The trip to Loyola House in Guelph is a
much-anticipated annual getaway for my retreat – some 23 years now, and counting.
Pretty much always in the fall, and for many years my week has been embedded in
the larger 40 day retreat that is already on. The retreat atmosphere of silence
is already in place, and my immersion in it is seamless and easy.
Every year I spend some time thinking about the grace
I will be asking for on the retreat. Every year, God takes me on a turn in the
road, a change in direction. I smile when this happens, and I take it as a
clear sign that God is watching over me from the very beginning.
This year, I was still reflecting on a gospel I had
preached on recently, the one of the young man asking Jesus what he must do to
gain eternal life. The message from Jesus was that he should basically empty
out and come follow him. For me, this led to a reflection on emptying myself
out to totally trust God for upcoming surgery I was to undergo for a basal cell
skin cancer. That in turn very quickly led me to reflect on the suffering of
St. Therese of Lisieux in the last year and a half of her life when she was essentially
suffocating with tuberculosis. I talked to my director about this and came back
to it a couple of times. He gave me a book to read by Clarence Enzler, “Let Us
Be What We Are.” Enzler had a devotion to St. Therese, and also faced cancer
surgery. Following the spirit of abandonment that St. Therese wrote about so
eloquently, Enzler decided to approach the surgery by uniting himself to the
Passion of Jesus. Like St. Therese he let himself experience his “smallness” so
as to be completely filled by God’s will for him .
This is where my turn in the road really began. I was
just getting into this and resonating with it not only for my upcoming minor
surgery, but for my life in general. And then, I started experiencing the pain
in my lower right abdomen . It became sharp, and I began to be worried about an
appendix attack.. I left the retreat three days early and drove home, straight
to the Emergency department . After several hours of investigation, a CT scan
was done, and they found the mass in an abdominal lymph node. There followed a
referral to hematology oncology and a whole new diagnostic process. Long story
short, a diagnosis of lymphoma was confirmed a couple of weeks later. It was
decided that chemotherapy would begin right away, on an inpatient basis. I
would have six rounds of this, a week at a time, every three weeks.
At time of writing this, I have completed three rounds
and have tolerated the chemotherapy very well. The Kingston Regional Cancer
Center has just adopted the Princess Margaret portable pump protocol for my
particular brew, and I have been able to have this last round at home!
Back to the retreat. It clearly has not ended, and it
clearly has continued to deepen the themes that were opening up in the few days
that I was in Guelph. I have smiled many times at St. Therese and asked her if
this is what she had been up to all along, preparing me for this over the past
three or four years of my devotion to her. The first fruit of that devotion and
of my being totally taken with her Little Way was that I have not had a moment
of anger or sadness or despair or indignation or “why me?”. Very shortly after absorbing
the significance of the news, my response was, okay Lord, what are you asking
of me here?
The answer to that also unfolded over the weeks. I
developed a very sharp perspective on what was important and not important in
life. I suddenly could not believe the things that have upset me in the past,
including how righteously indignant I could be at the behavior of other people!
I recalled in a whole new way the story St. Therese tells of how she decided to
love the nun who drove her crazy by criticizing her every little move. Therese
eloquently framed the discussion within her own reflection of the love Jesus has
for all of us with our foibles, sinfulness, and brokenness.
This is all stuff that I had previously read and
reflected on. I was amazed at how much deeper it was all going. And then I
recalled a reflection exercise we had done at a workshop on Discipleship here
in Kingston on November 28 last year. The reflection was on the story of St.
Paul being knocked off his horse by a blinding light and being led blind to Ananias. Ananias laid
hands on him and said “Saul, my brother, the Lord has sent me, Jesus who
appeared to you on the way by which you came, that you may regain your sight
and be filled with the holy Spirit.” Immediately things like scales fell from
his eyes and he regained his sight.
I have tried to be a prayerful person. I have lived
long enough to become aware of my own brokenness and sinfulness. I am grateful
every day for the gift of being in ministry as a Deacon. I therefore had no
idea that I had scales on my eyes. But I did. The cancer is the blinding light
that knocked me to the ground. Therese of Lisieux is Ananias. And Jesus has
blessed me, dramatically getting my attention! I have never seen or appreciated
or experienced my relationship with Jesus as clearly or as personally as I am
now. And I know that this is not done! For that reason, there is no other way
to characterize this journey than as one of great giftedness. Can you believe
that in the middle of the chemotherapy and everything that goes with it, I am
overwhelmingly grateful for what is happening in my relationship with God.
For that reason, the retreat continues. More later.
3 comments:
Thank you Phil for sharing this wonderful, personal and insightful reflection of you journey. We wrap you in the mantle of our prayer. God is good. All our love. Joe and Debbie.
Thank you Phil. An inspiration to all of us who suffer on the journey.
So happy to have stumbled upon this tonight. I hope God gives you the strength and willingness to continue to blog through your cancer ordeal. There is much for all to gain by your insight. Wonderful to see you at mass last Sunday. I'll pray for you, in God's hands, Maria.
Post a Comment