
Overcoming Leukemia
Through the Power of Christ
(Taken from the March 2002 edition)
By Kellie Horn
Sometimes God calms the storm, and sometimes He lets
the storm rage and calms His child.
My husband Jon and I made the decision to move from
Springfield to Oregon after we graduated from college. This was a very
difficult decision because my family was in Missouri, and we also had a
spiritual family at Abundant Life Covenant Church that we didn’t want to
leave. Jon and I were married there, and God had grown us up spiritually
through the pastors and people at the church. However, we believed, and
our pastors were in agreement with us, that the move to Oregon was the
right thing to do.
We packed our U-Haul and headed for Echo, Oregon. Jon
began working for Oregon Fish and Wildlife, and I got a job teaching early
childhood special education. A week before school started, I got really
sick to my stomach for several days. I didn’t want to go to the doctor,
but I kept feeling worse, so I finally made an appointment. On the day I
was to see the doctor, I felt fine, so when I got to the doctor’s office,
I cancelled my appointment and left. As I was sitting in my car at a gas
station, God told me to go back to my appointment. I didn’t want to, but I
couldn’t go anywhere else when I knew God had told me to go back. Back at
her office, my doctor told me she wanted to do some blood work to make
sure I wasn’t dehydrated. I had it done and didn’t think any more about
it.
That night Jon and I took some youth with the Oregon
Youth Conservation Corp on a three-day camping trip. When we got home,
there were five messages from doctors and the hospital telling me I needed
to come in. When I called, I was told that my white blood cell count was
185,000 instead of the normal 4,000 to 10,000. Three days later we were in
Portland seeing a hematology oncologist who told us that I had chronic
myelogenous leukemia and would need a bone marrow transplant. I was put on
oral chemotherapy until we found a donor and straightened out the
insurance. Unfortunately, this was not easy. After difficulty with the
insurance company, we finally got the okay to call the donor January 3,
2000, and start making arrangements.
On December 31, we were faced with more news. After
having my routine blood work, I called the lab to find out the results.
They told me that I needed to talk to the doctor. I knew something was
wrong. She said, “You’re pregnant.” Those were the last words I heard as I
said, “No, I’m not,” and passed out. Three days later at the high-risk
pregnancy clinic, we saw our daughter for the first time on the
ultrasound. I was three and a half months pregnant! Jon and I wanted to be
happy, but we were afraid. We weren’t sure if the baby was okay. Could I
carry it? Could the transplant wait? In tears I called Pastor Davis back
at Abundant Life and told him the news. “Praise the Lord!” he yelled. He
reminded me that God had a plan and He was in control. I thought I had a
plan. Jon and I had been told from the beginning that due to the heavy
chemotherapy and total body radiation I would have before the transplant
that I would not be able to have children. However, we agreed that God was
omnipotent. We thought that maybe years down the road I would be able to
carry a child or we could adopt. But God had a different plan. Every
morning I said, “God has a plan, a purpose, and the power to make it
happen” as I took my prenatal vitamin and chemotherapy pills.
I did a lot of growing during this time and not just
physically. All around me people were fearful about my circumstances. The
doctors told us that my cancer could go into the next stage at any time
and that if it did, a bone marrow transplant would not be an option. God
gave us His peace. He made Philippians 4:7 very real to me:
…and the peace of God, which surpasses all
understanding, will guard your hearts and minds through Christ Jesus.
I quickly learned that there is a constant battle for
the mind, and that I would lose the battle if I wasn’t wearing the full
armor of God (Eph. 6:13-18). I remember yelling Second Timothy 1:7 at the
top of my lungs with tears in my eyes and fear in my heart.
For God has not given me the spirit of fear, but of
power and of love and of a sound mind!
God is faithful, even when we are faithless. By His
Spirit, His Word, and His people, He kept bringing me back to the truth
and enabled and empowered me to overcome negative emotions such as fear,
anxiety, depression, self-pity, etc. While the storm raged on, He
continually reminded me that He had a plan, a purpose, and the power to
make it happen.
On June 24, 2000, our daughter Macy was born. Doctors,
nurses, family, and friends said over and over, “She’s a miracle.” My bone
marrow transplant doctor
came to see me after she was born. I was
surprised when he asked if he could hold her, and when he did, I saw a
tear fall down his cheek. No one said anything, but we both knew that God
had just put a little faith in his heart. As we drove away from the
hospital, I looked back at it and said, “God was glorified back there.”
God was already using Macy to put faith in the hearts of so many people,
including her parents. We felt that she was a promise and trusted God’s
power to make all the provisions necessary including keeping me healthy.
Along with continuously increasing my faith, God gave
me a boldness to speak and many opportunities to do so. It seemed like I
was telling my story every day. People watched as God walked us through
everything—while I was both pregnant and bald!
The transplant was scheduled for December to give us
time to recover. It was
during this time that we were in the eye of the
storm. Jon was offered a job as a Fish and Wildlife Officer for the Oregon
State Police. His training took him to another location, so we had to be
geographically separated for five months. This was a very difficult time
for both of us. I was alone with a new baby in a new town, Jon was at
training comparable to Marine boot camp, and we were both anticipating the
transplant, which would be two weeks after Jon graduated.
One day after being alone with my thoughts all day, I
became very fearful and realized I was losing the battle. I decided to
listen to a tape from Abundant Life. The name of the message was “Learning
Which Thoughts to Cast Down and Which Thoughts to Lift Up.” I called
Bishop Phillips after listening to the tape and explained our
circumstances. We opened our Bibles together and read Romans 8:11:
But if the Spirit of Him who raised Jesus from the dead
dwells in you, He who raised Christ from the dead will also give life to
your mortal bodies through His Spirit who lives in you.
Faith began to rise in my heart, and I began to think
rightly about my circumstances.
In November Jon graduated from the Oregon State Police
Academy, and we started preparing for the transplant. I was told I would
be in the hospital four to seven weeks. On December 7, Jon and I walked
into the hospital holding hands with peace and assurance that God was in
control. My first week in the hospital was spent having high dose
chemotherapy and total body radiation, which killed all of my bone marrow
and prepared my body to receive my donor’s bone marrow. The high-dose
chemotherapy and radiation kills the cancer and comes very close to
killing the person receiving it; the transplant just rescues the body. The
hardest time came after getting the new bone marrow—waiting to see if the
bone marrow was going to graft.

My counts came up quickly, and I continued to get
stronger. After only three weeks in the hospital, I was released to go
home, with visits to the bone marrow transplant clinic every other day. My
doctor said it had been the smoothest matched unrelated-donor transplant
he had seen.
Unable to walk very far or pick up Macy, I was very
weak the first day home. But each day I got stronger and before I knew it,
I was taking care of Macy all day long and walking two miles. Along with
strengthening my body, God strengthened my relationship with Him. He made
clear to me that I had to renew my mind and focus on His truths in order
to have a good attitude and get better—not bitter.
Today I am better—no leukemia. I am substituting for
the early childhood special education program and starting my masters in
the fall. Jon still works as a Fish and Wildlife Officer for the Oregon
State Police, and Macy is too cute and sweet to describe with words. We
just bought a house.
Jon and I have had some major challenges in the past
two years: graduating from college, moving, new careers, cancer, a baby,
buying a house…And we are so thankful for each one because with each
circumstance came just enough faith to get through the next. Through all
the storms in life, God is at the point of our need in the form of our
need as we renew our minds to who He is and who He has
called us to be.
Thank you God for your plan, your purpose, and your power in our lives.
Kellie currently lives in
Oregon with
her husband John and their daughter Macy