TheBanyanTree: Update on My Adventure
Anita Coia
anita at redpepper.net.au
Fri Mar 19 03:33:49 PDT 2010
Hi Chris,
Thank you for the update...it's fantastic to hear you're on the way up,
especially after that amazing description of what the surgeons did! I look
forward to your thoughts and discoveries about balance...I don't love my job
enough to ever become a workaholic, but I know some people who do, and
that's when I wonder which is passion and which is lack of balance. Because
indeed, the passion of some people, probably including yourself, can change
other people's lives for the better, and is not something that could be done
in a 9-5 situation.
It's a tricky one. But certainly everyone should be stopping to take care of
themselves and enjoy time with their loved ones. :)
Anita
-----Original Message-----
Message: 1
Date: Wed, 17 Mar 2010 15:54:40 -0400
From: "A. Christopher Hammon" <chris at oates.org>
To: The Banyan Tree <thebanyantree at remsset.com>
Subject: TheBanyanTree: Update on My Adventure
Message-ID: <4BA13380.6010601 at oates.org>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed
It occurs to me that while I shared the initial news of my unanticipated
adventure following the diagnosis of a rare condition requiring surgical
intervention and chemotherapy, I don't think that I have reported on my
progress with that journey. Today marks nine weeks post-surgery, so let
me share part of a column that I have just written for the Oates Journal
to bring you up to date (although I am aware that there are a number of
you that are following the Facebook updates).
.. A life-threatening illness, major surgery, chemotherapy, and a
prolonged period of recovery that included sixteen days in hospital was
not how I planned to start 2010; but it was my good fortune to do so
since it has given me the opportunity to hopefully add at least another
twenty years to my life and to view each of those years as gift. Cancer
is very rare in my family medical history; we have a lot of heart
disease that has ended a number of lives before sixty -- including my
mother and my youngest brother. And for those who avoid the early end of
life from heart disease we have a significant history of later life
Alzheimer's.
The surgery was more extensive than anyone anticipated; there was a lot
more of the mucinous material than expected and it involved more organs.
They removed the appendix, gall bladder, the right half of the colon, a
significant portion of the omentum, and a golf ball size tumor in my
diaphragm. They scraped the mucinous material off all of the other
surfaces within the peritoneum from the liver down. All of this
suggested a high potential for malignancy and a very bad outcome to this
story. Not being very alert during the first part of my hospitalization
I missed out on the experience that my family and friends had with the
fear that I did not have much longer to live.
It took ten days, but the good news is that all of the pathology reports
came back non-malignant and after another week in hospital I was sent
home to continue recovering. I am recovering well. The surgeon has me
back on my recumbent bicycle as part of my rehabilitation, although
still inside on the training stand. Life is good and I am grateful for
the opportunity to continue enjoying it. But this experience has been
and continues to be an adventure that is challenging me to learn and to
adapt to an emerging future.
Even as an involuntary adventure, and perhaps even more so as an
adventure that I did not chose, this experience has pushed me in several
directions of new learning; all of which beg for assimilation and
integration. And that means that in addition to engaging in
conversations with colleagues I need to be writing my way through this
exploration to help me develop a deeper awareness and understanding and
then sharing the insights that I encounter.
In the midst of this adventure I found myself discovering a new
perspective on integrative, holistic care; I am seeing more of a digital
era style collaboration that includes key roles for the patient. Since
this is a key part of our mission at the Oates Institute, I look forward
to sharing more on this.
While the work that I have been doing with narrative research in
ministry over the last half dozen years has focused my attention on the
significance and frequent absence of pastoral listening, the hospital
context provided a diverse and significant clinical lab for observing
listening practices. Again, this is taking me deeper into an area of the
Oates Institute's mission and ministry leadership that I have been
exploring.
My workaholism and my tendency to overlook physical symptoms that I
should pay attention to played a significant role in the surgery being
more extensive than anticipated. By writing off symptoms I was
experiencing as the effects of too much stress, I came close to crossing
the line of being able to recover. Friends and family have been calling
my attention to this for some time, but now they have my attention. One
of the books that Annie gave me as "recovery reading" was Stuart Brown's
Play: How It Shapes the Brain, Opens the Imagination, and Invigorates
the Soul (2009). It was just what the doctor ordered and I look forward
to sharing more about that with you.
Coming out of the initial phases of this experience-- we are looking at
2010 as a recovery year--I am aware that I need to make some lifestyle
changes in how I integrate work and play, passion and innovation, and
calling and ministry as I seek to learn from and adapt to the emerging
future. This takes me back to Scharmer's Theory U and the close circle
of friends that includes the clergy peer group exploring how we apply
Theory U in practical application. The question that we are asking
ourselves is how do we implement real, sustained, and meaningful change?
This is the journey I am on and I look forward to reporting on what I find.
Cheers,
Chris
/_________________________________________
A. Christopher Hammon, D.Min.
Director of Online Learning and Publication//
Wayne E. Oates Institute
Integrating Spirituality, Ethics, and Health
http://www.oates.org/
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