Saturday, July 1, 2017

The Big Why

"There are two great days in a person's life--the day we are born, and the day we discover why." ~ William Barclay

Most of my posts here on RoundTheWorldWriter have been about how we'll go around the world. In the months to come, I'll share every bit of our planning, packing and preparing. Once we board the Pacific Princess next January, I hope you'll still be with me, following our adventures as we circumnavigate the globe.

But I haven't written much about why we're going on the three month voyage. To answer that question, I'm borrowing a post I wrote last month for my Second Wind blog. (This is the place where I share what it's like to live with a chronic lung condition in the hopes that I'll encourage someone else who may be struggling with a health issue.)

Anyway, here's my... 


Big Why


I'm dating myself a bit, but when I was a kid, Carly Simon was singing "These are the good old days." At the time, I wondered what she meant.

Now I know.

It means we need to be aware of our blessings and thankful for today. For me, that means being glad that I can still walk on the treadmill, to be grateful to live at a time when I have the right meds to help keep my lung condition stable and to bless God for "Herkimer," my faithful oxygen concentrator. That little machine on wheels keeps my world from collapsing on itself.

And speaking of my world, I'm about to see a whole lot more of it. I'm still trying to wrap my head around this--my DH and I booked a world cruise! I kid you not. We're going all the way around the earth.

We've been toying with the idea for a while, especially since I did well on our 30 day cruise to Tahiti last year. But we didn't think we'd be able to do a world cruise till about 2021.

That didn't stop me from dreaming. And planning. And lurking on cruise line websites, comparing itineraries, prices, number of days.Then Princess had a sudden drop in their fares. By that I mean the fare for both of us was less than it would cost to buy a new car.

We decided to not to wait any longer.

We had to do some financial fancy footwork, but this is the right time to go for lots of reasons:
  1. We got a great price on our fares.
  2. We have the money to pay for it now. (I heard one horror story about a couple who MORTGAGED THEIR HOUSE to pay for a world cruise. They'd never even been on a 7 day voyage before and they were miserable the whole time. So sad...)
  3. My parents are in excellent health, our grown children well and employed
  4. Our little dogs are both fine and will be well cared for by one of our daughters.
  5. And finally, the most compelling reason to go now is that my NSIP seems to be stable.  
My lung function was the same or slightly better the last time I was tested at Mayo Clinic. With supplemental O2, I'm able to walk a mile on the treadmill in less than 30 minutes. When I'm at home, I can often move slowly around the house to cook, do laundry, etc without needing Herkimer (you can make out a little of him in the picture to the left. It's like taking a carry-on roller bag with me when I'm out and about.) If I'm seated, my O2 sats are in the high 90's just like everybody else.

But NSIP is considered a progressive condition with a life expectancy of 5-13 years after diagnosis, if you believe everything you read on the internet (which I almost never do!)


Anyway, I'm on year 7.

Please don't feel sorry for me. I don't. I live a blessed life and I know it. Besides, I fully intend on breaking through that 13 year statistic and skewing the curve all to pieces. Only God knows when my expiration date is. But I do know that now is all any of us really have. And I'm determined to keep my now as active and adventurous as I can for as long as I can.

When I was in my twenties, my DH had to take a business trip to Honolulu. Of course, I tagged along. We visited the Polynesian Cultural Center and snorkeled in lovely Hanauma Bay. I rode the public bus all over Honolulu. I learned to surf at Waikiki.

And while 20-something me was having a ball on the beach, I happened to see an older couple at the edge of the sand. She was in a wheel chair and he was wearing an oxygen cannula as he pushed her along. I felt so sad for them. To be in such a beautiful place and not to be able to do all the things my young healthy body could do struck me as almost cruel.

I think about it a little differently now. Even with their obvious health challenges, that couple was still on the beach. They were still going, albeit much slower. They were still exploring, still venturing out of their comfort zone to see what's out there.

That nameless couple are kind of my heroes.

Next January, when I feel the sands of Waikiki between my toes again, I'll be thinking of them.


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3 comments:

  1. I admire people who continue to make the most of their days regardless of old age or medical conditions. All too many people use them as an excuse to give up, unfortunately.

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  2. True. One of my literary heroes is Robert Louis Stevenson. Contemporary doctors have guessed he suffered from TB, bronchiectasis or sarcoidosis. Despite having such poor health, he traveled widely--from his home in Scotland to the US a couple of times and to France. He finally set sail for the South Pacific, where he settled and eventually died on Samoa at the age of 44. He said, "I wish to die in my boots; no more Land of Counterpane for me. To be drowned, to be shot, to be thrown from a horse — aye, to be hanged, rather than pass again through that slow dissolution."

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