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Jeff Bridges Recalls Being in ‘Surrender Mode' Amid Near-Fatal Health Battles

Bridges disclosed a cancer diagnosis in 2020 and then battled COVID-19 in 2021

File - Jeff Bridges at the 29th annual Screen Actors Guild Awards on Feb. 26, 2023, at the Fairmont Century Plaza in Los Angeles.
Jordan Strauss/Invision/AP

Jeff Bridges' health journey has been nothing short of a challenge.

The 73-year-old—who made his cancer diagnosis public in October 2020, just months before developing COVID-19—is reflecting on his road to recovery.

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"A lot of getting better was a matter of setting really small goals. At first they'd say, ‘How long can you stand?' For a while, my record was 45 seconds before I'd collapse," he told AARP in a new interview, published May 23. "And then they were saying: ‘Oh, look, you're standing for a minute! That's so cool, now can you walk 5 feet?'"

"The Big Lebowski" actor—whose tumor has shrunk "to the size of a marble"—went on to note that having his immune system stripped due to the cancer treatment made fighting COVID "really, really tough."

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"For me," Bridges told the outlet, "cancer was nothing compared to the COVID."

"I remember the doctor saying to me, ‘Jeff, you've got to fight. You're not fighting,'" he recalled. "But I didn't get it anymore. I just didn't know how to do that. I was in surrender mode. I'd say to myself, ‘Everybody dies, and this is me dying.' And I'd hear myself go, ‘Oh, well, here we are, on to the next adventure.'"

Celeb Cancer Survivors

“The Big Lebowski” star made the announcement Monday and said his prognosis was good.

In addition to "spectacular" nurses and doctors, Bridges had one person who was always in his corner—his wife of over 45 years Susan Geston.

"My wife Sue was my absolute champion," Bridges shared. "She really fought to keep me off a ventilator. I didn't want to be on it, and the doctors didn't necessarily want that. But Sue was adamant."

Bridges also admitted that during his recovery, he wasn't sure he'd ever be back in front of the camera.

"I didn't think I'd ever work again, really," he shared. "So at first I said, ‘Well, we'll see.' But eventually that became, ‘Maybe I can.' I have to admit that I was still frightened of going back to work. Then I began to think of my recovery as a gift being presented."

And nearly two years after they had to stop filming after four episodes for Bridges to receive treatment, the leading man was able to return to the set of "The Old Man" to finish season one.

"I come back to work, and, man, it was like a dream, as if we'd just had a long weekend or something," Bridges recalled. "I was seeing all the same faces in the cast and crew. Very bizarre. Everybody showed such dedication and hung in. We finished it. I appreciate that."

And on the days where COVID recovery makes filming "The Old Man" difficult, it's his cast that brings him back.

"I'm so blessed to have this cast to talk to and jam with," he added. "To get back to doing what invigorates you—it feels great, man."

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