Breast Cancer and Choosing Life
Every time cancer claims the life of another friend, I wonder why I am still here on this earth. Twenty-seven years ago, I was thirty-nine years old, mother of four young children, excited about the new chapter in our lives that had started the year before when Chuck accepted the call as pastor of Glasgow Church.
Visions of building God's Kingdom through His local church and spending the rest of our lives building life-long relationships with our church family took a back seat to unexpected news. The diagnosis of the beginnings of Stage 3 breast cancer stopped us in our tracks, took our breath away, turned our world upside down. Chuck and I share our cancer journey in the free MARKINC Ministries Learning to See When the Lights Go Out
Fear that the cancer will return takes a back seat to life these days. But every October, when even football players wear pink, I travel back to that scary time. On July 2, 2008, I posted these thoughts in my old blog. This month is an opportunity for me to remember once more the unexpected treasures that God sends to turn my heart toward Him. And that at the beginning of my breast cancer journey is when He opened my eyes to those treasures He sends every day.
Breast Cancer and Choosing Life
The sudden wave of tears refused to stop as I came out of my oncologist's office after a yearly check up. I had just finished getting an annual mammogram as well. Though I walked quickly, I noticed numerous patients with obvious signs of cancer treatment: the gentleman with a large patch on his face, clearly covering the place where his nose should have been; a daughter helping her unsteady elderly mother walk back to the examining room, a woman wearing a wig that hid the ravages of chemo-therapy. Depressing and all reasons for tears but these were not the reason for my emotions.Visions of building God's Kingdom through His local church and spending the rest of our lives building life-long relationships with our church family took a back seat to unexpected news. The diagnosis of the beginnings of Stage 3 breast cancer stopped us in our tracks, took our breath away, turned our world upside down. Chuck and I share our cancer journey in the free MARKINC Ministries Learning to See When the Lights Go Out
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Fear that the cancer will return takes a back seat to life these days. But every October, when even football players wear pink, I travel back to that scary time. On July 2, 2008, I posted these thoughts in my old blog. This month is an opportunity for me to remember once more the unexpected treasures that God sends to turn my heart toward Him. And that at the beginning of my breast cancer journey is when He opened my eyes to those treasures He sends every day.
Breast Cancer and Choosing Life
Twenty-one years ago this week I left the same oncologist, holding back tears. I left the office with the news that I faced major surgery and an unknown prognosis for aggressive breast cancer. Chuck and I were beginning a journey into the foreign land of cancer totally unprepared for the trip.
We didn't know the language that included frightening words like terminal, chemo-therapy, radiation, needles, monthly hospital stays, side affects, hair loss, nausea, vomiting, depression, mouth sores, and did I mention hair loss and needles?
The journey included four day hospital stays every month for six months, getting hooked up to IV bags of poison designed to kill the rogue cancer cells, poison that also engineered a week of extreme nausea and vomiting, total hair loss, weariness and increasingly wild emotions.
My walk from my oncologist's office to my car is different today. Today I am CANCER FREE!
Today I reminded my oncologist of how grateful I am that God led me to him and that he was aggressive in using cutting edge treatment that killed the cancer in my body. When I told his assistant that I have been coming to see them for twenty-one years, her eyes filled with tears and she agreed that they should put my picture in their office as a symbol of hope for patients just beginning the journey.
![](http://www.markinc.org/blog/images//breast-cancer-ribbon-sm.jpg)
His death overshadows every other dark time in our lives. But this year, God timed my annual check up with the uneasy anticipation of the fifteen-year anniversary of Mark's Homegoing.
I couldn't wait to get home to remind Chuck of this treasure in the darkness. God gave us twenty-one more years together, to learn how to love each other even more every day, to learn together how to reconcile His sovereignty with His love when Mark left our family. He gave us time together to learn how to reflect redemption when our hearts were breaking, how to choose life when death seemed more appealing.
Today I celebrate life, God's sovereign love and the privilege of living for Him in a world that is longing for hope and help. I celebrate because I am seeing Him keep His promise, that what He began in me, He will complete.
Today I choose life.
In His grip,
Sharon