Joanie Shawhan knows how to introduce light into shadows. Diagnosed with ovarian cancer, she turned to the Lord for encouragement, and now she offers that same encouragement to others. In this Health and Spiritual Growth UPGRADE, she offers a positive perspective for an otherwise difficult diagnosis.
Joanie asks, "How could anything good come from cancer?"
I (Dawn) asked myself that question when diagnosed with blood cancer. But then I read scriptures (1 Chronicles 16:34; Romans 8:28; James 1:17) about my good Father God, and I believed He could bring good from anything!
Joanie continues . . .
As an oncology nurse, I was familiar with the ravages of cancer and chemotherapy. But in 2006, ovarian cancer flung me to the other side of the bed.
I dutifully exchanged my nursing scrubs for peekaboo gowns and skid-free gripper socks. Instead of threading needles into the veins of my patients, machines pumped chemotherapy into my veins.
Chemotherapy pummeled my body, and I didn’t think I would survive the next hour, the next minute. But somewhere in the midst of this devastation and beyond, God surprised me with an overriding sense of His grace and showered me with gifts, hidden in the shadow of cancer.
Seven Gifts Hidden in the Shadow of Cancer
1. Family and Friends
I experienced the love and support of many people who prayed with and for me.
They:
Well-wishers sent cards, gifts, and flowers, reminding me I was not forgotten.
2. Rest
I could do nothing, absolutely nothing, for several days following chemotherapy.
I wasn’t only physically and mentally impaired, but I also felt spiritually impaired, unable to focus to read my Bible or pray.
But God only asked that I rest like a child in His arms—the arms of a loving Father—and allow Him to carry me through this trial.
3. Laughter
While I lay in the hospital bed with my finger poised over the pain medication button, my sister surfed the internet for wigs, hats, and scarves.
“We have to make this fun,” she said.
Fun? Where was sisterly commiseration?
But she was right. Shopping for wigs and hats was fun. I laughed as I tied scarves that turned askew on my bald head and morphed into pirate patches. Books and humorous cards buoyed my spirits.
4. New Friends
Nine years after my diagnosis, I finally met other ovarian cancer survivors at an ovarian cancer camp: Camp-Make-A-Dream, in Missoula, Montana.
Eventually I connected with local survivors. We meet monthly for lunch and plan social outings and fundraisers for ovarian cancer. We are . . .
"The Fried Eggs — Sunny-Side Up."
5. Empathy
As a nurse, I felt sympathy for my cancer patients, but I never really understood the struggle of living in the world of cancer.
But now as a survivor, I experience this unspoken bond, a glance that says it all. I KNOW.
6. Gratitude
I am thankful for God’s faithfulness through the many trials in my life, including cancer. He has brought me out on the other side.
I am cancer-free.
7. New Direction and Purpose
I wrote the book, In Her Shoes: Dancing in the Shadow of Cancer, to help other women struggling with a cancer diagnosis. I included my ovarian cancer story and the stories of other women surviving cancer as well as helpful tips.
I also write encouraging articles for women undergoing chemotherapy.
Along with other survivors, I share my ovarian cancer story with medical students in the Survivors Teaching Students program, hoping that earlier detection will save women’s lives.
God gives many gifts, sometimes hidden, but always a blessing.
If you, imperfect as you are, know how to lovingly take care of your children and give them what’s best, how much more ready is your heavenly Father to give wonderful gifts to those who ask him? (Matthew 7:11 TPT)
What hidden gifts have you received from the Lord when you were going through a difficult season?
Joanie Shawhan is an ovarian cancer survivor, registered nurse, speaker, Selah Awards Finalist for In Her Shoes: Dancing in the Shadow of Cancer, and radio and television guest. Contact Joanie on her website for more information.
Graphic adapted, courtesy of Harry Strauss (Image4U) at Pixabay.