It’s always a bit of a worry to
be told “there is a slim chance it could be cancer”. I’ve had to have another scan on my liver,
which showed a lesion so small that it could not be determined what it is. So I have to have yet another scan in three
months time. If the lesion has increased
in size, it will be assumed it is malignant and will have to be removed.
However, the doctor said the
chance of it being malignant is remote. Nine out of ten spots on the liver are
benign. I’m happy with those odds and I’m
not going to think about this again, until I have the next scan.
But I admit to having a few
negative thoughts about how I would cope if it was cancer.
I have felt as happy lately, as I
have since Ben died. (Ben is my son and was killed in a work place accident in
2006). I think my “wellness” brain chemicals are finally rising to levels which
are more normal. So I asked God not to allow more bad stuff, especially now,
just when I’m feeling so much better at last.
I know this is the superficial
attitude to being a Christian… “make my life comfortable and bump-free”. Life is very rarely without some bumps in it.
A truer picture of what being a
Christian is, and what our expectation of that should be, can more
realistically be found in verses like “I have learned in whatever state I’m in,
to be content”. The rock-solid mercy,
provision and dependability of God are reflected in verses such as “my strength
is made perfect in weakness”; or “suffering
produces hope and hope does not disappoint us”;
or “give thanks in all things”;
or “I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me”.
When these verses are taken on
board and “lived”, they have the power to mitigate the terror of bad
things; things we have no control
over. Like cancer (well… some cancers we
have control of because they are affected and caused by lifestyle. Even liver cancer is 4 or 5 more times more
likely to occur in a person who is a diabetic.
Diabetes is, in a lot of cases, a lifestyle disease.)
But I don’t want to have to prove
these verses and their power, again, against the all-engulfing fog of
cancer. I thought I’d done with big
suffering and would much rather reserve these verses and this stoic enduring
type of faith against the “normal” stress of encroaching , but natural, old
age. I don’t want more bad stuff;’ stuff
that’s in addition to ordinary life stress and strain.
I thought I’d served my apprenticeship
of suffering in a myriad of discomforting and testing ways. I’ve lived close to
the cliff edge enough times already, I thought.
As much as anything, if I had
cancer, it would have presented me with another grim reality in which, in order
to accept and cope and soar in the face of bad circumstances, I would have to
choose to believe and apply the aforementioned verses. Again. I would have to choose to honour (not
criticise) God in all things. I would have to go back to living a day at a
time, relying on God to get me though the minutes and the hours of each and
every day. It sounds a wonderfully
spiritual way to live, and it is. But living with sorrow and suffering, even
with God’s strength, becomes, as well, a burdensome and gruelling journey. After a while, you just long to be “normal”; to have “normal” problems.
To live a day at a time, with the above-mentioned verses, takes strength of will. And strength of will is something I’ve had to
use a lot, and it requires… well…. strength;
and resources. I just wasn’t sure
I was up for it.
The alternative though, is to
face cancer anyway, but without God’s help.
And really, when I thought of that, I knew that trusting and relying on
God was a much better way. The very
character of God, with all it’s strengths and richness, is available to the one
who chooses to invite God to walk with him/her, whatever the journey.
The difficulty lies in overcoming
the natural desire to rail against God and the circumstances he’s allowed.
Perhaps this censuring is part of accepting the circumstances. Once you’ve
decided to “let go and let God”, it becomes easier. God shares His power with us.
It’s the decision to give up the “right”
to blame and criticise and reject God which is hardest. The conquering of self
is always full of turmoil and destructive emotions. I suppose it’s a battle which must be
fought. And perhaps, if the scan had
showed cancer, I would have chosen, as I did when Ben died, to skip the whole “why
me?” mantra. And move straight to
acceptance.
But I am very thankful that, so
far at least, the spot on my liver is very unlikely to be anything serious.
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