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The
Times of India
Rajashree Birla
16 November 2006
Combating cancer is like going on an uphill
journey. Even when you do all the right
things in life, and take the right steps
along the way, death may overtake you.
This
is the reality and we must accept it. That
said, today there is tremendous advance
in medical science, and in the way oncologists
and support networks take care of the patient.
So, by and large, cancer is beatable.
Death
is an exception. This is one message that
needs to be constantly reinforced. Let me
tell you two stories.
The
first story is very personal. It is about
our family's brush with cancer. It is about
my husband, Adityaji. As we were returning
from Washington in 1993, a hoarding at the
airport caught his eye.
It
read: "If you are a man and over 50,
you should have a prostate check-up. You
may be suffering from prostate cancer".
And
Adityaji's reaction was let's have
this check-up on priority in Bombay. He
perhaps had an instinctive feel that somewhere,
something had gone wrong. In the course
of the check-ups, the doctors felt that
it could be prostate cancer.
Doctors
at Johns Hopkins, while confirming it, found
that the cancer had spread beyond the prostate.
From
1993 to October 1995, when he passed away,
he tried to live a life as normal as possible,
barring the last four months that he was
hospitalised. Even in this stage, he did
not want word of his illness to spread.
He
felt it would undermine the confidence of
his employees, investors and customers.
His illness was one of the best-guarded
secrets.
He
did not allow the family life to be affected.
Throughout the ordeal, he showed extraordinary
courage. He remained energetic and enthused
at work.
He
defied the pain of cancer. He would say,
let us seize the moment. Every day that
we wake up, we have to thank God, he would
aver.
He
began to develop a plan so that in any eventuality,
we, the family, would not face hurdles or
employees and shareholders encounter uncertainties.
He
did not make cancer the big story of his
life. To ensure continuity, he immediately
inducted our son, Kumar Mangalam, headlong
into the business.
Seeing
him work incessantly gave us hope. Healing,
in his case, did not happen. Because we
discovered his ailment late, and in those
days miracle drugs were not available.
But
he realised that the end was near. He knew
that we despaired. So he said to us, "It
is not the number of years that you live,
it is what you have packed in those years
that matters".
His
last words, before he slipped into a coma,
were, "Be brave".
Even
when we had no hope of his recovery, we
did not ask God Why us? We accepted
the will of God unconditionally. I must
admit though that at some point, I began
to look within for spiritual strength.
I
could do so only because of him. If I looked
at him and saw death and fear, it would
have rubbed off on me too.
But
he was always smiling and it is this happy
face that is etched in my heart. At one
point he said, "I always want you to
be happy and take life as it comes."
The
next story is that of a young couple and
their then six-year-old daughter who suffered
from leukemia. For months at a stretch in
hospital through three surgeries and a three-year
break from school, this child did not let
her spirit drop.
Today,
she is a happy 11-year-old, studying, painting,
singing and dancing as any kid her age would.
Throughout these traumatic times, with the
exception of the initial fortnight, this
family of four took the ailment in their
stride. So I asked the parents what saw
them through.
And
they said, an inner strength and an implicit
faith in God. The family determined from
the start that they would fight the cancer
to the finish line.
With
single-minded devotion, they slogged to
get their little one on the road to recovery.
The family would double up as cheerleaders
and fun managers. They would keep the kid
in good humour.
Studies
were done at home. Alongside, movies were
watched. Music and painting were taught
at home. They believed that God has his
own ways to send messages to us. We are
born to be happy, but often God throws a
googly. He also gives us the strength and
courage to brave adversity.
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