Friday afternoon, May 29, 2009, my friend, Greg Finch, and I were having coffee in Peet's coffee-shop on 19th Street in Sacramento, California.

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The previous day, my wife, Carol, had been diagnosed with Stage III, level c, ovarian cancer. Her surgery was scheduled for that coming Tuesday.

As Greg and I talked, I shared with him three things:

  • I know there are profound spiritual lessons in this for both my wife and me.
  • I have to do it differently this time.
  • I have to accept this and "let everything be as it is. "The only thing I can do is be "consciously present with her."

Rediscovering faith

After walking away from a fundamentalist church as a teenager, by age 40 I felt something was missing from my life and started looking for answers.

I began going to a small Unity church in Modesto where a guest speaker named Carol Ruth Knox delivered a talk one Sunday. For the first time in my life, I heard a message that resonated to the core of my being. I knew this was Truth, capitalized, emboldened and underlined.

A few months after that first meeting, I bought a small business in Walnut Creek, near her church. Over the next few years, her teachings on "Non-duality," "Progressing Spiritually from Victim to Victor to Vehicle," and "The Dark Night of the Soul" changed my life and the way I see God.

These lessons helped me see that my wife's cancer would have a profound spiritual impact on us both.


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The present of staying in the present

I had been a caregiver about 30 years before and it didn't go well. I tried to do everything myself and avoid the pain by "stuffing" my feelings and numbing out with alcohol.

Part of "doing things differently" this time was recognizing that I couldn't fix my wife. I could take care of many of her physical needs: cooking, driving her to doctor's appointments, buying groceries, cleaning house, etc. I also realized I needed to take care of myself, if I was to remain strong enough to take care of her. I would ask for help or hire someone to do the routine chores.

The greatest gift I could give to her (and to me) was to remain conscious throughout the experience. I said to God, "Okay, I am going to be present for all of this. I am going to feel it all." My promise to my wife was, "I will be consciously present with you and hold your hand throughout."