Spending a month in a hospital teaches you a lot about people. The doctor that told me to shave my head or she wouldn't treat me, The nurses that spent forever chatting to me And giving me supportive advice about how my illness doesn't define me. The woman who was given a terminal cancer sentence And chose not to pay attention to it and defied it anyway. How she sat next to me on my bed, Told me that all suffering is valid, And just because I'm not dying, doesn't mean I don't get to complain. How she complains more about her skin problems Than she ever complained about her cancer, And that's OK, because pain rarely follows rules. I never even learned her name, But she gave me the words I hold most closely to me On those days when I want to fall asleep and never wake up. I'm allowed to scream and shout and rage against the pain And the unfairness of it happening to me. I just have to make sure I know where the line is Between giving my darkness a voice and pitying myself.