I use the
plural pronoun deliberately, as no cancer patient (or “witness to cancer,” as I
prefer to be known) is an island. We are in this together. My melanoma has
altered forever the lives of my wife, Ellen, daughter Allison and son-and-in-law
Jonathan, and son Nicholas (and girlfriend Sara). All have been with me and for
me through the ordeal of brain tumor surgery and subsequent waves of therapy. In
even my darkest moments I’ve never felt alone.
I’ve been willing
to share this adventure knowing that it’s through suffering—both our own and that
of others we love—that we come to know more about God. It’s possible to assert
that no one can really say they know God at all until they do suffer. While no sane person would wish for a
diagnosis of cancer, seeing how my friends and family have risen to the
occasion makes me an optimist. I know something today about the source of all strength
that I didn’t before Aug. 5. I’ve been to the edge, looked over, and know that
there is nothing to fear.
Tucking in at the Cowboy Dinner Tree restaurant in Summer Lake last June. |
Allie and
Jon flew home just before Christmas and are now living in our downstairs
apartment until they return to academe next summer. It was hard on us all to
have them so far away during my medical emergency, but I was comforted by their
prayers and we managed to keep up communications via Skype. Sharing the same
roof will present new challenges as we discover anew what it means to live in
community.
Nick presents at Jacques Ellul conference at Wheaton College |
We got home
on July 13, Ellen and I coordinated a work party of squirrelly high school students
at Acorn the week of July 22…and then all hell broke loose for me medically. You
can read about what happened if you scroll backwards in this blog. I want to
acknowledge that neither Ellen nor I can imagine getting through those early days
without the encouragement and stalwart support that Nick and Sara provided. They
were magnificent.
Nick is now in
Seattle, tutoring English with elementary students in one of the most
ethnically diverse schools in the country, extending hospitality to the North Beacon
Hill neighborhood where he and his two roommates live, and hanging out with
Sara. He loves the urban vibe of Seattle.
Ellen directs DACA candidate at workshop she organized last summer. |
My own story
continues to be written, and for that I’m grateful. I remain on my quest to
explore why I’ve been allowed to remain in this world and what it means to be
here as a man whose toes have curled over the edge of the abyss.
As you may
have noticed, this blog has progressively become a record of my spiritual
journey, despite the occasional diversions into technology and the economics of
healthcare. I decided long ago that there are better ways of being ill than the
modernist rendering of a journey that is primarily a series of interactions
with the healthcare system. In most respects, that is the least interesting
thing about what’s happened to me since August. At its core, my life is now
about its transformation. It is something different than it was only months ago.
There is no denying that I remain marked by cancer, but it is not the curse
that some might think it to be. I now have different experiences than most
people, and I intend to continue to tell about them.
What we’ve lived
through as a family this year has wrought a level of commitment and trust that
I never expected to know—not just from Ellen but also from our adult children.
This bond has been strengthened by my recent medical therapy but was created through
a series of traumas that each one of us has weathered, in turn, since Nick was
a baby. Our family ties have been forged by fire. It has made us inseparable.
2 comments:
Peter, the Lord truly works in strange and mysterious ways. That's an old saying that I've only recently come to understand. So great to see you last week and spend time with you. Your faith is steadfast and comforting. Blessings to you and your family in the new year!
Ah... a wonderful post, Peter, that not only keeps us up to date with the goings on of the Ogle clan but speaks into our lives as well. Continued blessings in this new year!
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