Note: For those of you who worry, this was a routine mammogram and my thoughts about the experience :). No results yet, but so far so good.
Currently listening to: Under pressure by Queen and David Bowie
Breasts are pink ribbons and what lurks inside are butterflies.
I was shown a quilt. The quilt featured numerous ribbons with butterflies on them. Symmetrical butterflies meant all is well. Even slightly unbalanced butterflies is good. One butterfly breast ribbon and the other with numerous butterflies, uh oh.
And there I existed. Sitting in a big chair across from a big machine being instructed by a woman in a comforting pink shirt.
She jokes, “A woman said to me once, ‘So does that mean I have butterflies in my breasts?'”
This world is pink.
And why shouldn’t it be? Women represent pink. Sweetness and sugar and dainty and gentle. The charts for something that could take our lives are shown sweetly.
Like a sugar cookie.
But the sweetness can be overpowering. Even the robe I wore was pink.
The stickers on my body, to tell the radiologist these were moles and not something else, were, you guessed it, pink.
And the pressure wasn’t so bad. As usual the rumors of your breasts being squeezed were exaggerated.
And the tough yet flexible grandmother-like woman explained things to me in realistic terms. Matter of fact. A comfort that cut through all the sweetness.
“If I make an ugly face, it is not you, it doesn’t mean anything is wrong, I have arthritis in my shoulder.”
4 pictures and I was done. She made me laugh actually. An understandable stress release.
And I walked back into the changing room and saw other women in pink robes. Looking small like children, and just as vulnerable.








2017 New Monkees 30th reunion engaged in heavy discussion. From left to right: Me, Larry, Marty, Jared, and Dino. This was the first time I interviewed them as a group. That is my book proposal in front of me. Dino is holding my digital recorder. John was the photographer, lol!