Sunday, December 27, 2009

Resiliency: A Year in Review

Resiliency: A Year in Review
written by Leslie McQuilkin, MA- LDR
War, violence, disease, illness, poverty, racism, discrimination, and hate have one thing in common- survival. I met someone this year that learned how to survive and thrive; in my mind, she epitomized the word resiliency.  Nita was her name; I say was because Nita lost her battle with cancer after 30+ courageous years of learning how to live. She had purpose and she was my friend though 40+ years my senior. Life was simple to Nita- we live, we learn, we make our mark, and then like all creatures we die. Life to Nita was indeed more difficult to endure than most of us have or will experience yet she showed some significant appreciation for this suffering. Like most people that I have met this year, in fact all that can be defined as resilient find the same thing to be true for their suffering as well. This story is going to be about Nita- well a tribute to her life and a document of her legacy. Not unlike the rest of us, Nita was a mother, a grandmother, and wife. She had hobbies, a career, and had desires. Cancer hit Nita much unlike how it hits most people; she inherited as did her daughter a rare form of genetically transmitted aggressive breast cancer. Two months before Nita passed away, she had to bury her 44 year old daughter who lost her battle with the metastatic breast cancer that Nita was fighting as well. I often sat with Nita and her Husband Earl and just talked. I once asked her as we sat on her couch, “tell me about unconditional love Nita…” and she said with a serious face, “to love me unconditionally is to love me even when I am so ugly and I do not mean bald and vomiting…”. Earl chimes in as well, “she is right you know, we love each other when we need it the most- when we are mean, cranky, crying, or just plain hateful… we love each-other no matter what…” Earl and Nita had been married for 3+ decades, they were not what society or cinema displays as the perfect married couple but they were sure happy. Together they overcame so much and in this process developed a bond that is even unbreakable in death. One day, I asked Nita how her chemo was coming along and if the tumors that had developed in her lungs had shrunk in size and it was then I could tell that the cancer had taken her body over physically. She informed me that the chemo was to be stopped indefinitely and she would live her life out the best she could with the time she had left. I said nothing, because my face said it all. Nita immediately said, “I did not lose and I did not give up, there are just some battles we must let take their course… cancer has not taken my spirit, my soul, or my desire to make a difference… it is just taking my physical body…” – wow. She was not fibbing either. Nita was heavily involved in Relay For Life for many years, she was determined to help find a cure for this disease so her young granddaughters would not face the same fate as their great grandmother, grandmother, and mother have succumbed to. I remember going to a Relay For Life bank night and receiving a message on my phone, word for word here it is:
Les, this is Nita (raspy and weakened voice), I have just been released from ICU and I need to get by the bank so I will be late… but we have raised $3600 and want to bring it in…
My heart just swelled with pride, awe, love, and then my eyes filled with sad tears- the tears were not for Nita. My tears were for everyone who turned us down for funds in this race against cancer because they are too busy or too good to donate a dollar. Nita is dying, tired, sick, and swamped with her own bills still managed to stay committed to this cause- the worst part is, no one would have looked down on Nita if she had simply raised money to help her pay her own medical bills.




The town rallied around Nita and her family in her last few months, it is my hope that we gave her everything she wanted- a community bound tight in the fight against cancer. There was something about Nita that made us all want to be better people; her resiliency and faith was infectious and ignited the flames of hope in others that had long since died. Those flames still shine bright today. Nita may you rest in peace, your fight continues here and we promise to never give up.

Saturday, November 28, 2009

Please send your submissions...

Please send your submissions for posting to: resiliencytoday@gmail.com

The following information should be included:
Your name, credentials, citations, copy rights information....

PLEASE UNDERSTAND... all submissions will be run through a plagiarism software to ensure that all information is the sole property of those who created it.

Please allow 2-3 days for review

Do not include pictures***
Resiliency Unraveled

Some folks "assert" that the issue surrounding resiliency is, “what am I going to gain from pretending to find meaning amidst atrocious circumstance?” (and by assert I mean cackle loudly)


This social issue one calls ignorance spreads like wild fire when it pertains to the reverence of resilient behavior; resonating loudly is the sound of the familiar phrasing: “You are not special so you might as well give up…”

The bible tells me to be kind, so I decide to bite my tongue amidst the nagging pain to slap this person silly…

I defy the attraction to spew forth my own hateful ignorance for I am a good Christian woman, nevertheless, I must lead by example.

“Come on, your life is a train wreck …” anonymous states. “Just admit it, there was no meaning in what has happened to you, so why do you continue to believe this (your life) will mean something?”

Part of me was inclined to walk away

(Because what I had to say next was far from sweet), It was time to be honest with myself and to open up a world of humble for this incredibly ignorant individual

Why wait until now to address this issue of ignorance? Because folks, if there was a time to know something about somebody, then you should be aware that NOW there are three things everyone should know and believe about me;

1. I am brutally honest

2. NEVER, NEVER question my reasons to survive

3. IF you ask the question you better be darn ready for the answer

You want to know WHY I continue to believe my life means something beyond what has happened to me?

Because…

I know that there will be days I fail… but it is through those failures I grow…

I do more than endure; I thrive because I need to believe that somehow the things that happened can be turned into something positive…

I believe in myself, I believe that being resilient means I may get laughed at… but if I can manage to stand strong through it all then maybe… I can change a life.

I have held back tears and let them flow when no one was looking because being strong for others

… at that moment…

made the difference between someone crumbling and someone surviving…

I make people see what they are worth because they never knew the truth

That they… could be more than the circumstances they endured…

I make people repeat, “I will get through this…” over and over until they believe …

I have hit my knees in prayer, bloody and alone… determined to fight because I knew I was stronger…

NOW- If I haven’t made it clear then you are not listening with your heart…

I continue to live because I…

BECAUSE I was ready to give up when something… something in my tired and worn body said, “GET UP!”

…so I stood up blow after blow… I stumbled to my feet… I stared death, I stared evil, I stared the unknown in the face and said, “You will NOT define me… you will Not defeat me… I WILL triumph”

I have not met a hurdle I could not overcome yet… so come prepared,

because whether or not I have 5 years or 80 years left on this earth- I live by my terms

and NOT by the terms of circumstance.

Being resilient does not mean you will never hit rock bottom, being resilient does not mean you won’t ever be faced with the thought, “I don’t think I will survive…” being resilient does not mean you won’t ever be alone and afraid… being resilient quite simply means…

You will find a reason to triumph, you will come through a stronger person, you thrive, and you will find purpose… Being graceful is not a requirement for this trait so forgive me if this seemed far from…

Faith, hope, determination… the mind and the heart working together to say to people like you or circumstances unimaginable… “I won’t back down”

Why do I continue to believe? BECAUSE…

I KNOW my life has purpose.

I stand for those who were not strong enough to believe in themselves… I endure for those who believed they could not make it through… I find a reason because perhaps one day, just one day, I can meet someone like you and help them find their will to live…

“How?” you ask?

I don’t know.

Faith, God, inner strength, will, resolve… sure it all plays a part, but without the desire to survive I too will crumble at the feet of evil… and that… is not good enough for me.

To those I love, to those I lost, to those I see falling today… there will always be a hand waiting amidst the fire to fight.

We will emerge.

Sure we will be bruised, frightened, scarred, burned… but we will find a way…

We will keep going until our bodies can no longer withstand because that is the definition of character… courage.

With integrity we will face the unknown … and to all who laugh, sit in disbelief, criticize, and are lost in their pain I say,

“The difference between you and I is you may just ‘get through’ an atrocity… BUT I…I choose to have the courage live my life rather than let it happen to me…. Now here is my question… why haven’t you?”

© L. McQuilkin 2009
 
McQuilkin, L. (2009). Resiliency Unraveled. Tavares, FL