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Andrea Gibson is onstage telling us about the tumor and the calendar the doctor slipped into their chest like a final love letter: two years. Two. Years. I call it a kind of gift. not the cancer, never the cancer, but the clock you can finally hear ticking loud enough to drown out every stupid apology you were making for your own life. What a gift. If we could all be so lucky. Not lucky to have our cells rebel, our bodies burn, but to be handed the map with the edge of the world circled in red ink. To know with a kind of burning certainty that our days are numbered and the counting has already begun. What a gift. Because all of us have an ending drafted in the dark. We know this, but we keep stacking boxes in the basement to store our fear in, keep erecting excuses between ourselves and the truth. When does time become sharp enough to cut through the denial? A month? You’d feel that blade. A year? You’d start carving your name into every sunrise. Five years? Ten? At what distance do you stop believing the train is really coming? Our time here is limited. Still, we scroll, we postpone, we let the edge of loss skim past our skin a missing, like a hawk above we refuse to look up at, circling the prairie of our days, waiting to be noticed. The gift is not the sickness. The gift is the knowing. Sensing. Feeling the countdown in your bones. Living with the coming end until every ordinary moment turns sharp enough to cut open into joy. So let me ask you: What would you do if you knew, absolutely knew that your time on earth was ending in five years? Who would you love? What would you throw away? What would you finally say out loud? What a gift. Here it is, in your hands. Open it. Accept it. It was always yours.
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Nov 23, 2025
Nov 23, 2025 at 1:16 PM UTC
What a Gift
Andrea Gibson is onstage telling us about the tumor and the calendar the doctor slipped into their chest like a final love letter: two years. Two. Years. I call it a kind of gift. not the cancer, never the cancer, but the clock you can finally hear ticking loud enough to drown out every stupid apology you were making for your own life. What a gift. If we could all be so lucky. Not lucky to have our cells rebel, our bodies burn, but to be handed the map with the edge of the world circled in red ink. To know with a kind of burning certainty that our days are numbered and the counting has already begun. What a gift. Because all of us have an ending drafted in the dark. We know this, but we keep stacking boxes in the basement to store our fear in, keep erecting excuses between ourselves and the truth. When does time become sharp enough to cut through the denial? A month? You’d feel that blade. A year? You’d start carving your name into every sunrise. Five years? Ten? At what distance do you stop believing the train is really coming? Our time here is limited. Still, we scroll, we postpone, we let the edge of loss skim past our skin a missing, like a hawk above we refuse to look up at, circling the prairie of our days, waiting to be noticed. The gift is not the sickness. The gift is the knowing. Sensing. Feeling the countdown in your bones. Living with the coming end until every ordinary moment turns sharp enough to cut open into joy. So let me ask you: What would you do if you knew, absolutely knew that your time on earth was ending in five years? Who would you love? What would you throw away? What would you finally say out loud? What a gift. Here it is, in your hands. Open it. Accept it. It was always yours.
PoetryIsCheating
Written by
Boulder, CO
Nov 23, 2025
Nov 23, 2025 at 1:16 PM UTC
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