Two years after my surgery*, I’m reflecting on fear, healing, insurance battles, unexpected detours, and the small moments of light that helped me through.

Every year has dates that mark us. Some are joyful, some are heartbreaking, and some are the kind you don’t know how to categorize because they hold both. April 10th is one of those dates for me — a day that changed everything, and a day I now meet each year with equal parts gratitude, disbelief, and quiet reflection.
Eleven months before my surgery — almost to the day — someone sent me a photo of a rainbow settling over the old corncrib located on my family homestead. I didn’t know then why it struck me so deeply, or why I saved it. Now I do. It feels like a small piece of light sent ahead of me, long before I knew how much I would need it. A reminder that even after you leave a place, some parts of it don’t leave you.
Two Years Later
Two years ago today, I was wheeled into surgery after days of pain, vomiting, fear, and exhaustion. I barely slept the night before because at 2:00 a.m., my NG tube clogged and had to be replaced. I was practically hysterical — if they were taking it out, I didn’t want another one put in. Of course they had to, and I ended up with an NG tube for nine of the eleven days I was in the hospital. By the time they rolled me into the operating room, I was wrung out in every possible way.
Somewhere in the middle of all of this, I had a nurse who looked so much like one of my childhood friends that they could have been sisters. Every time she walked into the room, I had this strange mix of comfort and confusion — like my past and present were overlapping for a moment. It was one of those small, unexpected bright spots in a very hard week.
The nurse-

my friend –


Don’t you agree?
At the time, my world had narrowed to one desperate hope: make the pain stop, fix the blockage, let me go home. I didn’t yet understand the scale of what was happening inside my body, or how long the road back would be.
Today, I know so much more — about resilience, about fear, about patience, and about what “in sickness and in health” really looks like when it’s lived rather than spoken.
The emotional detours no one prepares you for
One of the hardest emotional blows came early on. I was told the colostomy could likely be reversed in three to six months, and I clung to that timeline like a lifeline. Before we had even really started treatment, I was asking the oncologist about it at almost every appointment. I think he was relieved when I finally stopped bringing it up.
And then came the day I learned the reversal wasn’t going to happen after all. No one said, “just kidding,” but that’s exactly how it felt. Losing that expectation knocked me back in ways I didn’t anticipate. It wasn’t just disappointment — it was grief for the version of my life I thought I was walking toward. It took time to find my footing again.
This year’s unexpected turns
Since my February update, this season has brought its own surprises:
- the frightening “has it spread to my brain?” scare ( it hadn’t, thankfully)
- another round of dehydration that reminded me how fragile recovery can be
- and a treatment completion date that has now shifted to the end of May
None of these were part of the plan, but they’re part of the story.
The financial and insurance maze
I also learned firsthand how difficult it is to navigate the financial and insurance side of cancer while you’re sick. I watched my mom go through it, so I knew it was “a thing,” but I didn’t understand the emotional toll until I was the one trying to make sense of bills, approvals, denials, deductibles, and out‑of‑pocket maximums while recovering from surgery and treatment.
Some of it was upsetting. Some of it was unnecessary. And all of it was harder than it needed to be. There’s a particular kind of exhaustion that comes from fighting for your health and fighting the system at the same time.
And still — I’m here
Even with the setbacks, the scares, and the shifting timelines, I’m here. I’m healing. I’m moving toward the end of treatment, even if the finish line looks different than I once imagined. I’m learning to look forward again — not with certainty, but with a quieter, steadier kind of hope.

I’m grateful for the care, the science, the support, and the stubbornness that have carried me to this anniversary. And I’m grateful for the reminder that even when the path changes, the progress still counts.
Two years ago, a surgeon removed a softball‑sized tumor and handed me back my life. Today, I’m still learning how to live it — fully, gently, and on my own terms.

Closing
Anniversaries like this aren’t celebrations, exactly. They’re acknowledgments. Markers. Moments to pause and say: This happened. I survived it. I’m still moving forward.
And that, in its own quiet way, is enough.

*I share these updates from my own experience and faith, not from medical expertise. My journey is just one story, and every person’s path is different. Please lean on your own doctors and care team for guidance that’s right for you.
- Update #1: Rooted & Established in Love — The Beginning of My Cancer Journey
- Update #2: Colorectal Cancer Awareness Month — My Story Behind the Statistics
- Update #3: Finding My Footing in the Hard Middle
- Update #4: Strength, Setbacks, and Small Victories
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What a journey you have had to endure Kimberly. I am so sorry that you have had to go through all of this. I am also amazed at the beautiful attitude you have had throughout. May is just around the corner and I know you will race across that finish line with grace and joy! Also, I completely agree your nurse and your friend do look so much alike!
Thank you, Crystal. I appreciate your kind words and many prayers throughout this journey. I wish I remembered that nurses name! She always had a big smile on her face!
I’m always so proud of you. The strength and courage you showed through this tough journey is inspiring.
A beautiful post.
Thank you so much, Cindy! Believe me, there have been several times when I have been less than strong. I appreciate your support!