EconTalk

D. G. Myers on Cancer, Dying, and Living

Jul 14, 2014
D. G. Myers, a literary critic and author who wrote about living with terminal cancer, reflects on honesty, time, and what matters when life is limited. He discusses reframing priorities, savoring small pleasures, reactions of friends, critiques of the battle metaphor, and how illness reshaped his reading, teaching, and views on literature.
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ANECDOTE

Diagnosis And Medical Journey

  • D. G. Myers was diagnosed with metastatic prostate cancer in fall 2007 after an opacity on a chest X‑ray led to a biopsy. He underwent chemo, hormone therapy, and prostate irradiation and later exhausted available drugs, now on palliative care.
INSIGHT

Time Reallocation Reveals Priorities

  • Facing mortality forced Myers to reallocate scarce time toward work that mattered and away from previously planned projects. He abandoned a theoretical book to review books, which led to greater public influence.
ADVICE

Narrow The Bucket List

  • Reduce bucket lists to achievable, high‑value items and prioritize presence with loved ones. Myers urges spending limited time with children rather than chasing distant dreams they won't remember.
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