When I was diagnosed with stage IV cancer, I started
preparing to die. Granted, we should all
“live like we’re dying” as singer Kris Allen reminds us, but an aggressive diagnosis ups the urgency on doing just
that. I went back to teaching even
though I could barely stand up because I wanted to be in the classroom one last
time. I stopped buying new clothes
because I didn’t think I’d have much time to wear them. I insisted on a summer vacation even though
my stamina was shaky because I thought that would be the last one I’d take with
the family. My husband and I secured
burial plots. There didn’t seem to be
much time, and I was intentional in my preparations for the end.
Then I went into remission.
Having already resigned from my life, I gradually let myself believe
that there could be another semester in the classroom, that if I bought new
clothes I’d have some time to wear them, that I might get to experience another
family vacation. What an amazing turn of
events. Thank God, thank the doctors,
thank the world for allowing me more time.
Living with gratitude has been at the top of the life agenda
these past five years of finding remission, losing it, then finding it again. The days, months, and years have been
accompanied by unfathomable gifts of grace.
At the same time, the space occupied by a stage IV cancer diagnosis, the
fickle status of remission, and ongoing oncology visits and chemo treatments is
often a discomforting one. In a recent
New York Times op ed piece, Paul Kalanithi, a young resident neurological
surgeon recently diagnosed with metastatic lung cancer, tries to figure out how
to live in that space. “The path forward would seem obvious,” he
writes, “if only I knew how many months or years I had left.”
Even though all of us not on our deathbeds can’t know the
hour of our death, we all know we will die.
As Kalanithi points out, however, those of us with metastatic cancer know
this acutely. In his own grappling with
how to live in the midst of a devastating diagnosis, this budding surgeon has
found wisdom in writer Samuel Beckett’s claim, “I can’t go on. I’ll go on,” statements that capture the
competition between resignation and determination, between despair over
receiving a premature death sentence and evidence that death is most likely not
tomorrow. How do we “live like we’re
dying” in ways that embrace what is
while also hoping for more?
I’ve been told that one day a stage IV breast cancer
diagnosis will most often not be a death sentence but rather a transition to
living with a chronic condition. So far,
I seem to be living in that future. The
“management” of my condition had a rocky start and has endured several bumps
along the way, but overall, I’m living very well with a serious, chronic
condition. How awesome. Yet I hear from the experts that know of no
others doing as well as I’m doing with this condition. How lousy.
Being an anomaly makes that discomforting space a bit more
uncomfortable. But I go on, trying to
lean as fully as possible in to that space, praying that more who share my
diagnosis will occupy the space with me, and hoping that I have more days,
months, and years, to understand how to respond to “I can’t go on” with “I’ll
go on.”
I am an almost 2-year survivor of stage 3 metastatic breast cancer. While my diagnosis is not as "serious" as yours, it's my diagnosis, and my experience has in many ways mirrored yours. I've yet to hear the words "remission" or "no clinical evidence." I've gained great comfort and support from your writings, as they are so very real and honest. I share this precious space with you, learning to live in gratitude for my "new normal." Know that you have been an important part of my healing. God bless.
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