B.W. COOK -- The Crowd
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“Win or lose, your dog treats you the same way,” said Mount Everest
climber, world adventurer and cancer survivor Alan Hobson.
The overcapacity crowd that came to support Hoag Hospital’s 14th
annual Circle 1000 Cancer brunch at the Four Seasons Hotel, Newport
Beach, roared with approval.
Hobson, 43, was told by his doctors that he may have three years to
live. “I plan to live at least 33 years,” replied the small man with the
infinite spirit and boundless will.
Hobson was diagnosed with acute myelogenous leukemia in August 2000,
just as he was about to begin an expedition to the lowest point in the
world, in ocean water near the Philippines. Three years earlier,
following two failed attempts to reach the summit of Everest, Hobson
arrived at the top of the world on May 23, 1997.
“Never use the word conquer,” he told the audience of more than 500
local Hoag supporters sharing breakfast with a true champion. “Everest is
never conquered. Occasionally she tolerates momentary success ... and I
can assure you, Everest is a she.”
“Will you ever go back?” questioned one woman in the crowd.
“Never,” replied the Canadian athlete, who among other accomplishments
is a marathon runner, hang-gliding enthusiast, white water kayaker, ice
rafter, rock climber and parachutist. Hobson is also a journalist and
writer who has recently published a book on his Everest experience titled
“From Everest to Enlightenment ... An Adventure of The Soul.”
The book, as a reflection of the man, is a highly spiritual romp, a
coming of age for an athlete in search of self and finding pieces of
life’s meaning on the road to the pinnacle of the Earth.
Hobson has learned that it’s OK to fail in life, but not OK to fold.
Today, Hobson climbs medical mountains. “I have learned from cancer that
we do not survive the disease by fighting it. We must instead flow with
it, flow with the force of a river,” he said.
Hobson also shared that he welcomed his chemotherapy and drank the
volatile fluid as if it were healing orange juice.
“There are few challenges in life greater than a life-threatening
illness,” Hobson said. “Perhaps the biggest lesson learned under such
circumstance is that if we are what we do in life, then when we don’t do
it ... we aren’t.”
For anyone who is consumed by their pursuit of a goal, this
realization comes as a major slap in the proverbial face. Hobson said
that he also learned that running away from fear only makes it grow
bigger.
“Advancing on fear will make it shrink,” he told the crowd that had
grown silent during his presentation, which was infused with audio and
video images of his Everest expeditions projected on large screens at
either end of the Four Seasons ballroom. “We are not human doings ... we
are human beings.”
Hobson said people should not worry about what they do, but should
concern themselves with who and what they are and how they interface with
others. His message was chilling, especially in light of his battle with
leukemia.
“A woman came up to me recently at an event who had never met me, yet
knew of my reputation as an athlete and summiteer. She looked me up and
down from head to toe a couple of times, and then said, ‘You’re not much.
You’re so small.’ I paused for a moment and then told her, ‘He’s inside,’
” Hobson said.
For this man, the challenge in life is on the inside. “Seventy-five
percent of what we accomplish is due to the aspect of mental achievement,
even the realm of physical challenges,” said the man who has mastered
many mountains in life. He claims that his mantra is simple. Just two
words -- “can” and “will.”
“If you are persistent, you can do the dream,” he added. “Summits are
not places far away. Life can change in a moment. Every day is a gift.
Make it a celebration.”
The crowd stood to applaud with more than a few tears and great spirit
filling their heart. Alan Hobson changed lives for one hour in Newport
Beach.
Proceeds of more than $450,000 raised at the Circle 1000 brunch will be allocated to the Hoag Cancer Center’s Cell Biology Lab for dendritic
cell programs for use with vaccines. Additionally, Circle 1000 has
earmarked $125,000 toward a pledge of $500,000 to support the Breast
Imaging Center and cancer-related services at the new Hoag Hospital
Women’s Pavilion.
The event was organized by Hyla Bertea, chairwoman; Sandy Sewell,
founding chairwoman; and Sheryl Anderson, underwriting chairwoman.
Significant donors in the audience included Arden Flamson, Jacqueline
Dillman, Lin Auer, Susan Barlett, Sherry Cagle, Pat Cox, Nora Jorgenson
Johnson, Betty Grazer, Kathy Schoenbaum, Ginny Ueberroth, Janet Curci
Walsh, Mary Buckingham, Teddie Ray, Jodi Greenbaum, Stephanie McClellan,
Vesta Curry, Elizabeth Vincent, Lula and Marion Halfacre, Pat Allen and
Judy Steele.
Circle 1000’s 14-year fund-raising effort exceeds $4 million. Such
efforts increase the flow of Hobson’s river in search of a cure. Hobson
and his wife, Cecilia, residents of Canada, embraced on stage as the
applause from the gathering continued.
“I have many more mountains to climb,” he said. And he will do just
that.
* THE CROWD appears Thursdays and Saturdays.
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