Yes, it's got its 'your mom' jokes and its pure geekiness and also stunning visual presentations of information, but it's also got heart-wrenching moments of emotion as raw and moving as anything else on the web - or anywhere.
This past Friday's comic was another example of that...
Background after the jump and partially thanks to Neatorama...
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The Blag
Last fall I posted about a family illness, but didn’t give a lot of details.881
In October my fiancĂ©e was diagnosed with stage III breast cancer. It’s rare for young women to get breast cancer, and she’s otherwise healthy and has no family history, so it was a real bolt from the blue.
She’s been in nonstop treatment for the last eight months, which has been an emotional and physical ordeal that’s hard to describe. We both have all the support we could ask for—including an incredible medical team—and we’ve had some really good moments during these months, but it’s still a terrifying and isolating experience. Treatment is ongoing, and there’s no well-defined end point; things are going to continue to be scary and difficult for a while.
I’m usually pretty private about my personal life, but I wanted to explain why I’ve missed some midnight comic deadlines and have been particularly hard to reach lately. I’ve also spent a lot of these eight months immersed in cancer science, and I want to be free to talk (and draw comics) about stuff I’m learning without the unexplained subject matter leaving everyone worried and guessing.
Thank you so much for your patience, kind words, and all the little flash games you all sent. And all the best to those of you who are also caring for someone with cancer, or who are struggling with cancer yourselves.
And sometimes it just stuns me with its haunting beauty.
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