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Fighting
For Your Life |
by:
Royane
Real |
Recently
the well known American news anchor Peter
Jennings died of lung cancer just a few
months after he publicly announced that
he had the disease and that he was going
to fight it with everything he had.
After his death, I read some of the tributes
that poured in about the life of Peter Jennings.
One of the common themes that appeared in
the statements made by his friends and colleagues
was that they remembered what a determined,
competitive man he was.
They said that he took on his battle with
cancer head on, and that he fought his cancer
the same way he battled everything, with
steely will and determination. And unfortunately
he didn’t win.
Reading about Peter Jennings’ losing battle
with lung cancer reminded me of another
conversation I had had about cancer very
recently.
Last week I had a meeting with one of my
business associates, a man named Brian,
to discuss some business matters.
After our business meeting was finished,
Brian started telling me about his parent’s
experience of living with cancer. A lot
lof what Brian had to say was very thought
provoking to me.
Brian told me that his mother had been diagnosed
with a bad type of bone cancer and doctors
had told her that she had only a very short
time to live. Yet in spite of the fact that
her cancer kept spreading to other parts
of her body, she managed to live fourteen
years longer than what her doctors had originally
predicted.
Brian said that he often wondered why his
mother managed to live such a long time
with cancer when many of his younger friends
who got cancer died of it quite quickly.
Brian told me “I come from a sports and
and athletic background, and so a lot of
my friends are athletes. My athletic friends
tend to be very focussed and competitive
people, and they’re used to being very aggressive.
When they were diagnosed with cancer, I
watched them go into their competitive and
athletic mode, and they would say ‘I’m going
to fight this thing’.
They would fight their cancer the same way
they fought their athletic battles, with
gritted teeth and courage and determination.
Brian said, “What I noticed about these
guys who were so tough and fought cancer
so hard was that in a lot of cases they
burned out really soon.
When my mother got cancer, Brian continued,
“Her approach was kind of the opposite.
She wanted to live, but she never said she
was going to fight this cancer. One of the
things I watched her do is that she decided
to drop everything that was stressful from
her life.”
Shopping was stressful for her, so she dropped
it. Driving a car was stressful so she stopped
driving. In fact, she stopped doing everything
she didn’t want to do, and she only kept
the things she really enjoyed.
And she made a point of becoming very relaxed
and enjoying her life.
Then Brian told me, “This experience made
me think that maybe the idea of fighting
for your life when you have cancer is like
trying to fight off insomnia.”
“If you decide to fight insomnia by gritting
your teeth and saying ‘I’m tough, I’ve fought
lots of battles, I’m going to fight this
insomnia and I’ m going to beat this thing,
well, you’ll never fall asleep. It won’t
work.”
Now I can’t say that what seemed to work
for Brian’s mother in living with cancer
is the miracle key for anyone else who has
cancer. This wasn’t a scientific study,
and many other factors are involved.
But Brian’s comments about his mother’s
approach to living with cancer, and his
comments about trying to use will power
to fight insomnia are worth keeping in mind
when we are facing a problem. Not every
problem can be solved with will power and
determination.
In such fields as business and sports, an
attitude of determination and competitiveness
can be very useful, and can be highly rewarded.
If we have been very successful in these
fields by being high powered, determined
and aggressive, we may try to use the same
approach to tackle every problem. Aggressively
and head-on. With grit and determination.
However, being aggressive and determined
does not work on every kind of problem.
If your mate is unhappy in your marriage,
or your child has a serious illness, or
if you have too much stress in your life,
then using determination and aggression
will not solve these problems. In these
situations, aggressiveness does not work.
We need to recognize those situations where
another approach might work better.
Sometimes what we need to do is relax more,
let go of our illusion that we can control
everything, become more humble, and be open
to living in the moment even when we don’t
know all the answers.
About the author:
Royane Real is the author of several self
help books, including “Your Quick Guide
to Improving Your Learning Ability” Sign
up today for her free newsletter filled
with life improving tips at http://www.royanereal.com
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