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Our American Stories

Caring for My Dying Husband Made Life Worth Living

Our American Stories

iHeartPodcasts

Society & Culture, Documentary

4.6817 Ratings

🗓️ 5 March 2026

⏱️ 10 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

On this episode of Our American Stories, when Tracy Grant’s husband became terminally ill, their lives shifted from planning for the future to paying close attention to the present. Over the next seven months, Tracy became her husband’s caregiver in every sense of the word. She managed medications and appointments, but she also found herself rediscovering the core of their marriage.

Tracy joins us to reflect on those final months and why the season that looked like a loss from the outside became, for her, a profound and life-altering gift.

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Transcript

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0:00.0

This is an I-Heart podcast.

0:02.3

Guaranteed Human.

0:13.9

And we continue with our American stories.

0:18.2

Our next story comes to us from Tracy Grant. Grant is the deputy managing editor at the

0:24.3

Washington Post. She is also the author of the essay that appeared in the post. I was my husband's

0:30.9

caregiver as he was dying of cancer. It was the best seven months of my life. Here's Tracy to share her story with us.

0:41.0

Almost 12 years ago, my world, as I knew it, ended.

0:47.0

My husband of 19 years, the father of my two sons, was diagnosed with terminal cancer. Over the course of my two sons was diagnosed with terminal cancer.

0:56.0

Over the course of seven months, Bill went from beating me silly on the tennis court

1:01.6

to needing my health to go to the bathroom and bathe.

1:07.4

It was the best seven months of my life.

1:13.7

Maybe I don't actually mean that, but it was certainly the time when I felt most alive.

1:21.1

I had lived 42 years before I heard the phrases,

1:25.3

We have a problem.

1:33.8

Multiple metastases on on the brain, probably in the lung as well.

1:45.6

I had become a respected professional, a responsible and I hope beloved parent, but I had yet to discover the reason I was put on this earth.

1:53.9

During those seven months, I came to understand that whatever else I did in my life,

2:05.0

nothing would matter more than this, even if I didn't really understand what this was.

2:09.3

For me, there were no more bad days.

2:15.4

I discovered that the petty day-in, day-out grievances of an irksome co-worker,

2:21.3

a child with the sniffles, or a flat tire, pale in comparison to the beauty of spontaneous laughter, the night sky, the smells of a bakery.

2:28.3

Some days were more difficult than others, but there were moments of joy, laughter, tenderness in every day if I was just willing to look hard enough.

...

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