Photo credit: en.wikipedia.org |
A lady doctor, to
create presentation impact, showed photos of well known celebrities who
survived their battle with the big C. Among them she made
particular mention of Sheryl Crow. I would have left it at that but
when she immediately added that Lance Armstrong left her as soon
as he learned she has cancer, it was difficult listening to the
rest of her talk.
I am sure she is not privy to the lives
of this couple. Any knowledge she has regarding the split can only be
speculative, if not taken from gossip. But if she was genuinely
focused on cancer than on dramatics, she would have mentioned Lance
as himself a survivor, a Tour de France icon for winning it several times in a row - an
achievement beyond compare and which proves there is life after cancer,
and finally the very one who started the Livestrong movement whose aim is to help those stricken with
the dreaded disease. Then this doctor's presentation would have achieved something truly positive and consequently shower her audience with hope.
But wherever her info about the Sheryl-Lance separation came from, she got the attention she wanted.
“Drama” has pulling power even when based on half-baked truths.
Sadly, in this journey me and
Cecille are in, there are some we know who expect a “drama”
ending. And since no “drama” is apparent, they are quietly
disappointed about her progress and the total healing we already see
looming on the horizon. They see weeping and moaning and dwelling on
death far more interesting than joy as fruit of hope, optimism, and
basking in life.
Maybe living in this broken world has
made us want to search for disappointments more than hope. We remain
pessimists because we do not want to be disappointed with sad
endings. In essence, ironic it may be, there are those who prefer suiting themselves up for failure than success, suffering than healing. I find this sort of attitude very self-defeating.
A close relative living in the US,
whenever we talk would, without fail, air her worries about the
possibility of finding herself without work next year. I am not sure
if it is their way of telling me I should not expect from them any
biking related items from Jenson's or Performance Bikes even if they are on sale.
And yet, for as long as I remember,
through all the recession and the economic troubles that US had, she
remains connected with the same company that recruited her so many
years ago, facilitated her family's permanent residence in the US, received treatment at Stanford for her type of cancer, and was
able to send her children to private schools. With all the good things
going for her, I wonder where all the gloom is coming from. Drama
school? Perhaps.
I am beginning to think that all this
talk of failure and darkness stems from the belief that indulging
in it creates a sense of security, a buffer from eventual suffering. They
dwell on sad endings thinking they will shed fewer tears in the event
it really happens. As if talking incessantly about the bad will
prevent it from actually taking place. Really?
We have inundated ourselves with so
much of the bad that we have forgotten a simple fact: where we focus,
where we turn our gaze, there we will go. My good friend Alex says it
better: “What we are conscious of, manifests.” But since “drama”,
no matter how ill its effect, is interesting so we submit. And
then we complain.
Science talks of the existence of
totipotent cells in our bodies that manufacture cancer cells when a
person is in severe depression. With all this bad we insist dwelling
on, we are essentially telling our bodies to get sick.
Then again, there is “drama” in being depressed, in being seen as suffering, in being hopeless, in being sick. In fact, I know of folks who insist they are better than the rest because they have illness more than anyone else. Please, take this cancer with you!!!!
Then again, there is “drama” in being depressed, in being seen as suffering, in being hopeless, in being sick. In fact, I know of folks who insist they are better than the rest because they have illness more than anyone else. Please, take this cancer with you!!!!
But Cecille and I want nothing of that.
We are keenly focused on hope, on ending this journey on a high note,
on healing.
Without the drama.
Without the drama.