A friend called me Monday evening to give me some news about someone I used to know. A woman I knew in high school has been diagnosed with cancer. It’s Stage 4 brain cancer.
I haven’t seen the woman since high school, but her husband — who I knew casually back then — is a banker who I deal with from time to time. I knew his wife very well back then, mostly from long trips on a church bus.
A couple of weeks ago, she suddenly felt strange and passed out. She was quickly diagnosed and had surgery, but what I read about Stage 4 brain cancer doesn’t sound promising.
I can’t help thinking how much it must change your view of the world when you find out that your life is suddenly threatened in a serious way. And how does it change you when this happens to your wife? Or your husband? Or whoever you love most?
Wouldn’t it completely change the meaning of your life? The things that seemed so important before would become meaningless — and the most mundane routines of love would become priceless.

It’s hard to shut off our internal chatterboxes to listen to silence
Brush with high-speed blowout leaves me thinking about death
I support MLK’s original goals, but not what his birthday represents
Trip to Memory Lane reminds me some relationships deserve to die
Accepting joy tomorrow does no good if tomorrow never comes
Find the partner who needs you; don’t be someone’s backup plan
Despite death, finally finding love made life worth it for new widow
I’d love to move to the Caribbean, so what’s been keeping me here?