I shared a few weeks ago that I will soon be joining the ranks of the Retired. After nearly 50 years working in commercial printing, I’m hanging up my computer. I will be spending more time with, well, this computer.
We have been working to prepare for this. Getting the finances squared away; signing up for medicare; gloating about it to my co-workers. You know, all of the important stuff.
And, things seem to be progressing nicely.
But, as with most things in life, the things that we don’t see are the ones that tend to impact us most.
We try our best to prepare for every contingency. What if the water heater blows up the day after I retire? Can we pay for a new one?
Check!
How about the car?
Check on that, too!
How about your health?
Well, I’ve got that dicey cardiac thing pretty much under control. So, yeah, Check!
What about your cancer?
Wha?!? Who?!?
What cancer?
The cancer that’s been growing in your colon, dummy!
But, I don’t have any cancer!!!
I eat right and exercise and don’t engage in high risk activities!
I even get regular colonoscopies to make sure that nothing’s happening!
Well, you did skip a year and a half.
Right?
You were supposed to have a scope in 2018. But, no, there was something else going on. And, the previous two scopes had been clear. Nothing to worry about. Right?
Wrong!
This past Monday I went in for my routine, but belated, colonoscopy. I wrote a bit about it here.
Afterwards, the Doc came in to give us the results.
There were a few polyps. No biggie. They snip them off and we’re good to go.
There was something else, though.
A mass in the ascending colon.
They took a biopsy and sent it to pathology.
The doc, however, was pretty sure what we were looking at.
Cancer.
Yesterday I received the results of the pathology.
Yep, suspicions confirmed.
Not how I had planned to begin my retirement.
Hell, not in any plans for anything at all!
But, there you go.
The things you don’t see are the ones that can derail you.
What now?
Today I go for a CT Scan to see if this bugger has spread.
Hopefully, no.
We have hopefully caught it early enough that it is self-contained.
If it has not spread, then next week I meet with a surgeon to go over how they will remove it.
The best case is that they will take it out and I will live happily ever after. The way things are going, though, I’m not overly confident.
Right now I am consumed by conflicting emotions. I don’t know what I feel. I don’t know how I SHOULD feel!
I know there are folks out there who have experienced exactly what I am. I don’t want to be a whiner and do the whole, “Woe is me!” thing. Especially when you are dealing with far worse.
But, we each process things in our own way.
My way is going to be to process it here.
I want to share this experience.
Well, not SHARE it. I can assure you that you do not want this!
I want to share my experience with you.
What’s happening physically?
The tests and the doc’s reports and surgery.
All the good stuff that cancer patients get to have.
What’s going on emotionally?
What thoughts and feelings are racing around in my head…my body.
It looks to be a roller coaster ride that rivals anything at Cedar Point.
What is this doing to form me Spiritually?
Where is Yahweh in all of this?
IS Yahweh in ANY of this?
So, for the next little while I’m going to write about these things.
Sure, I’ll still write the other stuff, too.
But, this is important right here; right now.
I invite you to come along with me on this journey!
Lord knows that I can’t walk it alone.
Your company is appreciated.
I also encourage you to share this and invite others to come along.
This is part of our shared human experience.
So, Please, share on your social media, at the dinner table, with co-workers…anyone and everyone.
Hopefully, in a little while I’ll be able to share with you OUR victory over this thing.
Mike, everyone’s experience is unique when it comes to the “c” issue. Will be praying for you and your family as you walk this path. Thanks for your willingness to share the trip. Free you.
Thanks, Richard.
Wow man.
Sorry to hear about this development Mike.
🙁
I will commit to pray for you daily
🙏
I appreciate you hombre
👊
Shalom
Mark
Thanx, Mark.
Hi Mike,
I remember the day I got the same news. Not the best day I remember. That was in 2014. That year they took half my left kidney out. In 2016 they discovered they didn’t get all the cancer. The rest of the kidneys went bye-bye, along with a tumor they found in my stomach while they were looking. Last year at this time I spent a month in the hospital down here in Winston Salem trying to survive a treatment that nearly killed me before the cancer that’s moved into my liver could. This year I’m doing much better. I’m taking an oral chemo that I seem to be tolerating well. The biggest side effect is that it screws with my taste buds. Not so nice, but hey, it’s better than lying in a hospital bed. Why am I telling you all this? Cause the road ahead can be tough. It has been for me. But I’m still here!! Six years of battling this disease and I’m still here, and the possibility that I might be around for a while longer is better than ever. I just wanted you to know that I know what you are going through. Or at least kind of. And I’ll be there for you in any way I can. If it’s only for you to know that you’re traveling a road that someone else has traveled before. Or if you ever need to talk, I’m pretty free these days. Well, you get what I’m trying to say, right? Later, my friend. ken
Thanx, Ken. I know that your journey has been rough. I appreciate you sharing this.
Blessings!
Thinking of you.
Thank you, Shelley!!!
Hey Mike: As always you and yours are in our prayers. Thank you for sharing; I have posted this piece on FB for close friends to see — most of whom are brethren who will also join in prayer.
Thanks to Alan D. who brought this installment to my attention.
Thanx, Joel.