3 Years

3 years. 3 years without your hugs. 3 years without your smile. 3 years without your jokes. 3 years without your voice.

3 years without you.

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I wrote this one month after I had to say goodbye to my dad:

It’s been a month since you left this place. The wound still open, my heart still broken, the pain so unbearably real. Some have said each day will get easier, I’m not certain that’s the truth. Others have said time heals all wounds, but time won’t bring you back. At times it feels like just yesterday that I awoke to that phone call, other times it feels like a year. The days blur together and I can’t keep track, all I know everyday is that the truth remains…you’re gone. To say that I miss you doesn’t even begin to convey the void I feel in my heart. A piece of it gone, a part of myself has gone missing, the hardest part has been letting go. Though grief and sadness overwhelm me, this is not the entire story; you see in the face of this loss I see now so clearly the truth about love that you always told me. Love is the answer, the key to it all. Dad, you’d be so blown away by the avalanche of love poured out for you. It’s captivating and overwhelming; it’s helping to carry us through. It was your life’s message, the song of your heart, no one played it like you, it was your special tune. It’s permanently written on the hearts of the lives you touched. For me it’s engraved in my heart, mind, and spirit, intertwined in my DNA. For me there’s no escaping the impression you have made. I’m honored that you called me yours and privileged to call you mine. To some you we’re pastor, teacher, or friend. To me you were all that and more, also known as dad. Even in your absence you continue to teach me, your love still helping to shape me. I didn’t know pain until you left me, but I am learning about God’s comfort, mercy, and compassion for the very same reason. You left me a toolbox, very well equipped, not knowing what my questions would be, you left me all the answers. You showed me the path to the heart of Creator, from which all blessings flow. He’s guiding and providing, he’s with me in the moments nobody knows. There are moments that I fear the life ahead of me, having to face it without you here, but I’ll remain your fearless adventurer even when the road is not clear. I feel your love inside and around me, I feel your smile and it warms my heart. Your light and love are still with me, I will carry them with me always. I’m both moved and at times immobilized by your love that’s still so living. I want to love like you loved; I’ll do my best and try. I miss your hugs, I miss your jokes, I miss your silent laugh, I miss it all. I’ll never feel like I had enough of you but I’m overwhelmed with gratitude and humility that God let me have you. I love you, I hate living without you. One month down, a lifetime to go…

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It’s 3 years later now and it feels like I’ve lived so many lifetimes in that time. Yet, there are still so many times I am completely stunned by the fact that my dad is gone; as though no time has passed. It can still knock the wind out of me like when I first heard the words “He’s gone.” The reality is that a lot has changed these last 3 years. I’ve changed a lot these last 3 years. You know what hasn’t changed though? Love. It’s still the answer. It may sound completely romanticized and simplistic, but it’s what I know to be true. I sat in a dark room, moments after learning that my dad was gone and I saw my whole world shatter into a billion pieces around me. It’s not complete, and it might not ever be this side of eternity, but you know what has put some of those pieces back together? Love. Love has come in the most unexpected ways and places. My dad’s love is still so much alive within me and it gives me the strength to continue. I have been blessed so far beyond measure with people in my life that have dared to love me in the midst of the messy…and there have been some really messy times.

I still miss my dad so much that there are times I literally feel an ache in the pit of my stomach. I miss him everyday. I think about him everyday. I can’t say that it gets easier, but I guess it does get better. I feel like my world is in less than a billion pieces now and that feels, well, it feels like hope. The missing him isn’t any different today than it was yesterday, but today when I remember the day he had to leave this place, I feel more love than sadness. I feel more love than grief. I feel more love than anything. I may still feel a lot of sadness sometimes, but even then, I still feel even more love.

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I feel so very blessed to have been and still be loved so fiercely by my dad. His love is what makes his absence bearable. Unconditional love is real and it’s exactly that…not even death or a grave is a condition. Love is the only thing we get to both leave here and take with us when we die. It’s the only thing that’s gonna matter and the truth is…it’s the only thing that matters now. I may feel some sadness today, but more than anything I feel loved. And rather than solely mourn his death, I celebrate a life well-lived and the man who knew how to love better than any other human I’ve met.

Friends, may we all love more and hug our people just a little bit longer today and everyday. 

God, I have had both the struggle and privilege the last three years to truly come to know you as God The Father…God My Father. Thank you for the light you gave my life in the life of my dad Mark Edward Lopez. Thank you for his beautiful soul. Thank you for choosing me to be his. I still don’t know why you took him when you did, but still, not my will, but yours be done. Thank you for sharing him with me for 25 years. Please continue to heal my heart. Help me to love well and love the broken during my time here, just like my dad did. Thank you for carrying me through these difficult seasons and surrounding me with your love, grace, and mercy. And I don’t know if you do this sort of thing, but if you could give him a hug for me, that’d be really awesome. In Jesus’ Name, Amen.

World Cancer Day

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It’s strange, though not surprising, that today is World Cancer Day and I happened to have standing plans to drive my grandma and great grandma to a doctor’s appointment. Out of all the doctors’ offices in Anaheim, my great grandma’s doctor’s office happens to be at Anaheim Regional Medical Center.  I sat in the parking lot and stared at the building where mom’s cancer journey began; it feels like lifetimes ago. I was having flashbacks to those first moments: “Your scan showed a large mass on your ovary that could indicate cancer.” I remember the deafening silence that followed. I remember writing these words during that hospital stay at Anaheim Regional:

Faith is so much easier to have when you don’t really need it. Sounds silly, I know. But you see, it’s the middle of the night and I’m sitting in a chair at my mom’s bedside in the hospital. I’ve always been unnerved in hospitals, but never like this. More than the eeriness of walking the hallways, or the awareness of all of the sickness here, or the strange noises coming from a patient down the hall, or the smell…you know what the most unnerving thing is? Sitting here in a dark room that is filled to the brim with questions, but completely void of answers. I like to think I have a pretty good head on my shoulders, but these are the kinds of questions that I can’t answer.

 

“Will my mom be okay?”

“Is it cancer?”

“If it is cancer, will she be okay?”

“If it is cancer, will we all be okay?”

“9 months after losing my dad, why is this happening?”

 Like I said, it feels like lifetimes ago. I got answers to most of those questions, except that last one. Nearly two years later we are all okay. This time two years ago we were in our last weeks of life as we knew it; life before cancer. During those first days and weeks when you’re still in shock upon receiving a diagnosis, it’s easy to feel like a victim of this disease. I mean, it is attacking you, but there’s this shift that happens as the shock begins to wear off. Most of us go through life thinking that cancer is something that happens to other people, and other families, it will never happen to you…and then it does. All of a sudden it was my mom who had cancer. And cancer goes from being a powerless word of something that happens to other people, to this dark, powerful enemy, that is attacking you or someone you love from the inside out.

Mom, Daniel, and I the morning of mom's surgery before heading to the hospital 08/23/14

Mom, Daniel, and I the morning of mom’s surgery before heading to the hospital 08/23/14

Shortly after this happens you are faced with a choice and it is possibly one of the most important choices you will ever make. You have to choose between being a victim of cancer or to be a fighter and survivor of cancer. I thank God everyday that he gave my mom the resolve and determination to fight like hell. It might seem like an easy choice, who wouldn’t want to live? But it isn’t as simple as choosing life because what you’re really choosing is life with cancer. And life with cancer means hospitalizations, surgeries, treatment, side effects etc. It takes a strong person to choose life with cancer. It is not an easy life. It’s a life filled with countless doctor visits, pain, fear, isolation, long treatments, and a lot of days where you feel lousy.

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I think as a culture we tend to give a sympathetic head tilt to someone battling cancer and maybe there is a time where that is helpful. But after walking alongside my mom through two cancer battles I think a more appropriate response to someone living with cancer might be applause, standing ovations, and endless high fives. What I’ve learned watching my mom and others throughout the course of her treatment is that they are the brave and courageous ones among us.

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Everyday they are faced with the reality of their own mortality, battling a disease that could take their lives, but they get up, face the truth, and still, they choose to fight. The truth is, we each face the same mortality, but most of us choose to live life as though it isn’t so. Even after remission, a cancer survivor never goes back to life before cancer. Sure, on the outside it may seem that way, but on the inside nothing is the same. They continue “fighting” cancer long after it’s left their bodies. After a cancer diagnosis, a headache is never just a headache again. There’s that fear and nagging question “Is the cancer back?” I experienced this with my mom just last month when we found out she had fractured her leg. For someone who hasn’t ever been diagnosed with cancer a fracture would be simple enough to diagnose and soon you’d be on your way. For my mom, there was the slight suspicion that her fracture could have been a result of cancer spread. She was hospitalized for a couple of days and during that time she had a bone scan to rule out cancer. Thankfully there was no sign of it and it actually is just a fracture. A cancer survivor isn’t someone who “survived” cancer, it is someone who is surviving and living even beyond cancer. It is someone who chooses to embody what it means to be a survivor rather than a victim of cancer. The temptation is always there to live under the dark cloud of fear and what ifs, but continuing to choose life is what makes them true survivors.

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Cancer patients are the gems among us that, truth be told, we look away from when we see because we don’t want to face our own mortality. I saw this so clearly during my mom’s cancer treatment, people in her life that I thought for sure would walk beside her were nowhere to be found. When the reality is, we should be taking notes; because I think when we’re honest we all want to live brave and courageous lives. We can start by being brave and courageous enough to not look the other way, but instead walk alongside those battling cancer.

Mom joining UCI and #TheAntiCancer movement

Mom joining UCI and #TheAntiCancer movement

Mom rockin' her freshly shaved head

Mom rockin’ her freshly shaved head

If I could go back and somehow spare my mom of her cancer diagnosis, most of the time I think I would…but when I ask her if she would trade it her answer is always no. Because of her bravery and courage, she can see the value in the journey. Relationships that were formed, lessons that were learned, a fire in her heart to live that might have stayed only just a flicker. The list can go on and on. Everyday she chooses life, joy, and gratitude. And I’m amazed by her all the time, but today as we raise awareness, share our stories, pause and remember those who were taken too soon by this disease, I want to take a moment to honor the choice she made to fight, even when she wanted to give up. She is my inspiration and my hero. Momma, consider this your virtual applause and standing ovation.

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I hope that in my lifetime I get to see a definitive cure for all forms of this disease and I am grateful for the men and women who dedicate their lives to research and science to make this hope a reality. I am especially grateful for the amazing doctors that joined mom’s dream team and continue to care for and support her.

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None of us know what tomorrow will bring, tell the ones you love that you love them and tonight hold them just a little tighter and just a few seconds longer.

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Cautiously Optimistic

For as far back as I can remember, writing has always been my outlet and escape. It wasn’t until I was older that I really found the power in it, but looking back, I always had a strong connection to it. Often times I can really get to the bottom of how I’m feeling through writing. Naturally, because of this, I tend to avoid it sometimes. There are different reasons why I avoid it, but it usually comes down to a four letter word I know all to well…

No, not that one. Haha. The other four letter word.

Fear.

Whether I’m afraid of what you’ll think, afraid of what I’ll think, afraid to have the blank page staring back at me, or simply afraid to find out what I really feel about something, fear is always trying to find a way to stop me. The harsh truth about fear is that I hand my power over to it every, single time. Over the course of the last few years my relationship with fear has changed.

I used to be afraid of all the big, bad things that could happen to me…until those things did happen to me.

After losing my dad and walking alongside my mom through her first cancer battle, I have to be honest with you, I felt invincible. I felt as though I had survived some of the worst things I would probably ever have to face, so by comparison, how scary could anything else possibly be? It’s a broken pattern of thought, I know that now.

I’m sitting here having walked through some of the darkest, loneliest, scariest times of my life, but you know what I’m scared of now?

Moving on. Starting over.

I find so much grace and redemption in the fact that I’m even in a place where I can begin to rebuild my life, but it’s also terrifying.

During the time my mom was hospitalized for her cancer treatment, one of her doctors repeatedly used the term “cautiously optimistic”.  At the time, I wasn’t even really sure what it meant. It seemed contradictory. How could one be cautious and optimistic at the same time? Throughout our journey I have not only come to understand, but deeply appreciate the term. Like so many things in life, it’s about balance. You don’t want to be so cautious that it prevents you from experiencing life, but being so optimistic that you’re oblivious to reality doesn’t seem to be the best thing either.

When it comes to moving forward in my life and essentially having to start from the ground up to rebuild it, I’ve been more cautious than optimistic. And you know what? It isn’t really working out. It turns out I need more optimism. And what I need more than anything is to take my power back from fear.

After all that has happened I’m afraid to rebuild and plan for the future. I had built a pretty great life and in a moment it all came crashing down and has mostly been in pieces on the ground ever since as the hits just kept on coming. Most days I’m afraid to even go near those pieces, let alone begin to pick them up and rebuild. I know that my life will never go back to being what it was, there are some huge pieces missing that can’t be replaced. Sometimes, it’s scary just facing that reality. At times it feels like every step I take and every day that passes takes me further away from my dad but, I feel his love so alive in my heart. And it’s not long before I hear dad’s voice in my head saying “My Lala, my fearless adventurer.” And in a bittersweet moment I am reminded that the things that make me who I am are bigger than my fear. I’m reminded of all that I’ve survived and while I hope that I don’t have to face some of those big things again, I know in my core that even if I had to, I can make it through because grace and strength have met me at every turn.

I start a new job tomorrow and it will be the first long-term, full-time job I’ve been at since before my dad passed away. It’s scary. It’s my first big step toward starting over and rebuilding. It’s also really exciting.

Moving forward to the next chapter, I am “cautiously optimistic” 🙂

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