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When Adam Robarts was asked by a family member what he would choose to do for a career if he were not an architect. Without hesitation he replied: A hospice nurse.
It was just five years earlier that he had a profound experience accompanying his father through the final weeks of life before he died of cancer in Uganda.
And yet, Adam could not have imagined then that nine months after that conversation with his family, he would begin to accompany his 19-year-old son Haydn through a battle with a rare and aggressive brain cancer.
My friends, today Adam joins us to share how Haydn's dignified response to his own suffering provides essential wisdom and hopeful possibilities for each of our lives.
This conversation will renew your mindset to live this precious life with purpose and clarity.
By John O'Leary4.8
674674 ratings
When Adam Robarts was asked by a family member what he would choose to do for a career if he were not an architect. Without hesitation he replied: A hospice nurse.
It was just five years earlier that he had a profound experience accompanying his father through the final weeks of life before he died of cancer in Uganda.
And yet, Adam could not have imagined then that nine months after that conversation with his family, he would begin to accompany his 19-year-old son Haydn through a battle with a rare and aggressive brain cancer.
My friends, today Adam joins us to share how Haydn's dignified response to his own suffering provides essential wisdom and hopeful possibilities for each of our lives.
This conversation will renew your mindset to live this precious life with purpose and clarity.

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