The Next Great Adventure: A True Story
Sowing & Reaping
Menu from Stampede 66 31st Anniversary Dinner |
We weren't just ready for a change. We needed one. Like many, maybe most, married couples at some point you get too comfortable, complacent even. You get to the point where you know each other so well there's no point in even arguing. Someone says something, an eyebrow gets raised, shoulders are shrugged, and you each go on doing whatever it was you were planning on doing anyway. Nobody gets mad, you already knew what was going to happen. We were well past that point and though life was easy, it was not especially fun, and we knew we needed an adventure, a new plan for the upcoming empty nest phase.
Our life was busy, often too busy for my preferences, and we rarely did things that were "just us" as a couple. Family, friends, work and church filled every hour. That was our normal mode of operation. Cindy never tired of planning, hosting, gathering, and caring, but it wore on me. One Sunday afternoon Cindy mentioned that she had been asked to serve another term as an elder on the Session of our church. I raised my eyebrow. She shrugged her shoulders. I thought it was too much, that she had served too long, and that there was a reason that terms were supposed to be limited. She wanted to do it, she wanted to be involved, and to help our struggling congregation however she could. I didn't argue and operations continued apace.
In February 2014 I found myself in Suriname, teaching a software training class. Cindy had recently
On the main road - Paramaribo, Suriname |
Back in Plano, I found myself at the office on a Sunday afternoon, clearing the decks for Monday, when it occurred to me that I didn't really have to be there. That I was working to avoid being at some church social function. For almost 30 years I arranged my life to be with Cindy, and now I was making excuses to not be there. Things needed to change.
In mid-October I changed jobs. It was difficult leaving. I liked the company, my co-workers, the product and much of the job itself, but small companies require individuals to have broad responsibilities, and I did not think I could continue putting in the effort that they needed from me. I moved to another company where I would be doing similar work, but could work from home and would have a few more resources to call upon. The pay was less, and there was no equity, but my plan had changed from hoping to cash in to slowing down and doing something manageable in the long term. Working from home would be a great relief for Cindy, too. I could "hold down the fort" for routine stuff - errands, meals, maintenance - that I hoped would eventually free up time for "just us."
Cindy & Griffin Plano West Senior High Wolfpack Band - Senior Night |
Suddenly there were no plans. There was no concern about the future, our relationship, or jobs. We were forced into a one-day-at-a-time perspective in every aspect of our lives. We had no guarantees, and we had no control, but we did have each other. We had always been a good team, leveraging each other's strengths, compensating for the other's weaknesses, and were able to work independently or together, but this was a new test. I knew Cindy had all she could handle, and that she didn't need to worry about me or abandoned plans, and that the partnership would change.
By December things had changed, drastically. We, like most people, assumed the medical community had a good handle on breast cancer. The diagnosis we received in November, however, was invasive ductal carcinoma and the biopsies showed that the cancer type was triple negative, a type that limits the treatment options and is quite aggressive. One night, mid-December, days before the scheduled bilateral mastectomy, we laid in bed, her head on my shoulder, and we talked, discussing a lot of difficult "what ifs." Cindy eventually slept. I'm not sure that I did, but the following day, for me, things had changed.
My role changed, overnight, from partner to caregiver. As I saw the dawn, I saw my new purpose.
Cindy, Griffin & Cooper pre-chemo haircut - Jan 2015 |
Griffin, leaving Mom behind on Lehigh campus stairs |
By early 2016 we knew things would be changing again. The next big adventure landed in our lap when it was announced that Cindy's offices were relocating to Houston. She would begin working from Greenway Plaza on July 1st. We spent the spring looking for a new house in Houston, and eventually decided to build one in a developing community in Sugar Land, on the southwest side of Houston. Cindy's commute would be easy, we liked the neighborhood, Cindy loved the house plan, and we thought there was potential for the value to increase. We wanted to downsize, and we did, slightly, but ultimately decided on a house sized for resale. We planned to live in the house until Cindy retired, then sell it and move back to family and Plano.
Cindy began spending some time in Houston and I worked on prepping the Celadine house for sale. We had minor repairs and landscaping to do, and we needed to get rid of a bunch of things to fit in the new house. The movers estimated that we had 27,000 pounds of stuff and it would take two days and one and one-half trailers to pack and load us, so we began 'Project Downsize.' We got rid of 1/3 of it before we listed the house for sale in August. I stayed in Plano to sell the house; Cindy lived at the Residence Inn across from Oxy offices. She came back to Plano periodically for check ups and to visit, and I would visit her sometimes, too, to check on the house and keep her company. We started having a few more "just us" opportunities, but she was a long way from recovered and most of her energy was spent on work. I was happy just to sit with her and read while she watched TV and dozed.
The Sugar Land house was scheduled to be completed in mid-December. Cindy had some further
Cooper waiting to leave Plano |
Frances' reward for helping to unpack |
At the end of her initial treatments the oncologist told us the goal was to make it five years post treatment. Statistically, if you made it to 5 years, there was an 80% chance it would never come back. I knew from all of my initial frantic research that if it did come back, the prognosis would be 18 to 24 months. In late January, 2017, about a week after our 34th anniversary, I knew that our time together would be limited, and that it would mostly be consumed by treatment and medication and misery. I knew this would be the final adventure.
Arthur C. Clarke once wrote that all human plans are subject to ruthless revision by nature or fate. I can confirm the accuracy of that statement. We planned to retire. We planned to return to Plano. We planned to spend time together, just us, reconnecting and enjoying the results of our work. None of those plans worked out. It would be easy, and maybe even understandable, to be bitter about it all, to be Job's wife, to say "Do you still persist in your integrity? Curse God and die!", but that's not who we were, that's not who we intended to be. It's trite, but we knew we could only control our response, not what had happened.
In the few years leading up to Cindy's diagnosis, we struggled, not that anyone would notice, and not that we were any different from any other random couple that had been together for 30+ years. We were too comfortable, too complacent. We took each other for granted. We had expectations. The plan was to regroup, reconnect, recapture some romance and fun as soon as we had time, as soon as we could retire. What I realize now, in retrospect, is that the years we spent loving and learning and living didn't create complacency in the relationship. Instead it built the trust, and the confidence, and the dependability that we would need to endure, to eventually help each other make it until the end.
I am not ashamed to admit that many of my early prayers were "why me? why this?" Cynically, I often ended up at Galatians 6:7 ... "Do not be deceived; God is not mocked, for you reap whatever you sow." ... and wondered what I had sown to reap this particular tragic harvest? Now, I realize that we had sown love, and that our harvest was not deliverance from tragedy, but the strength to bear it.