by Arunlikhati
Coming to terms with metastatic non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, Arunlikhati realizes he is his own refuge — and one for everyone else, too.
Back
when I thought I was healthy, I paid repeated visits to various doctors
with a basket of unexplainable symptoms. Joint aches. Headaches.
Fevers. Night sweats. I was otherwise doing well, it seemed, eating a
mostly plant-based diet and getting a good night’s sleep.
Always bewildered, the doctors ordered me dozens of blood tests,
scans, and pain medications. By the time enough data had accumulated to
warrant a hospital stay, the diagnosis had become grimly clear.
Turns out I have cancer.
My cancer is a metastatic non-Hodgkin lymphoma that has spread to my
bone marrow, liver, kidneys, bones, and central nervous system — not to
mention dozens of lymph nodes throughout my body. It has been more
painful than anything else I have endured.
As I sit through my rounds of chemo, I’ve decided that this is the time to get serious about my Buddhist practice.
Worse, no matter how well I respond to the six grueling rounds of
chemotherapy my oncologists have scheduled for me, my hyperaggressive
cancer is bound to relapse within a year. My only hope for a cure will
come from a stem cell donor.
There’s a catch. Due to my diverse ancestry, my chances of finding a matching donor are unusually low. I often hear that my odds are about one in a million, which I’ve learned is the technical term for, “There’s a chance. Just don’t count on it.”
So in the meantime, as I sit through my rounds of chemo and wait for
that needle-in-a-haystack life-saving stem cell donor to be found, I’ve
decided that this is the time to get serious about my Buddhist practice.
Bundled up in excruciating pain on my hospital bed, the inevitability
of my death brought an unexpected comfort. We all die, from cancer or
otherwise. Buddhism never fails to remind us that we are all subject to
birth, aging, illness, and death — and also gives us something to do
about it.
I started by trying to recall various Buddhist teachings I could
bring to mind, starting with the Four Noble Truths: life stinks, there’s
a reason why life stinks, life doesn’t have to stink, and there’s a
path you can follow so your life doesn’t stink. I figured it was time to
start making some headway down that path, while I’m still able to do
so.
I decided early on: now was not the time to struggle for
enlightenment and a release from all suffering in this life. It seemed
more prudent to focus on my unsurprisingly mundane priorities. I wanted
to manage my pain. I wanted peace of mind. I wanted to ease the burden
of my condition on my family and friends who had been with me through
this whole ordeal. Anything was viable, from meditation to chanting to
readings.
I found myself taking refuge in my breath during my bone marrow biopsy and MRI scans.
During my first two weeks in the hospital, I tried playing around
with different Buddhist practices to try to tease out which would work
best for me. Unfortunately, I was hopelessly disorganized and found
focus and consistency nearly impossible. I tried making a spreadsheet on
my laptop, but never updated it. I brought a notebook, but would fall
asleep before taking down notes.
One night, restless from a large dose of Prednisone, I picked up my notebook and scribbled down the thoughts running around in my mind. What
am I trying to achieve, if not ultimate liberation? Why is it important
for me to delve into Buddhist practice? What will make it all
worthwhile? And then I scribbled out one last line, closed my notebook and went to sleep.
Be the refuge you wish to see in this world.
“Be
the refuge” has become my strategy for engaging Buddhist practice in my
battle with cancer. To me, a refuge is a space for the cultivation of
true comfort and wellbeing. I’m fine with not reaching the fully
liberating refuge of enlightenment in this lifetime. It would be enough
if I could have somewhat of a refuge for myself from pain and anxiety,
and then to try be a refuge for those around me.
When I was in my most intense pain, meditation became a refuge for my mind. Metta meditation
was so effective at focusing my mind that, somehow, my intense pains
would vanish for a time. I found myself taking refuge in my breath
during my bone marrow biopsy and MRI scans, allowing my mind to dwell in
a comfortable space during some rather uncomfortable procedures.
We are most compelling when we are the very refuges we wish to see in this world.
In the hospital, I found my speech and actions could become refuges
for my family and caregivers — providing a space where they could feel
calm, positive and helpful. I try to be honest and let people help me
when they can. I try to use humor to take the edge off my complaints.
Simple courtesies of thanks and asking nurses and aides how their days
are going have gone a long way to making sure my care team knows that
they can breathe easy around me.
As it became clear that my cure will depend on a stem cell or bone marrow donor, organizing marrow donor drives
proved to be a refuge for my friends from the powerlessness of being
able to “do nothing” — a space where they feel empowered to provide
meaningful assistance toward finding my cure. It’s amazing to see the
faces of friends and family light up when they see they have the means
to actually help save my life. Complete strangers have shared with me
how meaningful it is to learn they can do something so simple to help save someone’s life.
Even now after the election upset, I feel that the challenge is for
us to create refuges of our own communities — spaces where people can
find true comfort and wellbeing. Is our meditation center a place where
newcomers can feel safe and secure? Do we feel supported by our
communities? Are our spaces attentive to the needs of those of us
marginalized by society?
There is a temptation to strive to change what’s outside, rather than
focus on ourselves and our own communities. While we still need to
articulate our principles, relay our stories, protest injustice and cast
our votes, we are most compelling when we are the very refuges we wish
to see in this world. When we can exist calmly in moments of suffering
and confusion, others notice and are drawn to us. When our communities
provide true and considered support, others notice and will attempt to
recreate the same benefits for their own communities. The power of our
refuges means others may even pay special attention to our work in
community in ways they would never do otherwise. When our communities
are welcoming to those in need of support and attentiveness, our
communities will grow.
“Be the refuge” is a challenge. It is a challenge for me to recast my
efforts and rethink the questions I use to focus my energies. For years
I’ve wondered about how to create an Op-Ed Project
for Buddhists of Color in order to encourage a greater diversity of
writers. But when I now refocus the question — “How do I create a refuge
for Buddhists of Color?” — I find myself with a broader set of
options to explore, not to mention more insightful ways to articulate my
goals for increasing the diversity of Buddhist writers.
As I fling my body through successively brutal cycles of
chemotherapy, my real challenge remains for me to be the refuge I wish
to see in this world. My life has already been extended by months, and
yet the end still seems sonear. What is the meaning of refuge as a space
of true comfort and wellbeing when I am in near constant pain, when I
have a life-threatening illness? How do I express my gratitude for being
alive every day? It occurs to me that, however disorganized I may feel,
I am finding my path of practice one day at a time, moment by moment.
May I strive for each and every day to be a refuge for myself and for all beings.
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