Saturday, August 31, 2019

19870502-20190831

https://ymi.today/2019/08/andrew-hui-im-32-and-im-dying/

ANDREW HUI: I’M 32 AND I’M DYING

Aug 29, 2019/in FEATURES /by Contributor



At 32, Andrew Hui now has an estimated two to three months left to live.

His latest treatment option of radiation was ceased a month ago after it was deemed no longer effective in controlling the spread of the cancer cells in his body. Since then, the tumor has been growing rapidly, and the lymphoma has spread to almost every critical organ and is pressing against important blood vessels.

Despite having just a month or so left where he would still be conscious and lucid, Andrew enthusiastically made time for this interview  at the hospital before being discharged back home to be made comfortable on palliative care as death looms.

“I want to encourage people to trust in God during the darkest points of their lives,” he said.



A SHOCKING DISCOVERY

Andrew hadn’t always viewed his condition this way. It took months of wrestling before he was able to reach this stage of peace and acceptance towards his prognosis—which came as a bolt from the blue last June.

Doctors had found out about the cancer in his body during a visit Andrew had made to the hospital’s emergency department one night because he was running a high fever. X-ray tests showed signs of a tumor growth in the upper part of his chest. Further biopsy tests identified it as Stage 1 Aggressive Non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma.

Yet, doctors were confident that his was not a complicated case and had even told him that 90 per cent of people who had this cancer at this stage have been cured.

So Andrew put his hope in probability and medical science, presuming that his treatment would be like a few months of “holiday”, and confident that he would recover soon enough.

But he was in the 10 per cent.

Undergoing six rounds of R-EPOCH therapy, a form of chemotherapy, did not help him.

So doctors gunned for a stronger form of chemo—RICE therapy. This time, they said, some 70 to 80 per cent would successfully have their cancer treated by it.

Again, he went for four rounds of treatment but was found to be in the 20 to 30 per cent of people for whom this treatment did not work.

He was next put on immunotherapy which was deemed to be suitable for 99 per cent of patients.

Andrew, however, once again found himself in the one per cent deemed unsuitable for the treatment due to the severe side effects that emerged.

“This is as straightforward a message you could get from God, don’t you think so?” Andrew said matter-of-factly, with a laugh and a glint in his eye.

“I had placed my faith in medical science and when that failed, He has shown me I need to drastically change my perspective and fall back on Him totally,” he added.



A TIME OF QUESTIONING

Despite being a believer from young and one who actively served in church as a musician and leader, Andrew wrestled with God over his sickness earlier this year.

Why me?

Andrew was not one who was careless with his diet or lifestyle.

The young banker did not drink or smoke. Instead, he would have salads for lunch five days a week and frequently head to the gym after work.

Why now?

His questions to God piled up thick and fast. “I have barely fulfilled 10 per cent of my dreams and I thought You would be able to use me to a greater extent. I have been serving in church for 20 years and this is the way I am to go? This is how You tell the world that you care for Your servant?”

In his anger and disappointment with God, Andrew also lashed out at other Christians.

“They proclaimed or declared healing on me as they believed that by His stripes, God has carried our pain and bore it all (Isaiah 53:5). But I can’t reconcile it with the fact that I am not only not healed but also getting worse. It gave me false hope. So I scolded them and shut them out,” said Andrew.

“The way I see it, if He chooses to heal me, then his task for me on earth is not done. If I am not healed, then it is time for me to go home, so either way it is a win-win situation.”

Part of Andrew’s struggle and despair also stemmed from the fact that he was in a lot of pain.

He had to deal with nausea, lethargy, and hair loss, and many a time he would throw up so violently that his stomach contents would hit the wall.

Bad coughing fits would leave him curling up into a ball on his bed and his heart would shatter whenever he saw his mother crying by his bedside.



A TURNING POINT

However, a profound sense of peace and acceptance of death came when Andrew’s view  of God shifted.

“I have always viewed His sovereignty over my life as something that can’t be questioned. He can do as He likes and pleases, and we have no right to ask for, say favor, unless He gives it. I saw His sovereignty as judicious and high and mighty,” said Andrew.

“But later I realized that the way He expresses His sovereignty is through love. What is happening to me may not be good but He is good and His sovereignty is seen in how He carries me through the storms in life,” he added.

One of the verses that has helped Andrew arrive at this understanding is Ephesians 3:17-18, which says, “And I pray that you, being rooted and established in love, may have power, together with all the Lord’s holy people, to grasp how wide and long and high and deep is the love of Christ, and to know this love that surpasses knowledge—that you may be filled to the measure of all the fullness of God”

His trust in God’s love and sovereignty has cast out any fear he used to have in facing his mortality.

“I have zero fear of death now. When I close my eyes for the last time, I am more certain about being with Him than I can have in boarding a plane and being assured of reaching my destination,” said Andrew, who worships at St. Matthew’s church.“I have zero fear of death now. When I close my eyes for the last time, I am more certain about being with Him than I can have in boarding a plane and being assured of reaching my destination,” said Andrew, who worships at St. Matthew’s church.
“That is the certainty I cling on to. Without that, if God or Jesus didn’t exist, I would have committed suicide because then all my hope is gone and there is no point or meaning to life,” he added.

He is also immensely grateful for having a church family who fasted, prayed, and cried with him throughout his period of illness. Many volunteered to buy food for him or to drive him to and from his home and the hospital.



A DYING TO SELF

Though Andrew was born into a Christian family and grew up in church, he only truly “came to faith” or owned his faith when he was 16.

He was in a Boys’ Brigade service in chapel one day and the lyrics of the song “So You Would Come” touched him immensely:

Nothing you can do
Could make Him love you more
And nothing that you’ve done
Could make Him close the door

These words pierced Andrew’s heart as he used to throw himself into doing good works or serving in church to try to atone for his sins.

The lyrics of the song gave Andrew a sense of freedom as he began to realize that God loves him and that he did not need to do anything to earn it. It also gave him the hope that despite his sins, God will never close the door on him.

But the journey since then hadn’t always been smooth-sailing.

Though he majored in communications and media studies, he joined the banking sector after graduation as it was more financially lucrative.

The number-crunching did not interest or excite him, but he had put money above fulfilment then as he loved to travel to experience different cultures and food. He also wanted to support the church by funding its missions work.

So Andrew worked long hours to climb up the corporate ladder and 12-hour workdays were the norm. His last position was as a manager in private banking.

But what he learned at the age of 16 never completely left him. The peace that comes with being convicted of God’s full acceptance and love for him, said Andrew, is the same peace that guards his heart now that he faces a larger battle of faith in confronting death.



A BLESSING THROUGH FAITH

Besides having the assurance of peace and knowing that he will meet Jesus in heaven after he dies, Andrew said his faith also makes a difference in mitigating his present pain.

“When I call out to him for help at night because of the pain, I find that the pain lessens when I focus on God and I will fall into deep sleep after that,” said Andrew.

Andrew’s faith has also enabled him to see the blessings that have arisen out of his illness, such as being able to know when he is going to die, and to be able to die without pain.

“This is so that I can prepare for death and say what I need to say and do what I need to do.

The pain medication and palliative care also enables me to be comfortable and die with a smile on my face,” he said.

Lately he has been able to talk to his parents about topics such as what they would be doing when he is gone and what they would use his room for.

“It is a blessing to be able to have such conversations because then there will be closure for them as well,” said Andrew, who is preparing a “death box” that contains all his farewell messages to his loved ones and friends.

“I don’t believe in having sad funerals. I want mine to be happy and I also want to have a gathering now when I am around to thank and affirm people who are important to me and enjoy good food together,” said Andrew, who enjoys cooking, and used to cook anything from kaya to sambal to mooncakes for church fundraisers.

These days, he finds himself not really thinking about death, but about “short-term” things such as his craving for tulang, or bone marrow soup.

One unrealized dream he has is to set up a soup kitchen with his two close friends for migrant workers or anyone who needs a meal.

“If I were to live my life again, I think the only part I would change is perhaps going into social service because that may bring more of a difference to the lives of others. But then again, I don’t know. I am who I am today because of all the moments in the past that shaped me,” said Andrew, who has a father with polio.



A FINAL WISH

His greatest wish now is to reconnect with people in his life, such as his primary and secondary school friends whom he has lost touch with.

When asked why he prioritizes his precious time with people he is not close to, Andrew said his heart is for them to come to know the peace that they can have through Christ.

“Whether they are busy working adults or battling their own problems, I want to share this peace that I have with them. So that when they come to the end of their lives, which may happen any time, they would know of a peace that money or toil or relationships or health or wealth cannot bring,” said Andrew.

“I want them to not hear of me as just someone who died, but a person who is waiting to welcome them in heaven and who desires to see them again in heaven.”



Editor’s Note: Andrew passed away peacefully at 11:25 p.m. (Singapore time) on 31 August 2019. Our thoughts and prayers are with his family and friends.

我鄙视那个贪图被人怀念的自己

读了G给N写的悼文后,我开始明白自己对整件事的情绪不仅仅是不甘心,还包括羡慕。
我羡慕他们曾有过要好的时光,我羡慕他们的关系紧密到无人能取代。
我羡慕他这样被怀念着。

与其羡慕,不如开始珍惜自己身边的人,建立我们之间的专属关系和自己被怀念的可能,不是更好吗?

但是,
希望被人怀念这个想法,对生者而言是痛苦的,是自私的;
为了希望被人怀念而建立关系,根本不是真心,这只会让我鄙视我自己。

作为惩处,我是否应该开始不再对任何人付出真心,然后一直撑到世上对我的最后一分怀念消失以后,才作一次无人记得的告别?

Thursday, August 29, 2019

不甘心好好的人就这么被带走
真的不甘心

类似蝴蝶效应的狂想——真的,只是个狂想

有一天,有个陌生人给你一个文件夹,然后在人海中消失。
文件夹里有则新闻声称你因某件事在某地点死亡,在未来20XX年X月X日X时;
文件夹里还有几份亲朋好友社交网站上为你写的悼词,日期也是在20XX年X月X日之后。

你会觉得这是不安好心的恶作剧,还是某个人从未来回来提醒你、试图把你救下来?

Sunday, August 25, 2019

19970226-20190822

来不及参加选美赛 22岁男生昏迷亡

发布/2019年8月25日 2:45 PM
文/张曦予, 陈玉能
来自/新明日报

22岁国大理学院俊俏帅哥新生,忽然在购物中心昏倒紧急送院,原定参加的新生选美赛为表尊重临时取消,新生挣扎一周后不幸离世。

8月正逢许多大学新生迎新之际,各个大学旗下学院科系都会各自主办迎新活动,以及新生选美赛。新加坡国立大学理学院原定在本月16日晚间在Bugis Plus购物中心内的欣艺坊(Joyden Hall)举行,不料却在当天早上基于一些不可预知的情况,必须临时取消迎新晚会兼选美赛。

《新明日报》辗转探知,这次选美赛共有6对男女参赛,其中一名22岁的男参赛者于15日晚间在Bugis Plus忽然晕倒,当晚紧急送院。由于情况严重,这名男生必须待在加护病房。负责选美的学校筹办方为尊重出事的参赛者,决定取消活动。

无奈,这名22岁的许姓男学生情况没有好转,最终于8月22日离世。网上有传这名国大男生的死因或跟脑部动脉瘤有关。这名学生长相俊俏,据悉人缘很好。

国大理学院在回复媒体询问时表示,所有受影响的学生已被告知取消的决定,并且都能谅解背后原因。另外,国大发言人也证实这名22岁男学生离世,并为此深表遗憾与伤感,而校方也将在这段期间给予家人所需的支持。

死者的家人透过社交媒体告知死讯,并表示这个消息对大家来说都非常沉重。

据一名友人透露,对于22岁爱儿就这样走了,毫无预兆,父母都感到非常难过,也哭了好多回,让大家都非常心酸。

Friday, August 16, 2019

16 August 2019 at 13:55

https://www.facebook.com/xtremer87/posts/10157765006010312


Dearest Friends, Family, and everybody I have had the great fortune to have crossed my life with,

It has been a wonderful 32 years that God has granted me. To have known each and every one of you. Words cannot sufficiently express my gratefulness and happiness to have all of you as part of the jigsaw puzzle that competed my life.

This journey, however short, requires me to depart at the next station, approximately 2 months from now.
The darkness of cancer has enveloped almost all the critical functioning organs in my body, and has begun to do what it was meant to do.
It has been a long, painful and drawn out battle for the past year.. and finally my strength has almost been completed depleted. My status is beyond the reach of medical sciences as well now.

Though my armor is battle worn and broken, my peace remains. As sure as the sun rises on the dawn, my destination awaits me.

The purpose of this post is to let all of you, my dear companions know that I appreciate all of you so much. I pray that the memories I have made with you will remain a part of you even as I get off the train of mortality. Remember me for the good that I did, and I plead with you to forgive me if I have done anything that has wronged you.
Remember me for the battles I fought alongside with you, and I pray for your forgiveness if I injured you in any way.

32 years is a relatively short time for most people, but in the ocean of eternity, even a hundred years is a speck of dust.
Death is but a gateway to my eternal home. Where there will be no more pain, no more suffering, no more tears and always, always peace.
As my Master awaits me with open arms in heaven, i invite each and every one of you to join me at the very end when inevitably we all reach the great equalizer.
I will be waiting for all of you with the widest smile, to hear all your stories and adventures in life.
Live the life I could not have, and may your days be filled with joy, peace, and an eternal hope that transcends even death.

To all who are reading this post, I leave you with a permanent blessing:
I pray that my Lord grant you Shalom, a peace that grants you an unshakable joy, health, favor, love, prosperity, strength, kindness, goodness. That each an every one of you will live life with a smile, knowing that at least one person is watching over you from above.

WIth all my heart, thank you for giving me the best life a boy could have.

Andrew