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Erika’s Reason to Relay

June 23, 2009

Hey friends, I am posting this on behalf of my dear friend Erika.  As brothers & sisters in Christ, we are called to love, serve, and support.. so I pray this encourages you and blesses your socks off, as it totally did mine and it places in you a longing to serve those around you!  I felt the leading to post this on my blog because I know so many of you fall upon it and I desperately wanted to share with you about a man who changed Erika’s life.. so grab a cup of joe, pull up a chair, and keep your Kleenex in arm’s reach!  If you would like to find out more information or would love to support her by making a donation [in any way] in her fight against cancer, please go here: My Reason to RelayRemember, we are called to be a blessing.. in return, the Lord will graciously bless us!   Thanks!  Love y’all!   -Sheryl

My Reason to Relay: by Erika Lee Brewer

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At four years old, I had no idea what “cancer” meant.

My mother had noticed a lump on the right side of my father’s neck in July of 1989. Neither of my parents were really concerned about it – they thought it was a harmless cyst.

My father had surgery that September to remove the “cyst.” What should have been a quick and easy surgery ended up lasting three hours. My mother knew that was a bad sign.

He was not diagnosed with cancer until October. The doctors did not figure out what kind until that January, when another tumor showed up, this time on the left side of his neck. The cancer was finally diagnosed as “Esthesioneuroblastoma.” In simple terms, the cancer was aggressive, originating between the bridge of his nose and his brain. He was a walking dead man.

That Christmas season was mostly spent in Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore, Maryland. I remember the decorations that were put up all around the hospital. No one wants to spend their Christmas season in the hospital, but somehow, with carefully hung decorations, it managed to become a more joyful place.

In the hospital, there was a huge marble statue of Jesus with his arms outstretched. A sign underneath him quoted scripture: “Come unto me all ye that are weary and heavy laden, and I will give you rest.” The statue is known as “Christus Consolator”- “The Divine Healer.” At four, I didn’t understand the concept of Christ as the great physician, but I did believe that Jesus loved me. And my Daddy.

I would walk around the hospital in my ruby red slippers. They were so beautiful. They were high heels made of red plastic that had sparkles embedded into them. I felt like a princess when I wore those slippers. One of my favorite things to do in the hospital was go down to the cafeteria to get chocolate milk. Between the enjoyment of my ruby red slippers and chocolate milk, it was easy to forget why I was there in the first place.

On a car ride home from Johns Hopkins one day, I began telling my mom about all the things my dad and I would do when he got well and came home from the hospital. My mother informed me that my father wasn’t going to get well. “What do you think that means?” my mom asked. I replied with an innocent but honest answer. “Die.”

On June eighth, I was brought to the hospital to say goodbye. I sat on his bed as my family stood in silence, lining the walls of the room that had become my father’s home. I sang the words of John 3:16 to him. “For God so loved the world, he gave his only son, that whosoever would believe in him would not perish but would have everlasting life.” A few years ago, someone told me that in that moment, I reminded them of a little angel. In the midst of heartbreak the presence of a child, naïve and innocent, became a reassurance of hope. Life does go on.

My father died three days later.

At the time, I did not grasp the gravity of our last moment together. I had no idea how much my world would change when I said goodbye to him.

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I wrote the story above as a memoir in a journalism class during my junior year of college. My “Daddy Will” has been gone now for 19 years, and finding ways to remember him and the life he lived are difficult. All I have are a few home videos, and the memories of my family members. Participating in Relay is an opportunity to remember in action – in a way that will hopefully lead to the prevention and healing of other people. I don’t know that there is a better way to remember him than that.

-Erika

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