![]() |
| Spelunkers navigating a salon at Grutas de Cacahuamilpa |
When I graduated from high school, I took a gap year and went to live in Nome, Alaska, way up on the northwest coast, 1,000 miles from nowhere. What a great adventure. I had never met or even spoken to any of the people I came to know there (and still communicate with!). I had no idea what I was in for before going, or what that year would entail for me. But I blindly went and had an amazing experience that is as vivid to me today as when I did it 44 years ago. Dog sledding along the shores of the Bering Sea. Fly-ins into small arctic Eskimo villages to record and archive their traditional music. Living in a one room cabin with no electricity or running water. Eating seal, walrus, and muktuk (whale blubber). Walking along the rooftops of houses buried so deeply in snow drifts that all you could see was their chimney stacks.
![]() |
| My Alaska cabin |
I continue to crave adventure. I've done countless hiking trips into and across the Grand Canyon. Each one its own unique adventure, modified by terrain, weather, and companions. I've done long bicyling trips with my best friend Dale. Over the past two summers we rode our bikes 1,100 miles around lake Michigan. Our trip was loosely planned. We didn't know what to expect, how difficult or easy it would be, or what we would encounter from one day to the next. I've gone blue water wreck diving with my kids. Each of these things was difficult, scary in its way, and fraught with risk. They were frequently unpleasant and difficult in the moment, but always amazing in retrospect.
![]() |
| Wreck diving in the BVI with Henry & Jane |
![]() |
| Rim-Rim-Rim with Karla in the Grand Canyon |
![]() |
| Tour de Comfort Inns around Lake Michigan |
So, leukemia is a new adventure for me. Maybe this is going to be Type III Fun? This is not an adventure I would have chosen. But in much the same way as all the others, it will be it's own journey. The destination uncertain. There will definitely be danger. There will be times when I think I cannot keep going, and I will want to quit. There will be lots of advances and setbacks. And hopefully, along the way and the end of the road there will be opportunities to be grateful for the experience, to find contentment, joy, and perhaps to even gain an ounce or two of wisdom.
So let the adventure begin!





I wonder if the possible attraction of type III fun is that we don't know whether it might end up as type III. I do regret never finding the time to do a rim to rim to rim trip with you.
ReplyDelete