Tuesday, 28 August 2018

How Was It For You?


Chemotherapy is a highly individual medicine.  It is made for the patient in the hospital pharmacy, once all the patient’s details have been given.  True, the processes within the body are broadly similar, but the body’s response to those chemicals can vary widely.  This makes the next part of my ‘journey’ quite difficult (oh, how I hate that term, but find myself using it and berating myself simultaneously).  While there are commonalities between people having chemotherapy, nobody can tell you how it will affect you.  Those of us who read the ‘side effects’ lists on drugs will know that there is a tendency for drug companies to cover themselves and put all manner of ‘side effects’ as potentials.  These days the companies helpfully categorise side effects so you have an idea of what is common and what is not, but facing something so fear-inducing as chemotherapy, my usual way of dealing with things by trying to understand what is coming is rendered useless, partly through my own fear.  Cutting off my hair, which I don’t like even if it does make me look so much younger, was something I could choose to do to mitigate the effects of what was coming.  However, I have always been aware that to some extent I must surrender.   This I have found tricky, because to surrender I have to trust, and life has taught me that is a bad idea. 

Sunday, 19 August 2018

The Enemy Within



The euphoria following the test results left me a bit stunned.  So many people were genuinely relieved that my cancer is localised, and my daughters were, frankly, shocked.  Not disappointed shocked, but the worry had so invaded their souls and bones, that they, and I, were numb with relief.  Of course, whilst the good news was amazing, the process of dealing with my cancer had to continue, and the next thing was a visit to the oncologist.  I hung round when the post was due, and if I’d been out, my eyes scanned the post on the mat with a practised eye, looking for a tell tale white envelope with a local franking mark.  Sometimes they are marked ‘confidential’, at other times they are quite innocuous.  Kit had told me I would hear in the next two weeks, but, as ever, the appointment arrived a few days after the results of my tests, with an appointment for the following Thursday to see the oncologist.

Hair Today


It has taken quite a lot to get down to writing this week, not something I’ve had a problem with in the past, but I promised myself I would write this as a record for me, so rather than assume I’d remember all that happened this week, I have kept my promise to myself and opened the laptop.

Alongside my own ‘extraordinary, ordinary storm in a teacup’ we have had a very hot summer.  I’m not sure whether the mind numbing heat has somehow allowed me to attribute some of my perceptions to be clouded.  Was it the heat that made it seem so unreal and otherworldly or have I just got used to the idea of having cancer and settled down a bit more into the reality of my diagnosis?  Or is it, like the amnesia that happens after childbirth, the mind in an attempt to help you deal with the past, just wipes it from the front of your mind and files it away quickly and efficiently, so the pain that so overwhelmed has diffused and gone.  With the passing of time I can recall the pain, but in the year after my first daughter was born that perception faded, only to come into stark clarity as soon as I got pregnant with number two.  It’s one of those ‘old wives tales’, I’m sure, for I didn’t have life threatening issues in childbirth, but I am told one of the problems of having the father of your child with you at the birth is it can be very distressing to see your loved one in such pain, and something that doesn’t fade with the passing of time.

Thursday, 2 August 2018

Testing, Testing, Testing


Part of the information given to me by the breast surgeon was the notification that several tests were to be undertaken.  Primarily to determine whether the cancer might have spread, but also to insert a clip into the tumour as a marker.  As I have Herceptin receptive cancer they want a way to measure the tumour’s progress with the chemotherapy. The tests were to be a bone scan and a CT scan, in addition to the MRI.  All this is very business like and efficient and you must admit they really are looking after me.  I’m now at the end of my week of tests, with no results yet, and feel I’m passing through a gateway.  Actually, the picture that comes to mind is one of an Ancient Greek adventurer in a small wooden boat passing under a natural stone bridge between two islands.  Something like Jason and Argonauts, from the original fabulously engaging 1963 version with special effects that so entranced me as a child.  I’m sailing into new unchartered waters, and with this, I know I’m changing how I regard myself.