I had the great pleasure of meeting Kris and her husband Charlie at a mutual friend's wedding in July of 2009. Simon wasn't with me but we connected over the fact that, like Simon, she and her husband both went to Notre Dame and after trying to figure out if they knew Simon (they didn't ... apparently everyone didn't know everyone like they did at Franciscan) we had a blast dancing the night away. We reconnected over email a couple of years ago and she graciously agreed to write a guest post. I was pleasantly surprised to see this in my inbox yesterday and if anything were to ever provide a profound amount of powerful perspective to me, this would absolutely be it. I can't thank her enough for being so willing to share her story with me and you.
Thank you, Grace, for extending the invitation to share a
little bit of myself with you all here. Grace asked me to share because I, like
her, battled cancer as a young mother.
I am happy to report that I have now been in remission for a year and a
half. I was diagnosed with StageIII choriocarcinoma five months after giving birth to my husband Charlie’s and
my first child, Grace Magdalene.
Choriocarcinoma is a rare and aggressive form of cancer that begins in the
placenta. Most commonly, it develops in molar pregnancies, but in my case it
developed after a healthy term pregnancy. Because of a long-term misdiagnosis
my cancer was not caught until it had spread to my lungs and begun to
compromise my liver. Had it not been diagnosed when it was and treated as
aggressively as it was, my surgeon tells me that the cancer would have quickly
spread to my brain, my prognosis would have been profoundly worse, and most
likely this disease would have lead to my death. Acknowledging that is still
very surreal for me, despite the inevitable welling eyes, racing heart and
bended knees. I pray I always remain here on my knees. It is indeed where I am
meant to be.
So, it’s been almost a year since Grace asked if I would like
to write a guest post for her blog.
Though I tried on many occasions to bring some cohesion to my
experience, to speak to it in a way that was both true for me and meaningful
for you, I never succeeded. In
fact, I always ended up less aware of what it was exactly I had experienced and
more conflicted about where exactly I was as a result of it all. There was just
no way of neatly and honestly packaging what I was going through.
To be sure, cancer is that defining moment in my life, that
experience that marks a major change, that divides my life into before and
after. Life before cancer is a memory almost as foreign to me as a life I never
lived. Dramatic, I know, but no exaggeration. I changed dramatically. My body changed, my mind changed, my
heart changed. And it has been
difficult to keep up with all the many places this leg of my journey has taken
me, much less describe them to someone else. The one thing that was clear to me
from day one was that things were changing, I was changing, and that I could
never go back to who I had been before. I knew too much.
The change that my cancer brought, the new perspective it
has offered, is taking a lot of time. Many times I feel I am taking two steps
forward, one step back. This is
partly just the nature of change, partly my own resistance to it. While I could
beat myself up over my sluggishness, and at times I do, I will instead thank
God for His patience. Thank Him that He takes the time to work with us, that
this oh-so inefficient way of His is His Way, that He wants so much for us to
see Him that He will continue to show us His face even when it is clear that we
prefer our own.
As you might gather, the words I would have had to share a
year ago, had I been prompt, are very different words than the words I have
today. And the words I have today are very likely, and most hopefully, not the
final word. I trust that what I do write is what Lord would have me share.
It’s not about me. That’s
what cancer has taught me.
When I was diagnosed our daughter Grace was five months old.
Charlie and I were just finding our footing in this new phase of our life
together. Grace was a difficult infant, preferred crying to eating or sleeping,
and often persuaded me to do the same.
Those first months were traumatic and exhausting. When Charlie returned
from work each night, he was greeted by two sobbing girls. In many ways I felt at
that time like I was holding my breath until things settled down. I could not
wait until we could return to “normal life”, a baby we could take out of the
house, a resurrected social life, the return of personal hygiene, peace and
quiet. My life again. I remember so often telling myself, “This, too, shall
pass”. That is not exactly what happened.
I found myself in a clinic, hearing those most dreaded words
at twenty seven years old, hearing my chances of one year survival, with a legitimate
fear that I would never see that coveted day of peace. And, of course, I begged
that I might never see the end of that trying time with my child, that I might
always have the pleasure of those difficult days and sleepless nights. I
understood then what an undeserved gift it is to be able to live for another
and surrender all, how unworthy we are of sacrifice and how fiercely we should
cherish it.
I began a very difficult chemotherapy regimen immediately
after scans revealed the extensive grip the cancer had over my body. I had six
days between each treatment, always just enough time to see the horizon only to
be pumped with drugs that put it again out of sight. It was cruel and
defeating; it was physical hell for me. I cried a lot. I cried in pain but the
vast majority of my tears were not brought on by the treatment or the tumors. I
cried because I was being robbed, I was losing everything. I cried because I could
not hold my infant child. I cried as others took on the task of her daily care.
I felt myself losing the capacity to find myself in my daughter, to conjoin our
lives. I could not care for her. I could not care for my baby girl. Even
writing this, I choke up thinking about it. It was intensely painful. And it
was the beginning of a death in me.
My cancer experience, while perhaps not quite unique, is a
specific kind of cancer experience. I found out pretty early in my treatment
that it was working, and it was working remarkably well. So, apart from the early stages, our
prayer was to be on the other side of this fight as quickly as the Lord could
possibly work it out. We asked for
quick and total healing, we asked for nothing less. Death became an outside chance, death was not where I seemed
to be headed. I think this is why fear of death was able to take such a hold on
me after my treatment ended. Christ, in His Mercy, was not preparing me for death, but I,
in my own weakness, was spending ample time fearing it.
The period of time that I was receiving treatment was both
the most difficult and the easiest time of this journey. The most difficult in
terms of the physical toll, the overarching exhaustion, and emotional shock.
But, thankfully, those were something I was given the grace to tolerate. It was
a time of pretty incredible grace, actually. My fears were kept in pretty good check. Grave suffering has
a way of bringing a sort of mental quiet, ever notice that? While there are certainly worries and anxieties
that come along with this sort of trauma, I very often experienced a remarkable
freedom from them in the moments of my suffering. I was living in pain, not
fear of it. I simply did not have the time, energy, or desire to fear that
which I was fighting.
So, during the months of medical treatment I experienced
something unlike anything I ever have before. I experienced a sort of freedom from self. In some ways that
sounds completely crazy. I mean, it was ALL about me. Our days were spent at my doctor’s appointments, my surgeries, orchestrated around my litany of meds, about my healthy food, my hospital stays, my
chemotherapy sessions, my every pain.
That is true, and for those providing my care and the care of my daughter,
there was likely a constant worry over details and a nagging fear about my
future. It wasn’t their suffering in the way it was mine, they waivered in and
out of it and thus did not experience the stillness. But for me it was a kind
of calm, a clarity of vision and an awareness of context. I stood in relation
to God. I knew myself to be small
and weak. I knew God to be my everything. I didn’t concern myself with how I could get through it all,
because I knew so clearly that I couldn’t.
This was His show, not mine.
It was clear to me that my life was not about my life; it
was about my dependency, my need, my inability to lead my own life. What I
desired was not something I could accomplish. Everywhere I turned, that is what I saw. Charlie’s and my parents took on the
tasks of our daily lives and the care of our child, meals were made by friends
and family, medical bills were paid, work schedules were shifted and forgone, we
moved out of our home, big sacrifices were made by many. My life was not my own. The fabricated
lines which marked “mine” and delineated my cherished independence had
disappeared. I experienced a
departure from that almighty fortress, the self-willed life.
This was both an devastating loss and an unparalleled
freedom. It was both at once. I wept as I watched others take my place and in
seeing this I grasped that my life was not truly mine in any lasting or
meaningful way. I was not
indispensible. I was seeing the Lord’s beautiful truth in the clearest, most
painful, most reassuring terms. I wept and I sat in true humility. I don’t know
if there is joy like there is in true humility. There is cheerier joy, but not
more rightful joy.
My life is not about
me.
As you know, treatment ended. My life started to slowly coagulate back into “my life”. It
was as close to ecstasy as I’ve ever known. It was like being a child again, but
with an awareness that children lack. Little things, to wake up with Grace in
the middle of the night, to drive to the store on my own, to go for a walk, I
felt explosive with joy at all of them. I knew, I experienced a strange physical assurance that each
moment was something miraculous. Each moment was an opportunity to do
something, something that somehow surpassed me while also fundamentally
depending on me. I had a strong though verdant sense that this life was big,
and it was about a lot more than me. The joy I knew was bigger than me. This
second chance to live was beyond me.
Once out of the physical fight, I also began the very
sizeable task of processing all that I had endured, of beginning to heal my
spirit and reclaim my life. I had great joy in and gratitude to the Lord Who
healed me. There was a strong desire to witness to His Love for me and return
that Love to Him in a more committed way. I had an insatiable desire to connect
with others. These were all true
gifts. But, almost without my recognizing it, there also entered great fear. I
am talking really, really big fear. All the fears I did not truly entertain when
I was sick came at me with pent-up fury. At times I was completely overwhelmed.
My blood counts
were constantly monitored for recurrence. I would drive myself crazy playing
out the scenarios that my cancer had returned and I lost once again all that I
had just recovered. Next time, I would dread, I will know what’s coming, suffer
twice at once, and I will not be able to bear it. We did have a hand-full of
truly scary moments: ER visits, persistent symptoms of tumors, worrisome test
results; these fed and justified my fears. And my fears extended beyond my health.
I recognized the fragility in everything.
I carried a palpable, overwhelming awareness that suffering was everywhere. I knew acutely, not in my
head but in my stomach, that it would be an ultimately unavoidable and ever-present
reality in my life and the lives of every other person I knew, and it was a horrifying
knowledge to carry.
My fears and this heavy knowledge slowly and quietly began
to swallow me. Every day was a battle. I would call Charlie or my mom in the middle
of the day sobbing, terrified by the weakness I saw around me. On the worst days, I would fall down on
the floor crying out to the Lord to take this burden from me. I would literally
scream, “Take it, Lord! I cannot do this another day!” And without conscious
acknowledgment, out of pure human instinct and emotional exhaustion, I began
living in defense mode, not challenging myself, wasting time and energy wishing
that things would be easier, living in the fear of all that could go wrong and
the pain of all that had been lost instead of truly looking to the freedom
found in surrendering to God’s Will.
So, contradictions lived within me. I was both convicted that I was not in
control and convinced that I ought to be. Every human impulse told me to fight
to regain control; this would make everything so much easier. Avoid risk, take
it easy, look out for number one, tread lightly. Basically, turn the heat down
with the Lord (It’s too darn hot in here!), I’ve had faith enough for the time
being, I’ll go ahead and indulge
my fears, put myself back at the wheel… God will get it. After all, I deserved a break.
But a break I would not get. God had begun to reveal to me
His vision for me, which was simply Himself,
Christ crucified, and despite my own fiercely-held vision, I could never quite
suppress that beautiful, painful, absolute image. I had experienced the life He
was calling me to when I knew with certainty that He was all I had and
everything else was “dust in the wind”. My power, my vision, my will, my fears,
my successes and my failures, even my suffering : dust in the wind.
For a long time after treatment my fear and weakness were
accompanied by an underlying sadness, a longing and an emptiness. I felt guilty
in acknowledging this emptiness since I, after all, had been healed of the
disease unlike so many others. I
often traced this void back to the pain I had experienced and was still living
on many levels, and I also supposed that I missed the intimacy with the Lord
that is uniquely available in suffering.
I suspect there is some truth in that. But, I now recognize that it was
more than that. I longed to truly see Him again, to stand again in relation to
Him, to in doing so to understand my life within His Will and His Work. There came a point when I knew this was
exactly what the Lord was asking me to do. To acknowledge that I needed to join
Him at the Cross, to die to myself, to join my suffering, past, present, and
future, with His and allow it to transform my life. I knew that I needed to die
in order to be freed from the bonds of fear and pain that so afflicted me. The Lord had shown me that sort of
freedom in the midst of cancer, for He is a God who can transform any
reality. And He was offering this
transformed life to me again. This is what He wants for us.
Recognizing that I am not indispensable and that life is
fleeting was not the place the Lord wanted me to remain and abide, it was only
one small portion of the Truth. I needed to realize that recognizing our own
futility is an invitation to a life that matters beyond what we can comprehend,
a life of power and purpose and freedom we could not otherwise hope for, a life
unthreatened for all eternity. That,
after all, is what all the suffering is for. It’s not just a story of pain and struggle, or of the human spirit, or even
of physical healing, but, like all suffering, it is meant to be a story of new
life in Christ. If I remained at
the helm, I would be overcome by the fear and the pain that I had known so
well. It would kill me, I knew that. Suffering is a difficult reality in this
life, and relinquishing control is as difficult. But far more difficult is a life without Christ, a life
where we flounder in vain for control, a life where suffering is simply ours to
endure and even after such endurance we are left broken and alone If I truly was going to reclaim my life,
it would have to be in Him. I must, as Blessed Elizabeth of the Trinity put it,
become “a new humanity wherein He renews His mystery”.
It is in this way that the Lord is freeing me of my fears. I
would never be able to handle the pains in my chests so reminiscent of tumors,
the possibility of future infertility, the difficulty of (God-willing!) future pregnancies, the miles of
healing still unfinished, the knowledge that we will continue to experience
suffering, I would never be able to handle these realities if I allowed them to
be my reality. I am grasping each day
at the reality Christ offers me. My fears are not evaporating. I am not sure that someone can surmount
these fears by sheer will, I certainly can’t fathom it. What is happening,
instead, is that my fears are being rendered obsolete. I ask God for the grace to understand
every corner of my existence as His. I ask Him to bring me to dwell in that
place of grace that He has revealed to me, where I knew my dependence, where nothing
was mine, where everything is His. Nothing can threaten us in that place. Everything is His and
everything is always working for His Good. Like everyone else, I am free to not accept or recognize this
reality, but recognizing it is what He is calling me to do. It’s what He wants
from all of us. We are His. Our only purpose is to look to the cross and follow
Him.
We were created
to live for another, to surrender all. That and only that is our trajectory.
So, think about that. Nothing, not sickness, death, infertility, poverty, or
any other number hardships or struggles can prevent us from doing everything that we were meant to do and
being exactly who we were created to be. Only we can get in the way of that. We are each living our way to that
realization. And, one day we will celebrate perfect union with our Lord. Until
then, we must struggle to accept our struggles under the darkness and the light
of Christ’s cross. Let us pray to be obedient enough to take ourselves out of
the center of our pain. Our vision
cleared, we will see the Lord’s outstretched arms. He beckons us to see our
pain as His and rest in Him.
Kris blogs about her cancer and remission over at Ever With Grace, about life with her family and her impressive home improvement projects at Chuckie's House and runs a (really cool!) Etsy shop, Kiki Koyote.
You're beautiful. You and Grace. This is incredible to me. That God puts things in our lives to test us and when others would have blamed him, you got on your knees and found His grace. I admire you - both of you. xoxo
ReplyDeleteThank you. He put His Grace right in front of me- literally! She truly was His Grace for me...a whole other sharing! Peace to you!
DeleteWow. Amazing, powerful, so much Truth contained here. This is something I will return to read over & over!
ReplyDeleteI am so thankful to be able to share. It's something the Lord intended not just for me but for us all. We must be willing to be made vulnerable so that healing can extend beyond us as individuals.
DeleteThanks for your words!
What an amazing post! Thank you for sharing your beautiful soul with the Camp Patton readers!
ReplyDeleteI am so happy to share, it's what we need to do!
DeleteThanks for sharing so deeply and beautifully. This was a great read and reflection. I will be thinking about it for a long while. God bless you!! you will be in my prayers.
ReplyDeleteI so appreciate your prayers, thank you! And thanks for your kind words. God bless you!
DeleteThis was beautiful and inspiring. Thank you so much for sharing and being so candid and honest. You and your family will be in our prayers!!!
ReplyDeleteOur God is always revealing His Beauty if we only bring ourselves to see it. Thanks for your words, and thank you for your prayers- cannot get enough of those!
DeleteWonderful post! Thank you!
ReplyDeleteMy pleasure! and Grace's doing.
DeleteThank you... This is something I feel God really wanted me to read right in this moment. While I'm still in the "it's all about me" mindset (which makes it difficult to open my head and heart to fully grasp the gravity of your words), if nothing else, I'm able to recognize the selfishness that's keeping me sick. One day, hopefully sooner rather than later, I will be able to give up the control I THINK (tell myself) I have and allow God to do his thing. It's so scary.. and I admire you for sharing your journey with such honesty and candor.
ReplyDelete"That, after all, is what all the suffering is for. It’s not just a story of pain and struggle, or of the human spirit, or even of physical healing, but, like all suffering, it is meant to be a story of new life in Christ." <-- my favorite part, and one I hope to embody one day.
p.s. you are absolutely gorgeous.
I am really touched by your honesty in return.
DeleteNone of our struggles are meant to be fought alone and all suffering is fluid among us. I know that my words, what the Lord is revealing to me, is as much for you as it is for me. I mean that in the most literal sense. This is yours.
In terms of reaching that place of relinquishing control, I am certainly not there. It's a daily struggle. And I fail often. But that, I think, is part of what the Lord asks of us- to struggle for Him, to struggle to Him, and, thankfully, if we do this we will struggle WITH Him.
You will be in my prayers as you walk this road. Know that we are on it with you. Know that the Lord only asks you put on foot in front of the other. He is right beside you! God Bless you, sweet sister.
<3 Tears! For the first time in a long time, at church this morning I could feel my heart was softer and open..
DeleteIt is hard to put our deepest sufferings to words. Somehow, Kris, you have done that, and you have still left a lot to the soul-imagination. How sweet it is to finally learn how much our lives are not about us, and yet how loved we are irrespective of that fact.
ReplyDeletethanks, Grace, for having this guest author. I think this one was in the "lots of people NEED to hear" category.
Thanks,Sydney. I really appreciate your encouraging words.
DeleteWe are more than "individuals" we are persons. That distinction is at the center of what I have learned, and its a distinction that, unfortunately, our culture does not recognize.
Thank you, Kris, for your sharing so perfectly your journey. I need to read this right now. I have already read all if your posts on your blog "Ever With Grace"
ReplyDeleteI am so happy to do it. My prayer is that the Lord speak to others through what He has shown me. I know the Lord has spoken to me when I have heard or read other people's experiences, and I know those stories were an integral part of what I shared here. They are a part of my story with the Lord. So, I pray this be a part of your walk with the Lord, too.
DeletePraise God that He can use imperfect, inarticulate, WEAK!, even resistant people to do His work! The power of an incarnate God.
Much, much love coming from The Wheel tonight. :-)
ReplyDeleteThank you!
DeleteWow, such beautiful and profound insights. It's really amazing how God reveals do much in suffering. God Bless your beautiful family!
ReplyDeleteIt is! He is a big God. Thank you so much and God bless you and your!
DeleteThis is so beautifully written and so wonderfully needed. Thank you for sharing your heart and your experience, Kris.
ReplyDeleteThank you. I had quite the muse :)
DeletePeace to you!
Thank you so much for sharing your story so beautifully, Kris. With Lent starting next week, it's the perfect reminder to us all of what truly is the purpose of our lives. God Bless you and your family!
ReplyDeleteThank you for your words. I really is a gift to be able to share them, and a real blessing and encouragement to see such reception of difficult truths, so thank you! God bless you and yours as well.
Deletejust marvelous...what a gift to share before Lent. Thank you, Kris.
ReplyDeleteMy pleasure! Thanks for taking the time to read it.
DeleteThis was so beautiful! Thank you for such a powerful witness to Gods love!
ReplyDeleteThank you, Lord, for showing me your love to me so blatantly!
DeleteAnd, thanks for your words. Peace!
If there is anyone out there who is not familiar with redemptive suffering, this would be the post to read. So beautiful. Thank you!
ReplyDeleteThank you. I need to go read Brothers K again!!
DeleteBeautiful story, Grace! I had cancer when I was in high school and can attest that it does change your entire life -- and it does bring you closer to God, if you allow it to. I can't even imagine how it would be to have cancer when you had a child to care for. You are an inspiration.
ReplyDeleteOops, I meant Kris. :)
DeleteThank you! and so are you, I am sure. God bless you!
DeleteOur suffering can ruin us or it can be our gift to the world. I am so grateful to the Lord for staying by my side, and for revealing Himself to me in the midst of it. He certainly provided and continues to. To Him be the Glory!
This is was such an incredible post, thank you so much for sharing this. I have a family member who has cancer and this was reassuring and eye opening for me to read. Thank you and may God bless you! I will keep you in my prayers!
ReplyDeleteWow, what an incredibly moving story and such a testament to God's wisdom and love. And I am feeling suitably silly about my complaints earlier this eveing :) Thank you for this!
ReplyDeleteThank you for sharing such a beautiful and inspiring story.
ReplyDeleteWow! This is absolutely AMAZING! Thank you so much for sharing!!!!
ReplyDeletebeautiful story. I bet it was hard to write. Thank you for sharing.
ReplyDeletePretty! This was an extremely wonderful article.
ReplyDeleteThank you for providing these details.
my web site http://www.wheelhousebikes.com/