David Hudson's Testimony
I invited Jesus into my heart at seven
years of age, but it wasn't until I was thirteen years old that I came to know
God in a new way.
In 1975, I was spending weekends at my uncle Andy's house. He built and flew
remote control airplanes, and let me help. One Sunday afternoon while I was
standing and watching him fly our latest creation, I began to see two of every
plane in the air. Everyone thought my eyes were just strained, or I must be
going through puberty. But the next day at school the same thing was happening.
By this time, my parents were getting a little worried and took me to the
doctor.
After many appointments with many different doctors, I was diagnosed as
having a brain tumor. This tumor couldn't be removed, as it was in the very core
of my brain. There was a good chance that it couldn't even be stopped from
growing because God made us so that the brain is very well protected by the
surrounding bone structure.
The doctor came into my hospital room and told me to make a fist.
"That's the size of what you've got growing in your head," he told me.
I found out in later years that he had also had a talk with my parents and told
them I had six months to live. He told them I might live five years if the tumor
could be stopped.
I went through a series of radiation treatments, then went home. There were
times when my mother burst into tears on a regular basis. The three other kids
in the family didn't know what was going on, but knew something was wrong as
tension filled the air.
Not being one to sit around, I did what I could to be a "normal"
kid - - motorcycles, public high school, the works. Yet, in the back of my mind
I still remembered that the doctor had told me I was going to die. I would
either shy away from people, or take unnecessary chances in the things I did.
When I was twenty years old, God let me know the tumor wouldn't be the cause
of my death. I had a dream one night, and didn't tell anyone. I wasn't sure God
spoke through dreams anymore. But when different friends I hadn't talked to in a
while, and therefore didn't know about my dream, approached me and told me
basically what I had dreamed, I finally accepted it. I now know the Author of
that dream in a much deeper way.
In 1993, when I was thirty-one, the doctor that had been keeping up with the
tumor retired. The new doctor ordered a brain scan. In his office, with the scan
on the screen, I asked, "What does the tumor look like now?"
"Well, right here is where it was," Dr. Kendrick replied.
©1995 David L. Hudson