Isn’t   it  amazing how quickly your    mind    can take    you down    the rabbit  hole    that
something   is  wrong?
Uncertainty had triggered   my  habit   of  worrying    and now I   was inside  the
mental  “What-if    Loop”:  Did grandma die?    Did I   do  something   wrong?  Is  he  in  financial
trouble?    It  must    be  me, what    did I   do?
Did you catch   what    happened?   The uncertainty triggered   my  habit   of  worrying.
In  less    than    five    seconds,    I   had convinced   myself  that    my  grandmother had died,
that    I   had done    something   severely    wrong,  that    my  father  was deeply  disappointed
in  me, or  that    I   was about   to  get in  major   trouble.
I   heard   the back    door    open    and him walking toward  the kitchen.    He  picked  up
the phone   and was as  nonchalant  as  could   be, “Hey    Mel,    thanks  for calling,    where   are you
right   now?”
I   was freaking    out on  the other   end of  the line.
“I’m    in  Miami   on  my  way to  the airport,    your    text    scared  me  to  death,  did I   do  something
wrong?”
He  chuckled    and said,   “No,    it’s    not about   you,    Mel.    It’s    about   me. I   didn’t  want    to  tell
you and your    brother until   I   was sure.”
I   almost  dropped the phone.  “Are    you gonna   die?    Oh  my  god,    you have    cancer.”
He  interrupted,    “Will   you let me  talk...I    don’t   have    cancer. I   have    an  aneurism    and I
need    open    brain   surgery to  remove  it  before  it  kills   me.”
He  went    on  to  explain the whole   story.  He  had had a   bout    of  vertigo and
collapsed    while   he  was     playing     a   round   of  golf.   That    lead    to  an  MRI,    which
revealed    this    aneurism.   They    found   it  by  mistake.    He  was having  surgery at  the end
of  the week    at  the University  of  Michigan.
I   sat frozen  on  the other   side    of  the phone.  My  father-in-law   had died    from
esophageal  cancer. Within  seconds of  hearing my  dad’s   story,  I   immediately thought
