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Thursday, May 10, 2018

My Journey With Cancer - Part 17

May 10, 2018 – If I Ever Stray

I have a date for my CT scan. After gaining insurance approval, that date is a week from tomorrow on May 18th. It will be good to get the results and see what has been going on. This week’s round of chemo has been the worst yet. I keep plugging along with the help of  God and those who love  me.

On another sort of related note, while  listening to the Deep Tracks station on SiriusXM today I ran across a singer that I have no idea how I missed. His name is Frank Turner and a couple of his songs were quite powerful.  One of them was entitled  "If I Ever Stray." You owe it to yourself to listen to it on YouTube. The lyrics are below. They speak in many ways  to what I feel some days. Listening will be encouraging.

If I Ever Stray
Forgive me, someone, for I have sinned
And I know not where I should begin
And some days it feels like you just can't win
No matter what you do or say.

Things didn't kill me but I don't feel stronger
Life is short but it feels much longer
When you've lost that fight, yeah, you've lost that hunger
To pull yourself through the day.

But if ever I stray from the path I follow
Take me down to the English Channel
Throw me in where the water is shallow
And then drag me on back to shore

'Cause love is free and life is cheap
And as long as I've got me a place to sleep
Some clothes on my back and some food to eat
Then I can't ask for anything more

So come on everybody sing it one, two, three, four
We all have secrets that we hold inside
The worst little things that you never confide
And the worst one of all that you just can't hide
Is that you're never quite as strong as you sound

So I'm sorry baby, for the times I've hurt you
Sorry friends, for the times I desert you
Most days it feels like I don't deserve you
And I wonder that you're all still around

So if ever I stray from the path I follow
Take me down to the English Channel
Throw me in where the water is shallow
And then drag me on back to shore

'Cause love is free and life is cheap
As long as I've got me a place to sleep
Some clothes on my back and some food to eat
Then I can't ask for anything more

So come on, everybody, sing it one, two, three, four
Come on and join me in the water
Swim for hope
Sometimes it's hard to remember
I couldn't do this on my own

If ever I stray from the path I follow
Take me down to the English Channel
Throw me in where the water is shallow
And then drag me on back to shore!

'Cause love is free and life is cheap
As long as I've got me a place to sleep
Some clothes on my back and some food to eat
I can't ask for anything more

I can't ask for anything more

The path I chose isn't straight and narrow
It wanders 'round like a drunken fellow
Some days it's hard for me to follow
But if you've got my back I'll go on.
If you've got my back I'll go on.

               ~ Francis Edward Turner / Nigel Powell

Sunday, April 29, 2018

My Journey With Cancer - Part 16


April 29, 2018 – Waiting

This past week marked the end of my third cycle of chemo treatments. I have now had nine infusions. That means tomorrow (Monday, April 30) is my day off. I can honestly say I need a week off in the worst way. This past week has been helacious. (That is a highly technical term that explains many things.) Ending this afternoon it has been on incredibly busy week on all front and the build up of chemicals in my system has begun to hit me hard. I may write about that in a future post, but not today. Since this is the end of my third cycle, I am due for a CT scan to see how/if things are progressing/regressing. I do want this information. After a call to remind them of this schedule need I will wait until this week to learn the schedule for the scan and the learn when I will know the results.

There is a word in that first paragraph that causes most of us to cringe just a bit. I am sure you saw it. That word is “waiting.” I am waiting. I do no really like waiting all that much, yet I have spent more time doing just that over these past months.

Waiting on the test

Waiting on test results

Waiting to see the MD

Waiting on the lab to complete work so they can begin my infusion

Waiting on the infusion

Waiting in the waiting room (Has anything ever been more aptly named?!)

Just waiting

You probably are somewhat like me. You do not really like the waiting thing either. If I am waiting, it means someone else is doing something and I am not. It means a loss of control. Herein lies the rub. We like the control, or at least the allusion of it. That is true even if we know we really are not in control, God is.

If I have had anything driven home to me over the past 6-months it is that fact. God is in control. I am not. God gives me freedom – within limits – to make decisions that affect my life and those I care about, but ultimately it is God who is in control.

It is nice know that the God who is in control of my life, and my waiting, loves me, cares for me, looks out for me, leads me, and likes me.

Guess I’ll wait a bit longer to see where this leads.

Monday, April 09, 2018

My Journey With Cancer - Part 15

April 9, 2018 – Third Sprint
Today marks the beginning of my third “cycle” (for want of another word) of chemotherapy. Each cycle includes three consecutive Monday sessions where sit for 2-3 hours while the chemicals are put in my system via my port. I have chosen 11:00 am to allow me the morning to get some work done prior to my infusion. (Don’t all Mondays have tons of extra things arise? Better to deal with them first.) Another factor is that Kay works until around noon each day and she comes to sit with me for the final 2/3 of the time.

As I said, today is my third cycle. It will end on April 23rd. (Maybe spring will be here by then!) Following that final treatment I will have another CT scan to determine if the drugs are working. If they are, we continue. If they are not, we talk about a new plan.

God has been very real to Kay and me during these last months. That “realness” has shown in many ways, but one way it shows is in the responses from the two churches I am privileged to serve. (The non-profit has been quite gracious too, but that is another post at another time.) The churches have supported us with prayer, understanding, concern, financially, and grace. Most weeks in the bulletin at Deer Creek Church they print a prayer for the attendees to take home and pray for us. I thought many of you would find this week’s prayer encouraging.

Mighty and merciful God,
You sent Jesus Christ to heal our broken lives.
We praise you for that today.
Please touch Terry with your healing touch.
Make him strong and bring him good health.
Provide strength and support for Kay and Gavin,
Then all shall be renewed with vigor
And point to the risen Christ who conquered death
That we might live eternally. Amen.

Saturday, March 31, 2018

My Journey With Cancer - Part 14

March 31, 2018 – Wear the Good Watch


Some years back I had the following story in my illustration file for sermons. It never actually made it into a message, but the story has impacted me on some level for many years.

As the story goes a son is preparing for the funeral of his mother. He is selecting the dress, jewelry and other items that will adorn her body as she lies in the coffin for family and friends to come to the final viewing. He selects the dress, the scarf, the necklace, and other items that will be the final clothes his mother will ever wear.

In the process of selecting the clothes, the son comes across a beautiful silk slip made with ornate handiwork and elaborate lace. His mother never wore it. It seems she felt it was so special she was waiting for the right event to wear it. As the son holds the slip, and lets his fingers trace the outlines of the lace he says aloud, “I guess this is a finally special enough event to wear this slip.”

The point hits me home every time I recount the story.

Now go with me to the Christmas season of 2011. At that time I have been living with the dream of leading an organization that grew to what we had all anticipated it could. The senior staff, all of which I was privileged to hire, train and work with were an incredible group of men and women. We were equally divided among gender and races. It was a beauty to be a part of. We had a representation of at least 50-60 other equally diverse staff among our area. But these individuals were very special to me.

I have never been one to have strong negative feelings about surprise gifts, surprise parties, and the like. I guess I always felt that if someone wanted to surprise me, why should I get in the way of their fun?

Our parent organization at that time held the usual Christmas luncheon, of which my staff was a part. As we neared the end of this lunch, one of my staff, said to me, “Why don’t all of us on your staff go somewhere and have something to drink and hang out together?” I was totally game, because I truly loved these men and women.

They suggested a location, or so I thought, and we all loaded up in our respective vehicles to drive to the agreed upon location. I was sitting at a high top bar stool around a table, when out of nowhere, Gavin (who was only 7-8 at the time) was tugging on my pant leg. I recall saying, “Hey buddy! What are you doing here?” I then saw Kay there and was even more surprised. Why? What? How?

After we ordered a drink, the members of my senior staff pulled out a gift to present to me and one to Kay. We were taken completely aback. They were matching Tissot timepieces. These were not watches. They were of a quality and price that I have never purchased for myself, and probably never would have. It still ranks as one of the top gifts I have ever been given, mostly because of what it meant.

Over the years since I received the timepiece, I have worn it only at what I would call dress up occasions. This would include, worship, banquets, and other important events. It was never my daily watch. I had one that was more plain and simple that I wore throughout the work week.

Now to today, as I recovered from my surgery and began my chemotherapy, began to go more regularly about my normal duties of the work week. Somewhere along that early time frame, I was getting dressed and reached to put on my normal weekly watch, but saw this incredible timepiece. I recall at that moment remembering the story I recounted above. As I thought about what lay ahead for me I said aloud to myself, alone in my bedroom, “Wear the good watch.”

From that day to this, if you see me during the week, on Sunday and anywhere that I would not fear the timepiece being damage due to my activity, I am wearing it.

I decided what am I waiting for? Celebrate every day! Every day is a special gift from God. Every day is deserving of the good timepiece.

Where is it in your life that you need to celebrate the gift that every single day is? Wear the good watch.

Two days ago my wife and I celebrated our 43rd wedding anniversary. Wear the good watch.

Today on Holy Saturday, we prepare to celebrate resurrection on the morrow. Wear the good watch.

Wear the good watch!

Sunday, March 18, 2018

My Journey With Cancer - Part 13


March 18, 2018 – Back from the Brink, con’t.

Here is my intention. Only a few folks find hearing what transpired from surgery to now interesting, so I am going to plow through this one from 30,000 feet for those individuals, then get back to making the blogging more current. I actually have already written the next one entitled “Wear the Good Watch” (you’ll have to read it to understand.) I will post it the day after this one. I have been busy since I have gotten back to work and life and ministry and dropped off here. I will do better.

Sound like a plan? Good. It’s what I am going to do.

I can say without any hesitation, that the seven days I spent in the hospital following the first surgery, were the most miserable nights I have ever spent. Now that is saying a lot since in the months leading up to the surgery when I was awake all most all night every night with the itching, I would dread nightfall every single day.

The morning following surgery I awoke with 7-8 differing tubes, IVs and other devices attached to me. I had an NG tube, a catheter, a side drain, an epidural, 3 IVs (two of which were still in place) and at least 2-3 other IVs over the next 7-days. They would remain a part of my body for the next week, in spite of me constantly asking how long before I could get them out. I must be honest and admit I may have been a bit pushy on that, but it was what was on my mind.

Sleep again became a constant elusive prey. It is difficult to rest when things are literally coming out of your body on all sides. I would lie awake at night for hours on end contemplating what was in front of me, what was taking place or just trying to get comfortable. On all but two nights, Kay was with me, sleeping on the sofa in my room. Hearing her across the room asleep (No, I did not say snoring!) became the most comforting sound in the world to me for it meant I was not alone. I know God was present, but having a human being present who cared for me meant everything! (Now, there is a sermon just waiting to be preached!)

I am joking when I say I would lie awake for hours on end, because the hospital staff did not allow that. I had my vitals checked every four hours, my medications administered, and other necessary interruptions that meant I was awakened every two hours all night. At 5:00 am each day my blood was drawn and sent to the lab, and by 6:30 MDs were starting their rounds to check on me which meant 4-5 MD visits. It was non-preferred celebrity status. If I did drift off to sleep, that was corrected in short order!

After a week I had pushed myself, and asked often enough, that I was allowed to go home. While I did not sleep more than 90 minutes at a time over the next month or so, I was at my home in my bed. I learned later when I found an online video of a portion of my surgery why that was the case. I was amazed to see just how much they cut me, how far they stretched the interior of my body, how many stitches and other procedures I cannot even describe were performed on me. After viewing that, I said “It is no wonder my entire abdomen hurts when I lie down, move or turn over. They did indeed “filet me like a fish,” as one friend put it. Gavin came in and saw me looking at the video and said, “Why would you watch that?” I laughed and said, “Well, I have over 90 holes/scars on my abdomen, I wanted to see what they did to put them there.” He shook his head and walked away.

As I tie up this “catch up” post here is the timeline from my 2018. My original scans (sonograms, CT Scans, and MRIs) were on December 1st and 2nd.  My first surgical procedure where I received my stint to begin to allow me some relief, and they took the biopsy of the tumor on my pancreas and a portion of my liver, was on December 4, 2017. I learned of my diagnosis on December 7, 2017 and met with my surgeon for the first time on December 11, 2017.

My major surgery was on January 9, 2018 with my discharge from the hospital on January 16, 2018. February 1st I began easing back into work duties with a lot less stamina than before. On Friday, February 2nd, I met my oncologist for the first time where we laid out our plan of action. The following Wednesday, February 7th was the third surgery to install my port. Friday, February 9th, one month from my surgery, I had a CT scan to determine two things. The first was to see how the tumor had progressed from my initial scans when it was discovered on December 1-4. Secondly, it was to get a baseline on where the tumor is at present and to see if there are any other signs of the tumor spreading other than the areas the surgeon found during surgery and removed.

I began chemotherapy infusion treatments on Monday, February 12th. I have a regular routine of three weeks on and one week off with my chemotherapy regimen. Every three months I will have another CT scan to determine if the cancer has spread, to see if the tumor is growing, and if the medication is actually working. My CT scan in February showed no appreciable growth from December, so that is encouraging. This routine of 3-on 1-off with scans to determine progress as I understand it will continue until I my body can no longer take it, or it is determined that the chemotherapy is not working.

I have chemotherapy infusion on Mondays. I chose Monday strategically so I would have full energy at the beginning of the week, and again on Sunday when I preach at my churches.

In a future post I will write about what it is like to undergo the chemotherapy while living and enjoying life. For those who think that is morbid or just plain weird, you may feel free to skip those posts. Of course, I will not know!

Finally, for those who have asked me, I have been back at work for some time now, but it was not until the last week to ten days that I felt my stamina returning from the surgery. I knew that I needed to get back to doing what I enjoy doing and am good at in order to be fully alive. I was back preaching two weeks ago and was reminded that I was quite good at it, and enjoyed it immensely.

So, that is where I am. I will post any health updates as they become available. For now this is how I function and I am quite thankful that God has given me the strength and grace to continue down this road.

Monday, February 26, 2018

My Journey With Cancer - Part 12


February 24, 2018 – Back from the Brink . . . Well, Sort Of

My last entry here was the day before surgery, so I am way overdue for an update.

The past 5 weeks have been a complete roller coaster. Actually at dinner on Saturday, my wife said something like this, “You know I do not like roller coaster rides. I have hated them since we were dating. And I am ready for us to get off this one.”

A roller coaster ride is exactly what this time has been. It has been good news, bad news, no news, maybe good news, hope, minimal hope, and on and on. I knew where she was coming from.

How about since this is my first post-surgery update I share where we are? First things first, the surgery on January 9th was unsuccessful. It happened in odd fashion. The surgeon had told Kay and me that he would do a small incision to begin the surgery and explore around to be sure the cancer was contained to my pancreas. If it has had spread he would close me up and other measures would have to be taken by my oncologist. He said if the surgery was not to be, he would be out to see her in less than an hour. She did not see him for 3-4 hours and assumed all systems were “Go.”

They were not. What transpired during the next 8 hours was oddly inspiration. 

When the surgeon did the exploratory element, all looked good, so he began the process of disconnecting and removing body parts to begin the Whipple. As he put it to us, he “accidentally bumped against something in my large intestine area far removed from the area where he was operating.” It was far enough away he should never have noticed it or even been close to the area. He dismissed it as just some small area of diverticulitis and continued the surgery. In a bit he bumped up against it again and investigated only to find that the cancer had metastasized to a lymph node in the large intestine area. His words were “my heart sank and I stopped the surgery” because I had to. He said he had gotten “emotionally invested” us and was excited to help a pastor.

He left the OR and found a colleague who performs the same procedures to gain another perspective on how to proceed. They were in agreement that since the cancer had metastasized it would be pointless to put me through the full procedure. Another plan was devised. He had already removed my gall bladder and associated ductwork. The selected surgery has a name that eludes me now, but it involved taking sections of my small intestine, creating new ductwork for the bile in my liver to pass directly to the small intestine. He also rerouted my small intestine around behind my stomach so there is little or no danger of the tumor once again blocking the bile flow and returning me to the misery of last fall.

The surgeon found my wife and broke the news to her, which is not what she was expecting.

When I awakened in the recovery room, I overheard the nurses talking about me heading to room 869. I interrupted them and said, I was supposed to go to ICU. They said, there was a change of plans and I was going to a regular room. I immediately began to think the best. I thought (and said) aloud, “Things must have gone better than expected!” No one responded.

Within the next hour I was taken to my room where Kay and my oldest daughter awaited me. I recall vividly their struggle to get me onto my new bed home for the next week.

Kay and Alyssa quickly came to me. I recall the expressions on their faces as if it were happening at this moment. I remember saying aloud to Kay, “I am in a regular room. Things must have gone much better than expected.” She then had the unenviable task of telling me the truth. Things had not gone better. They had gone terribly worse. Unbeknownst to anyone, the cancer had spread and the outlook was much more bleak. We had no idea just how bleak.

Alyssa looked like she was going to burst into tears. Kay looked like a great burden had been lifted to share this news with me.

I will write again in a day or so, and pick up the story from here. Thank you for following me, reading, and the patience to hear the last 7-weeks. I will say, my life is right where it has always been, in God’s hands. In the power of the one who loves me enough to always have my best at heart.

More to follow . . .

Monday, January 08, 2018

My Journey With Cancer - Part 11

January 8, 2018 – D-Day Has Arrived

Tomorrow is the big day. We are to be at the hospital at 5:45 am for an 8:15 am surgery. I am ready to get this moving. I have always been the energizer bunny sort of person. I could often dare folks to keep up with me. Now the fatigue is real and regular. This is something quite new for me.

D-Day is the term I chose a while back and mentioned in an earlier post. It was the date of the Normandy Invasion. It did not end World War II, but it was the initial battle that led to ultimate victory. There we numerous battles, and skirmishes after that invasion.

I will have many more battles over the upcoming months, but the invasion is tomorrow morning.

Please know that we are all appreciative of the thoughts and prayers that have been extended our way.

I will write again when I am able. In the meantime, Kay will have access to my Facebook page and will post updates on that page.

God is good . . . all the time.


All the time . . . God is good.

Thursday, January 04, 2018

My Journey With Cancer - Part 10

Symptoms, Tests, and Hope

Every story has a beginning. The story of my cancer journey begins several years ago, while the cancer cells were still small in number and microscopic in size. The story of my journey with cancer goes back to 1974.

1974 is when my wife Kay’s Dad had his first bout with cancer. He had an extensive surgery that involved, among other things, losing 75 – 80% of his stomach. He had a second bout 15 years later when he had his larynx removed and

The next major cancer event for us can in 2010. That is when my wife was diagnosed with Triple Negative Breast Cancer. We learned quickly that not all breast cancers are created equal. I have learned in the last month that not all pancreatic cancers are either. That is true for all forms of cancer. There are so many nuances that it is difficult for the untrained person to even keep up.

For those who are not as intimately connected with my family, here is what the journey has been like for us. It actually goes back 8-12 weeks when I began to have uncontrollable pruritus. That is basically itching all over my body with no relief from any and all attempts. I felt, as would most folks, that I was allergic to something so Kay and I set about to determine what that was. This meant changing body wash, shampoo, laundry detergent, medications, etc., with a 3-day time frame to try each. That took a 3-4 weeks before deciding it was not an allergy and I needed to get some medical attention. I called the Friday after Thanksgiving and made the appointment with my PCP.

By this time I was quite exhausted. The constant itching kept me up most nights. I was getting by on 2-4 hours of rest each night. The litany of symptoms I worked through would curl your hair. In addition to the pruritus, and fatigue I lost 20+ pounds in about 4-5 weeks and had many other symptoms I’ll not bore you with.

The Saturday before my schedule MD appointment the following Wednesday, our family was downtown Pittsburgh at the Christmas parade. I was sitting on the curb behind everyone, because I was so fatigued as was my norm then. Of course when you never sleep, it is easy to blame the fatigue on the lack of sleep. And it surely was a culprit in this mess. During that parade, my wife walked up to me, and said, “Look me in the eyes.” (Kay was a registered nurse in her first career.) She pulled my eyes open and said, “You are jaundice. I meant you are completely yellow. That is a sign of liver disease. You need to tell that to you doctor next week.”

That led me on another path. Liver disease is something I have witnessed in my good friend Craig. Both of us would clearly be non-alcoholic cases of cirrhosis if this were to happen. In Craig’s case, it led to a transplant.

As I researched I recalled many articles I had read where acetaminophen overdose has caused liver failure and death. I have taken a medication to help maintain a healthy blood pressure for nearly 20 years, so the only pain killer I could take for any sort of ache was that drug. I knew I had taken it for many years, but I tried to stick to recommended doses. I still wondered, “Was this the culprit?”

By the time my appointment arrived, I was so ready for some medical advice that I hung on his every word. The pruritus and fatigue had me to the point that I described it to Kay as being “absolutely miserable.”

In advance of that meeting my MD I typed out a list of everything I had tried and all of the symptoms I was having and my thoughts regarding the medication. I arrived at the office for my appointment and after being escorted back the nurse who took all of my vitals asked if I was okay to talk with the PA students first. I have seen 25-30 of them over the years, but today I declined. I just did not want to go through that litany twice. I said it would be fine if they are in the room while I was examined, but I just did not want two examinat

I have seen the same PCP for over 15 years, so he knows me pretty well, and knows I am no hypochondriac. When he came into the examination room, he “So, what’s up?” I

I simply handed him my list.

He looked it over, and then said, “Lie back.” He began to feel my abdomen, then called the PA over and said, “Feel this. Feel how swollen his liver is.”

To shorten this long story, I was given a lot of blood work and other tests and told to schedule a sonogram ASAP.

Before leaving he said, “This is interesting. And the one thing you don’t want to be in your doctor’s office is interesting.” That statement added a much needed bit of levity to a scary situation.

I called first thing Thursday morning to schedule my sonogram and received a 1:00 pm appointment on Friday to allow for needed fasting. Later that same day the MD’s office called and asked me if I had scheduled the sonogram. After informing them that I had for the next day, she told me, “Whatever you do, do not miss that appointment. The blood work and enzymes are showing lots of concerning levels.”

That evening my son Richard and his family were coming from Tennessee for a 4-day weekend visit, which I had lots of fun plans for. We went to my oldest daughter’s home and hung out with them for a few hours before everyone went home. They came over the next morning with fresh coffee and doughnuts. I had to decline until after my test, but we spent some time together until the sonogram’s scheduled time of 1:00 pm.

The location for the exam was just five minutes from my house, so that was a short trip. The test took 10-minutes and I was home by 1:30 pm.

I walked in the house, heated my coffee, grabbed a doughnut and prepared to enjoy the day as much as the symptoms would allow. Before I even settled in, I saw I had missed a phone call. I retrieved the voice mail, and it was my PCP calling me 15-minutes after the sonogram was completed. He left me his cell phone and said call him.

Kay and I went upstairs to the bedroom where I returned his call. We all know that your MD does not call to say, “Just checking in to see how the family is doing.”

He answered the call, and I experience the words I have stated in messages for years: “We are all one phone call away from our lives changing forever.”

His words were basically, “Terry, I don’t know what you are doing, but you must stop it and go immediately to the emergency room. We need a CT scan. The image is not as clear as we would like, but there is something going on that cannot wait. We are afraid you could go septic and with what we see, you may not last 24- hours.”

He had my full attention.

I said my good-byes, left for the hospital expecting to be back in a few hours. Kay did not even go since all of our kids were there, and I anticipated returning soon. I came home four days later.

At the hospital, they to lots more blood, performed the CT scan, and conducted an extensive interview with me which closed with something to the effect of, “You’re not going anywhere. We have to keep you. We are afraid of what may happen.”

The next morning I had an MRI where I learned I was a lot more claustrophobic than I thought! I have had one previously, but ever where I was completely inside. I can completely understand how some people can go stir crazy during those tests. The technician reminded me several times to be perfectly still, but remember I was still having this miserable itching over my entire body, so it was difficult to do.

Later that afternoon, they ordered another CT scan, this time with a contrast and came in with some vague comments about a “mass” on my pancreas. I was told that the reason for the itching was a “mass” was on my pancreas and was pushing on my liver and gall bladder duct work. It had bile completely backing into my bloodstream at 4-5 times normal levels. The reason nothing topical would relive the itching is because it was in my blood stream and thus pruritus over my entire body with not relief from anything. I learned this had my blood sugars at dangerous levels due to damage to the pancreas. The liver and gall bladder were struggling from the bile back-up which was dumping into my system and had now started to cause kidney damage.

I was a mess and had no idea!

Kay and I both thought they seemed afraid to use the word “cancer” because they danced around it every day from Saturday – Monday. Monday that did change.

I was taken down to have yet another test called an ERCP. (Google it, if you want to read the 15-syllable full name of it. J ) In essence I am sedated while a camera is inserted down my throat and throughout my GI tract. During the procedure a stint was inserted in the duct where the gall bladder and liver duct join, to begin to allow the bile to leave my system. It took about 10-days for it to be completely gone, but was most effective.

They also took biopsies of the liver and the tumor. (The surgeon who did the ERCP was the first person to use that word to us. If I were to do it over again, I would ask much more pointed questions earlier on.) We were told they would have biopsy results on Friday or Monday.

One odd note, I counted and as best I can tell, I was “stuck” 53 times while I was in the hospital. I think if I stood up and drank water I would have looked like the cartoon character with fluid shooting all around. J

The days following were busy and hectic. I had a friend (Thanks Stuart!) connect me with a good oncologist, who connected with the full Allegheny Health Systems team examine my case, and ultimately with my surgeon. I learned that I was indeed in the 20% who could qualify for surgery. It was pretty sobering to learn that 80% of the folks he talks to, there is nothing they can do.

The next day, when the surgeon’s office called me to get me into the office, I learned there was a “glimmer of a possibility that there may be a chance that there may be some prospect of hope.” I was in a lunch meeting with one of the divisions in my company. When I left I called Kay. I ended that call, and realized my eyes were full of tears.


With God, we live in hope and expectation. I still feel good about that “glimmer of a possibility that there may be a chance that there may be some prospect of hope.”

Monday, January 01, 2018

My Journey With Cancer - Part 9

January 1, 2018 – Asking the Wrong Question

Questions are funny things. Asking questions is how we learn. It begins with us as small children. We ask questions of our parents, our grandparents, our family members, our teachers, and others to expand our knowledge base and more so, to gain a grasp on the world we live in.

A key question we often ask as we grow is “Why?” Why does the sun come up? Why does the dog shake like that? Why am I not allowed to hold the special items on grandma’s shelf? The list of "whys" as a child goes on ad infinitum it appears to us.

As adults we are still basically children at heart. That means when something in our life goes in a direction we do not like, we ask the same question. We ask “Why?”
Why do I have to struggle financially?
Why was I the one to lose my job?
Why was my partner unfaithful to me?
Why did I get this illness?

There are many other “why” questions. But here is the rub.

IT IS THE WRONG QUESTION!!!

And you never get the right answer when you ask the wrong question!

If you can ask “Why me?” someone else could just as easily ask “Why not you?”

This is not new really. If you dig to the root of it, you wind up back at one of the reasons Jesus came into our world in the season we just remembered called Advent. One of the primary purposes of Jesus’ ministry was to show us just how messed up our view of God and our view of our world was.

How about some history? Jesus came into a world that believed and had believed for millennia that if you were wealthy it was because you had God’s favor. It was because God loved you. If you had good health, it was because God loved you more than those who were sick. To make matters worse, if you were poor, or ill, it was because you had sinned and God was angry with you.

Jesus came in part to turn that entire belief system on its head! God’s love for you, or God’s pleasure with you and your behavior have nothing whatsoever to do with your wealth or your health. God loves you . . . period. End of sentence. All nuances and other discussions get in line after that statement.

An interesting side note here lost in the Christmas story, Jesus was actually poor. Jesus was born into a family so poor that when the Joseph and Mary went to the temple to offer the obligatory sacrifice for purification following child birth, they had to choose the poor person’s option. “If she cannot afford a lamb, she is to bring two doves or two pigeons.” ~ Leviticus 12:8. Joseph, Mary and Jesus were poor. Let that sink in for a minute.

Okay, back to my comments and how it relates to my cancer diagnosis and upcoming 8-9 months of surgery and treatment.

I have not – for a single minute – asked “Why me?” The answer as I stated earlier could be “Why not me?”

We live in a world that is not redeemed yet. One day God will restore his creation, but that has not happened yet. That means there are some things in the world that are bad. They simply are. Cancer is one of them. It is bad. But it is my reality.

Do you know why our oft misinterpreted verse of Scripture (like Romans 8:28) talk about God making things work for good? It is because some things are simply bad. Death is bad. Sickness is bad. Poverty is bad. Abuse is bad. God must work to make them good; because they are indeed bad.

I might throw in here that I also do not believe the line, “God does everything for a reason.” What kind of abusive, hideous God would make a child ill to do good? God is not “bringing bad to do good.” Bad happens in this world. God then works to make it good. Sometimes we see how in this life, sometimes we do not. God lets things play out in our world because among other things, God gave us free will too choose. Sometimes those choices lead to bad outcomes that require God’s redemption.

Okay, I am starting to sound like a preacher here. Oh . . . wait . . .

Actually, we have not strayed too far from that heresy have we? You can see it on the television weekly. There are people who tell you, even today, that if you are sick or short of money or in relationship trouble, it is completely due to your lack of faith. In other words, it is your fault.

When I studied Greek and Hebrew I learned that both languages have the same word to describe that belief . . . BALONEY!

I do not have cancer because God is angry or disappointed with me.

God was not angry at the 10-year old boy that my wife taught in preschool who died on Friday of brain cancer.

God is not angry at you or mad at you or punishing you. If that is your view of God, get a new one. You need a new God. That one is clearly not working for you.

God is for you.

            God IS for you.

                        God is FOR you.


                                    God is for YOU. 

Sunday, December 24, 2017

My Journey With Cancer - Part 8

December 24, 2017 – Visual Effects

“I hate what this disease is doing to my body.”

Those words were spoken by me to Kay this week after I looked into the mirror at what was happening to my body. She commented that in all of years of marriage she had never seen, especially my arms and upper body, look like they do now.

I have always been one who has taken pride in taking care of my physical body. At nearly the age of 50, I rode my bike the entire 500 miles of the Blue Ridge Parkway, keeping up with, and on the highest climb on the hottest day, beating men much younger than me to the top. I have never been a tobacco user. I have never used any illicit drugs. I have never abused, or come close to abusing, alcohol. I have always been the one who worked hard, went to the gym regularly, exercised, and watched my diet (well, usually watched my diet, there is that chocolate thing. J)

I was the one whom everyone said, looked ten year younger than my age. They always looked shocked to learn my age.

Until now.

It hurts to look in the mirror and see what this disease has done to age me in the past 6-months. It hurts deeply, far deeper than I can express in mere words. Yet, there it is staring me in the face.

Research tells me that with no surgery, I have a 5% chance of surviving 12-months. History with other patients says I have at least a 25% chance of seeing the 5-year mark following the surgery.

How am I to cope? Quite simply, as N. T. Wright would put it, I hope in the resurrection. I hope in the fact that God will ultimately redeem ALL of his creation – of which I am a part. I hope in the hope (expectation) of a new incorruptible body. I choose to hope in the same hope Paul wrote to the church in Corinth in the second of his surviving letters to them.

Therefore we do not lose heart. Though outwardly we are wasting away, yet inwardly we are being renewed day by day. For our light and momentary troubles are achieving for us an eternal glory that far outweighs them all. So we fix our eyes not on what is seen, but on what is unseen, since what is seen is temporary, but what is unseen is eternal. For we know that if the earthly tent we live in is destroyed, we have a building from God, an eternal house in heaven, not built by human hands. ~ 2 Corinthians 4:16 – 5:1

The metaphor is incredibly comforting. I say this at every funeral I perform. This body is a “tent.” A tent is a temporary dwelling. We look forward to our “building.” A building is a permanent structure. God has prepared for us a permanent dwelling. We do not know what it will be like, but we will not be disappointed. John wrote in his first letter,

. . . what we will be has not yet been made known. But we know that when Christ appears, we shall be like him. ~ 1 John 3:2

I am not surrendering by any means. As Kay said to me, “You will just have to get through this surgery and build your body back up.”

That is my immediate goal.

On this Christmas Eve, as I prepare to preach to my congregations about the hope that comes with the incarnation, my long range hope is far greater. 

Sunday, December 17, 2017

My Journey With Cancer - Part 7

December 17, 2017 – Storms

For over 40 years in ministry I have made the same quote in various messages. It goes like this:
God never promised we would miss the storm. He only promised we would make the harbor.

Over the years I have had hundreds of former church members tell me what that quote meant to them. I have had so many actually quote my words verbatim back to me to thank me for being an encouragement to them. Since this ordeal began, I have received many cards from members where I served who heard that quote who wrote it in a card they mailed to me, asking that it  mean as much to me as it has to  them through the years. It was not a sermon to me, as many are, it was sharing a blessing they received from me, in hopes returning the blessing to me.


At a former church a gifted water-color artist presented me with an original painting of that quote, over a ship in the midst of a storm. That piece of art work has been moved to every office I have had in the 25 years since she gave it to me. It will now move from one of my current offices, to be displayed in my bedroom as a reminder over the upcoming year.

Thursday, December 14, 2017

My Journey With Cancer - Part 6

December 14, 2017 – Concert Tickets


I have seen most all of the great classic rock bands of my era. One that I have missed, and regret it big time, is the Eagles. Well, even though Glen Frey died last year (which hurt a lot!) I just purchased tickets for Kay and me to see the Eagles next summer here in Pittsburgh. I will be going bald, no beard, ugly as snot – but I plan to attend! Glen Frey’s son is filling in for him, so that will lessen the missing somewhat. 

I am excited to have that on my calendar - cancer or not.

Wednesday, December 13, 2017

My Journey With Cancer - Part 5

December 11, 2017 – Surgery Date Selection

So, why did I put off such a needed and serious surgery for a month? I could say, “It is complicated.” And I would be right. It is indeed multi-faceted.

At my initial meeting with the surgeon he said to me, “So I guess this is your busiest time of the year?” “Yes,” I replied, “There is a lot going on in both churches and the other business. A lot of folks depend upon me. Even though any of us are replaceable, I was hoping I could hold off on surgery until after the holiday, and perhaps after the first of the year.”

His reply was, “This tumor has been growing inside of you for years. Three more weeks will not make that much of a difference.”

And so it was, when we met the scheduler we chose January 9, 2018.

There is another side to this. A week ago, prior to meeting the surgeon I was at breakfast with a friend of mine who was telling me I need to let all of the church and ministry stuff go and take care of myself. My reply to him was, “I have been serving and helping people since I was 15. That is closing in on 50 years of ministry. I’m telling you, that switch does not exist inside of me. I cannot turn it off. The best I can do is to learn to manage it.”

I have now 3+ weeks to get things in order. I am scheduling 8-weeks of supply preachers at my churches, and getting some serious and major issues in line at the non-profit. If I get some of these things completed and in order, I will be able to disengage during the surgery and recovery, trust the good staff I have, and focus on my healing. I will not be able to turn it off, but I will be more able to cut back and relax while others do their part.


“Know thyself.” Someone said that once.

Monday, December 11, 2017

My Journey With Cancer - Part 4

December 11, 2017 – First Surgeon Visit

Today was a big day. January 9, 2018 will be D-Day.

This morning Kay and I had the first visit with my surgeon. It will not be my last. We learned quite a bit today. Some of it left us a bit off kilter. Some of it was just what we anticipated.
The surgeon who will perform my surgery was a great find. I became connected to him through a friend. He is older and seasoned. He has seen this exact type of cancer countless times. He spoke honestly and with clarity. He did not cut any corners but clearly laid out – even drawing on paper – exactly what would happen and what we can anticipate. It is not a pretty picture. However it is not as bleak as it could be.

In 2010 when my wife was diagnosed with Triple Negative Breast Cancer, we learned that not all breast cancers are created equal. Today we learned that not all Pancreatic Cancers are either.
We learned today that less than 20% of pancreatic cancer patients are able to have my surgery. Most of them simply have the difficult conversation that it is inoperable. That is not the case with me. But when you learn what all is involved, you may think it is! J Actually, we just had a “different difficult discussion.”  I am in the 20% that can have surgery it appears, so this shows that God was gracious.
Kay and I entered the room thinking that perhaps the tumor was sitting on the head of the pancreas. We learned that the last test showed that not to be the case. It actually was in the pancreas itself. That changes everything, and is not good news. While we had hopes the tumor could simply be removed from the pancreas, it will require something much more invasive.

My surgical procedure goes by the name of the Whipple Method, named for the MD who pioneered it. My entire digestive tract is about to be altered. I would not advise looking it up. Just sayin’ . . .
The surgery will begin with the implanting of a port in my upper spine that will be used for the next 5-days to release pain medications. Following that I will be sedated and they will begin with a laparoscopic procedure to look around inside my abdomen and assure themselves that the cancer has indeed not spread. If they find it has, they will close me up and forego the procedure. There would be no reason to attempt the surgery if that is the case.

If all is clear, I will have an incision that will run from the last rib on the left side of my body to the last rib on the right side of my body. That is about 10 – 12 inches in length. Kay told me that my bikini days are now over! I will have one hellacious scar to show off though!
Once inside me they will remove the front half of my pancreas, the lower tenth of my stomach, my gall bladder, all duct work that connects them to my small intestine, and the upper part of my small intestine called the duodenum. All this time they must avoid two major arteries that run though the center of the body.  This part of the surgery will take 3 – 4 hours.

The second half of the surgery will require moving part of the remaining lower intestine upward and then attaching the liver, the remaining stomach, and the remaining pancreas directly to this portion of the small intestine. There are many enzyme producing glands that must have their tubes connected so things can function. This is another 3 – 4 hour procedure. It is all quite involved and fraught with possibilities for complications.

Following the 6 – 8 hour surgery I will be in intensive care for a couple of days, depending upon how my body responds. I will be hospitalized for 7 – 21 days, again depending on how my body responds and accepts the new attachments. The type of tissue the various organs are made off will determine how well that goes. Evidently, each person’s body has different “textures” in their organs. Who knew?

If the body heals as anticipated and I avoid infection I will be discharged home. I will be out of commission for close to two months I am told. It will be longer than that before my stamina returns. It is amazing how quickly your body loses its stamina following surgery. I will learn patience.

If all goes well with the recovery, I will follow this up with 4 – 6 months of chemotherapy to extricate any remaining microscopic cancer cells. Losing what hair I have left is no fun prospect. Losing my beard is even less so. My chin has not seen sunshine since 1988. I will be one more ugly cancer specimen!

I started this post with an analogy. I called today a big day, and January 9th as D-Day. That was intentional. D-Day, or the Normandy Invasion, was the beginning of the Allies onslaught to defeat the Third Reich and the German army. It was bloody. It was gruesome. It was painful. It carried a tremendous loss of life. It was well thought out and planned. It was followed by the campaign that ultimately defeated the Axis powers, and led to victory. For me, January 9, 2018 will be that same event. It will be bloody, painful, and gruesome. (Hopefully there will be no loss of life!) Our plans are that it will begin the campaign that will defeat cancer in our family for a second time.

What are the odds that a husband and a wife would both have cancer (albeit completely different types,) undergo surgery, chemotherapy and (planned for me anyway) recovery? I guess it’s too late to purchase that lottery ticket, huh?

Friends, God is good – ALL the time!


Next post I will explain a bit how we chose our surgery date. Stay tuned.

Sunday, December 10, 2017

My Journey With Cancer - Part 3

December 9, 2017 - Perspective

Whenever we face a tough issue in our life (and I have had my share - some of them will come out in the upcoming weeks) our perspective on that situation can be everything. Below is how I introduced to my social media connection what is taking place in my life. This is not a new perspective for me. Ask anyone who has known me for longer than 6-weeks and they can tell you this is how I approach life and have approached life. 

Anyway here is what I wrote. I'll get back to my regular posting tomorrow.

“All - I have recently begun a long and difficult journey. In the past week I have been diagnosed with Pancreatic Cancer. I do not intend to write in depth about it on Facebook, but I do intend to publicly journal my family and my journey. If you wish to keep up, it will be posted on my web page. It can be reached via terrylmann.com or matrixminister.com. Both take you to the same place. Feel free to share with anyone you deem appropriate. I have made the two initial posts and will begin adding more regularly. I will make a notation here when a new post is up.
You will not read me whining about how difficult it is, but I do not intend to hide difficulties. I have helped people for 50 years now. If I am going through something such as this, I intend it it to help others.

Friends . . . no matter what happens in this struggle, God is good . . . all the time. God's goodness is not bound in my good health or lack thereof. God's goodness is not tied to any circumstance I may experience. I have lived in faith since my early teen years, and will do so until I breathe my last.”

Saturday, December 09, 2017

My Journey With Cancer - Part 2

December 6, 2017 - Purpose
So, before I write any more posts on this topic let me answer the question, “Why I am writing and recording this?” Three reasons come to mind.
    1. It is a way to keep folks informed without having to restate time and time again, all that has/is going on.
    2. I can let everyone know what I am really feeling / thinking in the moment. In so doing, it will require me to think it through.
    3. This can serve as a record of my journey.

Like I referenced above, this is not our family’s first foray into the cancer battle. In 2010 my wife was diagnosed with Triple Negative Breast Cancer. She fought a valiant fight, and is cancer free today. I kept an ongoing log of her journey on the site Caring Bridge and posted links on social media. You can read that here https://www.caringbridge.org/visit/kaymann as it is still online. I learned three things from writing that.
   1. It helped people who genuinely wanted to know what was going on to keep informed. It allowed them an insight into the journey. I was thanked so often by folks for keeping that information updated.
   2. Even today, after having bound copies printed, it serves as our record of what we endured.
   3. It was therapeutic for me to write it.

The goals are quite similar. I imagine the outcomes will be too. The biggest difference is this one is in first person. 

My Journey With Cancer - Part 1

December 5, 2017 – Unwelcomed Guest

I am by nature a social person. Having people around is my life blood. I am energized by it. Therefore, over the years and still today, my calendar is littered with times together with friends, business associates, family, young men I have mentored, concerts, you name it I may  have done it with friends – well,  within reason.

Each of those events occurred because of an invitation. It is a desire to be with someone so one of us invited the other to get together.

In the past few days I have learned that another uninvited visitor has entered my household. This guest has arrived without warning, and without any invitation. The guest arrived again even though he had been here once before, only to be kicked out of the house as an unwelcome guest.

That guest is cancer.

Wednesday, October 04, 2017

Tom Petty

Very few celebrity deaths hit as hard as the news of Tom Petty. This is really a tough one. The fact that he was only three years older than me makes it most real. I have seen him in concert 10-15 times with multiple different groups of friends, and totally different opening acts. He always held nothing back and left everything on the stage. When he would say "Thank you," to the audience following a song, you could tell he really meant it. I saw him multiple times with my daughter Lori Beth. This summer my grandson Gavin saw him with us for the first time and was amazed at how good the show was, how many songs he knew, and how many different ones there were. There is a complete irony there in that he would die on Gavin's birthday. I always drive home after work listening to music or a podcast. Yesterday, I drove in silence, feeling the music had died. I felt the same when Glen Frey died, I am thankful for having enjoyed his music through the years and saddened I will not see him again.

Wednesday, August 16, 2017

Presence

I left my favorite conference today to visit a gracious 93-yr old lady nearing the end of her life. The best decision of my day.

I held this dear gracious ladies hand, prayed several times with her, attempted to serve communion at her request (she was unable to swallow any elements,) and just spoke words of comfort. When I prayed for her to have peace, she repeated several times, "Yes dear Lord, grant me peace." She thanked me for stopping by and seeing her at least 50 times. I have never have I been thanked so profusely for doing seemingly so little. I hugged her, and kissed her when I left, and she cried tears of thank you. 


NEVER doubt the impact of your PRESENCE in the life of another. Your words may matter little and will probably be quickly forgotten, but your presence will not be forgotten.

Monday, December 05, 2016

Nostaligia and My Hometown

Kay and I were shopping yesterday at the mall and passed by the sheets and towels section. There, as big as all get out, were Cannon sheets and towels.
They were originally manufactured in the town in grew up in, which was named for the company - Kannapolis, NC. While in college, "I served my time," and worked in Cannon Mills for 3 years. In the early 90's they closed down all plants (I forget how many) and moved overseas putting close to 20,000 people out of work and decimating the town that is only now recovering.
On the back of the sheets it was printed "Made in China." I have no beef with buying foreign made products; I do all the time. In truth, there is no such thing in the global economy as an "American made product." Everything is impacted worldwide by the technology to manufacture it, the supplies, the infrastructure, something. But seeing those textile products and realizing the impact that move made upon my entire family was a little disconcerting. That is true even though I moved away in 1976, completed my education elsewhere in three other institutions, have spent my entire career and lived in three other states since then.
"You can take the boy out of the country," so the saying goes. It is true, I have always kept close tabs on what takes place there and look forward to my visits. Kannapolis will always be a part of me and who I am. Maybe when I die, I will have my ashes slung around the downtown "Idiot Circle where I and my idiot friend spent many a Friday and Saturday eveninng.