Trusting your gut, following your intuition and finding the courage to speak up is liberating!
Have you ever had a hunch, a gut-level feeling about something, or an intuitive message that tells you what to do or not to do? I have, and I have learned to always trust my gut!
One fall day in 2000, I received a call from Stephen, a volunteer doctor I worked with on occasional trips with Los Medicos Voladores (The Flying Doctors). He was calling to confirm that I would be on one of our upcoming four-day trips to a small village in Sonora, Mexico. Our mission was to provide health services to the villagers over a two-day period of a four-day trip (travel time is two days). The team of six volunteers usually included two doctors, two interpreters and two assistants. I was an assistant, always working with Stephen. The other doctor, Marvin, flew the twin-engine Cessna and because the locations were remote, we landed and took off in the desert. Stephen, also a pilot, served as the co-pilot on board.
Together, I had been on many missions with my two favorite doctor friends. However, my father had been ill and I was temporarily staying with him in his home while he recovered. While I knew that I could arrange to have my sister stay with my father for a few days so that I could take the trip, I listened to my intuition. I was hesitant and disappointed, but I immediately told Stephen that I would not be able to make that trip scheduled for October. I didn’t even need time to think it over or sleep on it like I do with many important decisions. I had a gut-level feeling that it was not the right time for me to go.
Picking a Path. Photo ©Tish Litchfield, 2024.
On a Sunday morning in October, I was sitting with my father reading the local newspaper. I was horrified and deeply saddened to read the headline, “Plane Crash Kills 6 in Volunteer Doctor’s Group.” The plane had crashed that Saturday in a field near Ensenada, Mexico, as it was making its way back from the humanitarian mission. Had my father not been ill and had I not trusted my gut, I would have been on that trip!
It took me a while to process the grief of that accident and losing such wonderful people in such a tragic way. Stephen had decided not to go as well and so both our lives were spared. Only God knows why.
There are times in life when an authoritative person, perhaps an expert like an oncologist, is insistent with their advice about something such as a particular medical treatment. I experienced this during consultations over my cancer treatment plan. My instincts or intuition was not to have chemotherapy. I had a persistent, gnawing feeling that said, no, that treatment is not for me! I did not understand where it came from or why the feeling was so visceral and strong. I just knew that I had to go with my gut—against the odds and against my doctor’s recommendation, which at the time, was the standard of practice for my particular condition. I’ve written in my book about the challenge of finding the courage to stand up and fight for what I intuitively felt was right or not right for my body’s treatment plan. To this day, I am so grateful that I trusted myself. It turned out that it was okay for me to say no to my doctor. Today I celebrate OVER ten years of life beyond cancer!
Another experience with my intuitive feelings about treatment happened while seeing my Ayurvedic doctor at the UCSF Osher Center in San Francisco. As I waited for my appointment, I browsed through cancer flyers and materials organized neatly on a shelf. One flyer from Epic Experience—Beyond Cancer caught my eye. It included an application to attend a one-week adult cancer camp at a dude ranch in the Colorado Rockies. One of the activities mentioned on the flyer was kayaking on the Colorado River which quickly caught my attention since paddling is my passion! However, I was not sure about taking the flyer because I was feeling down and worn out from the last year of balancing my job with all the doctor appointments, diagnostic tests and treatments, but I took it. I was going with my gut, even though the thought of packing, flying on a plane to Colorado and then being around a group of people that I didn’t even know for a week, 24/7, sounded utterly exhausting!
I am so glad that I went home and submitted that application! I was accepted to the camp in August of 2013 and it was one of the best experiences of my life! While I was initially hesitant about going, the timing was perfect for where I was on my healing journey. I needed to attend that camp!
Tish riding horse at Epic Experience—Beyond Cancer. Photo ©Tish Litchfield, 2013.
My time spent with fellow cancer survivors and Epic Experience staff was truly amazing, cathartic and energizing. I was so moved by my time at the camp that I am donating a portion of the proceeds from my book, A Miracle Within You: Paddling Through Cancer, to them so that more cancer survivors can attend this incredibly healing cancer camp.