The Beautiful Weight of a Shorter Life

A few summers ago, while travel was on hold as I waited for a heart transplant, my family had to get creative about how we spent our time. With nowhere to go and plenty of hours to fill, we found ourselves wandering through the city cemetery.

Morbid? Maybe.

But for us, it felt more like a small, unintentional anthropology project.

We began noticing patterns in the dates carved into the headstones. Our completely unscientific research revealed something interesting: if a person managed to survive childhood, the next major hurdle seemed to be middle age.

There were a surprising number of headstones marking lives that ended around fifty.

And by anyone’s standards, fifty is not old.

That observation has stayed with me.

Recently, my autistic daughter Keelie learned that her dear friend Annie is facing a health challenge. In a moment of anxious honesty she said, “I’m afraid Annie won’t live to be eighty years old.”

Annie is twenty-five.

And the truth is, reaching twenty-five is something Annie’s family already considers a miracle, given the circumstances of her extremely premature birth.

She isn’t the only young person I know living with what might be called a “limited-time offer” here on earth. Sadly, there are a few others whose lives carry that same uncertainty.

And yet, if you know them, you know something remarkable.

Their lives are beautiful. Meaningful. Inspiring.

Each one seems to have been gifted with talents, interests, and joys that exist for no other obvious reason than to bring them happiness—or perhaps to quietly teach the rest of us something about how life is meant to be lived.

If you know, you know.

No one who knows these young people would ever say their lives lack purpose. If anything, their lives shine with it.

And because of that, we celebrate differently. Each year matters more. Each month. Each ordinary day.

So what would you do if you knew your life might be shorter than expected?

I’ll tell you one thing—it has a funny way of making sixty-year-olds look awfully young.

The other night Aaron and I found ourselves talking about death and dying. I’ll admit, it’s not exactly the most romantic bedtime conversation. But the question came up: why are people so afraid of death?

Aging, at least from what we can observe, doesn’t always look particularly appealing. If we’re honest, the process leaves quite a bit to be desired. So if aging isn’t exactly the dream scenario, why does the thought of death frighten us so much?

And suddenly something occurred to me—something I had realized before but never quite put into words.

I had faced death once already.

I had looked it straight in the eye.

And what I felt wasn’t fear.

It was sorrow.

In the months leading up to my transplant, there were moments when the reality of my situation would surface with startling clarity. The heart condition that made my transplant necessary—ARVC, also known as ACM—could have caused sudden cardiac arrest at any time. And of course, the transplant surgery itself carried its own risks.

I didn’t know when the call would come telling me a heart was available. But in the weeks before it finally did, I had a strange sense that something was approaching.

The only way I can describe that time is that it felt a little like Katniss Everdeen before she entered the arena in The Hunger Games—a quiet moment standing at the edge of something enormous and uncertain.

But the truth is, I wasn’t afraid to die.

What I feared was leaving.

Leaving my husband.
Leaving my children.
Leaving the people I love to carry the weight of that loss.

Because I know what that kind of loss feels like.

I have already grieved the deaths of too many people I love—a dear brother, a beloved sister-in-law and friend, my daddy, and grandparents who meant the world to me. I know the hollow ache grief leaves behind.

And if there is anything I would wish to spare someone, it would be that kind of pain.

But grief tells a story of its own.

It tells us that a life mattered.

It tells us that love was real.

And in that sense, a life that is deeply loved—no matter how long it lasts—is not a tragedy.

It is something to celebrate.

A life isn’t measured only in its length, but in the love it gathers and the meaning it leaves behind. Some people are given many decades to discover that truth. Others seem to understand it much earlier. And the rest of us, if we’re paying attention, are lucky enough to learn from them—to celebrate the ordinary days, to hold our people a little closer, and to remember that even a shorter story can still be a meaningful one.

I’ll Rise This Way

There are days when defeat doesn’t arrive with drama or fireworks. It doesn’t kick down the door. It just sort of… sits next to you. It eats your snacks. It asks if you’ve “really thought about this.” And before you know it, you’re staring at the ceiling, mentally replaying every decision you’ve made since 2009.

Defeat is sneaky like that.

It shows up when you’ve done most things right but still landed on your face. When you followed the plan, adjusted the plan, stayed positive about the plan—and the plan still failed you. At least that’s how it feels. It’s the kind of tired sleep doesn’t fix, the kind of unmotivated that exists even when you want to care, the kind of wondering whether everyone else got a secret elixir or code you somehow missed.

And let’s be honest: in those moments, resilience sounds a lot like toxic positivity. Resilience? Who’s she? I don’t know her.

Lately—ever since telling everyone that this year I’d like to run my first 5K since my heart broke four years ago—I’ve been feeling a total lack of motivation and, as a side effect, resilience. If fatigue and ennui were part of my training plan, I’d be absolutely crushing it right now.

When I’m feeling defeated, I don’t want a pep talk. I want a nap. And snacks. Or to dramatically announce, “I’m taking a break from life. Don’t contact me until further notice.”

But here’s the uncomfortable truth: resilience rarely looks like a triumphant comeback montage. It’s not a swelling soundtrack or a slow-motion jog toward victory. Don’t be fooled by all those videos of people triumphantly crossing marathon finish lines, hands raised high, sweat and tears streaking down their faces—though that is the picture of resilience I thought would be mine.

Most of the time, resilience looks painfully unremarkable.

It looks like getting up and doing the next small thing while still feeling awful.


It looks like doing the laundry one load at a time.


Or changing from pajamas into comfy sweats during the day for no other reason than to smell a little better.


It looks like saying, “I don’t know what I’m doing, but I’ll try again tomorrow,” and meaning it… kind of.

Resilience is strength that isn’t looking for applause. It doesn’t even require optimism—at least not right away, even if it sometimes masquerades as it. To be resilient, you don’t have to believe everything will work out. You just have to believe that stopping entirely isn’t the answer—at least not today.

And that’s the part people don’t talk about enough: you can carry disappointment with you like an awkward backpack and keep walking anyway. Strength doesn’t require enthusiasm. It just requires movement.

Slow, consistent movement.

It comes down to choices. In my experience, all of this is a choice. When you’re winning at life, everything feels important and shiny, like it’s meant for you. It’s easy then to choose happiness and optimism. It’s easy to find purpose, to feel like what you’re doing matters.

But when you’re defeated, you suddenly see what actually matters—what’s worth continuing, what can be let go, and which expectations were never yours to begin with. Some things become easier to release, while it becomes harder to find meaning in it all.

Yet for all the ways defeat humbles you, it also clarifies. It teaches you where your limits are—and, more importantly, where they aren’t.

And slowly, almost annoyingly slowly, something shifts.

You realize you didn’t quit.


You realize you’re still here.


You realize that even on your worst days, you’re capable of showing up in imperfect, human ways.

Dinner may come from a box or a fast-food drive-thru, but the family gets fed regardless.

That’s resilience.

Not the absence of struggle, but the refusal to let struggle be the final word.

Despite the fatigue, the lack of visible progress, the burning lungs and sluggish legs, I’m not letting go of my goal. I don’t need the confidence that I’ll win—or even run—the 5K in order to stay in the game. I may not make any dramatic leaps forward, but I’ll keep taking stubborn, slightly grumpy steps ahead.

And maybe that’s enough for now. Maybe resilience, for me, isn’t about proving anything or crossing a finish line with my hands in the air—though that dream is hard to relinquish. Maybe resilience is simply about choosing to show up again tomorrow, even if tomorrow looks a lot like today. I’m learning that I don’t need to feel strong to be strong—I just need to keep going. One step, one breath, one imperfect try at a time. And if that’s what rising looks like right now, then I’m willing to rise this way.

The Quickest Way to a Man’s Heart

 So, it turns out the quickest way to a man’s heart is not through his stomach after all. It’s through his neck—specifically, the internal jugular vein. Sometimes the groin, wrist, or upper arm will do. Ask me how I know. Over the course of my lifetime, I’ve had this done about 25 times.

The first time was when I was twenty years old. I had been diagnosed with supraventricular tachycardia, and the doctor assured me he could fix it with a procedure called endocardial ablation. I was taken to the cardiac catheterization lab—the Cath lab—where they accessed my heart through the femoral artery in my groin. It was scary (they use only light sedation, not full anesthesia), uncomfortable (I had to lie flat with sandbags on my groin for hours to stop the bleeding), and deeply embarrassing (again, it was my groin). I’ve only had this done twice since. I do not recommend it—unless, of course, they’re trying to save your life. In that case, by all means, embrace your overpriced bikini shave administered by a nurse’s aide, likely male.

Over the years, they’ve also accessed my heart through my wrist (twice), my upper arm (truly awful), and even a tiny spot just below the xiphoid process of my sternum. But when it comes to heart transplants, the preferred route is through the neck, via the internal jugular vein. Post-transplant, this procedure—called a right heart catheterization—is used to monitor hemodynamics (the pressures within the heart) and to take biopsies of myocardial tissue to check for rejection. Since my transplant, I’ve had this done 19 times. No sedation—just a little lidocaine in the neck.

The University of Utah, where I receive my care, is a teaching hospital. Which means that at nearly every turn—every procedure, surgery, or appointment—there’s a student, resident, or fellow eager for a learning opportunity, and I am the willing (or sometimes unwilling) classroom. Over time, I’ve learned to advocate for myself. After a few botched attempts by fellows trying to access the tiny veins in my neck or upper arm, I started saying, “Attending only, please.” In other words, only the supervising physician—the one teaching the fellow—gets the honors. If I’m going to be awake and fully aware of every cut, pinch, push, pull, and squeeze, then I’d prefer the most experienced hands available. Thank you very much.

Then, one Sunday morning, I received a text from a leader in our church. We were hosting a regional conference, and a visiting church authority would be speaking. This authority, Hugo E. Martinez, and his wife, Nuria, were both retired physicians. He had played a key role in helping our son receive cardiovascular testing while serving a mission in Ghana, so he was already somewhat familiar with our situation. Since he was visiting our area, he wanted to check in with us.

After the meeting, we went to meet him. He was warm, kind, and genuinely interested in our family and my health. Then he offered a piece of advice: be patient with medical residents and fellows—let them learn from you.

I was caught off guard. How did he know I had been limiting who worked on me? It was probably just coincidence. Maybe divine inspiration. But from that day on, I loosened my grip a little on controlling who was allowed to practice their medical skills on me. And in doing so, I found myself feeling empowered in other, unexpected ways.

There is something uniquely healing—and even cathartic—about sharing your story and watching others learn from what you’ve been through.

Look, life is going to be hard. It just is. And if you’re going to experience the awful parts of living, why not take back some control by owning the narrative? Share your story. Share what you learned. Share how it shaped you. Share it with the people around you—or with the people who might benefit from hearing it. And there will be many.

I’ve had the opportunity to share my story more than a few times. I’ve even had the chance to teach others—yes, including doctors—through my experience. And I’ll say this: I feel stronger every single time I do.

That said, no student nurses may come at my veins to learn how to start IVs. I have to draw the line somewhere.

In the end, I’ve learned that the quickest way to a man’s heart isn’t a catheter or a scalpel—it’s vulnerability. It’s opening yourself up, telling the truth about what hurts, what healed, and what changed you along the way. When you share your own heart—carefully, honestly—you invite others to learn, to connect, and sometimes to heal right alongside you. And while I may still be selective about who gets access to my veins, my story is always open. After all, hearts were never meant to be guarded forever—they were meant to be shared.

The Gym is not Your Village

To be honest, not much running has been happening this week. I haven’t been feeling great. And around here, when mama doesn’t feel great, nobody feels great—meaning my not feeling great tends to ripple outward, creating a low hum of anxiety for everyone else. Still, I push on with my morning walks with friends. We’re experiencing an unusually mild winter, one that has gifted us many pleasant morning miles. I’m not complaining.

The other morning, our conversation turned to a big change coming to our neighborhood—one that has left most of us feeling disappointed. Maybe worried. At the very least, unsettled. It’s something some of us anticipated, yet still something we’re not happy about: a new development that will inevitably impact our community in ways that make us feel a loss of control.

When we built our home here twenty years ago, community was one of the most important factors in our decision. We were a young, growing family, searching for a safe, family-friendly place where our children could grow up feeling connected. We wanted a village. And a village is exactly what we found.

Over the years, our neighbors have walked alongside us through our daughter’s autism diagnosis, my brother’s sudden and tragic death, my sister’s stroke at thirty-four, my ARVC diagnosis and eventual heart transplant, thyroid cancer, and the loss of our parents—along with the countless mishaps and quiet struggles of everyday life. And we’ve done the same for them. We’ve cried together in seasons of grief. We’ve shown care through meals delivered during sickness, tragedy, or the arrival of a new baby. We’ve celebrated joy-filled milestones side by side. When I need a cup of sugar, a splash of milk, or a teaspoon of baking soda, I know exactly who to text.

That is community.
That is a village.

I don’t know who needs to hear this—though I suspect quite a few people do this time of year—but the gym is not your village. Yes, you read that right: the gym is not your village. I say this as someone who is very much pro-gym. I once had a Pilates studio in my basement where I taught group fitness classes. I speak—er, write—as someone who knows.

Years ago, after a devastating miscarriage, my husband gently suggested I find a new hobby—something to distract me, something that might help me move forward. I certified in Pilates and yoga and began teaching classes in my basement to women in my community. The classes grew. I added High Fitness. Eventually, I was teaching every day of the week. I was incredibly proud of what I’d built. Proud of my participants. Proud of what I believed was a community.

But when the proverbial crap hit the fan and my health forced me to shut down the studio, I found myself unexpectedly alone. It wasn’t the studio participants who showed up with meals, took me out to lunch when I needed encouragement, or sat quietly with me as I gave voice to my grief and fear. It was my neighbors, my family, and my long-rooted friends who did that.

The gym is wonderful for building strength, lifting mood, and connecting with like-minded people. It serves an important purpose. But true community is built through service. A village grows from the steady rhythm of giving and receiving—of showing up and being seen. If you want a village, you must be willing to be a villager: doing the work, offering effort, and investing in others. By and large, people at a gym are there for their own progress, focused on personal goals. They aren’t there for you—and that distinction matters.

When I walk with my friends and neighbors in the morning, I’m stepping into a different kind of rhythm—one shaped by presence rather than progress. The sidewalks and trails bear witness to our grievances, our long-winded pondering, and our unrestrained laughter. Those miles hold our stories. They hold us.

And even as our town changes—even as new developments threaten to reshape the place we love—I’m reminded that a village isn’t made of houses or roads or plans drawn on paper. It’s made of people who stay. People who show up. People who know your garage door code and which soda you like from the gas station.

No matter how the landscape shifts around us, in sickness and in health, this sisterhood, this village, is something I will always carry with me.

Grace, Grief, and a 5K

I’ve never really been one for goal setting; New Year’s resolutions aren’t usually my thing. As a fitness instructor, I never even endorsed the idea. My thoughts on goal setting were always centered on changing simple habits, finding enjoyable hobbies, and seeing how life evolves from there. I still recommend this approach. But something about surviving a heart transplant—and getting older—has made me want to aim for something this coming year. Nothing wild. Just a little something to work toward.

It’s normal to come out of a traumatic experience—especially a medical trauma—feeling a little lost, or as some say, a little empty. When we think we should be feeling joy and gratitude, we might instead feel guilt, purposelessness, or our own version of grief. Many of us assume a transplant will change us, improve us, only to wake up and realize that the only things that have changed are a new organ and a regimen of life-sustaining medications.

I can attest to all of these feelings—this has been my experience. Writing helps. As do time with family, my faith, and my near-daily walks with friends. These things help me express myself, feel understood, and provide a sense of belonging that I deeply missed while waiting for my transplant and during recovery.

It was that feeling of belonging that kept me rooted in running for so many years. You see, I was never a good enough runner to be remotely competitive. Early on, I didn’t even particularly enjoy it. But over time, as it became part of my everyday routine, running evolved into an invigorating, cleansing ritual. I considered it as much a part of my hygiene regimen as brushing my teeth. A daily sweat session could purify my soul almost as effectively as repentance and prayer. In fact, whether on the treadmill or the pavement, I often found myself in an attitude of self-reflection that naturally led to prayer and repentance.

Then, at the age of 24, I registered for my first race—a spring fun run in Sugar House Park. My neighbor and I signed up together as a way to get back in shape after having our first babies just one week apart. It was at that fun run that I discovered running could offer something more: community. The shared enthusiasm, anticipation, and—dare I say—joy were contagious. It never seemed to matter that I wasn’t elite, had never run a marathon (thank goodness, as that level of training could have accelerated my ARVC progression and need for a transplant), or ran in leggings instead of speed shorts. I was one of them—a runner, part of a unique group of people who tolerated pain and endured grueling circumstances better than most.

Running became more than a daily habit; it became a part of my identity.

Unfortunately, after my ARVC (arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy) diagnosis, running was something I had to give up. Over time, I made peace with that prescription. Even so, there was a hole left behind—a void where running once lived. I will probably always grieve those easy days when the rhythm of my feet hitting the ground felt natural and effortless, as well as that community I no longer feel a part of.

Recently, I read an article in Bonus Days magazine about a young woman named Wendy who received a small bowel transplant during the COVID restrictions of 2022. Isolation was the norm then, especially in the hospital. Her husband couldn’t even be with her during her inpatient stay. In the article, she shared two insights that stood out to me. When asked what illness had taught her, she said, “Health is a crown only the sick can see.” And when asked what joy looks like for her now, she said, “To get to a place of joy with where I am, I had to grieve the life I thought I was going to have so I could make space for the amazing and beautiful life that I do have.”

I said in an earlier post that it is perfectly okay to see the clouds along with the silver lining. We don’t always have to maintain a shining outlook to prove our gratitude. Without recognition and reflection, the hard parts of our lives can’t teach us anything. If we don’t look back, we’ll never know how far we’ve come. Grieving is an honest and necessary part of that process.

I know I will never be the runner I once was—age alone presents enough of a barrier. But my goal for 2026—my New Year’s resolution, if you will—is to train for, sign up for, and complete an organized 5K. I know I won’t be fast and won’t place anywhere near the top of my age group. But I will be proud of myself for showing up—for allowing myself the space to release old expectations and reconnect with a part of myself I thought I had mourned and buried long ago. 

This goal isn’t about reclaiming what I lost or proving that I’m “back.” It’s about honoring who I am now—someone shaped by grief, grit, and resilience. Crossing that finish line won’t symbolize victory over illness or a return to a former identity. Instead, it will mark my willingness to keep moving forward, to carry the past with tenderness and gratitude rather than regret, and to make room for joy as it exists today. I am healing, and healing takes honesty, grace, and a fair amount of courage. Sometimes the bravest thing we can do isn’t to run faster or farther, but simply to have the faith to begin again.

Five Rules For Life

This week, I celebrate two bonus years. Two more years granted to me through the generosity and foresight, during a time of grief, of a donor family; the discipline and hard work of healthcare professionals; the love and support of family, friends, and the most wonderful husband; and by the sheer goodness of a loving God.

At my recent follow-up visit with my transplant team, one of my favorite doctors asked what words I had to offer after two years. I blurted out, without much thought, “Don’t take it for granted.” But then I really got to thinking: what do I really want to say after this last year? While 2025—year two after transplant—challenged me in ways I could not have foreseen, it also blessed me in ways I previously hoped and prayed for. Looking back on it all, what have I learned?

In an episode of Malcolm Gladwell’s podcast Revisionist History, he talked about well-known celebrities and personalities and their 12 rules for life—rules like “Always stand up straight,” “Always try a new dish at a restaurant,” or “Always pat a cat when you encounter one in the street.” It made me think: what would my rules for life be?

So here are my five rules for life (so far, at age 50, two years post–heart transplant):

1) Carry the weight of just this moment.
So many times in life, when I’ve been burdened by something hard, frustrating, or painful, I’ve made my own burden heavier by worrying about how I was going to manage things down the road. I’ve learned in the last few years to let go of looking too far ahead in times of difficulty and to give myself permission to take it one step at a time—carrying the weight of just this moment.

2) Always look for something to be grateful for.
Showing up with gratitude is the quickest way to happiness and a satisfying life. Long ago, I read the famous quote by Holocaust survivor Viktor Frankl: “Everything can be taken from a man but one thing: the last of the human freedoms—to choose one’s attitude in any given set of circumstances, to choose one’s own way.” In that instant, my perspective changed. We get to choose how we feel. I have found over the years that one of the quickest ways to shift how I feel is to choose gratitude. Look for things to be grateful for, and you will be happy.

3) Treat your body with respect. Consider your health a privilege.
Every day outside of the hospital, every day you wake up in your own bed, get to choose your own meals, and use the bathroom in privacy is a day to celebrate. So take care of your health; protect it. The internet and social media are full of opinions on the best way to do this, but in the end, nourishing food, enjoyable-yet-challenging movement, good rest, and evidence-based medicine are your best bets.

4) Move your body, breathe deeply, sweat a little every day.
Exercise is a privilege—one that was taken from me for more than two years. Even now, I miss running and the joy it once brought me; I hope and pray someday to participate in a 5K or 10K again. If you’re reading this, take one minute to breathe deeply, stand up—or sit down, if that’s a limitation you’re facing—and find some way to move your body before that ability is taken from you.

5) Find happiness in simple things and celebrate tiny miracles.
While setting goals and working toward achievement stretches us, helps us grow, and pushes us toward our true potential, it’s the little things we appreciate day to day that make life uplifting and bearable. Big accomplishments are life-enriching, for sure, but in times of test, simplicity is best.

Two years ago, my life was quite literally on the line when a donor, along with a skilled surgeon and medical team, gave me the gift of more time. These years since have taught me that life is not meant to be taken lightly. It is meant to be appreciated, protected, and lived with intention. My rules are in no way declarations of having figured it all out, but reminders I try to return to when I find myself comparing, rushing, or looking too far ahead. If these years have given me anything, it is a deeper reverence for each ordinary day and a profound awareness that every breath, every step, and every moment of love is a gift. So as I celebrate these bonus days, I do so with humility, gratitude, and a renewed commitment to live fully—carrying only today, choosing gratitude, honoring my body, moving when I can, and finding joy in the small, miraculous moments that make a life whole.

That Which Does Not Kill Me

I recently learned that the very thing that drives so many people where I live crazy is also the secret behind our spectacular sunsets. It turns out that the dust, the high altitude, and the bone-dry air—the trio that makes daily life feel like a battle with the elements—are the same ingredients that paint our skies in colors that look almost unreal.

For years I’ve grumbled about the dryness that clogs my nose at night and leaves my eyes feeling like sandpaper. And the dust—don’t even get me started. The slightest breath of wind can fling enough grit into the air to make you wonder if we’re all going to die of black lung. But then evening comes, and suddenly all that irritation feels like the price of admission. Because, wow. Our sunsets don’t just appear; they perform. Bold and fiery—light and color spilling across the sky and over the mountains in a way that can’t be captured in words.

What’s really happening is a little atmospheric artistry. As the sun sets, its light comes through the sky at a lower angle, scattering the shorter wavelengths—the blues and violets—out of sight. The dust particles in the air ramp up the drama, catching and amplifying the remaining reds and oranges. Meanwhile, dry air and high elevation keep those colors pure and intense. The result is a sky that looks like it was painted on purpose—because, in a way, it was.

It’s easy for me to overlook the spectacular shows that play out in the western sky each evening—to just close the blinds and ignore them. Instead, return to rubbing my irritated eyes and smoothing lotion over the dry skin on my knuckles, grumbling about this place and its cold, arid weather. One day, I swear, it’ll be the death of me.

But take me out of this dry, cold, dusty place and what would I notice? What would I learn? Would I go blind to the beautiful trees and grow tired of the moist, damp air somewhere else? Probably.

Funny how quickly we forget to appreciate the things that come to us without any effort. A sunset we barely look up to notice. A body that keeps us going day after day. Hot water we assume will always be there. Even a simple smile from a stranger. Meanwhile, somewhere in the world, someone is wishing for exactly one of those things we take for granted.

My son served a mission in Ghana, and for two years we were lucky enough to video chat with him every Monday morning. He sent home plenty of emails too—photos filled with snakes, chickens, goats, and the everyday chaos of his surroundings. But what stood out most were the smiles. Not just the smiles of the people of Ghana—people who live without so many of the comforts we take for granted—but the smile on our son’s face as well.

Why? Because of contrast. Because there’s benefit to be found in opposition. The things that challenge us, stretch us, or push us outside our comfort zone don’t just test us—they strengthen us. Opposition has a way of reshaping us. 

You’re familiar with the expression, That which does not kill me, makes me stronger.

But here’s the thing: you get to choose. You get to choose what exactly that which does not kill actually does to you or for you.

That which does not kill me grants me new perspective.

That which does not kill me teaches me a lesson.

That which does not kill me makes me more grateful.

That which does not kill me gives me purpose.

That which does not kill  me a writes for me a better life story.

The other day I was watching a clip from Dead Poets Society—the scene where John Keating, the teacher, is explaining the purpose of poetry to his students. He says: “We don’t read and write poetry because it’s cute. We read and write poetry because we are members of the human race, and the human race is filled with passion. Medicine, law, business, engineering—these are all noble pursuits and necessary to sustain life. But poetry, beauty, romance, love—these are what we stay alive for.”

I would add one more thing to John Keating’s list of reasons to be alive: the sheer richness of learning. The way experiences in life increase our understanding and expand not just our minds but also our lives—one might call it poetic.

Life’s experiences—the good and the painful, the easy and the difficult—give it depth, beauty, and meaning. Sometimes, it’s through the hard times that our purpose quietly unfolds. For this, I am profoundly grateful: for the light and the shadow, the ease and the struggle, each one an opportunity to grow. 

Too many of our days slip by while we’re busy thinking about all the wrong things—dwelling on stress instead of gratitude, worry instead of joy, noise instead of love and learning. And I get it, it isn’t easy. With so many responsibilities, it’s hard to stay positive, to find that good perspective. But even in the busiest times, we still get to choose where our thoughts wander in the quiet moments.

So where will we focus? On the dry, dusty air scratching at our patience? Or on the brilliant sky at sunset, beautifully painted just for us?

Pulling the Goalie

Recently, my husband and I were invited on a weekend trip to hike with friends in Arches National Park. Oh, how I had been looking forward to it! I love hiking almost as much as I love running—that toxic lover of mine. And to do it surrounded by my husband and friends felt like such a gift. We even managed to snag coveted permits for the Fiery Furnace, a maze of sandstone canyons with no marked trails.

Aaron and I made the four-hour drive to Moab almost giddy, ready for a much-needed getaway and some time outdoors before the holidays. We arrived as night fell, greeted our friends with enthusiasm and began making preparations for the next day. We were buzzing with excitement.

After a not particularly restful night, we woke early, divided into carpool groups and headed to the park. We wandered through the Fiery Furnace for hours, climbing over boulders and squeezing into narrow slot canyons, before I began to slow down. Even with peanut butter and honey Uncrustables and Reese’s peanut butter cups fueling me, my energy started to fade. My quads burned in a way that didn’t feel normal. I was more tired than usual and so, so thirsty.

Still, the conversation drifted toward the next hike and tomorrow’s plans. Which arch should we explore next? Who wants to see Delicate Arch?
Me, my heart shouted. I do!
But my mind countered with reason. I needed rest.

That night, as we gathered in the Airbnb swapping stories and playing games, a brutal migraine struck. The nausea, the pounding pain—it all hit at once. Ugh. Why now? By the time Aaron and I headed to bed, I knew I wouldn’t be able to join the group for their hikes the next day. Even though I understood it was the right choice for my body, the sadness settled in deep.

The next morning, Aaron and I made an early retreat and headed home. As we made the four-hour drive we listened to Malcolm Gladwell’s Revisionist History podcast where he talked about hockey. I don’t know anything about hockey. I don’t even like hockey; I’m in no way particularly interested in hockey. But what they were talking about caught my attention. Pulling the goalie. I’ll try explaining.

In hockey, when a team is down late in the game, the losing coach might pull his goalie  and substitute them with an extra attacker, so instead of having a full offensive team and a goalie, the coach now has six offensive players and no one guarding the net. It’s a risky move that, while making it easier for the other team to score, also increases the losing team’s chances of scoring a goal and tying the game. The coach is making a calculated risk. Pulling the goalie too early will undoubtedly upset the fans in the short term–possibly in the long term if things don’t go well. But if things play out the way the coach would like, well, then who’s the hero?

I’m the type of person who suffers from Fear of Missing Out (FOMO). When people gather, I want to be there. I want to share in the laugher, get in on the inside jokes, make all the memories. You see, as a child, I spent most of my time with just my sister as my companion and friend. Due to divorce, job changes, moving, and general upheaval, we found ourselves separated from family and frequently changing schools. While teaching me how to adapt and quickly make new friends, I also took on a fear of being left behind.

For three years—while I waited for a heart transplant and later recovered—I was, out of necessity, left out of get-togethers and girls’ trips. I watched friends and family travel and enjoy activities that felt so exciting, yet out of reach for me. From home, it all felt distant, and I often felt lonely and left behind. Even now, during our walks, my friends sometimes reminisce about jokes and stories from the trips they took while I was unable to leave the area. It’s no one’s fault, but hearing those memories still hurts in a quiet, complicated way. Since then, I’ve fought hard—both mentally and physically—to rejoin the world: joining groups, getting active again, going on walks, hikes, and weekends away.

Until I have to pull the goalie.

Another way to explain this—drawing on an example Malcolm Gladwell uses, without getting political—is through America’s gun laws. In many states, there is a legal principle called “Duty to Retreat,” which requires a person under attack to retreat safely, when possible, before resorting to deadly force in self-defense.

It feels counterintuitive, right? Your property, your safety, your family may be at risk—and you’re expected to back away? To rely on retreat as your defense? Yet research shows this is actually safer. In states where “Stand Your Ground” laws have replaced the Duty to Retreat principle, homicide rates have increased, according to Gladwell’s podcast. 

I cried when the migraine hit. I cried again when I realized my health wouldn’t let me join the group on another hike. More than anything, I wanted to stand my ground, take some pain medicine, and be right there with everyone in the national park the next day. But logic was the rule of the day. I needed to take the calculated risk of leaving–choosing my health and well-being over my social standing. I might miss the jokes, the memories, and maybe next time even the invitation. But if I stayed, the risk could be far greater.

After my transplant, I had a lot of expectations for myself–most of them centered on participating again. I wanted to run again, to race, to take classes and teach classes again, to join every activity that crossed my path. If people were doing something, I wanted to be right there with them. But life never unfolds the way we picture it. It unfolds the way it will. And so we adapt–something I’ve become very good at. Sometimes the wiser choice is that quiet, calculated retreat. Sometimes we have to pull the goalie. Stepping back isn’t failure. Sometimes it’s survival.

In the end, I’ll be better for having made the call. My friends will be there on Monday with another invitation–I know they will. Hopefully I’ll be well enough to join them. And if not, I have faith that the people who love me will always hold space for me, just as I hold space for them.

The Secret Language of Worry

I’ve heard it said that honesty is the first casualty of illness. I’d argue that honesty is the first casualty in any struggle. I first learned this when I took my then fourteen-month-old daughter in for a developmental evaluation, ordered by her pediatrician after we first noticed her having seizures.

After watching her “play” for nearly an hour, a speech therapist and a registered nurse brought me their assessment: moderate to severe global delays. With a cry trapped in my throat, I asked, “Will she catch up?” The two women looked at each other, glanced at my daughter, then at the floor—never at me—and said, “We’ve seen miracles.”

Was it a lie? Maybe. Maybe not. I don’t know. But I do know it wasn’t complete honesty.

This was my first exposure to the secret language of worry. Since that time, I’ve become fluent in this unique dialect.

It begins with the eyes. They look down and to the right, or over your left shoulder. The face may turn toward you, but the eyes wander elsewhere. There may be a smile, the conversation might seem jovial, but the eyes are elsewhere. Even when truth is spoken, the eyes often drift away.

You will try to gain eye contact, and you might succeed momentarily, but then your attention is drawn to the mouth. Around the lips is a tightness—a subtle stiffness. Perhaps the laugh is forced, the smile lingers too long. In some settings, masks conceal this nuance, but you’ll notice the sound in the throat, the clearing of vocal cords. Even a brief pause before answering can be a tell in the language of worry. What is this person really trying to tell me?

As you become fluent, you notice the subtleties of speaking this language. You learn its origins. Suddenly, you avoid eye contact when your spouse asks if you’re feeling okay. You find something on the floor to study when a friend asks about lab results. Your voice weakens, and your throat clears when a son or daughter asks about a future date. Will you be well enough then? Who even knows?

The secret language of worry exists as a shield, both for the speaker and the listener. We live in a world overflowing with information—sometimes empowering, sometimes overwhelming. The truth can hurt. We carefully release it, bit by bit, gauging the reaction of those we love. Can they hold this worry with us?

In a few weeks, I will return to the hospital for my two-year heart transplant follow-up. They will run labs to monitor my organs—especially my struggling kidneys. They’ll perform a chest X-ray, EKG, echocardiogram, right heart catheterization, myocardium biopsy, and even a left heart catheterization with angiogram to monitor cardiac allograft vasculopathy (I just wanted to flex some medical jargon). As the date approaches, I find myself slipping into the secret language, explaining and justifying my concern repeatedly.

Oh, how I wish I could replace this language with the foreign tongue of celebratory optimism. I rehearse affirmations and speeches of positivity in my mind. But over the years, the language of worry has become ingrained, and it pulls me in too easily. Gratitude helps. Prayer helps. Patience helps. Until then, I practice them all.

If you catch me slipping into this secret language, try to relate. Empty platitudes have no translation in the language of worry; they ring hollow to those fluent in this tongue. Just listen. Listening helps.

In the end, we all speak the language of worry in our own way—it is, after all, a universal language.

The Toxic Ex-Boyfriend

I have this toxic ex-boyfriend, and he haunts me. In fact, I run into him almost every day. It’s becoming problematic.

We were first introduced in elementary school. I hated him then. I couldn’t understand the kids who liked him—mainly the boys in my class. He was always chosen for all the teams, and all the boys loved to play with him at recess. I personally never understood the attraction.

In junior high, he started drawing the attention of some of the girls. Not me, however. I tried steering clear of him, but no matter how hard I tried, it seemed we were always partnered up in gym class. It was torture.

In high school, my sister started hanging out with him a lot. She and her friends spent quite a few summer mornings and Saturdays with him. Their time together looked so easy—so fun and refreshing. Though I didn’t understand at first, you could say I was intrigued; maybe there was something there. Maybe if I gave him a try, I’d understand the appeal. And so I began a flirtation, if you will. Sometimes I’d join my sister and her friends when they’d hang out with him on a Saturday, hoping maybe there’d be a spark between us. He was kind of popular, and I wanted to like him and really wanted him to like me.

Let me tell you, in the beginning it did not go over well. I guess you could say our chemistry was lacking. Yet time and time again, we’d continue to ask each other out—I’d chase him, he’d chase me. Around and around we’d go. This went on for years, until one day it all clicked, sometime after the birth of my first child.

Most weekdays I’d set aside at least a little time for just the two of us, usually in the morning after my husband left for work. I’d put my son down for a nap and sneak off to spend time with him. But there were other times when I’d bring my son along, figuring that the early introduction was somehow good for him. Our relationship was easy and flourished then. Those mornings were so fun; sometimes I’d add an afternoon. With just one young child and so much free time, I put a lot of focus on him, and our relationship was strong.

But with the birth of each additional child, our dates became more difficult. I couldn’t just put a child down for a nap or bring one kid along to meet up with him. Suddenly, I’m juggling schedules. I’ve got preschool and soccer carpools. I’ve got toddler meltdowns and orthodontist appointments to work around. Timing things got harder and harder. Sneaking away to find time with him became more difficult. Our time together became more precious, so when I did find time, I wanted to really make it worthwhile. I hung on longer, or more intensely—anything to make the time more meaningful.

Eventually, I found ways to add dates to the weekends. I might sneak away for a Saturday morning with him. And that’s when things became torrid. That’s when my friends found out.

Once my friends got involved, we began planning weekend getaways. Aaron managed the kids while I went away with my friends and met up with him. I still feel guilty admitting that those were good times. I felt wild and alive. Adventurous. I was another person away with him and my friends. We ran free, and we laughed until our breath caught in our throats and our heads throbbed. And at the end of the trip, we almost felt hung over from the experience. But there was a price to pay.

This went on for more than twenty years. Over two decades of our love affair began taking a toll on me. And Aaron began noticing.

I began feeling tired. A lot. But this boyfriend demanded my time. And, oh, how I wanted to spend that time with him. I felt young with him. He validated me in a way nothing else did. But eventually, he broke my heart—completely destroyed it.

Wouldn’t you know it, as soon as my health began to fail, he left me high and dry. There was a part of me that thought I could hold on to him until I was an old lady, that I’d go to the grave with him by my side. At least I’d be able to tell my grandkids about my love affair, and they’d blush and whisper about it to their friends, secretly proud of their grandma.

Nevertheless, when my health went south, I came to peace with ending our relationship. I’m a happily married woman of a certain age, I figured I didn’t need him anymore. Believe me, I mourned the loss—I grieved, for sure. I felt broken inside. We had been together for so long, he had become a part of my identity. But I did blame him—his toxic nature. And there was a piece of me glad to be rid of him. I put that relationship firmly in the past.

But then my heart transplant surgeon brought him up, named him by name. Said he’d like to see me get back together with him. Perplexed, I turned to my husband, who sat beside me. He nodded his head in agreement. “I think you should try again.”

And so, after completing thirty-six sessions of cardiac rehab, I laced up my running shoes and tried again.

With a new, young heart and with ARVC in the rearview mirror, I jumped on the treadmill and began cranking up the speed. I started with just a few awkward, toddler-like steps for only thirty seconds at a time, eventually working up to running a full mile. My stride was clumsy, my cadence slow. But I did it.

Did I love it? No. In fact, I’d say we’re back where we started, with me watching all the runners around me making it look so fun and so easy, making me wish I liked it. Just like those days in elementary school, those boys at recess who ran with so much freedom and ease—at least now I know the feeling. My sister and her friends in high school who made their Saturday morning hill runs seem fun—now I understand the appeal.

I know I’ll try and try again. Some runs will be good, and other runs will be horrible. I might chase him; he might chase me. We might go around and around like this for a while. I don’t know if my love affair with running will ever be rekindled. But I hope one day to tell my grandchildren about my love affair with running and make them proud of their strong, resilient grandmother.