Chemo has started again.
Having braved the procedures last year, was it easier to walk through
the doors of the chemo ward? The answer
to that is, unsurprisingly I’m sure, both yes and no. A friend who had not accompanied me before
was at my side for this first of three FEC chemotherapy treatments. Whilst FEC is a standard breast cancer
treatment, this day would be new to me and I felt something like a first former
having moved up a year, the walls of the classroom were the same but the books
were very different. To add to the
novelty, my appointment was for a Friday at 3pm rather than a Wednesday at
8.30am. I wasn’t one of the new patients
for the new day: the rhythms were well established, the comfy seats occupied
and the biscuit basket had made many laps of the ward already.
Tuesday, 22 January 2019
Thursday, 3 January 2019
Intermission
I’m in another ‘downtime’ phase
after the excitement of my histology results. They were almost as good as
they could have been, with no cancer in the lymph node, the tumour completely
removed, and evidence that the chemotherapy had killed more than 90% of the
cancer cells. I was genuinely surprised, because I had to have a
therapeutic mammoplasty rather than a lumpectomy, as the footprint of the
tumour appeared largely unchanged from MRI data. I was bracing myself for
more surgery, disappointing chemo results and spreading cancer, but none of
this has happened. It seems that the only reliable evidence is when you
get to see the tumour for real and the histopathologist can do his (it was a
‘his’ in this case, not my casual sexism) analysis. It felt like the
horizon was opening up in front of me, such was the relief that enveloped
me. Nevertheless, my mood has changed as I deal with the practicalities
of life now and what comes next.
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