These past
few months have been sombering. The
shadows creep in and out day after day.
No matter what we try to do, clouds hover close by. We are way past the bargaining stage of grief. Long gone are the “if I survive this I will
do xyz”. We aren’t in denial of what is
happening though we would love to be able to do this.
Our initial
shock of diagnosis has morphed into a weary sense of survival. Of living in a moment in time. Of trying to make the best of a bad situation. Four years – four long years of battling this
enemy. We tire of the question “how are
you?”. The response will always depend
on who we are talking to. For some it is
“fine”, for others it is “surviving”, and yet for others it may be “just so so”
or “not great”. A sympathetic pat on the
shoulder, an empathetic hug, a loss for words.
This past
year has taken its’ toll on us physically and emotionally. Unable to make plans and, if we take a risk
to make a plan to do something in the back of our mind is “what if”. What if George isn’t feeling well? What if he ends up in the hospital? What if, what if….? Always a backup plan in the backs of our
minds. We sometimes have to respond with
– “I won’t know until the actual day of the event… we are a definite maybe.”
In the past
few weeks George has had a couple of bouts of blockages – temporary but
painful. So far we have been able to
manage them at home – rest, fluids, sleep and sometimes medication. The mere fact that there have been two within
a two week period is a bit disconcerting.
The mere fact that both occurred when there were celebrations planned
made it worse. The celebrations went on –
but without George being able to participate in any real way.
I believe it
is because of this and the fact that no holidays or celebrations went off
without a hitch that I became a bit wary and weary of Christmas this year. My heart doesn’t feel like celebrating too
much. I worry that it will be yet
another holiday that is tempered by George not feeling well.
George and I
had a discussion about this. Would it be
possible to ask the family to make a change in how we celebrate? Can we ask them to celebrate with us on a
date other than December 25th?
That way they have a better chance of having fun than if we did the same
routine we’ve been doing for 15 years.
We need to do this. We need to
take the focus off of us and onto our children and grandchildren.
I sent a
message to the three girls asking them to consider the plan of having our
family celebration before the holiday and explained to them why. There are other advantages to doing this –
their kids can stay home and enjoy their new gifts without uprooting quickly
after opening in order to go somewhere else.
They all responded that they could do this. But for one it is not easy to digest.
It’s not a
decision that was made lightly. But it
is a decision that makes sense for where we are in this point in time. George wants peace, quiet. He has little energy these days and holidays
can be especially hard on him. If he’s
not feeling well, he feels bad that he spoiled the day for others. We need to take the emphasis off of the
holiday.
As parents,
we know that change is inevitable. Quite
frankly, I am utterly amazed that we have had our children and grandchildren
with us every Christmas up to this point.
Other families with the same type of logistics as us have already made
adjustments to how they celebrate. It is
not uncommon for families to do their traditional activities on a day other
than the actual holiday. I so love that
my children have been willing to do this even when it has not been easy to do
so. So asking them to change was
difficult.
Change is
hard. Accepting the fact that cancer
changes things is hard. Knowing that
this could possibly the last Christmas with George is very hard. If he is still around next year, his health
will be incredibly compromised by cancer.
It is hard for us - - but harder yet for our children. They aren’t here day in and day out as we
watch what has happened to George. They
see it for bits and pieces of time when they come. They have had more glimpses of it recently as
they’ve been here when George was having some bad days.
None of us
like this. None of us want it to be this
way. But as I told the girls, it is what
it is. We can hope and pray for a
miracle – but we need to be prepared that the answer could be “no”. We hate that word. We’ve hated that word since we were young
children. God doesn’t always answer the
way we want him to. “Thy way” not “my
way” says the Lords Prayer. Our job
during this time is to hang on to our faith – and hang on to the hope that God
has a plan for us and that when it is time for any one of us to go, that God
and Jesus are waiting for us. We will be
free from any earthly pains we may have.
The toll of
cancer. It changes the way we think and
move and breathe. It affects our
relationships. It permeates every aspect
of life and forever changes us.
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