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What are, then, the parallels between cancer and baseball?
1. There are always greedy people willing to put their financial self interests above the good of the whole no matter how much money they have, like certain doctors and pharmaceutical companies.
2. Hope Springs Eternal.
3. Once in while, in spite of overwhelming odds, the good guys do win.
4. It's a long season, and a long journey with cancer.
5. You gotta play hurt.
6. There are always certain doctors, nurses and coaches willing to go above and beyond the call of duty to see that the interests of the player/patient are put first.
7. Sometimes you need to fire the doctor or manager to move forward.
8. Sometimes the rules of the game change - scientific breakthroughs, interleague play, etc.
9. As long as a game is played well, it is still enjoyable even if your team loses.
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There's something about baseball that's different from most other sports. With its regular rhythms of play, and its series of innings (that can go on much further than nine, if you're not counting), baseball at its best and most laid-back can have about it a whiff of eternity.
Play by play, base by base, inning by inning, you move forward. You enjoy some triumphs, you commit some errors, you move on. There's no choice: the game itself will move you on. And sometimes, on a sticky summer evening, with just enough daylight left to see the ball, you sense that the rhythms of this particular game are in sync with the rhythms of a much larger game, one that was and is and is to be.
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Indeed it ain't. Play ball!