So here's the story...
As most of you know, I moved to Stroudsburg, PA this
past July to become Rabbi at Temple Israel of the
Poconos. As part of the move, I needed to find
new doctors who would look after me. I made an
appointment with one of the local specialists, who
suggested that I should have my lungs checked as
part of a
thorough physical examination. So he scheduled me
for a C.A.T. scan, expecting to find nothing out of
the ordinary. Well, surprise, surprise! When I
returned to the doctor for the results, he told me
that there was a spot on my lungs, and he could not
rule out lung cancer!
Next he scheduled me three days later for a P.E.T.
scan, which would definitely show if anything was
going on in my throat. I came to the surgery center
and they inserted some dye through an IV, which
would flow through my entire upper body, and by
means of the the scan, would clearly allow the
radiologists to diagnose any real or potential
problems. So I lay still for sixty-five minutes,
trying to "zone out," actually counting the seconds
(one thousand one, one thousand two, one thousand
three...) and pretty much trying to act like the
macho man that I did not feel like. My doctor had
scheduled the next appointment for a week later. I
asked him for an earlier date, but he said it took
that long for the results and the evaluation of the
scan. Actually, that was all done two hours after
the test, but who knew?
I had a whole week to think about dying of lung
cancer. What made it really scary was--my Mother
died of lung cancer. She was a heavy smoker, I have
never smoked, but I had already presumed that it was
genetic and that my life was over. And then I began
to plan. What would I do with the time I had left?
First, would I take chemo and radiation for the
cancer? I decided absolutely not, since I was not
prepared to spend the next year suffering through
mind-and-body-numbing treatments which would at best
give me another month or two of life which was
not-life. I have seen too many of my congregants and
friends go through that, it was not for me. Would I
quit my job as Rabbi? Yes, I would have done that
immediately, and I even began working on my final
sermon. I would have told my new congregation that
there were places in this world that I wanted to
visit with Ellen, and that I especially needed to
return to Israel for a final visit, so I was
resigning from the pulpit, to live out the rest of
my life the way I wanted to. I would thank them for
the lessons they have already taught me even in the
short time we had together, and I would ask their
forgiveness for any pain I had caused them. In
short, I would complete my relationship with them
before I left.
After seeing other parts of the world, I would
return home and
begin to travel all across the country, giving a
lecture to
anyone who might be interested,
entitled: "Final Life-Thoughts of a Grateful Rabbi."
The lecture would talk about gratitude being my
first-choice feeling on learning of my impending
death. Above all, I am grateful for the life that I
had been granted; I considered my life a precious
gift to me from God. After gratitude comes
everything else, all other feelings and thoughts.
The world can only be repaired when gratitude replaces
entitlement, when we move outside of ourselves toward
others in our lives. I was not angry, just sad that I
would not live to see my kids' life-cyle events or
share in the lives of my grandchildren as I had
hoped to be able to do. My hopes, dreams and
aspirations have been reached, I would die fulfilled and
happy. If my time had come, I would be ready,
unafraid and unashamed of what I had accomplished in
my life. I know that I have mattered to lots of
folks, and my teachings and my memories would be my
final gift to them, and to the Universe.
I fully believe that when our mission on this earth
is accomplished, we can then be ready and prepared to
leave this world for whatever comes next. The
problem is--who among us knows when that will
happen? How will we know when our life-missions will
have been accomplished? We don't, so that when God has
decided that my earthly purpose has been
fulfilled, who am I to argue? Even more, I have
known too many women and men who have lived "too
long," that is to say that their final years were
spent in pain or in a nursing home, or totally
unable to communicate with those they love. I would
indeed be fortunate, because I would leave this life
on my own terms, proud and grateful. And not in any
physical pain.
So you see, smart guy that I am, I was sure I had it all
figured out. Needless to say, thank God, the results
came back showing that the spot on my lungs was just
that, some
benign scar tissue left over from who-knows-when. I
was elated. I really was! But to tell the deep,
dark, dirty,
honest-to-God truth, I was just a wee bit
disappointed at the same time. I was actually
looking forward to the last year of my life, I was
going to be able to fill the closing chapter of my
existance with passion!
Between seeing the world, teaching women and men all
across America the truths I had learned, finishing
my book on grief and hope, perhaps starting another
book, my days would be filled with joy and
creativity. They would be filled with life, not death,
and when the end would come, I would feel that the
banquet of my life had been well worth my fifty-nine
years of effort.
That's my story, and it has a happy ending. Sort of. The
gnawing-in-my-kishkas question I continue to ask
myself ever since this
happened is: What's stopping me from doing all
those things I was going to do when I knew I was
dying? How many of them can I still do right now,
while I am still living? Why will I have to wait
until the
Angel of Death comes calling for me, for real? It is
these questions, not thoughts of my death, which
continue to haunt me. Maybe by next month I'll have
some answers.
Mel Glazer