The first draft of my summer bucket list looks like a directory of local restaurants. You can probably relate. In summer 2020 we couldn’t visit any of our favorite eateries because COVID forced many establishments to close their dining rooms.
But that wasn’t the only thing that kept me from my favorite local haunts. In summer 2020, for me, most food tasted like metal or sand or made me sick to my stomach.
The second draft of my summer bucket list looks like a TBR log, a litany of literature. You probably have a summer reading list, too. Quarantine reminds you how much you love getting lost in a good book. Last summer I used novels and nonfiction to escape the hum and the beeps of medical machines.
The next draft of my summer bucket list looks like a guest list as I write down the names of all the people I haven’t hugged in over a year. You probably have your own friends and family tour planned. But in summer 2020 I often wondered not when I’d see my loved ones again but if I’d see them again.
I spent summer 2020 going through chemotherapy to treat stage II breast cancer. And let me tell you— that summer bucket list hits differently when you’ve spent the previous summer fighting for your life
“You’re too young for cancer,” the nurses and lab techs would say. It’s true that women in their 20s and 30s account for less than five percent of breast cancer cases. But it’s the most common cancer for women in this age group.
Breast cancer is often diagnosed in its later stages for women under 40, which means the survival rate is lower and the recurrence rate is higher. And while Black women and White women get breast cancer at about the same rate, Black women die from breast cancer at a higher rate than White women. As a Black woman diagnosed in her 30s, breast cancer changed everything.
A bucket list is supposed to be a list of things you want to do before you kick the bucket. Cancer forces you to take the bucket list back to its roots and ask yourself, “What would I do if this summer were my last?”
Even after your surgeon cuts the tumor from your body, even after your last dose of chemo and final round of radiation, cancer still sits on your shoulder, whispering in your ear, reminding you that life as you know it can end in an instant. So, you learn to take nothing and no one for granted.
This summer I will drive hundreds of miles to hug my friends and fly across the country so I can hold my niece for the first time. I will see my parents’ faces without a mask and they will see mine.
This summer I won’t sweat the small stuff, but I will appreciate the little things. I don’t need trips to exotic lands. I just want to go to the movies and finally visit the National Museum of African American Music in Nashville, Tennessee. I want to enjoy my summer reading without chemo fog clouding my brain.
After a summer with a constantly queasy belly and no taste buds, I will savor brunch and tacos and the occasional scoop of ice cream and I will not count a single calorie.
I will try that fitness class I keep seeing on Instagram – not to lose weight but because I’m glad to have the energy to move.
I will wear dresses with spaghetti straps and let the world see the battle scars that cancer and chemo left behind.
I will go to Orange Beach with my husband, slip on a swimsuit and not chastise my body for belly bulge or thighs that jiggle. I will honor it for staying alive against the odds.
While I wouldn’t wish cancer on anyone, I do wish everyone could have something that pushes them to live and love with urgency. Whether you’re a cancer patient or not, tomorrow is not promised. So, act accordingly.
Wear a swimsuit.
Take the trip.
Write the book.
Start the business.
Love your people.
Love yourself.
This feature was submitted by Javacia Harris Bowser
Javacia Harris Bowser is an award-winning freelance journalist and the founder of See Jane Write, which a friend of hers once called “the Sisterhood of the Traveling Pens.” See Jane Write is a website and community for women who write and blog which she founded in 2011 in her hometown of Birmingham, Alabama. A proud graduate of the journalism programs at University of Alabama and the University of California at Berkeley, Bowser is the author of the forthcoming Find Your Way Back and the recipient of the art grant fellowship from the Alabama Council on the Arts. Connect on Instagram @SeeJavaciaWrite.
Featured Image by D. Jerome Smedley/BGrace Media
Love this, great read! It’s so important to do, live and be!
So true – tomorrow isn’t promised. So glad you are through your treatment and making such a fun summer list! On my summer list, definitely books to be read, and beach visits. Also new recipes to try – I attempted to bottle some orange extract so wish me luck! Happy summer
This is so powerful! Wow! The pandemic was hard enough without having to fight cancer too! I’m very impressed with your fortitude and so glad you are getting to hug those you love the most, and not foe the last time. My bucket list: Read more stories about resilient women!
I love this article! Thank you for reminding us to be grateful for the time we have and to spend it doing all of the things we enjoy.
You’re such an inspiration! Your work is one of the reasons I’m taking several personal and professional “leaps of faith” right now.
Thanks for the reminder. We all need to just do it!!
I enjoyed reading this article! Very inspirational.
This was a beautiful and inspirational piece! Thank you for sharing your journey!
Loved this article. While I realize black women are dying at an alarming rate due to lack of healthcare. Sharing your journey, fears and SUCESS!!! This article was very motivating.
Thank you for sharing your journey! It paints a picture of a strong, determined, resilient woman determined to live. What a great reminder to me to keep moving, reading, asking questions and writing! Live life until death.
This is everything and a reminder that only life and self-love matters
This was an amazing read! I’m not going to wait any more
Well said. Last year was definitely a colossal bunch of hot mess and then to have to deal with something else that is devastating only added to the heaviness. But you came through with a smile on your face and a newfound or strengthened grasp on what truly matters-living life to the fullest and appreciating it every step of the way.
Such wise advice
This is a beautiful article and just the reminder that I needed to live fully in each moment
Wow Javacia your story is incredible so glad you overcame the cancer and treatment. You’re an inspiration and encourager and this shines through your beautiful writing, thank you for sharing!
This is such a great essay! As a fellow breast cancer survivor I appreciate how uncertain a diagnosis makes every day after. So well written! Hope u are writing a book because I can’t wait to read it!!
Javacia, you got it…the grit and gumption. Way to go!
Such a wonderful and powerful reminder to live each day to the fullest to live for today. Thank you!
This is so inspiring. I’ve been working so hard, I’ve forgotten to enjoy life and the little things you mention. Thank you for the reminder.
This article is a powerful reminder to not take our lives for granted! Thank you, Javacia, for sharing your story and being such an inspiration!
Wow! This definitely shifts my perspective. Thank you for sharing your story—and I am so happy to hear you persevered to get to a bucket list this summer filled with love and fun. You deserve all that and more!
Excellent article and insight! Glad that you are fully embracing life! Enjoy your summer!
Wow. What a beautiful article. So honest and raw. Love it!
So real and touching!
I have not had cancer, but I still need a regular reminder to live each day and stop waiting until…
I want to do it now with urgency!
Thanks Javacia for the reminder!
Great article! Thank you for being an inspiration!
You are amazing! I always love reading your articles and posts. You are so inspiring.
“ live and love with urgency…” Enough said. WOW Javacia, you knocked it out of the park – as ALWAYS! Love, love, love the passion & inspiration expressed .. I felt exhilarated reading along, savoring & agreeing with each & every prompt to LIVE & LOVE WITH URGENCY .. Thank you for the reminder! You ROCK!! #BlackGirlMAGIC 😊👏🏾🔥
Great article, beautifully written. I’ve had a life bucket list for years but never thought about breaking it down by the seasons. Getting started on fall right now.
Awesome read! I am inspired to live life out loud everyday. I am glad to know you are well and living your best life. Your strength is in your story. Keep writing
RJ
This was fantastic, thank you for sharing!
I love this idea, and I can relate in so many ways. You touched on something that isn’t talked about enough that cancer will be in the back of your mind, “whispering in your ear, ” long after treatment has ended. Thank you for sharing your story. You are an inspiration.