darwin999
Well-known member
As a cancer survivor, what I can say is that *if* you have the blessing to survive it, it becomes a huge gift.
For me, survival totally clarified and reset (in multiple positive ways) my definitions of what's important in life, and what constitutes a crisis.
And it also rounded off some remaining sharp corners on my persona.
And, of course, you then get to live longer as well.
So best wishes to @Stickman393's sister for a successful outcome.
And best wishes to continued recovery for @jcpst - who is 1000% right about the miracles of modern medicine.
Shocking to think that it was only in 1846 that the first painless surgery was administered thanks to anesthesia, and of course the advances continue from there at an exponential rate. My 2010 cancer wouldn't even have been detected in advance only ~20 years before, so I would have been 6 feet under quite a while ago.
For me, survival totally clarified and reset (in multiple positive ways) my definitions of what's important in life, and what constitutes a crisis.
And it also rounded off some remaining sharp corners on my persona.
And, of course, you then get to live longer as well.
So best wishes to @Stickman393's sister for a successful outcome.
And best wishes to continued recovery for @jcpst - who is 1000% right about the miracles of modern medicine.
Shocking to think that it was only in 1846 that the first painless surgery was administered thanks to anesthesia, and of course the advances continue from there at an exponential rate. My 2010 cancer wouldn't even have been detected in advance only ~20 years before, so I would have been 6 feet under quite a while ago.