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Me And My Cancer Adventure

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Angel KP.gif
I missed our coffee appointment

Hey found this image of an angel and I really thought she looks like you (((((KP)))))
 
Hey, Froggie. I actually thought about you a lot this weekend. Thought about what Freakofnurture said above about feeling so much loss, too.

My dad only loved material things. Food, vacations, books, furniture, television, money, comfort, health, pleasure... and his cancer stripped all those things away, one by one. His world shrank and shrank until he finally died, sort of miserably, destitute and alone even when surrounded by family.

On the other hand, my grandmother loved friends, grandchildren, neighbors, relatives, God, life, nature, laughter and giving to others. And in the weeks leading up her death, there at the end, it was like the whole universe turned out to lavish those things on her. She was surrounded with love and support. She enjoyed giving away her "possessions" so much- she was actually able to laugh while parceling out her clothes and jewelry. She enjoyed the bits of time when she felt good, and even her bad times were made blessed by her ability to give and receive love from those who were caring for her. She wasn't a perfect woman. She didn't have a perfect life- she had a lot of challenges (an early history of abuse, abandonment, an alcoholic spouse) but she was vouchsafed a beautiful end.

I guess it all depends on where your treasure is. If worldly possessions and pleasures are everything to you, yes, terminal illness is nothing but loss. But if your treasure is in the people who love you, the friends you've made, the experiences you've had, the gifts you've shared and given.... well, no illness can strip those things away.

Hope this didn't come out preachy when I wanted it to be encouraging.

A
 
If worldly possessions and pleasures are everything to you, yes, terminal illness is nothing but loss. But if your treasure is in the people who love you, the friends you've made, the experiences you've had, the gifts you've shared and given.... well, no illness can strip those things away.

truer words have never been spoken..

maybe we all need to keep our eyes on the bigger picture... and somehow try to keep the resposibilities of 'life' (for lack of a better word) from clouding that..
 
I guess it all depends on where your treasure is. If worldly possessions and pleasures are everything to you, yes, terminal illness is nothing but loss. But if your treasure is in the people who love you, the friends you've made, the experiences you've had, the gifts you've shared and given.... well, no illness can strip those things away.

No it's not preachy at all, it is all so true. As I have mentionned to some, I'm in abundance when it comes to love, support, family, friends, etc. Yes I do feel losses, my physical loss is hard as I can't do things like I used to especially with the grand-kids or giving a hand to my kids.

No, not preachy at all, just putting things into perspective, and why do we wait till we are confronted with a death issue to put things into the right priority ?
 
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