Update and a little insight into my head and heart
On March 4th I had bunch of CAT Scans which guided them to put
the locator tattoos in the right place for the upcoming radiation. They also
made a mold which will hold my body in the same place during all the sessions
of radiation. If the Doctors can complete their treatment plan, then tomorrow
will be the final preliminary visit to the cancer center before they begin the treatments.
On the Thyroid cancer front, I continue with hormone
replacement pills. The big picture is that I have the proper dosage. Blood
tests show the right levels, and I do not have many of the possible side
effects. On a smaller scale, I reach the correct weekly dosage by taking a
double dose on Saturday and Tuesday nights. That makes Sundays and Wednesdays
very interesting. I swing between bouts of tiredness and energy. It seems that
the cancer fog is a little more of a factor on those days too. At Wednesday night
Bible study, the leader will ask for the group to find a passage related to the
topic. When he gives the reference, I think ‘I know that without looking it up’
so I start to recite it and the fog rolls in and I end up paraphrasing or even
making up the rest of it. We now joke that while some use the ESV and others
the KJV, I use the JCE version.
It is 2:20 AM Thursday morning and I am still feeling
the effects of Wednesday’s double dose. Wednesday night we were in bed by 10PM.
At 11:30 I was still wide awake and ready to say, ‘Forget about all this
medicine and cancer treatment. Maybe I should just live normally until I die.’ This
was not the most rational of thoughts, but I was really feeling tired and
discouraged with the changed lifestyle and intrusive therapies I am going
through. I so much wanted to get up, throw the medicine away, cancel all my
appointments, and go into the kitchen and eat foods I am not supposed to have.
I realized this was ridiculous thinking and finally asked God to help me fall
asleep. He was merciful and I fell right asleep. It makes me wonder why I spent
the time fretting about my situation instead of asking for His help sooner. I woke
at 1:35 which was the perfect time to take my next Thyroid pill. I went back to
bed and began to think about all the things in this experience I could write
about and by 2 AM realized that I would not remember it by morning. Thus, I
find myself in my office typing this out. I am using the energy cycle of my
medication for good purposes, instead of moaning about it.
I was really encouraged by something at Bible study
tonight. It was one of those little ‘God things’ where I saw something that had
nothing to do with the lesson and while I dwelt on it, everyone else moved on. We
were looking at 2 Peter 1:3 ‘His
divine power has granted to us all things that pertain to life and godliness,
through the knowledge of him who called us to his own glory and excellence,’. I took the ‘all things’ as similar to the ‘precious
promises’ of verse 4 ‘by which he has granted to us his precious and very
great promises, so that through them you may become partakers of the divine
nature, having escaped from the corruption that is in the world because of
sinful desire.’ I started to list the promises that seemed especially
precious to me at this stage of life. I began paying attention to the class
when they started looking at Acts 2:14 and following. My eye glanced down at vs
24 ‘God raised him up, loosing the pangs of death, because it was not
possible for him to be held by it.’ And the phrase ‘loosing the pangs of
death’ jumped out at me. I put that together with the ‘partaker of the divine
nature’ of 2 Peter 1:4 and realized that as part of our identity in and union
with Christ, we are loosed from the pangs of death. This helped me understand the
way I am dealing with two aggressive forms of cancer, where statistically
speaking, successful treatments will see my life expectancy to be in the high single
digits. How can I be not only accepting, but embracing this harsh reminder of
my mortality? It is simple, it is because of Jesus, He has loosed me from the
pangs of impending death. I extended that thought to another concern I have
had. This is the impact of my death on Karen. I realized that while she will
still experience loss, memories may be tinged with sadness, and there will be
times of missing me; as a follower of Jesus, she too will be loosed from the
pangs of my death. Because of this, she will grieve, but not as one who has no
hope. Her hope as well as mine is rooted in the precious promises of our God
and Savor, Jesus Christ.
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