The roads and parks this spring and summer are filled with
tourists and our highways are busy with people driving through our great land.
Among them are my aunt Alice and her husband Dave Siewert.
Dave and Alice are going on a giant road trip and are seeing
some of the great beauty of the Western United States. There are no people more
worthy of experiencing all of the natural beauty of America than Alice and
Dave. And this road trip is special for them because it will be their last
together.
Bad news came fast for them at the end of last year. Dave
was diagnosed with esophageal cancer and has not been given long to live. Alice
is a cancer survivor and Dave had heart surgery years ago. They have more than
paid their dues to the trials of medicine; they have endured enough health
hardships to last two lifetimes already. This just isn’t fair.
If you look up the definition of “balls of steel” in a
proper dictionary, the entry will have Dave’s picture next to it. Dave is
facing certain death and has doubled down on embracing life.
No one would blame Dave if he holed himself up in a dark
room and gorged on cheese curds like some kind of
Midwestern Howard Hughes. Not a soul would
find fault with him if he numbed himself from the specter of his own
approaching death.
But that’s not how he does things.
Alice and Dave acquired a camper and set their sights
westward, making the journey from their home in Wisconsin to Yellowstone
National Park. Early on they had an accident due to a blown tire that delayed
their journey. But what is a little traffic accident when you’re spitting in
death’s face every day?
Dave has to return to Wisconsin every six weeks so his
esophagus can be dilated to prolong his life. Yet he’s out there, rolling down
America’s highways with no regrets and no apologies. He is boldness personified
and the baddest badass cruising America right now because I guarantee you the
toughest trucker or biker on the road today is not staring death in the face
like Dave is.
At a time when it would be easy to voice bitterness or rage
at life’s unfairness, they have remained a moving example of grace and love. The
way they insist on living life to the fullest and refusing to be beaten down is
itself like a great work of art. Like all great artists, they make it look
easy.
But no one who knows them is surprised. Alice and Dave were
married outside on what turned out to be one of the hottest days of the year.
It somehow didn’t feel that way though. The breeze was just right and no one
seemed to notice the temperature. Alice’s vows included a promise to support
the Green Bay Packers. After the ceremony, Alice and Dave enjoyed their first
dance together as a married couple. Before their song was over, Alice beckoned
everyone to join them on the dance floor. She would tolerate no slackers. Even
those guests who normally do not like to dance at weddings happily obliged.
Alice created a Facebookpage to document her and Dave’s
travels. She is a gifted writer and has posted comments and photos. “We can
feel the petty retreating by the hour,” Alice wrote in a post. “This has not so
far been a year too full of laughs. Yet we have been laughing and crying and
learning things about ourselves and each other that the world of cubicles and
chemo bays muffles somehow.”
“We are witnessing natural
things that were previously beyond my imagination,” Alice wrote me in an email.
“Talking stops and all one does is stare dumbly at a magnificence that renders
your life, worries, ego all meaningless. It is fun to be on the road. But
some day we come home for good. And that is a principle to wrestle with
the starry night through.”
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