
It's not that I'm embarrassed or ashamed to tell anyone. Sometimes I've worried about the effects of the news on certain recipients - my parents, for example, whom I held off telling as long as I could. Sometimes - as with my potential roommates here in SF - I selfishly worried the knowledge might nullify the pending transaction (as it indeed did, in some cases). And sometimes I've shrunk from the instant notoriety of being added to a dozen prayer lists around the world.
Now most of those closest to me know - friends, family, colleagues. But sometimes I still have to drop the C word to new people I meet, inevitably cracking a glacial crevasse in the pleasant conversation.
At its heart, I don't want the diagnosis to define me. I cling to the quintessentially American ideal: judge me by my actions; not by my parents, my family name, my hometown, my college, my degree, my church, the wealth or poverty of my background, my appearance, ethnicity, gender, or any of a hundred other categories that divide and define us. Judge me by how I live my life.
(I have always thought it curious that Americans find sola gratia so tempting, given the American preoccupation with self-definition through one's actions. Perhaps it is that obsessive focus on works which reveals to us the ultimate insufficiency of our actions in the face of divine sacrifice - or perhaps our frustration at consistently imperfect actions bolsters our hope that God can help us faithfully live out our idealistic natures in demonstrable ways. But I digress.)
It is the duty of men to judge men only by their actions.
So how do I tell these folks I meet that I have cancer? Quickly, bluntly, and honestly, tossing off a joke into the awkward silence, and moving on.
6 comments:
This is off-topic, but I just rented out my house this afternoon! And, I signed the lease on an apartment here in SF - I'll be moving in next week sometime.
Congrats, V. Now you can start doing your work!
When I was sick, I was always heartened by the people who I hadn't told, and sometimes didn't know, who approached ME and shared their stories with me.
Carol - this made me smile - I sat in front of two folks on a shuttle bus from work the other day...they were talking down their co-worker for being off work for several months ("He's just milking that cancer thing for all it's worth...He's not really that sick"). I gently inserted myself into the conversation...it was a good 10 or 15 minutes before I revealed that I'd just been diagnosed and was about to undergo cancer treatment.
They were, needless to say, a wee bit embarrassed.
V--
You were nicer to them than I might have been. (Or at least in my imagination I would have ranted at them.)
Afterall, anyone in their right mind knows you don't 'milk cancer.' You milk a cow. You milk a cold. You milk a bad day.
Those people who were ranting about their coworker hasn't walked a mile in that person's shoes.
I try to not bog down the conversation about the people who I know who have fought cancer. (One because I'm really superstitious and two because I don't think you would find it comforting.)
That said...I just would add that the people who I know who went through the treatments are the bravest, strongest, most loving, and appreciative (of life) people I know.
I think the people on the bus who were nasty because they've never bother to learn what their coworker was facing. But I guarantee you that the coworker probably had much more compassion and sympathy for them.
PS. Excuse grammar and such...I"m a zombie right now.
Here is a Web page full of items with "Cancer Sucks" on them.
http://www.choosehope.com/commerce/catalog.jsp?catId=29
I think those two words pretty much sum it all up. I am sorry you have to fight the battle, but you will win!
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