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Hitch and His Cancer

Wednesday, 4th August 2010

He's not named it Henry yet, preferring to speak of it as "the alien", but Christopher Hitchens on his cancer is worth your time and, perhaps, that of anyone you know with any of those diseases:

Carcinoma works cunningly from the inside out. Detection and treatment often work more slowly and gropingly, from the outside in. Many needles were sunk into my clavicle area—“Tissue is the issue” being a hot slogan in the local Tumorville tongue—and I was told the biopsy results might take a week.

Working back from the cancer-ridden squamous cells that these first results disclosed, it took rather longer than that to discover the disagreeable truth. The word “metastasized” was the one in the report that first caught my eye, and ear. The alien had colonized a bit of my lung as well as quite a bit of my lymph node. And its original base of operations was located—had been located for quite some time—in my esophagus. My father had died, and very swiftly, too, of cancer of the esophagus. He was 79. I am 61. In whatever kind of a “race” life may be, I have very abruptly become a finalist.

[...]The oncology bargain is that, in return for at least the chance of a few more useful years, you agree to submit to chemotherapy and then, if you are lucky with that, to radiation or even surgery. So here’s the wager: you stick around for a bit, but in return we are going to need some things from you. These things may include your taste buds, your ability to concentrate, your ability to digest, and the hair on your head. This certainly appears to be a reasonable trade. Unfortunately, it also involves confronting one of the most appealing clichés in our language. You’ve heard it all right. People don’t have cancer: they are reported to be battling cancer. No well-wisher omits the combative image: You can beat this. It’s even in obituaries for cancer losers, as if one might reasonably say of someone that they died after a long and brave struggle with mortality. You don’t hear it about long-term sufferers from heart disease or kidney failure.

Myself, I love the imagery of struggle. I sometimes wish I were suffering in a good cause, or risking my life for the good of others, instead of just being a gravely endangered patient. Allow me to inform you, though, that when you sit in a room with a set of other finalists, and kindly people bring a huge transparent bag of poison and plug it into your arm, and you either read or don’t read a book while the venom sack gradually empties itself into your system, the image of the ardent soldier or revolutionary is the very last one that will occur to you. You feel swamped with passivity and impotence: dissolving in powerlessness like a sugar lump in water.

[...]These are my first raw reactions to being stricken. I am quietly resolved to resist bodily as best I can, even if only passively, and to seek the most advanced advice. My heart and blood pressure and many other registers are now strong again: indeed, it occurs to me that if I didn’t have such a stout constitution I might have led a much healthier life thus far. Against me is the blind, emotionless alien, cheered on by some who have long wished me ill. But on the side of my continued life is a group of brilliant and selfless physicians plus an astonishing number of prayer groups. On both of these I hope to write next time if—as my father invariably said—I am spared.

The whole thing is, in its way, classic Hitchens.


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Andre

August 4th, 2010 8:37pm Report this comment

I admire Christopher Hitchens enormously and always enjoy reading his work. I was very sorry to hear of his cancer and wish him well. I pray for him - I am a catholic and I could no more desist from this than ignore a drowning man. He's a good man and a powerful force for light and laughter in an all too sad world.

Julian

August 4th, 2010 11:15pm Report this comment

A great spirit, entering a long dark tunnel. May he emerge into the daylight again and while in the twilight know what light he has afforded and keep that torch aflame. Good luck mate.

David Chorley

August 5th, 2010 12:33am Report this comment

Oesophageal cancer is a difficult disease to treat and in my medical experience, have only seen one person cured, and so I would ask all of you to wish Mr. Hitchens the best, but understand thatit is a hard road that he has to go down

Tom Burroughes

August 5th, 2010 12:05pm Report this comment

I hope he can defeat this gremlin. My mum has cancer and has managed to struggle against it, but it is no point being naive about this. Hitch writes about his condition with all the stoicism I would have expected. Bests to him and his family.

Baron

August 5th, 2010 5:13pm Report this comment

keep your spirit up Hitchens, have survived it now for over seven years, do hope you'll join me in the club.

Simon Mason

August 6th, 2010 9:19am Report this comment

Great Hitch interview on CNN:

http://www.b3ta.com/links/507396

Ben G

August 12th, 2010 2:55pm Report this comment

The world's best writer.

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