Science is designed to ask the questions of what and how.
But when it comes to the why, it screeches to a halt. It is efficient when you
ask questions like: Why do cancer cells grow? What are they?
However, science is quiet when you ask: Why is there
cancer? Why is there disease at all?
Science makes conjectures about environment, DNA
deficiencies, and the effect of stress on the human body as reasons for cancer.
But if you asked a scientist why cancer came into the world, they’re gonna be the first to tell
you that first, they don’t know and second they deal with facts and scientific
discovery only.
Those are small comforts to the families dealing with loved
ones plagued by the disease.The question why is the one we are desperate to answer.
However, as usual, nature shows us the bigger picture and answers what science can’t.
This is my pear tree this year. I have nurtured it from a
stick about three and half feet tall, to this lush sapling. It will never be
huge because it is a semi-dwarf—because the harvester is a semi-dwarf.
For the last couple years it has produced pears of two
varieties, red and Asian pears. The branches produced the blossoms in the spring
and fruit in the summer. This year the fruit is bigger and tree branches droop,
they yield to the weight of fruit. Stress on the branches is evident, but the
tree is not giving up, it’s giving over…for the eventual higher gain.
2014 has been fraught with friends’ anguish over their dying
parents. The comment is always, “well, we’re getting to that age…” Ugh. Once
each month of this year, I’ve gone to the funeral for a dear friend’s parent
and each time I share in their loss and their pain.
My mom was a very private person. She didn’t like to talk
about herself but her cancer journey spanned over twenty years. When she was 54
years old, she was diagnosed with an aggressive breast cancer and underwent a mastectomy,
radiation, chemo and finally a bone marrow transplant. For four months she
carried a mini trash can with her just in case she “lost her lunch” as she put
it. She still had kids at home and she fought hard to live so she could usher
them into adulthood.
In the process of all the treatment, she lost part of her
eyesight, part of her hearing, her stomach lining changed so that foods she
enjoyed before she couldn’t eat anymore, and there was a black spot on her
brain scans where her short term memory had once been. During the next twenty
years after she was “cured,” she endured many different diseases because her
immune system had been so severely compromised. But she never complained. She
smiled, loved and kept going. She never gave up and sometimes I would tell her
she must be caring around an imaginary sword to fight off the defeating
feelings she most definitely was fighting.
A little more than a year ago, my mom was diagnosed with
myelo-dysplasia syndrome. It’s a disease that strikes the marrow of your bones
so that they can’t make blood cells the way they used to. Eventually you are
left with no new platelets, red or white blood cells and your body collapses. This picture of her hand is one of the only ones she would let me take of her during her myelo dysplasia treatment (blood transfusions only). She was determined to make it to Christmas.
Doctors told her she could possibly go through another bone
marrow transplant, but things were different this time. Her children were
grown, she had 17 grandkids and she was now 73 years old. She had accomplished
many more things. So when the docs and her family looked to her decision on a
transplant, she just shook her head. The devastating emptiness swept through
the cavern of my stomach and radiated out to my crushed heart. Some of us didn’t
understand her decision. But her answer was, “If God is calling me home, who am
I to say no?” No one could fight with that response.
Later my dad explained it differently. “She’s not giving up,
she’s giving over.”
Again I am humbled by my mom’s understanding of life. She
was asking herself why she would go to extremes to stay in this life when there
was something better and so profound on the other side. Everlasting life makes
this short time on earth seem trivial.
My mom was a fighter. She carried her imaginary sword with
her at all times. In the end, she didn’t put down her sword or kneel to defeat.
She never submitted to the enemy. Never.
She simply gave herself over to God and bravely walked
through a door to another life. She showed her family how to do it. She modeled
parenting to the very end.
To all my friends who must watch their parents suffer and
diminish, I salute you. It’s a devastating time that hurts because we are
losing the person who has loved us unconditionally our whole lives.
And yet, even in that light we can see that they are showing
us yet another gift. In their suffering and our loss, they show us that the One
who has always loved us unconditionally is really Christ. That is the true fruit of the Truth.
4 comments:
Thank you, Loretta. Your cousin, Judy
Oh Judy! I pray for your family every day. Talk soon?
indeed it is difficult time, hen we see our closed one dying.This post took me into my past.
So I'm not sure you ever got to the point of this post. "Why" exactly does a perfect loving god, make even good Christians suffer through cancer, or for that matter any disease, natural disasters, famine, and homelessness? Just part of his plan? Some god.
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