I have stopped using it because the friction made it form and then bleed. Another one near the collar of her T-shirt. So now, before she slept, I removed the shirt. I bandage the lesions under her chest so she does not scratch at them in the night.

Every evening, my mother, Anand and I sit down together and dress her wounds. Paraffin gauze. Gauze. Fixomull tape. Earlier we were using silver nitrate and Placentrex; now we are more careful, more protective. I give her Maxmoist epithelial cyclosporine drops. Ocupol DX for her eyes. She is on Keppra, Gabapin, Avil, Famocid, Condrovet, Sucrafil, Prolivit, Quercetin, Ceterizine. The list feels endless. She is filled, almost overflowing, with medication.

And yet — at five o’clock l, every evening, and a half hour after midnight — she rises.

She lifts her head. She takes a toy in her mouth. She runs after Zuri. Given half a chance, she will steal the toy from Zuri’s mouth as well. There are tumours on her paws, on her hips, on her chest, near her eye. There is a lipoma near her anus that we clean gently every day. Her body is fighting a war. She still wants to play in the sunset. 

That is the cruelty of this stage. The body falters. The spirit does not.

Dr Dipti gently said that we need to start thinking about letting her go. I called Geeta immediately. She was in Jammu. She took a flight and came down last night. That is what love looks like in our family — we gather when it matters.

I am not ready. Not after losing Zach less than a month ago. I cannot bear the thought of losing another child so soon. It feels like Zuri all over again — that tearing open of the chest, that helplessness.

Xena is my baby girl. She came all the way from Bangalore in a tiny crate. She was smaller than a foot when I first held her. A fragile, wee little thing who trusted me without question. She grew into the most intelligent, observant companion. On walks, if she is ahead of me, she turns to check if I am following. If Anand is about to take them downstairs and I step into another room, she comes back to ask when I am coming along. She waits for me.

She has seen everything.

She has seen Rajmahal. She has seen me in love and in heartbreak. She has witnessed my journey through open relationships and the quiet complexities that come with them. She has seen my buas — Munni and Goodie Pua. She has known my aunts while they were alive. She was there when my mother came through cancer. She saw me emerge from a very dark space in my life. She lived through COVID with us. She was there when my father died. When my aunts died. She has watched the seasons of my becoming.

Like Zach.

Our dogs are not just companions. They are witnesses. They are milestones in our histories. 

I know this path was inevitable. I always knew. Loving animals means accepting that their time is shorter than ours. I have said goodbye before — Zach, Zoe, Rolfe, Diana, Bonzo. I survived each time. I still think of them. I still love them.

I know I will survive this too.

But survival does not cancel heartbreak.

Tonight, I removed her T-shirt and bandaged her gently. I had to put a cone around her neck because she paws at the lesion near her eye. She settled down, trusting me as she always has.

And I sit here wondering: when is the right time?

She still eats. She still drinks water. She still wants to go out. She still plays at five in the evening. She still loves me with everything she has.

How do you measure the end when love is still present?

How do you decide when a body that is failing still houses a spirit that shines?

I do not have the answer yet. I only know that whatever happens, she has been brave beyond measure. She has lived surrounded by devotion. 

And – if love could cure cancer, she would have been immortal.