If you had asked me on the morning of January 8th – MRI morning – if I thought I still lived a cancerous life, I would have known it wasn’t as bad as it had been once upon a time, but after a pause to weigh it all, I would have most likely said yes. Yes, our collective family life is still very much filled with the indirect weight of cancer.
However, the last four weeks have proven that I have indeed forgotten more than I remembered.
I forgot what it was like to live in a place where I take one step without seeing the step after or even knowing when the movement will be required of me.
I forgot what it was like to have people feed me practicality and logic when I just need a hug and the acknowledgment that life is hard, but this won’t break me.
I forgot the near hourly feeling of not being enough for children who want me to process something for them that even I don’t understand.
I forgot the weight of their sobs – how much I hate that they hurt when I gave birth to protect them from, not direct them through, the nightmares at their door.
I forgot what it feels like to live a life half in and out of the hospital, feeling the dread of landing there again even as I relax into the second home – the love-hate relationship with a building filled to the brim with stories of pain and hope.
I forgot all the suggestions that get given.
I forgot how much the well-meaning can can sometimes hurt.
I forgot how much I still want to hear from people even if hurts like hell itself because there is nothing worse than silence in a struggle like this.
I forgot how quickly the days pass when I’m focused on keeping everyone breathing.
I forgot how that breath is a gift.
I forgot that every moment is so excruciatingly precious that it should never be taken for granted.
I forgot that God is enough and wants to be enough. Even though I write those very words all the time, I did not remember the feel of it in truth.
I forgot that sometimes I need blood and pain to remember the things I should never forget – the things in life that truly matter. And I hate myself for that a little bit. Surely, there’s an easier way.
I forgot that remembrance in seasons is actually a gift because these days in their awfulness still manage to showcase the most precious aspects of life on this earth.
I’m not sure if having it all dulled by a long season with more “normal” was worth the pain of it creeping back in (because with a diagnosis like this, it is a slow creep and not an epic crash – it’s an unfolding and not an exploding – but it still hurts – perhaps more so because it is the second and not the first), but for every piece I’m forced to remember, for every new nuance that appears, I claim it for the story it will become, the tool it can be – and in so doing, the moment can wound, but not hold me forever, because there will be a purpose to it.
I forget… but for better or worse, continuing Chase’s cancer journey ensures that I will remember again. And then comes hope…
Moment by moment.
“Is his unfailing love gone forever?
Have his promises permanently failed?
Has God forgotten to be gracious?
Has he slammed the door on his compassion? And I said, “This is my fate;
the Most High has turned his hand against me.”
But then I recall all you have done, O Lord;
I remember your wonderful deeds of long ago.
They are constantly in my thoughts.
I cannot stop thinking about your mighty works.” Psalm 77:8-12
What a wonderful family Chase has supporting all his years of the FIGHT to CHASE AWAY CANCER, as we follow your journey as some of us has lived & walked & fought along w/you plus lived it w/a little guy also, feeling the pain, strong will W/them fighting CANCER day after day & the big Survival so far-never give up Faith, & Believing! ❤️From another Caring Gma all my love to all-Jolene
I’m so sorry! Praying for Chase, for you as you deal daily with the pain and discomfort of your son, for the entire family because longterm illness never happens to just one person. May God give you His peace, His rest, His assurance that He is with you and with Chase when you feel helpless to help him.
Please tell Chase that, I, too had a total thyroidectomy and I was so scared and worried that I waited 30 years to have it done! But God..( don’t you love those 2 words?)…but God, in His infinite love and mercy, tells us not to be anxious because He goes before us, beside us, behind us and is ALWAYS with us. His love for us is SO great that whatever He chooses for us is perfect to glorify Him and that is our purpose..to give Him glory. How many hundreds of people..strangers..has Chase touched through his battle and brought so many to pray for him? All glory to God.