One Cancer Patient’s Ultimate Travel Bucket List

One Cancer Patient’s Ultimate Travel Bucket List

What’s an ultimate travel bucket list? Psychologist and award winning author Robin McGee (The Cancer Olympics) shares her perspective on travel, healing and cancer.

Her recent travels, with and in spite of cancer, include Ireland, France, Italy and a transcontinental North American road trip.

Fill Your Bucket

When I learned my cancer had recurred, I was only weeks away from a trip to Ireland with my three sisters.   That trip had a spiritual significance to me, as while the four of us helped our parents through their deaths the year before, we promised each other we would go.  My Dad was from Belfast, and we had heard about it our whole lives.  It meant the world to me to go, seeing as it might be my last trip ever.

Ultimate travel bucket list

Robin (second from right) wit her three sisters in Ireland

My cancer doctors were understanding.  They knew my disease might be inoperable, so they kindly delayed the titanic chemotherapy until the day after my return.   So my sisters and I went for two weeks.  I loved every minute.  Cancer dread hovered at the edges, but I was able to focus and absorb the staggering beauty of that jewel of an island.  I saw the green fields my father had told me about.  I met relatives.  I drank Guinness.  The trip gave me a fount of joy to draw upon as I faced my devastating treatments.

Ultimate travel bucket list

Months of devastating chemo ensued

And devastating they were.  Months of brutal chemotherapy followed by a 12-hour surgery followed by more harsh chemo. Hideous mind-bending surgical complications, followed by months of treatment away from home, followed by another 13-hour surgery, followed by more treatments.

And where was travel in all of that mix?  Sadly, the cancer could not be fully excised, as a biopsy revealed cancer cells deep in the pelvic sidewall. My time is limited.  So I embraced travel as a way to have quality of life for the time I have remaining.

In July of 2018, I was in a wheelchair due to chemo side effects.  Nevertheless, I went to France on a river cruise with family.

While everyone else was eating the gorgeous French food, I was having the consume.

While others could walk the cobblestone streets, I jounced and vibrated along in my chair.

And yet, the glorious and poignant history, the awe-inspiring Cathedrals, and the peaceful Seine, and the breathtaking art were all absorbing.

If one is going to feel unwell, one may as well feel unwell in Paris!

I recovered some money in the medical malpractice lawsuit that followed the heinous events described in my 2014 book The Cancer Olympics.  The funds allowed me a truly joyous bucket-list opportunity – to rent a villa in Tuscany for two weeks and invite my six siblings and their spouses.

This time, I was well enough to walk (and more importantly, EAT).  It brought tears of elation to my eyes to see my family enjoying the place and each other, to see them enraptured by the art and the vistas, and to celebrate my continued survival.

Tuscan villa

A Tuscan Villa, complete with pool

Finally, my treatments ended this past spring (2019).  I could start mending.  So my husband and I traveled across Canada in our 18-foot trailer, a journey which I reacted to in my blog integrating cancer with famous songs.  The journey took three months, during which we opened our souls to the spectacular landscapes and fascinating stories of my home and native land.

Ultimate travel bucket list

Robin with her husband

Ultimate travel bucket list

A windswept praire in central Canada

On a windswept Prairie I saw a hawk land on a fencepost.  He settled in majesty, scanning the horizon as hawks have done for millennia.  It was an instant, and yet it was forever.

As I watched him, all at once, the vastness and infinitude of nature descended into my mind.  I realized: I am nature, I am culture, I am history.

Civilizations and even landscapes pass away, as we all must.

Coming to terms with incurable cancer means facing and accepting our own impermanence.

Ultimate travel bucket list

The vastness and infinitude of nature

Travel underscores those lessons.

We must treasure family, place, and experience.  So much of life is wonderous.

Fill your bucket, fill yourself.

***

What’s your ultimate travel bucket list? Could it be an all expense paid healing retreat? Click here to learn more. 

More Reading On Cancer, Travel and Healing

Traveling To Heal: 83 Days on the Road

Thoughts on the Metaphor of a Road Trip

Traveling The Timeline Of Now

Visiting the Galapagos

Healing Travel For A Better Matrix

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Bucket-List-Travel

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What is #CancerRoadTrip and how did it come to be? Read this post to get the backstory! 

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The Matrix: A Road Trip Into The Psyche With Wendy Wagner PhD

The Matrix: A Road Trip Into The Psyche With Wendy Wagner PhD

If you’re a film buff, The Matrix is the massively popular film starring Keanu Reeves as Neo. In the film, Neo discovers that his “reality” is a manufactured illusion. Nothing he perceives is real. And as he dives into The Matrix, his education begins.

In a similar fashion, this Matrix Series is intended to shake up some of our preconceptions and to explore a deeper, more meaningful and consciously created life. Through interviews with people across numerous disciplines, we explore the elements that make up our Matrix, those daily choices that determine our thoughts and our experiences.

I am delighted to introduce Wendy Wagner, PhD in this first interview for the new Matrix Series.

Meet Wendy E. Wagner, PhD

 

“My emphasis is on the correct use of the mind and mindfulness, choosing which thoughts to think.The art of thought, the art of choice.”

 

Wendy is a cancer survivor with a Bachelor of Science in Psychology from Tufts University, a Masters’ Degree in Transpersonal Psychology from the Institute of Transpersonal Psychology, and a Ph.D. in Transpersonal Psychology from Summit University. She is also also certified as a Master Hypnotist, an Addictions Counselor by the West Coast Institute of Addictive Studies, and  a Mindfulness Coach and Doula.

“The source of most disease is in the spirit. Therefore, the spirit can cure most disease.”

–Nicola Tesla

 

Cancer is a traumatic event for most of us. If we’re honest, it’s a call to pay attention to our body and our soul. How do we use the trauma to grow and heal? What part does our psyche play in healing? How do we enlist the power of our mind?

Wendy and I had a wide ranging discussion about using cancer as a portal towards becoming more conscious. The interview runs over an hour, so I’ve cut it down into shorter segments. In this post are the first three segments.

 

A Cosmic Cattle Prod

 

Wendy talks frankly about her own cancer diagnosis, which she calls a “Cosmic Cattle Prod”. It forced her to go within to discover the strength needed to move forward with cancer.
Ancient cultures consider severe illness to be a portal to the soul. The experience is seen as a gateway, a narrow portal, being presented that opens to a totally different dimension if we take the opportunity.

 

 

 

Everything that happens is for your benefit

 

Wendy has had a number of influential mentors over the years. One posed three statements to ponder:

 

Everything happens for your benefit

The body is an effect of the mind

There are no neutral thoughts

One can agree or disagree, but each opens a fascinating portal for exploration and discovery.
If one were to approach life from a perspective of learning, what might one learn? 

 

Creating Your Reality With Thought

Science is beginning the explore the power of our minds and its influence on our world view. As Einstein once asked:

“Is the world a friendly place?”

Your answer matters.

If you answer yes, your life experience is one of relative security and curiosity.

If not, it’s one of fear and conflict.

Which path do you choose? Because it is a choice.

 

 

Visit Wendy’s website for more videos on her thoughts on the power of the mind.

“The Art of Thought, the Art of Choice.”

 

The interview will continue in a future post.

 

More Reading on Consciousness and The Matrix

Do We Live In The Matrix? from Discover Magazine
A New Earth: Awakening to Your Life’s Purpose  by Eckhardt Tolle
The Divine Matrix: Bridging Time, Space, Miracles, and Belief by Gregg Braden
Healing Travel For A Better Matrix
Gratitude: A Habit For All Times

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If you’re interested in learning more about photography (or cooking or film or any number of topics) check out MasterClass All-Access Pass for on-line excellence:

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What is #CancerRoadTrip and how did it come to be? Read this post to get the backstory! 

Follow me on Twitter, Pinterest, Instagram, and at Anti-Cancer Club.  Connect with me!  I may need a place or two to stay along the way!