“People never change,” or so the saying goes. But that’s not true. People can change, and they do, and it’s happening all the time. Usually, change is for the better, as we learn and grow. Most people need some instigator to bring in the change. It may be something that inspires them, someone who challenges them or an unexpected event that comes from nowhere. It needn’t be something big or scary.
For me, it was cancer. And it changed my life for the better.
I thought I’d been doing pretty well in my life. Running a small web design business. Living with my partner, whom I love very much. A large circle of friends. A beautiful apartment in London. In many ways I was quite content. Better than content, even. It seemed that most things were going my way. But as I look back on those times now, I realise that one important thing was missing. I wasn’t entirely happy.
Some unhappy people say that they worry themselves to sleep at night. I had no trouble sleeping. My problems were during the day. I would worry incessantly, relentlessly and pointlessly. I’d worry about things that had happened, things that might happen, and things that would probably never happen. Somehow I was incapable of keeping anything in perspective. I’d live my life in perpetual fear, trying to anticipate anything that might go wrong. I guess instinctively I was trying to make things better, but in fact I was only making things worse.
Much worse, as it turned out. The excessive levels of stress that I was subjecting my body to were taking their toll, weakening my immune system, and perhaps even giving the cancer cells in my body a chance to take hold. Ironically, all of my anxieties that something was going to go wrong may very well have been a contributing factor to what actually did go wrong. But even I hadn’t anticipated contracting cancer.
In the months that followed, I underwent scans, surgery, chemotherapy, severe allergic relations to my antisickness meds and several very serious skin infections. The team at The Royal Marsden Hospital in London did a fantastic job in taking care of me, and they probably saved my life.
This was the most challenging time of my life. Yet strangely the most challenging aspect was not the surgery, nor the chemotherapy. It was the challenge of changing the way in which I think. I realised when I first received the diagnosis that there was no way I could carry on as I was. Given the amount of stress that I was subjecting myself to when I had nothing to worry about, heaven knows how that would be magnified now that I had something real to worry about. I knew that there could be no chance of recovery for me, unless I learned to stop worrying altogether.
I remember how I used to tell people that I got my best work done in the mornings, because first thing in the morning, my mind was like a tranquil pool, and it was easy for me to stay focussed. But by the end of the day, that tranquil pool had become a turbulent ocean of giant waves. As each event happened during my day, it was like a progressively large rock was thrown into the pool, stirring up the waters even further. What I find amazing now is that I used to tell this story about my pool to friends all the time, and yet I never considered what I should do to remedy the situation.
The cancer diagnosis finally gave me the unavoidable impetus that I needed to start getting my head straight. And in doing so, it put me on a path to a much happier life.
In this blog, I want to share my experiences as I was cured of cancer. I’d like to share some really great thinking that I picked up along the way from some very wise friends, and some remarkable books that have helped me a lot. I’m not a religious person, so my journey was not about scripture or faith. Instead, I discovered a kind of spirituality. To me, spirituality is about finding peace with yourself and the world around you – learning to be happy, and discovering how to share this happiness with others. It needn’t be about anything mystical or unscientific. Looking back, I can see that everything I’ve learned was pretty obvious to begin with – it just makes me realise how often I miss the things that are staring me in the face.
My chemotherapy was successful – and although the doctors still want to monitor me closely, the latest scans show no active cancer in my body. It’s a second chance for me, and I want to make the most of it. The feeling of surviving cancer is both liberating and humbling – and it is amazing how edifying this combination of feelings can be.
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