I’m sitting on the 35th floor of an Airbnb in Houston, earbuds in, Zach Bryan’s Pink Skies running through Spotify, and the city sprawled out beneath me like a quiet map. From up here, it’s calm—peaceful even. The kind of calm that makes you forget the chaos waiting on the ground.
And chaos came quickly.
Tugboat got sick. The Wi-Fi didn’t work for two days. The hospital “forgot” to give me my chemo pills during my first day of radiation. My short-term leave paperwork got botched so my paycheck was delayed. And the crown jewel? On my second morning, walking Tugboat, my ostomy bag finally ruptured and left me strolling home covered in my own…well, use your imagination.
Individually, none of these things would’ve been a dealbreaker. But stacked up in the first 48 hours? It felt like the universe saying, “You thought this was going to be smooth sailing? Ha.” I’d pictured myself coasting through treatment, reading four books, cooking like a pro, brushing up on tech skills, and coming back to Austin in November stronger, smarter, better. Instead, here I was, two days in, feeling like a guy in a slapstick comedy with an exploding prop bag.
And yet—here’s the weird part—I’m grateful. Three days of radiation in, I don’t feel any real side effects. Maybe these small fires are blessings in disguise. Each one has kept me busy enough that I haven’t had time to spiral into the fears I carried with me to Houston: What if the radiation doesn’t work? What if I get really sick? What if it hurts like hell? What if I can’t handle it?
So far, those questions haven’t lived in my head. And if it takes a series of sh*t shows to keep them at bay, I’ll take it.
Before coming here, the biggest weight on my mind wasn’t radiation or chemo—it was the bag. The literal one attached to my stomach. My friend Ramsey, who used to be an ostomy nurse, gave me the crash course in leaks, gas, and blowouts. She made it clinical and funny enough that I felt less like a patient and more like a leaky bicycle tire. Still, the self-consciousness followed me everywhere.
That’s why, when my friend Emily invited me to a movie the night before I left for Houston, I nearly said no. Emily is brilliant, kind, gorgeous—all the adjectives you want in a new friend. But sitting in a small arthouse theater with someone like her while your stomach bag farts on its own schedule? Nightmare fuel.
We went anyway. It was a Leonardo DiCaprio flick, One Battle After Another. Loud soundtrack, constant noise, perfect cover. Two hours in, I was thanking God for the volume. But then came the setup—foreshadowing I should’ve seen from a mile away.
Two hours and fifteen minutes in, the film drops into a dead-silent car chase. And right on cue, my bag decides it’s time to audition for America’s Loudest Sound. In my head, it was a jet engine. In reality, it was probably much smaller. Still, as I shrank in my seat, praying for invisibility, Emily didn’t flinch. Didn’t smirk. Didn’t acknowledge it. She gave me exactly what I needed: nothing. And with that, what I thought would be my most humiliating moment became just another story. One more absurd chapter in this whole saga.
That’s been the theme: the disasters I script in my head never play out the way I fear. The ruptured bag, the sick dog, the broken Wi-Fi—none of it has crushed me. If anything, each stumble has been a reminder that this whole thing is survivable. Laughable, even.
So here I am now, earbuds in, Zach Bryan still playing, watching the Houston sun sink into the horizon. Thankful for Emily’s quiet kindness. Thankful for Ramsey’s expertise. Thankful even for Tugboat’s stubborn stomach, because he gets me out walking when I’d otherwise sulk indoors.
It’s not the smooth, quiet trip I imagined—but maybe that’s the point. The chaos, the interruptions, the embarrassments—they’re not detours. They’re the path. And maybe, just maybe, they’re what keep me looking up instead of down.