I’ve
encountered IT before, cancer I mean.
But it’s always been someone else’s cancer. This summer, it’s been mine. Last night when John and I were eating supper
near the open windows with that balmy Big Lake breeze wafting inland to our
place, I couldn’t help but think back to this past winter. “Remember how cold, how long, how snowy it
was then?” I asked. “Back then I thought
this summer would be so wonderful compared to such a terrible winter.” However, the summer had barely begun when I
was diagnosed. And I soon discovered
that cancer sets such a high score in the bad-news category that previous bad
days hardly seem worth mentioning by comparison.
I was also surprised
by another discovery. After years of thinking
of myself as rather indecisive much of the time, I found out that I can be extraordinarily
decisive when faced with something as jarring as cancer. Suddenly I had an instant motivator for re-prioritizing
my life. Not that all my old choices
were bad; they weren’t. But almost immediately,
it became very clear to me that I was paying a lot of attention to things that merely
filled up my time without adding much real value to my life. Enough of that! So I unceremoniously dumped
what wasn’t worth my time and, believe it or not, I almost felt physically
lighter. Easiest diet I’ve ever been on
– a “spiritual” cleanse, of sorts -- and the best part was that I didn’t even
have to whip up something green and Kale-ish in my blender and convince myself
to drink it!
I hope I’ve
learned a lot these past three months. I
think I may have. I’ve been reminded
again how much closeness matters. I earnestly sought out closeness to God. In church services, I listened for words to
remember later while waiting in the doctor’s office. I copied down a verse from a hymn and sang it
silently. I covered some familiar
faith-ground by thinking again how grateful I am that Jesus came to live among
us. I need the kind of God who would do
that to convince me I’m not alone and that my fears and troubles are known and
cared for. I did not want God to be
distant.
I also wanted
closeness with those whose faces are so beautiful to my way of thinking that I almost
tear up just bringing them to mind, my own loved ones. And then,
at the same time, I found myself more acutely aware of suffering people. For me, one of the more amazing things about
coming in to the cancer center for treatments day after day has been seeing
others who are going through the same thing or something even more
challenging. They smile, they talk
quietly to one another, they hold the door open, wait patiently in lines, and even
work on a jigsaw puzzle on a table together.
In some ways, I think we are all puzzling our way through.
I’ve
learned something about my deep-down, bottom-line belief about prayer too. It started with a practical question early
on: who needs to know? Who should I
tell? Again, I was surprised at my own
reaction. I didn’t feel the need to be
on a massive number of prayer lists. (I’m
currently connected to four congregations in four different denominations. Trust me, I could summon prayer partners like
Jesus could summon angels!) However, especially in those first few days when I
was waiting for answers to very scary questions, I longed for private, heartfelt
prayers, not necessarily numbers of them.
I’m not so sure that God is impressed with volume as much as quality. I was
confident in the group I turned to.
However, I soon realized that their lives weren’t carefree at the moment
either. So, we began praying for each
other. I don’t think I’ve ever fully
appreciated the bond that comes from giving AND receiving prayers like this
before. It levels the ground and lifts
my spirit.
I have
learned that I love life. I like the
look of a delicate cosmos blossom and marvel that my dahlias are so huge and
gorgeous, although they are grown from tubers that I stuffed into ground that
hadn’t been tilled in nearly two decades. I love the softness of skin, the sound of
familiar voices. I love the gift that
life is and at the same time, I grieve that, for some here on this earth, life
is incredibly brutal or endlessly bleak. That troubles me more than cancer does.
When people
ask how I’m doing, I usually say something about being grateful for good news,
about the outcomes of tests and where I am in the process, but that’s not the half
of it really, you know. God is
close. I am blessed and I marvel. I pray and I’m not afraid. I am not alone. I am loved.
I can share what really matters.
And although none of this is news, it is all so very fresh and new to me
today because cancer passed my way.
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