Toronto Star

When Breath Becomes Air by Paul Kalanithi

- PAUL KALANITHI

At the age of 36, neurosurge­on Paul Kalanithi was diagnosed with Stage IV lung cancer. The life he’d imagined with his wife, Lucy and newborn daughter evaporated. He chronicled his journey, the last months of his life, very publicly in a blog and in the New York Times. In this excerpt from memoir When Breath Becomes Air, he also mentions how his oncologist, Emma Hayward, helped him cope.

In February, I flew to Wisconsin for a job interview. They were offering everything I wanted: millions of dollars to start a neuroscien­ce lab, head of my own clinical service, flexibilit­y if I needed it for my health, a tenure-track professors­hip, appealing job options for Lucy, high salary, beautiful scenery, idyllic town, the perfect boss. “I understand about your health, and you probably have a strong connection with your oncologist,” the department chairman told me. “So if you want to keep your care there, we can fly you back and forth — though we do have a top-notch cancer center here, if you want to explore it. Is there anything else I can do to make this job more attractive?”

I thought about what Emma had told me. I had gone from being unable to believe I could be a surgeon to being one, a transforma­tion that carried the force of religious conversion. She had always kept this part of my identity in mind, even when I couldn’t. She had done what I had challenged myself to do as a doctor years earlier: accepted mortal responsibi­lity for my soul and returned me to a point where I could return to myself. I had attained the heights of the neurosurgi­cal trainee, set to become not only a neurosurge­on but a surgeon-scientist. Every trainee aspires to this goal; almost none make it.

That night, the chairman was driving me back to my hotel after dinner. He stopped the car and pulled over. “Let me show you something,” he said. We got out and stood in front of the hospital, looking over a frozen lake, its far edge luminous with specks of light leaking from faculty houses. “In summer, you can swim or sail to work. In winter, you can ski or ice-skate.”

It was like a fantasy. And in that moment, it hit me: it was a fantasy. We could never move to Wisconsin. What if I had a serious relapse in two years? Lucy would be isolated, stripped of her friends and family, alone, caring for a dying husband and new child. As furiously as I had tried to resist it, I realized that cancer had changed the calculus.

For the last several months, I had striven with every ounce to restore my life to its precancer trajectory, trying to deny cancer any purchase on my life. As desperatel­y as I now wanted to feel triumphant, instead I felt the claws of the crab holding me back. The curse of cancer created a strange and strained existence, challengin­g me to be neither blind to, nor bound by, death’s approach. Even when the cancer was in retreat, it cast long shadows.

When I’d first lost the professors­hip at Stanford, I’d consoled myself with the idea that running a lab made sense only on a twenty-year time scale. Now I saw that this was, in fact, true. Freud started his career as a successful neuroscien­tist. When he realized neuroscien­ce would need at least a century to catch up with his true ambition of understand­ing the mind, he set aside his microscope. I think I felt something similar. Transformi­ng neurosurge­ry through my research was a gamble whose odds had been made too long by my diagnosis; the lab wasn’t the place I wanted to plunk the remainder of my chips.

I could hear Emma’s voice again: You have to figure out what’s most important to you.

If I no longer sought to fly on the highest trajectory of neurosurge­on and neuroscien­tist, what did I want? To be a father? To be a neurosurge­on? To teach? I didn’t know. But if I did not know what I wanted, I had learned something, something not found in Hippocrate­s, Maimonides, or Osler: the physician’s duty is not to stave off death or return patients to their old lives, but to take into our arms a patient and family whose lives have disintegra­ted and work until they can stand back up and face, and make sense of, their own existence.

My own hubris as a surgeon stood naked to me now: as much as I focused on my responsibi­lity and power over patients’ lives, it was at best a temporary responsibi­lity, a fleeting power. Once an acute crisis has been resolved, the patient awakened, extubated, and then discharged, the patient and family go on living — and things are never quite the same. A physician’s words can ease the mind, just as the neurosurge­on’s scalpel can ease a disease of the brain. Yet their uncertaint­ies and morbiditie­s, whether emotional or physical, remain to be grappled with.

Emma hadn’t given me back my old identity. She’d protected my ability to forge a new one. And, finally, I knew I would have to.

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