Just when you think you are on top of your game, life throws you a curve ball. In 2013, my solo show Cornwall [re]Constructed had opened at St Louis Artists' Guild in Clayton, MO.
My art was also in two invitational shows, Women's Marks at the Edwardsville Arts Center in Edwardsville, IL ...
... and Intertwined at the Jacoby Arts Center in Alton, IL.
Meanwhile, I taught two papermaking workshops, one at the Jacoby Arts Center in Alton, IL ...
... and the second at Esic Church in Edwardsville, IL.
By mid-August, I was back in my classroom, teaching six art classes a day, Monday through Friday, plus two after-school art clubs, at Oakville Middle School in St. Louis County.
But physically, I hadn't been myself. My clock felt as if the spring had sprung; and I was growing sicker by the day. After a month of treatment for diverticulitis, my gastroenterologist decided to perform a colonoscopy. Instead of finding an infection in my colon, which had began to heal, what he found was anal cancer.
I was very fortunate that my cancer was small and had not spred. I would live through the months of chemo and radiation treatments.
Just when you think you have life figured out, and all of your plates are spinning up on their little poles, God retunes your attention, and allows you the opportunity to rest, heal and focus on what is truly important -
faith, family and loving friends.