Note: This article was originally published for the Faces of Blue series by the Colon Cancer Coalition. What is survivorship? What does it mean? Survivorship has different meanings for different people who are survivors of cancer.
For me, survivorship means much more than surviving surgeries and chemotherapy. Those are the physical aspects of being a survivor. Being a survivor is about attaining a quality of life, one that replaces the quality of life before they contracted cancer. In 2013, I learned that I had colon cancer. My ascending colon was removed. Because my cancer was considered Stage I, I wasn’t required to have chemotherapy. I was assigned to yearly CT-scans for five years. The first two years were NED. Then in the third year, 2016, my CT-scan revealed colon cancer metastasis to the left lobe of my liver. Surgery was performed in November and the left lobe was removed. Currently I’m on adjuvant chemotherapy until late June. It was frustrating to go through a recurrence of cancer. I went from Stage I to Stage IV because of the liver tumor. Because the tumor was removed and my surgeon declared me as clean of cancer, my current status is High Risk and, hence, the necessity of adjuvant chemo. Despite my setbacks, I maintain a positive outlook on life and that’s an attitude that goes back to when I first contracted cancer in 2013. What were once priorities changed as more immediate and meaningful priorities came to the forefront. And the most important priority was to cherish life and my life as a cancer survivor. Developing a positive attitude hinged on Ojibwe cultural teachings and experiences related to cancer. One experience that deeply affected me was a young woman who had cancer. She saw her cancer as a spirit within her and she would offer asemaa (tobacco) to appease the spirit. It was a part of her daily praying. Then there is a teaching by Ojibwe healer Herb Sam. Herb teaches that cancer should be approached with respect and not hatred if it is to be healed. To me, cancer is not simply something within me. It is part of me. It is not some foreign, invasive disease from an unknowable source. My cancer is me. It’s like Augustus Waters says in The Fault in Our Stars: “The tumors are made of me. They're made of me as surely as my brain and my heart is made of me.” My cancer is me. At first, there was grief in when I was first told “you have cancer.” But then came an understanding that cancer was/is a spirit within me. And like that young woman, I too offer asemaa to appease that spirit within me. In doing so, I am not honoring death, but rather life and death. I honor both because life and death are the two predominant aspects of the human experience. This then is the meaning of my cancer survivorship.
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Robert Desjarlait
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