Current:Home > StocksAfter 18 years living with cancer, a poet offers 'Fifty Entries Against Despair' -SecureNest Finance
After 18 years living with cancer, a poet offers 'Fifty Entries Against Despair'
View
Date:2025-04-15 01:02:22
Poet and memoirist Christian Wiman was 39 when he was diagnosed with a rare form of cancer. Now 57, he's endured many rounds of chemo, a bone marrow transplant and several experimental therapies over the past 18 years. He also turned to what he terms "God."
Though Wiman grew up in an evangelical church in West Texas, he spent many years as a self-described "ambivalent atheist" before finding religion again.
"I don't picture God at all. ... I don't think of God as an object at all," he explains. "I find it more helpful to think of God as a verb."
Wiman teaches religion and literature at Yale Divinity School and the Yale Institute of Sacred Music. His new book, Zero at the Bone: Fifty Entries Against Despair, uses memoir and poetry to explore themes of illness, love and faith.
Wiman's cancer has been in remission since the spring, but he says that living with illness for so long has shaped how he thinks about life. It's also taken away his fear of death.
"The truth is, when death hangs over you for a while, you start to forget about it," he says. "The only reason I was scared of death was my kids and my wife, of course. But for myself, that sort of visceral fear that I used to get of my own life ending, that visceral animal fear — I don't feel that at all."
Interview highlights
On the worst kind of despair
In my experience, the worst despair is meaninglessness. It's not necessarily thinking that you're going to die. It's the feeling that life has been leeched of meaning. That's the worst. And physical pain actually doesn't bring that all in. That can come on any time. In my experience, you can have physical pain and still experience joy. Joy can occur in the midst of great suffering. The kind of difference between joy and happiness — we're not happy in the midst of great suffering, but we can still experience these moments of joy. I think there are a couple of different kinds of despair. The despair that you feel in physical pain is not existential. It's remediable with the drugs. When they don't work, and I've had periods when they don't work, then you really do fall into a kind of irremediable despair.
On turning to faith because of love and illness
People mock the fact that it takes a crisis to bring us to God. They say there are no atheists in foxholes — of course there are plenty of atheists in foxholes. But the fact is, it takes a hell of a lot for us to change a coffee habit or something, and so to make an existential change in your life, you sometimes need to be really taken by the throat. And for me, that actually happened when I fell in love and not necessarily when I got cancer. My wife and I actually started to pray shortly after we met each other. And it was a kind of haphazard, almost mocking, comical kind of prayer, but it gradually got more serious. And it was when I got sick that I needed a form for the faith, the inchoate faith that I was already feeling. So I went to church, and that's never really worked out for me very well, church, but it was the first step towards finding a form for faith.
On the difference between answers and faith
I think you can believe in God and not have faith. I think faith means living toward God in some way, and it's what you do in your life and how you live it. I don't feel the sense of mystery or terror alleviated by faith. I don't feel that at all. I don't understand when people present God as an answer to the predicament of existence. That's not the way I experience it at all. I have this hunger in me that is endless, and I think everyone probably has it. Maybe they find different ways of dealing with it, whether it's booze or excessive exercise or excessive art or whatever. I tried to answer it with poetry for years and hit a wall with that. And finally ... I discovered ... the only solution to me was to live toward God without an answer.
On how his illness has affected his wife
I think that the experience that I've gone through has been something we've both gone through and is very much changed our sense of our relationship of God and what love means. I feel some guilt, I suppose everyone does, because her whole life for the last 20 years has been defined in some ways by this illness. Even when it's not weighing on us, it's sort of always there. Every decision we've had to make we've had to plan for the fact if I couldn't be here. And it just always determines everything. I am very aware of that and the faith that we have forged out of that is very much shared.
Sam Briger and Susan Nyakundi produced and edited this interview for broadcast. Bridget Bentz, Molly Seavy-Nesper and Beth Novey adapted it for the web.
veryGood! (7)
Related
- Rams vs. 49ers highlights: LA wins rainy defensive struggle in key divisional game
- I watch TV for a living. Why can’t I stop stressing about my kid’s screen time?
- Citing Supreme Court immunity ruling, Trump’s lawyers seek to freeze the classified documents case
- Multiple injuries reported after July 4 fireworks malfunction in Utah stadium, news report says
- Arkansas State Police probe death of woman found after officer
- How aging veterans are treated like family at medical foster homes
- Arkansas election officials checking signatures of 3 measures vying for November ballot
- 2 dead, 3 injured after stabbing at July 4th celebration in Huntington Beach, California
- Paige Bueckers vs. Hannah Hidalgo highlights women's basketball games to watch
- Comedian Tony Knight Dead at 54 After Freak Accident With Falling Tree Branches
Ranking
- Military service academies see drop in reported sexual assaults after alarming surge
- Man dies after strong storm overturns campers at state park in Kansas
- Simone Biles Says Not Everyone Needs a Mic Amid MyKayla Skinner Controversy
- ATV crashes into pickup on rural Colorado road, killing 2 toddlers and 2 adults
- Buckingham Palace staff under investigation for 'bar brawl'
- Proof Julia Roberts and Danny Moder Are Closer Than Ever After 22 Years of Marriage
- Feeling strange about celebrating July 4th amid Biden-Trump chaos? You’re not alone.
- Backers of raising Ohio’s minimum wage to $15 an hour fail to get it on this year’s ballot
Recommendation
Gen. Mark Milley's security detail and security clearance revoked, Pentagon says
Delaware judge refuses to dismiss lawsuit in battle over estate of the late pop icon Prince
Biden heads into a make-or-break stretch for his imperiled presidential campaign
A dangerous heat wave is scorching much of the US. Weather experts predict record-setting temps
Biden administration makes final diplomatic push for stability across a turbulent Mideast
Taylor Swift brought back this song cut from Eras Tour for surprise set in Amsterdam
Backers of raising Ohio’s minimum wage to $15 an hour fail to get it on this year’s ballot
2024 Tour de France Stage 7 results, standings: Remco Evenepoel wins time trial