My husband, Gary, was stubborn tenacious. When he was first diagnosed with late-stage, slow-growing cancer, we learned he could expect about two years of life. But Gary stubbornly insisted on living ten years. Ten far-reaching, astonishing years.
I love that I was married to a tenacious man.
There was a day—with chemo still in his system and having lost a good deal of energy and weight—that Gary suggested we walk a three-mile loop of the Deschutes River trail as part of our Friday date night.
He said we could always find a bench to sit on and then turn back if he couldn’t go the distance.
But we walked the full three miles. Because he was that stubbornly tenacious.
Based on relevant research and years of observations of people under extreme stress, Drs. Douglas Strouse; George S. Everly, Jr. and Dennis McCormack, an early Navy SEAL who later became a psychologist, produced a list of shared characteristics in highly resilient people.
And tenacity—an uncommon perseverance, especially in the face of setbacks and discouragement—made the list.
Based on my experience as Gary’s caregiver, here are 5 reasons his uncommon perseverance mattered:
1. Tenacity supports quality of life.
There’s no science to prove that our cancer team—good nutrition, increased physical activity, a tenacious attitude, plugging into community, giving back, and our strong faith—extended Gary’s life from the projected two years to ten.
But certainly our cancer team was profoundly instrumental in providing good quality of life. Which was important to the patient as well as his caregiver.
2. It encourages healthy risk-taking.
Gary and I stepped out of our comfort zones by establishing a non-profit, writing for grant funding, and sharing at various venues across the country what we were doing to live well with terminal disease.
It took tenacity to dare imagine there would be an audience for our proactive message, and tenacity to complete the steps to get us there.
3. It produces a positive attitude.
My husband didn’t sit around bemoaning the fact that he was going to die of cancer, “that is, if I don’t get hit by a bus first” (his words, not mine).
His determination to remain proactive helped set the tone in our home. We didn’t have our heads buried in the sand; we knew that terminal meant … well, terminal.
But while we still had life, we were determined to live it.
4. It generates fun and memories.
Gary and I had more fun and created more memories in the cancer years than at any other season of our marriage. It’s because in the earlier years we were too frugal, and too busy saving for someday.
And then cancer knocked on our front door, and even though it insisted on accompanying us, we climbed to the tops of more mountains, and took more road trips, and established a standing Friday date night, and laughed uncontrollably, and explored more places across this great land than at any other time in our marriage.
5. It creates hope.
My husband, on a hormone therapy regimen that produced exhaustion, had every reason to sit back in an easy chair and watch other people lead extraordinary lives.
But he donned hiking boots, and cleats in snow and ice, and turned on the lights in the bill of his cap in the dark early morning hours, and hiked to the top of a small mountain in the middle of our hometown – two miles round trip, 500′ elevation gain. Every workday morning.
I don’t do 5:30am, but on weekends Gary and I discovered the trails in the nearby Cascade Range. And we became addicted to fresh mountain air, and the smell of pine needles on sunbaked dirt, and the sound of burbling creeks and roaring waterfalls, and the beauty of impossibly tall Oregon trees and startling wildflowers after snowmelt.
My husband’s persistence to live his remaining days well gave me so much hope that maybe he’d live longer than the experts projected.
Which turned out to be exactly the case.
With the completion of radiation and his decision for no more chemotherapy, Gary and I resumed our after-dinner walks through the neighborhood. More slowly than before chemo, but still …
One early evening we came across this flower growing out of the gutter. Which reminded me of my husband.
Hanging in there against all odds.
Surviving in limited resources.
Doing what it was created to do, even in less-than-desirable circumstances.
Yep. Gary.
One final thought …
Elon Musk leaves us with this to ponder:
“If something is important enough, even if the odds are against you, you should still do it.”
Resolve. Persistence. Determination. Grit. Tenacity. It doesn’t matter so much what you call it; it matters that you cultivate it.
What if we could all live our lives that way – with or without cancer?
Marlys Johnson is a cancer widow, author, speaker & blogger. We first met her through her work coordinating St. Charles Medical Center’s Survivorship Program and her beloved husband, Gary – a CHN Support Volunteer for many years. Her passion for helping others navigate life’s challenges inspires us every day and we are delighted to share her insights.
To read more of Marlys’ work – and discover her love of all things outdoors – visit her blog Renew | Repurpose.