4/16/2012
And so we play
the waiting game. Here’s the thing. My blood levels, particularly my white count,
needs to rise to a certain level in order for the “harvest” of stem cells from
my blood supply to be successful. It
should happen but we wait and check by blood test every few days. Friday’s test put them at about 7% of where
they need to be. This morning’s (Monday)
no change seen. This is not worrisome,
as the lab tech explained through vivid swooping motions, the levels drop far
and then rise as I continue to inject myself each morning with the leukocyte
stimulant. It’s not worrisome but it is
waiting and, humanly speaking, honestly speaking, I’m a bit tired of
waiting.
Gloomy weather
doesn’t help and it has decidedly gone back into the fairly common cold wet
spring mode here in Germany’s southwest corner after a spell of fairly glorious
weeks.
Physically I
haven’t bounced back quite as far energy wise as after the first hospital
stay. I suppose that makes sense. Two rounds of this more potent chemotherapy
should logically impact me more than one.
I can’t put my
finger on why this waiting seems harder than what I’ve waited through
before. Maybe it’s easier to wait in the
winter when we’d all like to hibernate anyway.
Maybe it’s because things have moved at a predictably appropriate pace
until now. Maybe it’s because I’m sort
of at the brink of the endgame – a, hopefully, fully successful procedure that
could just put this thing behind me.
Maybe I’m tired
of betrayal. It came to me a day or so
ago that cancer is just that – a betrayal of yourself by your body. One day something so basic and unconsidered
as your T-cells and/or (in my case) your B-cells “decide” to run off the deep
end and put the entirety of your existence here on earth at grave risk. Surviving that risk requires a wholesale
change in circumstances and medical procedures that no well person would think of
undertaking voluntarily. You haven’t
been “hit by a bus”, you haven’t chosen to bungee jump with too long a cord,
you haven’t wittingly exposed yourself to environmental hazards, your enemies
have not fiddled with your drink – what’s happened is that your own body, in
contravention of common sense, has turned upon itself.
But that is just
that way it is in this broken world of ours.
We’re our own worst enemies sometime deliberately (a thought I entertain
when I enter a hospital portal through the clouds emitted by smoking medical
personnel) and sometimes just because that’s the way it is in this Creation
that groans for redemption.
So, it’s not my
finest moment in the whole lymphoma chapter of life. But truth always helps. A few weeks ago I was reading II Corinthians
and the following verses were powerfully refreshing so I set them aside to be
included in future musings. I think now
is a good time. And the sun just broke
through.
II Corinthians 4: 16 Therefore we do not lose heart.
Though outwardly we are wasting away, yet inwardly we are being renewed day by
day. 17 For our light and momentary troubles are achieving for us an
eternal glory that far outweighs them all. 18 So we fix our eyes not on
what is seen, but on what is unseen, since what is seen is temporary, but what
is unseen is eternal.
5: 1 For we know that if the earthly
tent we live in is destroyed, we have a building from God, an eternal house in
heaven, not built by human hands. 2 Meanwhile we groan, longing to be
clothed instead with our heavenly dwelling, 3 because when we are
clothed, we will not be found naked. 4 For while we are in this tent, we
groan and are burdened, because we do not wish to be unclothed but to be
clothed instead with our heavenly dwelling, so that what is mortal may be
swallowed up by life. 5 Now the one who has fashioned us for this very
purpose is God, who has given us the Spirit as a deposit, guaranteeing what is
to come.
6 Therefore we are always
confident and know that as long as we are at home in the body we are away from
the Lord. 7 For we live by faith, not by sight. 8 We are
confident, I say, and would prefer to be away from the body and at home with
the Lord. 9 So we make it our goal to please him, whether we are at home
in the body or away from it. 10 For we must all appear before the
judgment seat of Christ, so that each of us may receive what is due us for the
things done while in the body, whether good or bad.
6 comments:
Thank you for sharing Russ....we wait on the Lord with you during this particularly long and hard wait.
We wait with you. Prayers for rays of sunshine (both literal and not) when you need them.
As fellow tent-dwellers, we groan with you...
And don't forget our old friend Habakkuk 3: 17-19.....(we can easily insert our situations into his laundry list of 'thoughs'....
"Though the fig tree should not blossom and there be no fruit on the vines.
Though the yield of the olive should fail and the fields produce no food.
Though the flock should be cut off from the fold and there be no cattle in the stalls.
Yet I will exult in the LORD,
I will rejoice in the God of my salvation.
The Lord GOD is my strength,
And He has made my feet like hinds’ feet,
And makes me walk on my high places.
Hangin in there with you! Karen
Still praying for you friends :)
Thanks again, Russ, for sharing your heart with us. It was good to visit w/you in person after church last week- good to know how to pray you guys.
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