A Life Well-Lived
Finding comfort in life's new territory.
By Deborah Lang Hampton
Breast cancer is a foreign country I’ve learned
to live in. When I was first diagnosed, it was as though
I had been parachuted into enemy territory, an unwilling
draftee. I had to learn the language and customs of
this new place quickly, as though my life depended
upon it—and it did. I was engaged in a war that
was going to change me forever. I had no idea how profound
that change was going to be or where it would take
me. As the years went by, this new country became my
permanent assignment and then, truly, my home.
After
nearly 12 years, I have spent one third of my adult
life in this place. Each experience, each encounter
has harrowed up the soil of my life, my heart, my soul.
From this ground, I have learned my capacity for courage,
acceptance, strength, humor, joy and persistence. I
now know and trust myself. As hard as this has been,
I wouldn’t change my life. The common thread
woven throughout has been living with breast cancer,
not dying from it.
I thank my body, which has rallied
and responded to treatment so many times, showing strength
and endurance in the face of a persistent assailant.
Yet I sometimes feel betrayed by it. Why does the cancer
keep coming back? I see my many scars as evidence of
a series of battles, sometimes as signs of having been
violated by this disease, but more often as badges
of effort and even courage. I’m
not saintly at all about this. I have to pry my fingers from an attachment to
how I wish I still looked and felt physically. But I remind myself of that profound
truth that embedded itself years ago: It’s how I live my life that matters.
I
have spent these years with cancer looking for its
higher purpose. I don’t
profess to have some cosmic understanding of that,
but every day I see evidence of the opportunities it
opens to me. I think that when we suffer, we have two
choices: We can become bitter and blaming, or we can
dredge out a deep channel for compassion and see ourselves
linked to the suffering and struggle of other people.
Living
with the uncertainty of my life is sometimes trying.
The end-of-life work that I’ve done this past
year as my prognosis worsened has been necessary and
meaningful. Now that I’m doing better, though,
sometimes I feel like I’m all dressed up with
no place to go. I walk the tightrope between maintaining
hope that I could live to a ripe old age and living
in the moment. My spiritual and emotional history,
however, tell me that I have every reason to be filled
with hope. My hope lies in my sureness that I will
be able to face whatever comes and that I’ll
have within me and around me what I need for the journey,
wherever it takes me.
Some people talk about cure, but
I don’t have that word in my vocabulary,
at least not where it applies to my life. I’ve
watched other women live meaningful lives, right up
to their deaths. Were they cured? No, not if you mean
having their illness taken from them. But by my witness
of their lives, they were healed. Their lives were
as authentic and full as any I’ve ever known,
whether they lived to be 28 or 80.
That’s the healing that I pray
for. Make me a whole person, one who loves, accepts, serves, rejoices
and opens up to others honestly and without hesitation. Then I might
be someone worth remembering. Then I will have left a life well-lived.
Deborah Lang Hampton
lives in Hixson, Tennessee, and is author of the upcoming book,
Slapped Awake: Living with Breast Cancer. Contact her at deborahhampton@slappedawake.com.
Send your 700-word essays on cancer to mweber@curetoday.com.
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