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Goodbye, Jan

JanJan Stafl, my friend, died two weeks ago. He was 58. He had lived – and I mean lived – 4 years with an aggressive, incurable form of cancer for which he had received a 9-month prognosis. No, he didn’t die “after a long battle with cancer.” Jan didn’t battle his cancer. He worked with prodigious energy and deep curiosity and extraordinary courage to understand it, to be on speaking terms with it, to learn from it. He worked thoughtfully, patiently, with grace and humor – and I have to say again, with prodigious energy — to teach himself and those around him how to die in full consciousness.

I write about Jan to honor him. But I write about him in this particular forum to make two points. The first is that, sometimes you do everything right, and you still get clobbered. You are physically active, and you eat well, and you have deep and loving connections to family and friends, and you live in a beautiful place, and your work is meaningful, and you have a rich spiritual life. In short, you live the ultimate counterclockwise life. And then you get some weird bad cancer and you die.

I know I am not the only person who works overtime to fool herself into thinking she has the ultimate control, that she can avoid all things bad by doing all things good. Of course I know this is not true. But Jan’s death forces me to feel it and deal with it. This is a good thing, not a bad thing.

Jan’s illness and death, also, I think, puts the correct focus on why we should choose to live healthy, vibrant lives. We choose this life not to avoid death (ha!) or even, it seems, to avoid random illness. We make purposeful healthy choices every day so that we can live wholly and fully during the years we are alive. We make these choices so that we have the energy and resilience and embodied delight to enjoy the world and to do good things in it.

Which is what Jan did.

In spades, as they say.

6 comments

1 Colleen { 05.13.15 at 7:03 pm }

Lauren,

A beautiful tribute to a beautiful person. But your last paragraph is truly the heart of what you are writing – right on/write on!

Thank you for the reminder.

c

2 perry patteron { 05.13.15 at 7:30 pm }

Thank you, Lauren, for putting in words what so many of us feel about Jan’s beautifully lived life. Most of us humans have, whether we like it or not, varying faces or “moods” that we carry through our days. In contrast, Jan seemed “baggage” free…. always exhibiting a life-embracing, joyful countenance. He seemed to have attained the spiritual gifts that the rest of us aspire to. What a rare and delightful thing to behold!!
Thank you, Jan, for blessing all of our lives.

3 Lauren Kessler { 05.14.15 at 12:21 am }

Do you remember him in his silly vest dancing at the Holiday Song Fest and Glucose Tolerance Test? We polka’ed around the dining room one year.

4 Holly Simons { 05.13.15 at 8:30 pm }

Lauren, thank you for this beautiful piece of truth honoring Jan. Jan assisted in my son’s delivery, lifting Rowan up into the air from my belly so I could see him for the first time. It was a moment of awe, and Jan’s gentle spirit helped to make it even more wonderful. He gave so much of himself. In the couple of fill-in visits I had with him, I quit worrying that my OB wouldn’t be around–Jan was comforting, encouraging light.

Blessings and peace for Jan and his family, and to you for this post.

5 Liba { 05.14.15 at 1:44 am }

Beautiful, Lauren. Thank you for writing this piece.

6 Bev Forster { 05.16.15 at 4:43 pm }

Inspiring…beautifully written, beautifully shared tribute to Jan. Thank You.

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