Have you ever had a moment in your life that made you question everything?
Since Jack Tuller was a small child, he was led to believe that when he was a baby, his father had driven off of Devil’s Slide, a cliff in California overlooking the Pacific Ocean.
He was assured that his father was long dead and that there would be no reason to do any further investigation. Still, certain things about this story didn’t quite add up. Over five decades later, Jack discovered the reality.
The First Tumor
Jack had surgery for his first brain tumor back in 1994, although it took a few incidents before he knew what it was.“I was doing dishes, of all things, and after washing them, all of a sudden, I don’t understand language at all,“ Jack told The Epoch Times. ”Like I feel like it was French but I didn’t know French at all.”
Initially, he dismissed it as not being able to think straight because he was hungry, but six months later, another situation occurred.
“It was a similar thing. I remember I was sitting in my bed and, all of a sudden ... I lost my ability to talk, for some reason,” Jack said.
The straw that broke the camel’s back was when Jack was with his then-girlfriend (now wife), Jennifer, and he experienced three seizures in one day. Jennifer advised him to go to the hospital, which he did shortly thereafter.
Anaplasia is a condition in which cells go through difficulty transforming into other types of cells, and astrocytoma is a form of brain cancer. Oligodendroglioma is a type of tumor believed to originate from oligodendrocytes, another type of brain cell.
The tumor that this condition produced was the size of a grapefruit.
Jennifer was working for a nonprofit at the time but all of the stress surrounding Jack’s tumor made it difficult to focus. Her co-workers had a great idea to help her manage everything though: treating her boyfriend’s tumor like a campaign for her job.
She was able to gather a group of people in her apartment at once to show them Jack’s scans. Her friends signed up for certain tasks, like driving Jack around or picking up groceries for the couple.
“It ended up being a very supportive atmosphere,” Jennifer told The Epoch Times. “Friends came out from all over the local Bay Area to really help out.”
Tumor Round Two
While quite scary at the time, the couple look back on those years after the first tumor with an odd sense of nostalgia. After all, it was then they got married, and with his brain uninhibited, Jack felt freer to express himself and say what he wanted to.Still, those happy days didn’t last forever. In 2013, Jack experienced another incident very similar to his time doing dishes all those years ago.
“I was washing the windows and then, all of a sudden, like half of my body was just crazy,” Jack said. “I went numb and my language was a little off. I went ‘Oh my god! It’s coming back!’”
Worried for his life, Jack called a cab to be taken to the hospital---he was diagnosed with yet another brain tumor.
“It has been challenging because, after Jack’s first surgery took him a couple of years to come back, somehow I had this feeling, this notion, that everything would be fine, he’d be OK, and he was and it turned out that way for the next 19 years,“ Jennifer said. ”This time after surgery though, I didn’t have that exact same feeling.”
Jack could feel a difference too. Knowing he might not have much time left to live, he decided to finally look into the mystery that had been plaguing him for decades.
When Jack was in high school, in the midst of his mother and stepfather divorcing, his stepfather revealed that Jack’s real father was still out there somewhere. He didn’t know where the man was at the time, but felt Jack could find him.
Meeting ‘Jack Daddy’
Prior to the second surgery, Jack saw something online about a man named Jack L. Farrell---who was his father’s exact age.Jack was certain this was his dad but the man lived in Antioch, about an hour away from his home in San Francisco. The brain surgery effected Jack in such a way that he couldn’t drive, so he wouldn’t just be able to show up on a whim.
Yet, in December 2016, Jack was invited by a friend to go out to Antioch. Since he had business there already, Jack saw it fit to visit his supposed father’s house on the way over.
“She goes ‘Oh. Can I help you?’” Jack recalled. “I was like ‘[Shoot]! What do I say?’ I said ‘Well, I’m looking for somebody named Jack Farrell. She goes ‘Oh, that’s my husband!’”
Soon, the senior Jack himself stepped through the door.
“You’re my dad?” Jack asked.
“You’re my son?” Farrell replied. “I can’t believe it!” he exclaimed, as the two of them hugged it out.
The pair later took a DNA test to make sure that they were, in fact, father and son. The results showed a 99.999% possibility of paternity---another joyous moment.
Since then, Jack and his father have remained close. They’ve had barbecues, ridden around in golf carts together, and gotten to know each other more during weekends away in Carmel, Sacramento, and Sonora.
Farrell gained the nickname “Jack Daddy” so it would be easier to distinguish which Jack is which.
While it’s incredible that Jack’s tumors were what led him to discover his dad, the effect they have had on his health should not be understated.
Jack has accomplished a lot in those years that he never thought he'd have done: He’s worked in both technology and real estate, traveled to places like Cuba, Thailand, and Madagascar, married his girlfriend, and met his long-lost dad.
Speaking of celebrations, on July 28, he had a huge party for his 57th birthday, called “The Jack Tuller Show.”