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Praise the Lord

🥹 Good thing is I can stop wearing bandages now.

This treatment is [i]rough[/i]. I’m not being dramatic when I say that there were moments I was sure this was it; I was gonna die. No one understands what this feels like till they’ve been through it. And it’s harder and harder to bounce back each round.
“Well, nobody likes to be poisoned,” my oncologist had said. It’s definitely poison. Sometimes, I can’t even move. I’m so nauseated and in pain for weeks. Two rounds of this type of chemo to go. The last kind wasn’t this hard. (It also didn’t help much)

I’ve prayed to God to just finish me off already; I’m ready to die. Just get it over with. And He didn’t. So I suffer, and it made me mad even though I know His will is best. I raged against Him anyway, wondered what the point of me is. He made it clear to me: take care of your mother and her house.
That made me even more angry. [i]I don’t feel well.[/i] Ever. In my childhood, when I needed [i]her[/i], where was she?! Do you think she was kind to me? Do you think I learned any compassion or care from her?!

I know most won’t understand this, but He said “Use what [i]I[/i] taught you; not what she did.”

So I sulked a bit. In the face of the truth, I know it, but I struggle a bit to come around to it. I still accept it in the end.

I’m to take care of my mom and her house. After that, I might die or I might have another purpose in life. But until I do this, it’s not something that will be clear to me. In the meantime, I still have blessings if I’d bother to notice them. (There’s no missing this blessing. I was so sick of the bandages, the wound and its stink and bleeding. It’s hopefully over now and won’t reopen or tear somewhere else. 🙏)
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RedBaron · M
The lord couldn’t have done it without your doctors.
Colonelmustardseed · 36-40
@RedBaron Untrue. But I understand that any time someone mentions the Lord, people who don’t believe in Him feel compelled to try to get those who do believe to stop believing or stop talking about Him. Because He’s revealed His hand over my life in so many different ways, there’s no denying His existence from me.
RedBaron · M
@Colonelmustardseed Not trying to stop you from believing in anything. Just suggesting you give credit to whom it’s due.
Colonelmustardseed · 36-40
@RedBaron Which would be the Lord. There are plenty who go through treatment and still die. In the end, it’s in the hands of God.
RedBaron · M
@Colonelmustardseed And your doctors.
Colonelmustardseed · 36-40
@RedBaron Who are unable to heal everyone they try to treat. You don’t know if I’m even grateful towards my oncologists or not. I didn’t talk about them in detail in this particular story. You chose to make this one story the whole story.
For this, I talk about gratitude for the Lord. Because, in the end, it’s in God’s hands no matter what oncologists do. The reason you refuse to understand my answer at all; is it because you don’t believe or is it because you think you’ll gain something by arguing? Because I already told you that you can’t convince me that God isn’t real.
Colonelmustardseed · 36-40
@RedBaron Actually, now that you brought it up, I think I shared on another story about how I came to find this particular oncologist. The first one I saw after I was diagnosed, tried to gaslight me simply because I had questions and concerns about chemotherapy. I wasn’t going to go through with treatment after that.
I prayed for doctors who’d be on my side, and God brought this oncologist into my path. So even this oncologist is thanks to the Lord. I knew he was trustworthy when he said that thing about chemo being poison, but it’s a necessary poison for me since this is a very aggressive type of cancer. So I praise the Lord for this oncologist as well.