Tune in to FOX on  Thanksgiving Day, November 26, 2009 at 4:00pm ET for Kaleidoscope, a  program that combines skating, song, and the brave message of survivorship to  raise awareness of the key issues surrounding women and cancer and to inform,  inspire, and influence women to take control of their health. Join cancer  survivors Dorothy Hamill, Scott Hamilton and Olivia Newton-John along with  Kristi Yamaguchi, Nancy Kerrigan, Rachael Flatt, Johnny Weir, Brandon Mroz,  David Foster, Katharine McPhee and David Archuleta for this touching new  Thanksgiving tradition. 				
			
			 
					 
		
		
		INTERVIEW
		
		Scott Hamilton: A Miracle on Ice
		
		By Jay Edgerton and Randy Rudder with Mia Evans-Saracual
                	The 700 Club
                	
		
		
		 
		CBN.com 
		 Mia Evans-Saracual [reporting]: Since gliding his way into  millions of homes during the 1984 Olympics, Scott Hamilton has been synonymous  with figure skating. Despite his success, some recent career challenges and a  battle with cancer had Scott skating on thin ice.  But this Thanksgiving, he returns to the rink  with Kristi Yamaguchi, Dorothy Hamil and others for Kaleidoscope, a national  television special to support cancer research. Scott talked with me at his home  in Nashville about his triumph over cancer, his new family, and his faith.    
		Scott Hamilton: Losing my mother to cancer put me into the  cancer community. We started fundraising within a year of her passing. It  changed my life forever. Having cancer myself, I realized that there are issues  in this community that need to be addressed that I thought would support  education and obviously the never-ending funding of research that needs to be  done as well. So with Kaleidoscope, the show that is coming up with  Sanofi-Aventis pharmaceutical company and their commitment to raise awareness  for all kinds of women’s cancers, it’s just a thrill to be able to participate  in things like this.
		Evans-Saracual: How difficult was it getting back into  shape? 
		Hamilton: It was the hardest thing I’ve ever done in my  life. It’s been a year of just trying to teach my body how to do this again,  and it’s difficult. I forgot just how long it takes to accumulate the strength  and the timing and the rhythm and that quickness that you need and the stamina  that you need to pull this stuff off.
		Evans-Saracual: When you went into retirement, you said that  you felt like you had lost your significance. Do you feel like you’ve recovered  that? 
		Hamilton: It’s like  that mid-life thing. It can be really destructive or it can be really  constructive. For me, it was getting married and starting a family, and I got  baptized. I’ve committed myself spiritually, and I’ve really embraced that in  the second half of my life.
		Evans-Saracual:  How  has your relationship with God grown through all of this?
		Hamilton: For me, I really feel like every day is a learning  experience. When I told Tracie, my wife, that I had a brain tumor, she say,  ‘Oh!’ or anything. She just looked at me, grabbed my hands, and started to  pray. I realized that that’s the only place to go, because that’s where it all  happens. It was a real strong, amazing moment in my life. I say that glass  shattered will never do what it did before. But if you hold it up to the light,  it can make rainbows and great beauty that it couldn’t do before. Scars are  much stronger tissue than what it replaced. It will never cut there again.  These are the things, when you look at them from a different angle, it gives  you great strength. I guess my place in a lot of this is to say, “I’ve had a  childhood illness that made me the littlest one in my class, ill health, and I  got through that. I got through failing in skating. I got through the loss of  my parents. I’ve gotten through broken relationships. I’ve gotten though cancer  and chemotherapy and surgery. I’ve chosen to really love life like I’ve never  loved it before.”  
		Evans-Saracual [reporting]: When Scott participated in a  cancer benefit recently, his first appearance in five years, he says he wasn’t  sure what to expect. 
		Hamilton: I never thought I’d be back there again. It was  such an incredible realization that everyone there really wants to be lifted  up. They want a great moment in their lives. They want to share in something  that makes them feel good and more powerful and that they can actually do this.  It’s an extraordinary opportunity to look at a cancer patient and say “I admire  you.”
		Evans-Saracual: What  kind of a legacy do you want to leave behind?
		Hamilton: Whatever I accumulate as far as recognition or  awards, if I can inspire people to better lives--great. That would be  wonderful. But ultimately, it’s how I raise my boys. Every night when my head  hits the pillow, I thank Him for Tracie and for the boys. I say, “I’m giving  them to You. I want them to embrace You and to live their lives by You, through  You, and with You.” Every night I thank God for these boys and the life that  I’ve been given.                  
      
		
CBN IS HERE FOR YOU!
	Are you seeking answers in life? Are you hurting? 
	Are you facing a difficult situation? 
 A caring friend will be there to pray with you in your time of need.