Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes - Duke professor and author, Kate Bowler:
“Bowler was diagnosed in 2015 with stage IV colon cancer that had already metastasized. She's married, has a young son and can't bear the thought of him growing up without her. What's kept her alive in addition to colon surgery and chemo is experimental immunotherapy treatments that helped shrink her tumors.”
https://www.npr.org/2018/02/12/585066841/a-stage-4-cancer-patient-shares-the-pain-and-clarity-of-living-scan-to-scan#:~:text=Bowler%20was%20diagnosed%20in%202015,that%20helped%20shrink%20her%20tumors.
She details her experience seeking (advocating for) and receiving the immunotherapy treatments in her second book, “No Cure for Being Human.” She’s an amazing writer and a seriously smart, thoughtful, and funny person, both in writing and on her podcast. Her first book (“Everything Happens for a Reason”) was beyond fabulous, too - definitely the place to start!
One caveat - her books have a strong thread of Christian faith running through them, though not at all in a way I found off-putting, though I am an atheist Jew. Personally, I found her references to her faith to be thought-provoking and even relatable, though my faith obviously differs from hers. She’s awesome!
I love this!!! ty
Anonymous wrote:Yes - Duke professor and author, Kate Bowler:
“Bowler was diagnosed in 2015 with stage IV colon cancer that had already metastasized. She's married, has a young son and can't bear the thought of him growing up without her. What's kept her alive in addition to colon surgery and chemo is experimental immunotherapy treatments that helped shrink her tumors.”
https://www.npr.org/2018/02/12/585066841/a-stage-4-cancer-patient-shares-the-pain-and-clarity-of-living-scan-to-scan#:~:text=Bowler%20was%20diagnosed%20in%202015,that%20helped%20shrink%20her%20tumors.
She details her experience seeking (advocating for) and receiving the immunotherapy treatments in her second book, “No Cure for Being Human.” She’s an amazing writer and a seriously smart, thoughtful, and funny person, both in writing and on her podcast. Her first book (“Everything Happens for a Reason”) was beyond fabulous, too - definitely the place to start!
One caveat - her books have a strong thread of Christian faith running through them, though not at all in a way I found off-putting, though I am an atheist Jew. Personally, I found her references to her faith to be thought-provoking and even relatable, though my faith obviously differs from hers. She’s awesome!

Anonymous wrote:Yes - Duke professor and author, Kate Bowler:
“Bowler was diagnosed in 2015 with stage IV colon cancer that had already metastasized. She's married, has a young son and can't bear the thought of him growing up without her. What's kept her alive in addition to colon surgery and chemo is experimental immunotherapy treatments that helped shrink her tumors.”
https://www.npr.org/2018/02/12/585066841/a-stage-4-cancer-patient-shares-the-pain-and-clarity-of-living-scan-to-scan#:~:text=Bowler%20was%20diagnosed%20in%202015,that%20helped%20shrink%20her%20tumors.
She details her experience seeking (advocating for) and receiving the immunotherapy treatments in her second book, “No Cure for Being Human.” She’s an amazing writer and a seriously smart, thoughtful, and funny person, both in writing and on her podcast. Her first book (“Everything Happens for a Reason”) was beyond fabulous, too - definitely the place to start!
One caveat - her books have a strong thread of Christian faith running through them, though not at all in a way I found off-putting, though I am an atheist Jew. Personally, I found her references to her faith to be thought-provoking and even relatable, though my faith obviously differs from hers. She’s awesome!