This Man is a Fighter!

DALLAS – Matt Chandler doesn’t feel anything when the radiation penetrates his brain. It could start to burn later in treatment. But it hasn’t been bad, this time lying on the slab. Not yet, anyway.

Chandler’s lanky 6-foot-5-inch frame rests on a table at Baylor University Medical Center. He wears the same kind of jeans he wears preaching to 6,000 people at The Village Church in suburban Flower Mound, where the 35-year-old pastor is a rising star of evangelical Christianity.

Another cancer patient Chandler has gotten to know spends his time in radiation imagining that he’s playing a round of golf at his favorite course. Chandler on this first Monday in January is reflecting on Colossians 1:15-23, about the pre-eminence of Christ and making peace through the blood of his cross.

Chandler’s hands are crossed over his chest. He wears a mask with white webbing that keeps his head still when metal fingers slide into place on the radiation machine, delivering the highest possible dose to what is considered to be fatal and incurable brain cancer.

This is Matt Chandler’s new normal. Each weekday, he spends two hours in the car — driven from his suburban home to downtown Dallas — for eight minutes of radiation and Scripture.

At the hospital, Chandler sees other patients in gowns who get chemotherapy through catheters in their chests and is thankful he gets his in pills before going to sleep at home next to his wife.

Chandler is trying to suffer well. He would never ask for such a trial, but in some ways he welcomes this cancer. He says he feels grateful that God has counted him worthy to endure it. He has always preached that God will bring both joy and suffering but is only recently learning to experience the latter.

Since all this began on Thanksgiving morning, Chandler says he has asked “why me?” just once, in a moment of weakness.

He is praying that God will heal him. He wants to grow old, to walk his two daughters down the aisle and see his son become a better athlete than he ever was.

Whatever happens, he says, is God’s will, and God has his reasons. For Chandler, that does not mean waiting for his fate. It means fighting for his life.

___

Thanksgiving morning, a normal morning at the Chandler home.

The coffee brews itself. Matt wakes up, pours himself a cup, black and strong like always, and sits on the couch. He feeds 6-month-old Norah from a bottle. Burps her. Puts her in her bouncy seat.

The next thing Chandler knows, he is lying in a hospital bed.

What Chandler does not remember is that he suffered a seizure and collapsed in front of the fireplace, rattling the pokers. He does not remember biting through his tongue.

He does not remember his wife, Lauren, shielding the kids as he shook on the floor. Or, later, ripping the IV out of his arm and punching a medic in the face.

During the ambulance ride, Lauren, 29, looks back from the passenger seat at her husband in restraints.

He is looking at her but through her.

She texts the women in her Bible study and asks them to pray.

At the hospital, Matt comes to.

“Honey, what happened?”

“You had a seizure.”

He realizes that their two older children — Audrey, 7, and Reid, 4 — had seen it.

“Are the kids OK?”

Tears well up in his eyes.

“They’re fine. They’re fine.”

He dozes off, wakes up and asks about the kids again. The same exchange repeats itself five times, always ending the same way, with Matt tearing up.

In short order, Chandler is wheeled back for a CT scan, followed by an MRI.

Not long afterward, the ER doctor walks in and sits next to him.

“You have a small mass on your frontal lobe. You need to see a specialist.”

It was Thanksgiving. Chandler had not seen his kids for hours. He had collapsed in front of them. For whatever reason, those grim words from a doctor he’d never met did not cause his heart to drop. What Chandler thought was, “OK, we’ll deal with that.” Getting the news meant he could go home.

___

Chandler can be sober and silly, charming and tough. He’ll call men “bro” and women “mama.” He drives a 2001 Chevy Impala with 144,000 miles and a broken radio. He calls it the “Gimpala”

One of Chandler’s sayings is, “It’s OK to not be OK — just don’t stay there.” In other words, your doubts and questions are welcome at The Village Church, but eventually you need to pull it together.

He’s also been known to begin sermons with the warning, “I’m going to yell at you from the Bible.”

Chandler’s long, meaty messages untangle large chunks of Scripture, a stark contrast to the “Eight Ways to Overcome Fear” sermons common to evangelical megachurches that took off in the 1980s. His approach appeals, he believes, to a generation looking for transcendence and power.

His theology teaches that all men are wicked, that human beings have offended a loving and sovereign God, and that God saves through Jesus’ death, burial and resurrection — not because people do good deeds. In short, Chandler is a Calvinist, holding to a belief system growing more popular with young evangelicals.

“Matt goes right at Bible Belt Christianity and exposes the problems with it,” says Collin Hansen, author of “Young, Restless, Reformed: A Journalist’s Journey with the New Calvinists.” “He says, ‘Enough of this playing around and trying to be relevant and using cultural touch points. Let’s talk God’s words.’”

Chandler’s background does not suggest someone suited to the role. He grew up a military kid, drifting from Olympia, Wash., to Sault Ste. Marie, Mich., Alameda, Calif., and Galveston, Texas.

Chandler was taught that Christianity meant not listening to secular music or seeing R-rated movies. He developed what he calls a small and “man-centered” view of God — that God will bless people who are good. That began to change when a high school football teammate started talking about the Gospel.

After graduating from a small Baptist college, Chandler became a fiery evangelist who led a popular college Bible study and traveled the Christian speaking circuit. He was hired from another church in 2002 at age 28 to lead what is now The Village Church, a Southern Baptist congregation that claimed 160 members at the time.

The church now meets in a newly renovated former Albertson’s grocery store with a 1,430-seat auditorium; two satellite campuses are flourishing in Denton and Dallas. Chandler has a podcast following in the thousands and speaks at large conferences.

“What Matt does works because it resonates with the deep longing of the soul the average person can’t even identify,” said Anne Lincoln Holibaugh, the church’s children’s ministry director.

___

Tuesday after Thanksgiving. The Chandlers meet with Dr. David Barnett, chief of neurosurgery at Baylor University Medical Center.

The weekend had brought hope: A well-meaning church member who is a radiologist looked at Matt’s MRI and concluded the mass was encapsulated, or contained to a specific area.

But Barnett delivers very different news. He saw what appeared to be a primary brain tumor — meaning a tumor that had formed in the brain — that was not contained. It had branches.

“Matt, I think you’re dealing with something serious,” Barnett says. “We need to do something about it quickly. Go home. Talk it over with your wife. Pray about it.”

Chandler is facing brain surgery. He schedules it for that Friday, Dec. 4.

He is scared.

Questions start to haunt him. Am I going to wake up and be me? Am I going to wake up and remember Lauren?

The surgery begins around 2 p.m. A biopsy determines that it is, indeed, a primary brain tumor.

As far as Chandler knows, there is no history of cancer in his family. His tumor, like most others, was likely caused by a genetic abnormality, Barnett says. There’s no way of knowing how long it’s been there.

The surgeon is aggressive, pushing to remove as much of the mass as possible. It’s in a relatively good place in the brain’s “silent hemisphere,” removed from areas that control most language skills.

The hospital has an intraoperative MRI, which allows surgeons to remove part of a tumor, stop, take a picture, look more closely, then go in and remove more. Barnett uses it twice during Chandler’s surgery.

“You cannot be a timid neurosurgeon when you deal with these things,” Barnett says later. “Your first shot is your best shot at treating this. I wanted to get as much of the tumor out as humanly possible, but I also wanted to be careful not to permanently injure him. It’s a fine balance between the two.”

Seven hours after entering surgery, Matt is wheeled to intensive care.

His head is swollen and wrapped in a bandage.

His irises are quivering.

Chandler wakes to Barnett’s voice.

“Matt … Matt … Who am I?”

He knows the answer. Relief. His left side is numb. His facial expressions are frozen and his voice has no pitch, what doctors call a “flat affect.”

This is all good, leading Barnett to believe he pushed hard but not too hard.

Each day after the surgery, Chandler gets better, stronger.

“The first four days were just … not scary, but hard,” Lauren says. “I’m wondering, ‘How much of this will stay? How much of this will be normal? How much of this will be the new normal?’”

Tuesday after surgery. Barnett meets with Lauren and Brian Miller, chairman of the church’s elder board. The final pathology results are not in, but Barnett shares what he knows — the tumor was malignant, fast-growing and mean.

Though he removed what he could see, such tumors send tiny fingers of cells beyond their borders — and eventually a branch will reach back and grow another brain tumor, Barnett says.

Barnett asks Lauren and Miller to keep the diagnosis to themselves for a week so Matt can concentrate fully on recovering from surgery.

On Dec. 15, Barnett shares the pathology results with the Chandlers. Tumors are designated by grade — with Grade 1 being the least aggressive and Grade 4 being the most.

Chandler’s tumor is a Grade 3.

The average life expectancy in such cases, Barnett says, is approximately two to three years. The doctor says later, in an interview, he believes Chandler will live longer because of the aggressive surgery, treatment and Chandler’s otherwise good health.

There’s also a chance that “God smiles upon us” and the cancer goes into remission for years, says Barnett, a devout Christian.

Before the meeting ends, Matt prays that his children and others do not grow resentful.

“Lord, you gave this to me for a reason. Let me run with it and do the best I can with it.”

Barnett says later that he’s witnessed many tragedies and miracles. He has seen how people handle life-changing moments. He called Chandler’s attitude one of the most amazing he’s seen.

Chandler says learning he had brain cancer was “kind of like getting punched in the gut. You take the shot, you try not to vomit, then you get back to doing what you do, believing what you believe.

“We never felt — still have not felt — betrayed by the Lord or abandoned by the Lord. I can honestly say, we haven’t asked the question, ‘Why?’ or wondered, ‘Why me, why not somebody else?’ We just haven’t gotten to that place. I’m not saying we won’t get there. I’m just saying it hasn’t happened yet.”

Later, Chandler clarified that. There was one moment when he looked at a Christmas card, saw a picture of a man who chronically cheated on his wife and thought, “Why not that guy?”

Chandler confessed to Lauren that his thoughts were wicked and wrong.

___

Monday, Jan. 4, a month after surgery. Morning breaks with 4-year-old Reid singing “Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star” at full volume. Matt sits at his laptop in the dining room, nursing a cup of green tea.

He’s preparing to drive to a homeopathic clinic for an infusion of Vitamin C to bolster the immune system, followed by the long drive to downtown Dallas for radiation. He’s in the midst of a six-week program of radiation and chemotherapy, to be followed by a break and more treatment.

Chandler never thought such a trial would shake his faith. But until now, that was just hope in the abstract.

“This has not surprised God,” Chandler says on the drive home. “He is not in a panic right now trying to figure out what to do with me or this disease. Those things have been warm blankets, man.”

Chandler has, however, wrestled with the tension between belief in an all-powerful God and what he, as a mere mortal, can do about his situation. He believes he has responsibilities: to use his brain, to take advantage of technology, to walk in faith and hope, to pray for healing and then “see what God wants to do.”

“Knowing that if God is outside time and I am inside time, that puts some severe limitations on my ability to crack all the codes,” he says. “The more I’ve studied, the more I go, ‘Yes, God is sovereign, and he does ask us to pray … and he does change his mind.’ How all that will work is in some aspects a mystery.”

Since falling ill, Chandler has gotten letters from the governor and pastors in Sudan. He has tried to steer attention to others, including a 6-year-old Arizona girl with cancer.

At church, he has deflected sympathy with reassurances that this is a good thing, that he is not shrinking back. Chandler has preached the last two weekends and is planning trips to South Africa and England. He recently lost his hair to radiation but got a positive lab report last week and feels strong.

“The human experience commonly shared is suffering,” said Mark Driscoll, pastor of Seattle’s Mars Hill Church and a friend of Chandler’s. “If he suffers well, that might be the most important sermon he’s ever preached.”

Chandler would rather this not have happened. But he is drinking life in — watching his son build sandcastles at the park, preaching each sermon as if eternity is at stake — and feeling a heightened sense of reality.

“It’s carpe diem on steroids,” he says.

At the dinner table on the sixth day of radiation, new normal looks like this: Reid in Spiderman pajamas. Peanut butter and jelly dipped in honey for the kids, turkey chili for the adults.

And peppermint ice cream.

It is a diaper changed, dishes done.

Matt Chandler takes his chemo pills and goes to bed, grateful for another day.

Article written by Eric Gorski of the Associated Press

Survivor Recap: Coach is Delusional

I watched this episode a day after it aired so I am a bit late on my episode reflections. I have seen several dozen Survivor blogs so this one is probably a day late and a dollar short. Overall this episode didn’t live up to the standards the previous 3 set. It is clear that the Heroes are the least unified of the two tribes. It is also clear that the villains are the least athletic of the two. I said in an earlier blog that the Heroes will dominate any physical challenge and that is the way this season has played out. They dominate any part of a physical challenge but unfortunately lose the mental ones.

This was a pretty uneventful episode but I do have several thoughts.

  • Coach rubbing Jerri’s hair really creeps me out. I still think they are the eeriest couple ever.
  • I find Russell’s flirting with Parvati confusing. Since Parvati is such a big target being seen as her primary ally doesn’t make a lot of game sense.
  • I still think Tom looks chubby.
  • Parvati gets the award for the best confessional quotes of the week. She said of Russell: “He is kind of a lunatic.” She said of Jerri: “She is a bitter old cougar.”
  • Russell burying his tribes machete came off as pandering to the camera more than game strategy. I am beginning to wonder if Russell’s celebrity has gone to his head. I keep waiting for him to shift into game mode. If he actually gets a hold of Rob’s Boston Red Sox hat and hides it I will believe he is back to his old self. On the Red Sox hat issue…..I can’t imagine how livid Rob would be if that hat disappeared. It would make for some great TV.
  • On Russell and Rob. The two alpha males are beginning to scheme against each other. I bet in the next couple of episodes one will try to take out the other. I predict within two weeks we will know who the really alpha male is.
  • Interesting….not really any thing worth reporting about the heroes. The only hero doing anything of note was JT trying to play Candice and Cirie against each other. JT is playing a much more strategic game than he did before. It will probably help him last into the top ten.

The immunity challenge was stacked in the heroes favor. As I have already mentioned, any solely physical challenge will be easily won by them. The king of the hill/ mud wrestling contest proved that theory accurate. The heroes dominated all 8 matches. The two notable battles were Coach versus Rupert. Coach clearly broke the rules when he tossed Rupert into the mud but still went into his zen mode and flexed for an audience of none. After Probst was able to snap him back to reality (reality is a relative term for Coach) and lets him know that round didn’t count, Coach then flips Probst off (not a real zen moment for Coach). The other interesting match was James versus Randy. First off, Randy is old and was probably not very athletic in his youth. Here this un-athletic old guy is battling a roided up, musclebound man who is close to snapping! James plowed him over as you would have expected. He then throws his bag at a beaten Randy. Classy move James. James is turning into the biggest villain of the season.

Randy ends up getting voted out by the villains. Several of them tried to steer the votes towards Parvati but ultimately the Black Widow was able to bite Randy. Randy did not deserve to be on this season. He is not an All-Star. I am glad he was voted out. That being said, Parvati would have been a much better strategic move.

My Survivor of the week. Unfortunately, there wasn’t a contestant who stood out this week. So no Survivor of the week. Instead I am picking the worst Survivor of the week. That award goes to Coach. I don’t like Coach but I still found myself embarrassed for him. Besides flipping off Jeff Probst (I can’t wait to hear what Probst says about it) he had several other ultra annoying, crazy, delusional moments. Coach was back to telling his megalomaniac stories of heroism and hardship. I loved how Boston Rob made fun of him while he talked on and on. Coach was also giving game advice to Russell. Coach, who has zero strategy, is giving the greatest strategic player in Survivor history advice. Good grief. The most annoying moment with Coach was his usual he’s an honorable player who never lies rant. He actually quoted Martin Luther King to prove his point. Dalton Ross, who blogs on Survivor often, made a great observation about this moment:

“* I’m sorry, but did Coach just quote Martin Luther King, Jr.? I’m sure that’s exactly what the Reverend had in mind when he set off on the civil rights crusade over 50 years ago: that a Steven Seagal wannabe with a feather earring would be quoting him on a reality TV show when deciding whether to vote out either a flirty Perfect 10 model or a crotchety white guy who prides himself on having no friends. Congrats, Coach: You just transformed King’s dream into a total freakin’ nightmare.”

As James watches this season with his family, he is probably thanking Coach for possibly becoming a more despised contestant this season than him. Odds are by the time the season is over, we will dislike Coach more.

This Week’s Doh!

As MMA continues to grow in international popularity and increase in media exposure, the opportunity to catch someone in the industry doing something (or saying something) questionable is also increasing. I thought it would be interesting to start a weekly feature on Fight Pastor called This Week’s Doh! and highlight the biggest blunder of the week. This is, of course, completely arbitrary and by no means a scientific poll. This is strictly MY opinion of the biggest Doh! of the week.

Last week Frank Mir did a radio interview and was quoted as saying he wanted Brock Lesnar “to be the first person that dies due to octagon related injuries.” The public outcry was soon to follow. Several days later Frank Mir issued this apology:

“I would like to apologize to Brock Lesnar, his family, the UFC and the UFC fans for my stupid remarks,” he said in a statement released on UFC.com. “I respect Brock, all the other fighters and the sport of mixed martial arts. I’m sorry that I stepped out of line.”

Dana White, who makes a point of saying the UFC has had no fatalities or major injuries, was needless to say, not pleased:

“I was disappointed by Frank Mir’s comments,” White said. “Frank’s been with the UFC a long time; he’s a two-time heavyweight champion and a commentator for the WEC. I think his emotions are running high right now; he has a big fight coming up next month, and he’s still upset about his loss to Lesnar. He’s been talked to; he regrets what he said, and he won’t be saying anything like that again.”

It always amazes me how people blow things out of proportion. Frank Mir doesn’t really want Brock Lesnar to die. He and Brock have a verbal rivalry. Since Frank stands little to no chance of ever beating him in the octagon, he makes rash statements and attempts to win the verbal battle. Fortunately, Brock is smart enough to keep his mouth shut and stay out of the public eye other than when he is fighting.

I don’t think Frank apologized because he felt bad. I think he apologized because he is a smart guy. For a brief moment he had a brain lapse and threatened Superman, once he came to his senses he realized this wasn’t smart. Come on, you don’t pull on Superman’s cape! Once Frank’s brain returned to his head he knew Brock wouldn’t verbally retaliate but would eventually take it out on him in the octagon. Frank is a bright guy, he remembered how badly Brock beat him up in their last fight. He doesn’t want to add extra motivation for Brock to pummel him even worse.

So this weeks Doh! goes to Frank Mir. Not because he said he wanted to see someone die but because he said he wanted to see Brock Lesnar die. Seriously, if you are going to talk smack like this say it about Michael Bisbing. I sure hope for his sake Brock is a forgiving person.

Fight Pastor Q and A’s

A couple weeks ago I posted a blog where I shared my amusement by and linked various blogs that had misunderstood the New York Times article and had less than flattering things to say about Fight Pastor. Since then, many bloggers have done more research and discovered I am not the violent, gun toting, anarchist they had first assumed and emailed me apologies and printed retractions. (I respect their willingness to acknowledge they were mistaken.) To be fair, most of the response I have received from people have been positive. I only poked fun at the few negative and neglected to highlight the positive. In the last week, I did interviews with several bloggers and wanted to link a couple of the interviews. Enjoy.

My Recent Bout With The Fight Pastor

Religion and Mixed Martial Arts

Remembering Kermit’s Second Attempt at MMA

It was the end of January and I was at the gym sweating and bleeding all over the place, as I had been for the last three years. I could not go a single practice without getting a bloody nose because after blocking so many punches with my face, the veins in my nose became as weak and brittle as a delicious gingerbread house. My coach came up to me and said that they had another fight lined up for me in March. I had rehearsed what I was going to say a thousand times but all I got out was “really? Cool!”

There was one condition, I had to run every single day, and I had to text or call Coach Eddie and let him know that I had ran, is it ran or run?, I had to let him know that I had gone running. If I skipped a day Coach Charlie said he would pull me out of the fight. They remembered that my cardio had played a huge role in the outcome of my last fight and they wanted to make sure it wasn’t going to happen again.

I was scheduled to fight a guy who was about 280, I had watched him fight before and he got knocked out……hard, by a buddy of mine.

At the time I was working nights as an Emergency Medical Technician (E.M.T.) I would get off work at 7, run for 12 minutes (I went to 12 because last time 10 wasn’t enough) and then went home and slept until about 3 when I would wake up and go to the gym and train for about 3 hours. Most of my workouts were me running again and cardio drills.

Two weeks before the fight, the other fighter backed out. I was mad that I had worked so hard, but luckily they found another fighter. I was told he was 5’9 and 235lbs with a record of 0-1.

Every night at work I found my self irritable and hoping we would get some crazy crack head to attack us so I could get some training in, but in reality I spent most nights watching movies on my lap top or taking naps in the back of the ambulance. Not a bad way to earn a living, I kept telling my self that the first guy backed out because he was scared, I’m not sure what really happened, but I’ll stick with the he was afraid to fight me story.

It was the night of the weigh ins, my opponent was not there so I did not get a chance to size him up. I was still in the super heavy weight division (225 and up) despite my best efforts, and by best efforts I mean only eating tacos 3 out of 5 nights a week. I took a breath and stepped on the scale. 260. I heard someone in the back yell out “he made weight!” I went home and drifted off into a Nyquil educed slumber.

The morning of the fight I relaxed by watching the travel channel and making a fruit smoothie. I ended up going to Taco Bell on the way to the fight because tacos always seem to calm me down, the way a promise of cookies calms a 3 year old. We had the rules meeting and doctor check up and then they had us go foreword to get our tape and hand wraps. I finally saw my opponent, the guy they told me was 5’9 and 235 turned out to be 6’2 and about 270. I got taped up and sat in the dark corner shaking.

I was on deck to fight next; I was at the door while my opponent walked to the ring. One of the guys who had just fought was coming in the locker room and proceeded to violently throw up in the doorway and on my feet. I have to admit it was not the best mental pump up, but I was ready. I went to the ring and was still a little ashamed to remove my shirt because as I said in my last blog, I have what some people in the medical community like to call “man boobs” or “moobs” for short. I think I remember blushing and, I may have even giggled a little, I can’t be sure.

I was in the ring and before he announced our names, I heard the announcer say “these guys are obviously heave weights.” We touched gloves and had a great exchange for a few seconds. There is a picture of us punching each other at the same time; sadly, there is another picture of me eating a punch like a fist burger. I didn’t like getting punched so hard so I went for a take down and got stuffed, so I kicked, I can remember hearing the crown let out a groan and thinking, “I didn’t kick him that hard, why did they groan?” Looking at the video, as I kick, he connects with a hook that bounces my head like a Michael J. Fox bobble head doll. He grabbed my leg and picked me up, lifted me off the ground and slammed me into the mat where I instinctively let him take mount. He bounced his fists off my skull until he got bored and went for a key lock. I held in and we both started sliding out of the ring so the ref stopped us, moved us to the center of the ring and let him have mount again. I took a few more Alzheimer’s inducing punches to the cranium before he caught me in the key lock again and cranked my shoulder like a slow kid on a sugar rush. I tapped out and stood up, where we shared a warm embrace in the center of the ring.

After the fight I showered and went to the after party. One of my friends from the gym, who is a professional fighter and quite possibly one of the scariest men I have ever met, was talking to a girl I knew, I didn’t think anything of it until she pulled me to the dance floor and started dancing with me, I looked up and my buddy was just staring at me with fire in his eyes. I mouthed the words “I’m sorry,” and please don’t kill me,” over and over again.

The next morning, I looked in the mirror and found a huge puss filled lump on the side of my face. I had contracted a staph infection while training for the fight. I know this because 3 other people from my gym had also contracted staph and we had been training together. For 3 weeks I had a hideous mark on my cheek, but I feel better knowing that I most likely gave it to my opponent. He may have won in the ring, but I had won in the biological fight. Never mind, I still lost.

Watch the fight http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vz2cfPJJXdQ