24 October 2007
Minor Good News and Major Bad News
I just got back from the oncologist's office. He said my bloated belly is fluid buildup rather than fat. The good news is that they can readily fix that, at least temporarily, by draining it, which they'll do on Friday, 26-10-2007. After the draining I should feel a lot more comfortable, and probably look better, too. (Today is Wednesday, 24-10-2007.) And I can help reduce fluid buildup by eating more protein, which just means quitting two days early the "cancer cure" diet I've been on for the last two months, which required that I consume no animal products at all, which obviously cuts out a lot of protein, no matter how many beans I eat.
The bad news is that the fluid buildup probably means that the cancer in my liver is growing agressively again. They'll know more about that on Friday after the ultrasound, which comes before the draining.
So, whether God heals me or not, I'm in his hands and I trust him. But if I had my druthers I'd rather have the miracle. He still can and he still may, so please continue to pray for a miraculous, complete healing of the cancer.
In the meantime, I'll try to continue to do this day what he gives me to do, to reflect to the people around me his love and their worth to him.
God is still God and love is still enough.
02 October 2007
Koalas and Electric Shock Therapy
Okay, first the koalas. They are nocturnal animals and most of the time that they are awake there in the tops of trees. Your only chance of seeing one is during one of those brief times when they climb down from one tree to find a better one. Living in the city, of course, you don't see a lot of wild animals under the best of circumstances. So Kaylah Hearn, age 18, who has lived in Australia for 13 or 14 of those years, has never seen a koala in the wild. Warning signs along the road warn you to be watchful for native animals to avoid making them roadkill, but the fact is, you're very unlikely to ever see a koala in the wild, as far as I can tell.
Kev Crowther, my friend, employer, and brother-in-law of Roland Hearn, who I moved her to plant a church with, has a small acreage on the edge of the developed area of Brisbane, in what has been kind of a semi-rural area that is now being developed. He has a small office building on the acreage as well as his home, and I work in that office. Kangaroos aren't too tough to spot in the area in the right time of day, but in the 18 years he and his family have lived there, they've never seen a koala -- until last week. He, one or two of his kids, and his mother-in-law all saw a koala waddling along from tree to tree, looking for a good one, right there on their property the other day. It was a big event. We were all very excited. And now we know koalas do live in the area, and they saw it at a time of morning that I'm normally at work, so I do have a realistic chance of seeing a live koala in the wild at some point.
Now to the electric shock therapy. One of the weird side effects of chemo is numbness and tingling in one's fingers and toes. Mine started doing that some time before chemo ended, and the doctor said it can take as long as six months for that to go away. For some people it doesn't even start until shortly after chemo ends. Mine seemed to get a little worse after chemo ended. Most of the time it's just mild numbness, but every once in a while you get a brief moment of actual tinglinng that takes you by surprise and even feels briefly like a very mild electric shock.
This past Sunday, Karen and I visited a nearby church. After the service she was visiting with someone she knew from work and I walked over to her. As soon as I reached her and stood still, my feet started tingling so much that I actually asked her if the floor was vibrating in that spot. The sensation went away shortly, but it's just very, very weird.
Life these days is just one novel experience after another.
For my one actual bit of news, I'll be home for Christmas, although Karen and Jake won't be able to come. I'll be there for about a month, so I should have time to enjoy all the relatives and friends. It'll be good.
20 September 2007
Just Checking In
My real problem is that even with a death sentence hanging over me, the day-in, day-out routine gets pretty, well, routine. I'm still too busy and/or tired and/or poor to go on a lot of exciting adventures to report, but not much new is happening on the cancer front (as far as I can tell), either. In addition to that, I'm trying to maintain 4 pages on www.choosing2live.com, as well as writing on www.naznet.com, so my writing energies and inspiration are pretty diluted.
On a wildly different subject:
Pinto Beans
Brisbane
Australia
Those are just listed to make it easier for search engines to find this blog entry. I had another poor stranded American e-mail me this week wanting to know where to find pinto beans in Brisbane because I mentioned in a blog entry many months ago that we'd found them but didn't say where. So, for future searchers, I get pinto beans from Mrs. Flannery's Natural Grocers in Chermside. They have several other locations listed on their website: http://www.mrsflannerys.com.au/. They also have several other kinds of beans AND Karo syrup. I have no idea how THAT qualifies for shelf space in an organic natural food store!
On still another front, Roland preached at one of the Brisbane Nazarene churches last Sunday. It was a good message, of course. At the end of the service, the pastor gave me a check from an offering they'd taken for me earlier. They have some incredibly sweet, caring people there.
We also this week got a refund check from the hospital for charges we'd paid and then the insurance company wound up paying. We'll be able to apply both checks to our remaining debt for chemo drugs.
So, all in all, not a bad week.
31 August 2007
A Year in Australia
On the other hand, tomorrow night we'll watch the fireworks at "Riverfire" in downtown Brisbane, or "the City", as they call it. It's by far the largest, most impressive fireworks display I've ever seen in my life anywhere. Almost as nice, a few members of our group have to get there early in the day to save a good spot for the evening fireworks display, because both sides of the river will be packed beyond capacity by the time the show starts. The nice part is that by being one of the volunteers to get there early I can spend the whole day lying around on a blanket on the grass, sleeping in the name of noble self-sacrifice. You gotta love that.
Then on Sunday morning Roland and Emmy and Karen and I will attend part of a district pastor's retreat. That'll be a good time.
The best thing I have to show for my year, as far as advancing the purpose for which we came though is that people's hearts are growing softer. People who were suspicious and guarded toward each other are getting sweeter and tenderer and experiencing new joy in rediscovering God's love. And, of course, although it's not nearly as much as I want to accomplish, there's some small value in my mere being here, as it reconfirms in the hearts of others the value and power of the dream we share. It helps keep hope alive, and hope is one of those three powerful things the Bible mentions in the same ranks as faith and love.
Anyway, I've had this day and I have a reasonable expectation of an enjoyable, fruitful weekend. An old hymn from my childhood asserts that Jesus "never has failed me yet." In that same vein I can say that, so far at least, God is still God and love is still enough, and that gives me confidence that, no matter the circumstances, the same will be true tomorrow.
13 August 2007
We're Staying
I sent the following e-mail to my parents and siblings on the 10th of August, 2007 in response to a plea from my brother to come back to Texas for medical treatment. It seems appropriate to post it here for the rest of you who care about me, as well:
We've decided to stay here in Australia. Karen talked to Charlotte by phone and we had a "family meeting" with Wesley and Jake. We are all agreed.
The doctors here know about M..D. Anderson, what they're doing and what they can do. They've been quite clear that I have a better chance of a literal, supernatural miracle than of a cure, even from some medical breakthrough. I'm either going to get a miracle or I'm going to die. The only difference between treatment and none is a few months. The main advantage to dying there a few months later is that I get to die with you. The main advantage of dying here is that I get to spend the time I have left, doing what God has called me to do, helping as much as I can to get a church established that will make a bigger difference in a couple of years than everything I did with my life previously to planting the church in Frisco.
And if God chooses, as we're praying, to heal me, his miracles are not geographically dependent and it will be easier to stay here than to get back here, because of the financial situation we'd leave behind if we left now, including breaking our lease and phone contracts.
I'm sorry. I love you with my whole heart, but we're staying. We're still working on getting tickets for a 3-week visit during Jake's Christmas break from school. It's not certain we can achieve even that, but I think we can pull it off. Someone has offered enough frequent flyer miles to buy the tickets. We just have to figure out the details of how that's done and when.
In the meantime, I will try a new "alternative" therapy of diet and supplements that claims to cure cancer or dramatically reduce it after two months on the regimen. And Kenneth's magic cancer-curing water should be here sometime during that period, as well.
Love,
Brad
03 August 2007
I've been rich and I've been poor.
The miracles we need seem to keep piling up. Karen just got a call from the hospital pharmacy saying I can't continue with chemo unless we pay the full $7,000 for chemo drugs we've already been provided and for which we've been billed. We have $3,000 in our medical donations account, but they told Karen they won't take a partial payment. We did just have $2,000 until today, when we received another significant donation, but those are few and far between. We were holding that $2,000 in reserve to pay for things like the upcoming cat scans that should be scheduled for sometime in the next week or two, that require up front payments rather than being billed. So we could only pay $2,000 now toward the drug bill, holding back the remainder for the cat scan. That means unless another $5,000 appears in the account between now and Tuesday, I'm done with chemo. Otherwise, I'd be receiving several more -- probably between 4 and 8 more weekly treatments. I have no idea how much difference that makes to life expectancy, but presumably some.
My oncologist may have some thoughts on how to get around the financial problem to continue treatments. I'll be able to talk to him about that on Tuesday when I go in to schedule the cat scans. We're also working on scheduling a trip home to Texas around Christmas. I'll work at that time on getting approved for medicaid there, for the possibility of treatment at home if I could benefit from further treatment and can't get it here in Australia.
Beyond that, in God we trust. We remain, as ever, in his hands and he is wise, powerful and loving and that's enough. And we have this day which he has given us, and it's good.
We've just moved into a townhouse of our own, out of the Hearns' house, and we don't have internet connected there yet, so my ability to post updates here and at www.choosing2live.com has been limited. I hope to update www.choosing2live.com after my oncologist's visit on Tuesday, the 7th of August.
Love,
Brad
22 July 2007
The Lighter Side of Life
This morning I preached at the Capalaba Church of the Nazarene here in Brisbane. It was my first time to preach to an Australian audience other than our little NewStart-RiverCity group which is largely Roland's extended family at this point. I was a little more nervous than normal, worrying I'd say something offensive to anyone who may ever have misunderstood Roland's methods or goals, worrying that I'd use some Americanism that miscommunicates ( a hoagie in the states is a sandwich, for instance, while in Australia it's a dirty diaper. Bubba means brother in the states and baby in Australia.). And the message just never felt like it was coming together adequately in my head as I prepared it during the week. I wanted it to be a message of hope and encouragement and affirmation to a good group of folks who have reason to feel beaten down and discouraged, and I wasn't sure I was up to the task.
When I actually preached it, however, the people understood and seemed to enthusiastically embrace what I was saying. Roland, his mother and Karen all said it was perfect, and Emmy said it was the best message I'd ever preached. So that was a relief. And of course, it's always a joy to recognize that God has answered my prayers to use a sermon to deliver his message rather than my own, to open my spirit to communicate his heart clearly, and to open the group's spirit to see his heart clearly.
And to dispel any doubt that we were really in Australia, on the way from the church to the pastor's house for lunch after the service, we saw two dead kangaroos on the roadside and four live ones in a vineyard.
An otherwise good, interesting weekend was only dimmed slightly by our weekly family movie night. We watched a DVD together tonight called “The Good Shepherd”. It had a whole raft of big names and was about the CIA. It sounded like a thriller. It wound up being long, slow and virtually incomprehensible. I do not recommend it. But when that's the low point of your weekend, it's been a great weekend.
17 July 2007
A Message About Suffering and God
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I want to talk to you this morning about abandonment; about pain and suffering, about praying desperately for deliverance and not being delivered, praying for rescue and not being rescued; about fearing the very worst and then having your worst fears realized and finding it even more terrible than you had feared.
Some of you have experienced disease and great physical pain. Many have grown up in broken homes or with alcoholic parents. Others have experienced horrific sexual abuse. We all have some basis for feeling abandoned and unprotected and insecure. I grew up moving every year or two. Maybe that wouldn’t have been too bad, but it fed into other things that also helped shape my experience of life at an early age. By the time I was 11 years old, 5 members of my family that I lived with had died, including my sister who was 18 months younger than me. My best friend at school died in second grade. My mother’s family has a hereditary disease that is slow, wasting, debilitating, incurable and ultimately fatal. If a parent has it, the kids have a 50/50 chance of getting it, too. My grandmother, a great-aunt, a great-uncle, an aunt and two uncles have all died of it so far in my lifetime, and two of my first cousins are dying of it now. Those things shape my experience of the idea of abandonment.
I remember the moment Daddy told me that my sister Paula had died. I ran back to my cousin Doug’s bedroom and threw myself across his bed and sobbed “No, no, no, no, no, no, why, why, why, why? Why!?!” And God didn’t answer. I asked Daddy what time she had died and then I thought back to remember what I had been doing at the moment of her death. I had been watching a cartoon about a big, goofy, bumbling one-eyed giant. At the moment of her death I had been laughing, and I felt somehow that I had been tricked into committing some sort of terrible sin. It seemed like God should have let me know what was happening at that moment so I could have prayed against it, or at least been appropriately grieving or reverent or somber to show my love for my sister and express the significance of my loss. Daddy felt obligated to have an answer for every question, and he eventually tried to answer the why. He said that three families had become Christians through the impact of Paula’s death and the way her spirit had reflected God in the hospital. Bless Daddy’s poor, grieving, Daddy heart, trying to answer unanswerable questions that deserve answers. It’s terrible sometimes being a parent, isn’t it? I didn’t find that answer even remotely adequate. I would very much have preferred that all those three families burn in hell if I could have kept Paula. I couldn’t imagine that God couldn’t have found a less destructive way to reach those people.
Christians aren’t supposed to feel that way, are we? We aren’t supposed to question God or doubt his power or his goodness. We’re not supposed to feel devastated. We’re supposed to always be happy and confident, aren’t we? If we aren’t, if we feel all those bad things and have all these bad thoughts, we’re supposed to stuff it, hide it, deny it. If you fall apart when your world collapses in on you, it scares me, because I’m afraid I might react the same way. I’m afraid that what I believe about God always protecting me from my circumstances, might not be true, so I tell you to stuff it, to get over it. We think we have to make God look good by acting like nothing ever really gets to us. If we were writing the Bible, none of the heroes would ever look bad or weak.
But that’s not how the Bible was written. The Bible is sometimes just shockingly honest. As Jesus hung dying on the cross, he cried out: “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?” I think that must be the most puzzling, terrifying, bone-chilling sentence ever spoken or written. Think of it! Jesus is God so God cries out to God: “Why have you forsaken me?” Why would they tell us he said that? Why wouldn’t they hide that or censor it? I mean, it makes me think, what if I journeyed to the center of the universe and found this forbidden city and found gates of pearl and on a great white throne, this ultimate being of absolute power just like the world religions led me to expect, but it turned out that this ultimate being at the heart of the cosmos was utterly, certifiably – mad. Insane. But Jesus wasn’t just fully God, he was also somehow fully human. Still, why is the Bible so honest about human fear and pain and loss and alienation?
King David in the Bible is called a man after God’s own heart, and this is what he wrote in the 22nd Psalm, that Jesus was remembering on the cross:
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My God, my God! Why have you forsaken me? Why do you remain so distant? Why do you ignore my cries for help? Every day I call to you, my God, but you do not answer. Every night you hear my voice, but I find no relief.... Our ancestors trusted in you, and you rescued them.... But I am a worm and not a man. I am scorned and despised by all! Everyone who sees me mocks me.... Yet you brought me safely from my mother’s womb and led me to trust you when I was a nursing infant.... You have been my God from the moment I was born. Do not stay so far from me, for trouble is near, and no one else can help me.... My life is poured out like water, and all my bones are out of joint. My heart is like wax, melting within me. My strength has dried up like sunbaked clay. My tongue sticks to the roof of my mouth.... My enemies surround me like a pack of dogs; an evil gang closes in on me.... My enemies stare at me and gloat. They divide my clothes among themselves and throw dice for my garments. O LORD, do not stay away! You are my strength; come quickly to my aid! Rescue me from a violent death; spare my precious life from these dogs.... Then I will declare the wonder of your name to my brothers and sisters. I will praise you among all your people.... Honor him, all you descendants of Jacob!... For he has not ignored the suffering of the needy. He has not turned and walked away. He has listened to their cries for help. I will praise you among all the people.... All who seek the LORD will praise him. Their hearts will rejoice with everlasting joy. The whole earth will acknowledge the LORD and return to him.... Our children will hear about the wonders of the Lord.... They will hear about everything he has done.
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That’s the 22nd Psalm. When David was a young man, his king kept trying to kill him. Later, his wife ran off with another man. Still later, one of his sons raped one of his daughters and two years later another of his sons murdered the rapist. When David was an older man, one of his sons staged a coup and started a civil war, trying to kill David and take his throne. But David deeply loved that son and when the son Absalom was killed, David publicly wished that he himself had died instead. David had plenty of reasons in the course of his lifetime to feel forsaken by God. At the beginning of Psalm 22 he’s accusing God and at the end he’s praising God. David experienced miracles. He’s the one that killed the giant, Goliath. But it’s not apparent that David’s circumstances have changed at all between the beginning and the end of Psalm 22. But his experience of God has changed. He has changed. What matters most to him has changed. The thing that is really most important to him has changed.
Sometimes life hurts. Sometimes it hurts bad. Sometimes it’s just not fair at all. I don’t know why sometimes God clearly miraculously spares me from pain and sometimes he doesn’t. I don’t have all the answers, either about this life, or the life to come. But I know one thing for sure. Jesus loves me, this I know. I only have one answer that I know from personal experience to be true. Even when I am in despair and in agony, God is there with me. All the way with me. He hurts with me and cries with me and he restores my soul and heals my pain. And when I seek the Lord I wind up praising him. My heart does rejoice with everlasting joy. Let me tell you about one such experience.
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Let me tell you about my very favorite Christmas. We had some good ones and some bad ones. I remember a good one when the entire extended family was together, and our rich Aunt got me this really cool telescope and my cousin only got a stupid velour shirt. The prices were comparable, I'm sure, but he still brings it up. I remember one year when a big, full-sized van from a church in Little Rock pulled up in front of the house filled to the brim with toys and clothes and food for us. It was all the Christmas we got that year, but it was incredible. And then there was the year I got a "Thingmaker" by Mattel from the rich Aunt. It was so cool. You could make your own rubber insects with it. It was great. The first Christmas after my sister died when I was 11 and she was 9 was pretty rough. It was one of my chores to set the table before supper every night, and for months after she died in July, I'd forget and put down six place settings. Then I'd remember, and put the sixth setting back, and cry.
That Christmas, my parents went to a party and took my other younger sister Janet and my brother to a babysitter, but decided I was old enough to stay home alone. We had this really old, fragile, but authentic looking nativity scene with Mary and Joseph and baby Jesus in the stable, with angels and shepherds and all that. Daddy used to set it up every year. Each piece was separately wrapped in tissue paper for protection. They would be very carefully unwrapped and arranged around the manger. Daddy made it seem like an art, or surgery. That year, he decided I was old enough for that job. I was so excited and honored. So while they were at the party, I got to work on it. We had this fireplace that was supposed to have a gas heater in the fireplace part, but didn't. I arranged the manger scene there, with all the thought and care for realism that Daddy always put into it. Then I strung a string of Christmas lights around the mantle. And set out all the wrapped Christmas presents around the baby Jesus and the manger scene. Then, with Christmas carols playing, I turned out the overhead lights and turned on the Christmas lights and opened a Bible and read the Christmas story out loud to myself, with no one in the house but me. And God.
God was there. For the first time in my life, it hit me what God had done -- what a miracle it was that he could reduce himself to a human baby -- and what a sacrifice it was. What awesome, unearned, transforming, empowering love. We had very little money, no Christmas tree, few friends because we were new in town, my sister was dead, I was by myself. And my precious Jesus came down to me, and in to me, and wrapped me in his arms and loved me as warmly and as deeply as I have ever felt in my life. And I was transfigured. Maybe no one noticed but me. But that was my favorite Christmas.
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That seems to me to be pretty much the same thing David experienced in Psalm 22. I personally have seen miracles of physical healing, miracles of very specific comfort in times of trial, miracles of financial and material provision. But that Christmas, my circumstances didn’t change at all.
Ultimate reality, our ultimate joy and peace is not in our circumstances, it is in our relationship with God in the midst of our circumstances. Our pain here is absolutely not a part of his divine plan. He does not cause it or desire it. God does promise that ultimately, finally, everything will be redeemed and our circumstances will be perfect. But the truest thing we learn about God is learned not from our circumstances, but from what happens to us as we walk with him through the circumstances – from what is revealed about God and about me in the context of our relationship in the midst of the circumstances. My ultimate happiness depends on my relationship with God, and on my confidence in his character toward me, rather than on my immediate circumstances – no matter how terrible or wonderful my immediate circumstances may be. We all know what it’s like to be unhappy and dissatisfied at a very deep, fundamental level, in both good and bad circumstances. On the other hand, God invites us to experience, in both good and bad circumstances, real joy and real peace. I’m healthy right now. I may be the only person in the world over the age of 40 who doesn’t have back problems. I have a kind, beautiful, loving wife, and smart, sweet, good, beautiful kids and a bigger, fancier house than I ever imagined as a kid. But I am not promised any of that for tomorrow. I have known bad times, and almost certainly will again. I cannot base my happiness or value my life on the basis of my circumstances. I expect to experience heaven – eternal paradise with God and with you, but Jesus warned us that in this world we would experience pain. At the same time, he promises joy. The joy is in our relationship with him and our confidence in his character, his intentions toward us, and his power to secure our glorious destiny.
I stand here today and testify to you with God as my witness that such joy is possible and real here and now. And that it is worth everything. We are offered joy unspeakable and peace that passes understanding in this life with Christ and each other. And it is worth more than anything else I could ever desire. It is worth everything! It is worth everything! Those of us who’ve experienced that to be true need to continually remind each other of that truth, and keep each other focused on that one great prize. Those of us who haven’t, deserve to be drawn into that relationship, by being surrounded by people who can testify that it’s true. And we are surrounded by such people, right here and right now. I promise I won’t name names, but I could, and I did think about it. I could point to someone in this room whose childhood was a nightmare and ask is it true that God heals the deepest emotional wounds of childhood? I could point to another who spent most of their life feeling lonely and unconnected and ask is it true that God gives more and deeper and happier relationships than you ever dreamed possible? I could point to another and say is it true that God forgives your past and takes away your shame? Is it true that God sets you free from the things that held you in bondage? I could point to an old Christian who’s walked with God for decades and ask is it true that God never has failed you, yet. And you would testify from your own experience here at NewStart, resoundingly, confidently, joyously that yes, those things are true. It’s true. It’s true. Precious hearts, let us resolve together to allow the Christ of the cross to walk with us through our pain, and to allow ourselves to experience his power and his healing, and his everlasting joy.
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14 July 2007
Bad News as Good News
I got some wierd good/bad news from the doctor Tuesday. He'd said originally that life expectancy with no treatment was 8-9 months and with treatment was on average 22-24 months, with 5 years as absolute maximum, short of a real miracle. He also said that each succeeding round of chemo would be less effective than the previous one.
So Tuesday I asked him how much the second and subsequent rounds of chemo would actually extend my life. He said none, really, it would just relieve symptoms, and the symptoms it would relieve are just the (bearable) ones I'm experiencing now from the chemo itself.
The bad news in that is of course that this round will do essentially all that medical science can do to significantly extend my life. The good news is that I can just forego future rounds of chemo, which the insurance is basically not paying, avoid all the debilitating symptoms of chemo, stay in Australia until the end, and rely on much cheaper alternative therapies and prayer/a miracle instead.
I actually feel wierdly good about those prospects. It feels somehow freeing.
Anyway, keep us all in your prayers, and expect a miracle, but count on the peace that passes understanding, and joy unspeakable, full of glory.
03 July 2007
Church Family Camp
This past weekend the 24 people in our little proto-church went to a rural retreat center. The kids played ping pong, tennis, minature golf, volleyball and soccer, and took long walks looking for Australian wildlife. Our kids have seen enough kangaroos now that they've lost a little of their novelty. The challenge now is to see a koala in the wild. They're small, nocturnal and mostly stay in the tops of certain types of gum/eucalyptus trees, so you don't often actually see one. No luck this weekend, but they saw lots of kangaroos. The picture below is just of the Brisbane river near it's source, running right past the camp, and nearly dried up from the drought that is severely effecting Queensland.
I did a lot of sleeping, reading, sitting around visiting with folks, and eating. I gained a pound or two over the weekend for the first time since my cancer diagnosis, so that was encouraging.
We had a couple in attendance who normally are active in a Wesleyan Methodist church. They're good folks who enjoyed the weekend. Saturday night we watched Bruce Almighty and afterward discussed how it portrays God.
On Sunday morning we had a wonderful church service with communion. At the end of the service Roland had the whole group, kids first, gather around me, put their hands on me and pray for my physical healing. It was very moving.
I'm not at all afraid or unwilling to die, as far as it just involves me. But I would dearly, desperately, fervently, intensely love to be the miraculous answer to the prayers of those kids that builds into the DNA of this new church we're planting that the God they love is not only a God of love but a God of power who can, indeed, miraculously, instantly, supernaturally and completely do things that are humanly, naturally, physically, utterly impossible. Even if they get a hundred no's for every yes, I want them to know that, no matter how big or impossible the request, sometimes the answer is yes. I want them to have the opportunity to remember last Sunday morning for the rest of their lives as proof of that to carry them faithfully through all the hard, dry, discouraging times that every life brings.
Love,
Brad
23 June 2007
More Medical Stuff
To determine whether he was right, he had x-ray's of my colon done on Friday and arranged to get the results immediately so he could make a decision right away. The x-rays convinced him that the colon cancer wasn't the problem, so they don't need to do a colon re-section and colostomy. Wierdly enough, he decided that I need to deal with the ongoing loose bowel movements by taking over the counter anti-constipation medication and stop taking all the anti-diarrheal medications. Apparently there's constipation back behind the diarrhea. Also, my belly and ankles are bloatetd and he decided that is from not getting enough protein, so I'll eat more protein-rich foods and see what that does.
One of the things I've discovered is that serious cancer provides a wealth of first-time-ever experiences. Swollen ankles is one of those. Also, perspectives change. When I told Karen about the possibility of a colostomy, she asked if it would be permanent. I replied: "well, the doctors think I'm dying, so as far as they're concerned, pretty much everything is permanent for me at this point." So we continue to not worry about tomorrow, but live this day for all it's worth.
17 June 2007
Home Again, Home Again, Jiggedy Jig
I'm writing this from the hospital, where I don't have internet access. (AAARRGGHH!!!!) I'll post it after I get out. After losing 13 pounds and being dehydrated and very low in potassium from a week of chemo-related diarrhea, the doctor skipped this past chemo session and had me come in for 3 consecutive days of just re-hydrating me intravenously with potassium and salt-laced water. He assured me that a week or two off chemo now wouldn't be a big deal, but 3-4 sessions off later would be, and that would be what will happen if we don't stop now and get the diarrhea under control. On the 3rd day of trying to rehydrate me on an outpatient basis, with the potassium levels still low, he convinced me to stay in the hospital as an inpatient so they could pump fluids into me 24 hours a day and get a handle on the diarrhea. I checked in on Thursday, 14 June 2007. The diarrhea has gotten better and the oncologist liked what he heard and felt when he poked around on my belly on Friday, and evidently what he's seeing from the daily tests they're doing daily. The diarrhea is apparently just an unusually severe response to the chemo. At any rate, it looks like, having checked in on Thursday afternoon, I'll be heading home with everything under control again Sunday afternoon or Monday morning, skipping chemo on Tuesday, 19 June 2007 and then coming back in for chemo as usual on Tuesday, 26 June 2007. I was 40 pounds lighter when I checked into the hospital than I was on 5 March, 2007 when the cancer was diagnosed, and I wasn't overweight then. Half the weight loss was from the initial naturapathic diet I went on after the original diagnosis. The naturapathic diet changed after 52 days, but while the new, permanent anti-cancer naturapathic diet didn't make me keep losing weight, it didn't help me gain back what I'd already lost, either. Then, the other half of my weight loss was from the various effects of the chemo. The good news is I've gained back a significant amount of weight while in the hospital, so I should be able to safely resume chemo and the naturapathic diet as soon as I get home, without fear of further weight loss and without fear of being at such a low weight as to rob me of normal strength, energy and immune system responses.
Meanwhile, I've actually had a surprisingly good time in the oncology ward. It's always nice being waited on hand and foot, of course. The food is good, and I've got hot sauce from the house for those meals when my taste buds just don't taste anything at all. Dulled taste buds is another of the unfortunate effects of chemo. And they've got a little kitchenette on the ward, just for patients, so I can stroll down there in the middle of the night, as I did once last night and help myself to a chunk of cheddar cheese, a dab of peanut butter and Vegemite and a cup of tea with milk in it. It was great.
And visiting with the nursing staff is fun. One was interested in my Churchill book on my nightstand. One uses terms of endearment like honey and sweetheart the way Texans do but that I was warned that Australians generally don't. And a couple of the nurses are from India. I got to chat with them about India, about our common experiences as immigrants, and about our shared taste for hot, spicy foods that Australians generally don't like.
Even without internet access here in the hospital, I've got my laptop, so I've got this blog update as well as updates for www.choosing2live.com ready to upload as soon as I get home tomorrow, and with the Bible program on the laptop, I've been catching up on “daily” devotions that I'd gotten behind on.. So whether I have 3 months to live or 30 years, I feel like I've spent this day doing the things that make this day matter.
And moving quickly from the sublime to the ridiculous, what kind of computer spell check function doesn't recognize the word “blog”!?! This goofy spell check doesn't know that word and thinks maybe I meant flog or biog instead. Good grief! It's a limited enough dictionary anyway, you'd think it would at least know basic computer and internet-related words! It does insist I show a little respect for the internet by advising me to always capitalize it, though. I guess it's heart is in the right place.
13 June 2007
Maybe near the end of a bad spell
This week the oncologist cancelled chemo for the week, assuring me that one week off wouldn't hurt, but letting it get worse til I need 3-4 weeks off would be a setback. In the meantime he's got me off the Imodium but has given me a pain patch that has a side effect of constipation and combined that with another specific prescription drug that directly and primarily fights diarreha, plus the codein. Last night I slept 6 straight glorious hours without having to run to the restroom, for the first time in over a week, so I think we're starting to get it under control. I still have diarrhea, but less frequently, and hope to be "solid" again by this time tomorrow or the day after.
In the meantime, they've had me in for the last two days, plus tomorrow just pumping potassium/salt water directly into my veins at 3 liters per day, just to rehydrate me. On the other hand the dryness in my mouth and throat, plus "thrush" on my tongue and throat, apparently dulling my tastebuds to an extreme degree, has limited my dietary intake to liquids (Ensure, Cup of Soup, etc.). Between the diet and the diarrhea, I've lost weight very seriously. We expect I'll be able to resume chemo next Tuesday and hopefully begin to be able to eat normally again to start gaining weight again. I hope in 3 or 4 weeks to be back up to a minimumly healthy weight again. By then we'll just be 2 months from the end of this 6-month round of chemo and I'll be off it until or unless it mutates and begins to grow again. As soon as the chemo ends I'll start on an alternative diet and supplements that make gigantic and implausible claims to cure cancer in 2 months. But it's cheap and harmless at worst and it's the only thing left to do but sit around waiting for death or a miracle, so I'll give it a shot and see what God will do.
Thanks for your continued concern and prayer. At this point, even the oncologist and the naturapath agree that it's my best hope of a cure so keep praying and believing for a literal miracle.
05 June 2007
Every Birthday is a Gift

It was a good one. My mother and brother just left today after a good two-week visit. I took them to Surfers Paradise on the Gold Coast just south of Brisbane yesterday, along with my oldest son Wesley who's here for his summer break, and his girlfriend Eva who's visiting for 3 weeks. Everybody played in the water at least a little, walked along the beach, and then had lunch in one of the beachfront restaurants and did a little people watching.
Then we spent four hours testing the limits of our love for each other while being lost on the ever-winding, unnamed streets of north Brisbane before finally finding our way home.
Today my chemo visit was made immensely quicker by my brother's gift of his own iPod to me. I've had to figure out by trial and error what dosages of meds adequately control nausea and diarrhea. I told the doctor what those doses are today and my prescription now reflects that, so I shouldn't run out again like I did yesterday. So hopefully today will be the last day for at least a while that I have to worry about diarrhea dehydrating me and keeping my weight dangerously low. My focus for the next couple of weeks is purely on gaining back to a minimum healthy weight.
A year ago I was firmly of the opinion that, there being no significant difference in anyone's mind between 48 and 49, or between 51 and 52, that birthdays were now meaningless unless they ended in zero. This year I've obviously had occasion to change my mind. Each birthday is a milestone of victory and a precious gift of God in which to further enjoy and love the amazing array of people who love me.
We are enjoying this day each day, praying thank you for healing me today; please heal me tommorrow. We're taking "no thought for tomorrow" and praying "not my will but your will be done" but meanwhile praying and trusting God for a genuine, literal miracle of complete physical healing for many more long years of just loving people more deeply into the kingdom of heaven.
God is good, all the time. All the time, God is good.
Thanks for your love, prayers and good wishes.
29 May 2007
A Small Miracle
Choosing to Live Physically
Choosing to Live Psychologically
Choosing to Live Spiritually
My Thoughts on Choosing to Live
However, since those entries will disappear as soon as I replace them with new entries, here's the short version of my week.
Mama and my brother Roy Lee arrived this past Tuesday for a 2-week visit. This week we visited rain forests, mountains, downtown Brisbane, the Gold Coast beach and enjoyed a proper "Devonshire Tea". We laughed together, cried together, prayed together and generally had a good time.
A potential major breakthrough or two at work give us optimism about the future of the company. Physically I had more trouble than usual with nausea this week than normal. The doctor has slightly adjusted my medications for that so we'll see if it gets back under control in the next few days. I've also had a problem this week with hiccups, which make me more likely to throw up if they coincide with nausea. That makes it harder to gain the weight the doctor wants me to gain, so it's a problem.
The coolest thing for me this week was the regular monthly district prayer time here on the Australia Northern Pacific District of the Church of the Nazarene. Mama requested prayer for my healing at the meeting, and prayed with her usual fervor and emotion, which kind of drew everyone else into her pain and desire and faith. The group that gathered around me ranged from strangers to new friends to deep old friends, but they all poured out their hearts and love on me a foreigner who had not yet given much to them. As they prayed for my hiccups, the hiccups vanished and haven't come back.
I felt their faith and their love and the healing presence of God for the hiccups and was encouraged to believe it might not be the only miracle he has in store for me.
Roy Lee's largest expression of love for me was the astonishing gift of his own very nice laptop computer. I'm amazed at the openness and generosity of his precious heart.
All in all, a lot of small things pointing to the possibility of big things ahead. It was a week of increased joy, hope and faith.
21 May 2007
It's Good but it Feels Bad
It's good, but somehow it feels kind of bad on a purely psychological level. Something permanent sticking out of your arm every minute reminds you every minute that you're not really as well as you feel; that you're a patient. I feel like it makes me look like a patient, too, to people like my mother and brother who'll be here in three days, and for whom I wanted to look as normal as I feel, to reassure them. It's an odd, silly little thing, and it'll pass, but for the moment, there the feeling is.
Another good thing that feels bad is the people who are being drawn into my consciousness. When you're fighting cancer as publicly as I've chosen to, you get to know a lot of other past and present cancer patients. The first round of stories that you hear are the great, encouraging victory stories of people who won their battles when the doctors said they couldn't. But part of the reason I've chosen to be so public in my struggle is that I want God to use even this as an avenue for ministering to other people. That means I'm getting to know other people who are still fighting cancer now, and some of their battles aren't going well at the moment. Because I'm in the same battle, I know how to pray and what to say that will be encouraging instead of merely trite. God gets to use this as a tool for more effectively loving other people who need to know that they're loved and lovable.
That's good. That gives my own struggle meaning and value even if I ultimately lose it, but even more so if I ultimately win it. But it feels kind of bad at the same time, because I care about those who seem to be losing their battles at the moment and I begin to carry their load with them. And it feels a little bad because I realize that what's going badly for them could be going badly for me tomorrow. It even feels a little bad that my latest news is encouraging while theirs is discouraging, because it raises the question of why God will heal some of us of cancer but not others. The trite, easy answer of the living that suggests it's because those who live always have more "faith" than those who die, doesn't fit my personal observation or experience or understanding of faith or scripture or God, or the view of most of the wisest and most holy of Christians through the centuries. So trust has to be enough when my understanding isn't. When I don't have all the answers like I did when I was younger, I have to choose to let God be God and love be enough.
So I do.
15 May 2007
My execution date has been postponed!
I'll take it. He also said I look better. I still have no symptoms except side effects from the chemo. The doctor isn't yet willing to say the cancer won't ultimately still be terminal, but my improvement was clearly on the high side, the "hoped for" side of what he would consider the normal, expected response to chemo. He agreed with me that we're just almost weekly seeing news reports of potentially major breakthroughs in cancer treatment that the researchers expect to have on the market within 1-3 years, so staying alive that long potentially dramatically increases my chances of a cure for what he initially declared flatly incurable.
In short, I am still having no trouble remembering to live each day as if it may be my last, but I am encouraged and thanking God for his healing at work in my life. And of course, I'm profoundly grateful for the love and concern of so many people for my well-being. Today's chemo has left me a little woozy and I really want to lay down for a little while, but I can't until I've written something here, on my blog and on the choosing2live website, because so many amazing, precious people are waiting anxiously for news, like Darius outside the lion's den.
Thank you for your love and prayers, and thank God for his love and power and grace.
Love,
Brad
08 May 2007
A Time for a Miracle
Miracles are by definition the exception rather than the rule, but if you're reading this, I'd sure appreciate it if you could over this next week pray for a miracle, no matter how small your faith.
In life or in death, God will be God and love will be enough, but I'd sure love to "be the miracle", as Bruce Almighty says. I'd sure love for this miracle to be a part of the story we tell when we tell the story of the great church God is planting in Brisbane. I'd love to be the first in a long list of stories of how God is transforming people's lives, healing them, liberating them from fear and from shame, "happifying" them in this place, in this generation.
And as my kids cling to me, hoping to see God intervene to avert tragedy in their young lives, I'd love to see the look of relief and triumph in their faces as their budding faith is confirmed and sealed by one enormous "YES" to a prayer that they've prayed, to carry them through all the dark moments that will come in their lives when God will seem silent. One memorable yes, can carry a person's faith through a lot of silence. I'm prepared to hear from God that his grace will be sufficient for me even on my death bed, but I'd love to be that yes in the early life of my children and my church.
29 April 2007
The Big Lie and the Big Truth
What you're really expressing is what everyone, believe it or not, feels to one degree or another, when they're forced to be honest with themselves. We can see that other people -- at least some other people -- are inherently valuable and worth loving, but not us. At least in our low moments, we can each do exactly what you have done here: go through the list of all the things that are valuable and admirable and lovable in us and say they don't really count, the good things aren't really me, the bad things are. Any evidence to the contrary notwithstanding, I remain unloved and unlovable.
When another dear friend was writing to me years ago about her inner struggles, there were times early in our friendship when I could say things to her and she could begin to accept them even though they were the same things she had discounted or denied when her husband said them because "He has to say that; he's my husband." Eventually, as our friendship matured, she began to say to me: "Of course you'd say that; you're my friend." There is something in us that says "my real worth is determined not by the best things I've ever done or that have ever been done to me, but by the worst things."
It's a lie, precious heart, a lie from Hell. You ARE fearfully and wonderfully made. You ARE worth more than many sparrows. YOU are adopted, chosen, made a royal heir. When the Bible says "while we were yet sinners Christ died for us" it means precisely that Christ knew that YOU were lovable and worth loving even when you were in the middle of those experiences that cause you the deepest shame, because those things aren't who you really are; they aren't what you're really about. There is a real you, not just a potential future different you, but a real you, right here, right now, that is good and noble and beautiful and worth dying for and being friends with, no matter what you've done and no matter what's been done to you.
The blood of Christ goes deeper than the stain of sin has gone, to that real, truest you, beneath all the layers of pain and self-protection from pain, beyond all the shame that has layered on top of the real you, and beyond all the facades that you've layered on top of that to hide the shame.
It comes most naturally to me to express to others in words the worth I see in them, like I'm doing now. It comes more naturally to you to express to others their worth -- to love them -- by doing things for them. But it is in both cases a sweet, beautiful, admirable heart that is, each in its own way, loving others. A loving heart is always a lovable heart and yours is as loving and as lovable as any I've ever known.
YOU ARE who God says you are, and not who the lie in your head says you are, no matter how persistent the liar is in repeating to you your alleged worthlessness and no matter how clever he is at compiling the purported evidence that you aren't lovable. His case is a deception, a clever, twisted house of cards that connects unrelated details, misrepresents them and deludes a redeemed man into submitting to the bondage of fear and pain and loneliness even in the middle of a loving crowd. Those good things you do for people can't simply be discounted; they are a reflection of who you are. With you, as with God, the quality of the gift is a reflection of the character of the giver. And the quality of your gifts is better than you think.
The truth will set you free, baby doll. Trust God's assessment of you. Accept God's assessment of your worth when he uses other people to reflect to you his positive view of you. You are more loved than you think, by more people than you think, and they would find it impossible not to love you. They reflect how God sees you, and how God sees you is who you really are.
Love,
Brad
25 April 2007
My Hair-brained Linux Infatuation
At any rate, I was going to post here Phillipians 1:20-22 from the New Living Translation. It perfectly expresses my thoughts right now on my present prospects of life and death. Then I'd have probably said something borderline profound about the passage.
Unfortunately those thoughts have all been driven completely out of my head by a self-induced technological crisis. I got this hair-brained idea to try to install Linux on our family desktop PC. Linux is an operating system like Windows or Mac, only it's free and is supposed to be fast, virus-free and never freezes up. I had hoped to have what's called a dual-boot system where I could start the PC in Linux while Karen and Jake would still be able to start it in Windows with everything just like it has been, until I got everything set up for them in Linux. Then I would try to lure them over so we could get rid of Microsoft altogether.
I discovered that all those reviews that told me how easy and consumer friendly Linux is were written by Linux geeks who wouldn't know easy if they tripped over it.
I got Linux installed, but wiped out Windows in the process, so no dual-booting. That wouldn't have been too terrible because I have all our data backed up. The problem is Linux doesn't recognize my wireless card so I can't get on the internet anymore, which is 90% of the value of a PC for us.
I hope to have some nice Linux geek rescue me within the next few days, but until then I'll be a little slower in answering e-mails and in updating www.choosing2live.com and this blog.
While you're praying big prayers for my healing, maybe you could pray a little one for my stupid computer's healing, and for Karen and Jake to forgive my poor ridiculous self who lives in that tragic netherworld of people who aren't competent enough to qualify as geeks but are too curious and proficient to just leave the PC alone and settle for word processing and e-mail.
In the meantime, let this be a lesson to the rest of you. We are Microsoft. You will be assimilated. Resistance is futile.