“I choose to
look at that brain tumor as
the greatest gift I could have ever gotten …”
During the 1984 Winter Olympics, my
bride of less than a year wanted to watch figure skating.
I skipped whatever favorite show
competed for that time slot and released the remote into her hands. I’m pretty
sure I groused a bit.
For crying out loud, it was … just … figure
skating.
When Scott Hamilton slid onto the ice,
I grew mildly intrigued. When he won Olympic gold while skating to “Walk This
Way,” I was hooked.
I laughed at his antics and gasped at
his signature backflip. And I fell in love with figure skating.
Almost 30 years later, I recently showed
clips of Scott Hamilton to a group of teenagers. I wasn’t sure they’d find him as
incredible and fun as I did. In fact, I feared a figure skating clip of Scott
Hamilton would get a groan, and I’d be tagged as the out of touch geezer.
But I needed that clip to demonstrate
what an incredible athlete he’d been in the 80’s and 90’s. I needed it before I
showed him talking about his health issues.
The kids cut up and horsed around as
they gathered around to watch the video. Then they watched him slide, glide,
twirl, flirt, and flip. They laughed. They gasped. And in the end, they enjoyed
Scott Hamilton and … figure skating.
The routine captured all the joy and
pleasure Scott Hamilton brought to the ice.
Exactly what I’d hoped would happen.
It gave the context of what followed—Scott
sharing about his health struggles as a child with a mysterious illness that
stunted his growth, the loss of his mother to cancer, a fight with testicular
cancer, and the eventual discovery of a brain tumor.
The latter had been with him from
birth. He mused about what his life would have been like without the tumor, if
he’d grown to be a taller man, if he’d not, due to the childhood illness, ever
been exposed to ice skating.
That’s when he made this statement. “I
choose to look at that brain tumor as the greatest gift I could have ever
gotten … because it made everything else possible.”
Link to the whole video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k9ZcN_6wzp8
Link to the whole video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k9ZcN_6wzp8
T. Neal Tarver has served churches in Texas and Wisconsin.
He, his wife Ellen, and son Daniel lived and worked for three years as
missionaries in the Russian Far East. Tom speaks enough Russian to both
converse and confuse.
He currently serves as an associate pastor and writes from his home in Wimberley,
Texas. He also writes about Christian community at A Curious Band of Others (www.tnealtarver.com).
Tom has spoken in churches across America, and in Europe, Asia, and the Middle East.
8 comments:
Love, love figure skating! What a wonderful attitude. A true champion.
thanks for sharing this Tom. Powerful.
Great post, Tom. Will share!!
Gail
What a wonderful story. May I share it on my website - www.seniorlifejourneys.com ? Thanks, Carol Howell - Best Selling Author of LET'S TALK DEMENTIA - A Caregiver's Guide
I, too, love figure skating...AND Scott Hamilton. Good post, Tom. I'll share.
Thanks for this wonderful blog. There was a story on last night's news featuring a young father, faced with brain cancer, who was living his life to the fullest.
Happy to share...What an amazing story!
Thank you all for your wonderful words. Of course, feel free to share. It's Scott's story and it is powerful.
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