So this post is well overdue.
I foolishly thought I would be able to write every day, or every other day at least, whilst going through this shitstorm. Turns out chemo is actually pretty brutal - I spent 10 days after my first session in bed, zoned out, still, silent, trying to meditate myself away from the pain. Writing was the very last thing on my mind, as was showering, eating, moving, drinking, speaking. When you see cancer patients looking like hell, it's not because of the cancer. It's the chemo. Chemotherapy is poisonous. We are being poisoned in order to save our lives.
The pain.
I'm no stranger to it, but it really did test the limits of my sanity. Pain makes your days last forever, so it feels a lifetime ago since my first chemo. The thought of going through at least 5 more recovery periods like the one I've just came through makes me feel physically ill and terrified.
The most distressing pain came from the V drug in the ABVD chemo regimen - "Vinblastine". It can cause toxicity of the cranial nerve, which runs down the side of the face, causing severe jaw pain. Imagine having your teeth pulled out one by one, but really quickly, and repeat constantly for 3 DAYS STRAIGHT. Sharp, electric. I don't think I got a wink of sleep in 72 hours. My jaw felt so fragile, like it was made from glass. I didn't dare open my mouth too much as it felt as though my jaw could shatter into a thousand pieces if I moved it too much.
Teamed with the sore mouth from the infamous A - "Adriamycin" aka Doxorubicin aka THE RED DEVIL I began to realise why people refuse chemotherapy, why people want to give up. The whole of the inside of my mouth felt like it had been burnt with acid, I barely managed a cup of water on the worst day. Lidocaine infused mouthwash became my best friend, and the 15 minutes of relief every 3 hours felt like Christmas morning. I just feel lucky, that these side effects, plus the inescapable fatigue, were my worst ones. I can't even imagine having to deal with nausea and vomiting on top of this.
So, you could say I am dreading tomorrow and what the next recovery period will bring. Still I thank myself lucky, I might have cancer, a fairly rare cancer in fact, but it is one of the most highly curable (>90% cure rate when caught at an early "favourable" stage - which I have, stage 2A), even at stage 4B which is the final stage of the disease, when the cancer has spread throughout the body and into the bone marrow. Because the disease has been caught early, and the fact I have no masses of "bulky" tumours, my outlook is very good indeed. One chemo down, the half-dozen tumours I could feel in my neck have shrunk by more than half, and I can only feel 3 now. After tomorrow, I'll have 4 treatments left. I'm trying to be hopeful I won't need any more than that, but if I need more so be it. A few months of feeling like dogshit is worth it, if it means it will safe my life.
That old saying is true - "there's always somebody worse off than you". Given the circumstances, I feel very lucky indeed. I refuse to let cancer be a death sentence, I refuse to let it take my spirit, I refuse to let it break me.
I have fought for years, physically, and mentally to get to the place I'm at today. But most importantly, despite everything, I love my life. I love my fiancé, so much. He changed my life for the better and restored my faith in the goodness of people. I love my parents. I love my sister. I love my auntie. I love my friends. I love my pets. I love my home. I love walking on the beach. I love the sound of birds singing in the morning, and I love beautiful sunsets. I love the smell of the garden after the rain, I love the smell of hot pavement on summer days. I love the colours of the trees in Autumn. I love Halloween, I love Christmas (and pigs in blankets). I love good coffee and getting lost in a book. I love my life.
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2 years on
Today marks 2 years to the day that I was diagnosed with Stage 2 Nodular-Sclerosing Hodgkin's Lymphoma by an Ear, Nose & Throat doct...
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Today marks 2 years to the day that I was diagnosed with Stage 2 Nodular-Sclerosing Hodgkin's Lymphoma by an Ear, Nose & Throat doct...
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Cancer is awful. Cancer is shit, really fucking shit. Cancer is a motherfucking bastard cuntface from hell. Not that I'm ...
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So this post is well overdue. I foolishly thought I would be able to write every day, or every other day at least, whilst going through th...


Hi lovely!!!
ReplyDeleteI know we probably haven't spoken since you left Barclays, but honestly, you're amazing! Reading that post had me in tears. I've had a particularly crappy few days with the little ones, but reading that really helped to put things into perspective, so thank you for that! You're an absolute inspiration and it's nice to see someone being real about chemo, rather than hiding away from the truth that sadly, a hell of a lot of people have to face, directly or indirectly, at some point in their lives! If you handle this the way you used to handle ass hole customers from CPS, you're gonna kick cancer's ass!!! You got this! Good luck for tomorrow, I hope this recovery period isn't quite as shitty for you <3
Lauren,
ReplyDeleteThis is the first time I have been on the other side of caring about someone who is in a fight for their life.
I want to protect you from the horrid reality of what you're experiencing.
Those of us who have seen the limits of our morality are never the same henceforth. It will leave you jaded about pursuits you once held in esteem and have you questioning your new 'identity'.
As much as you might want things to be the same again, they won't be.. because you, yourself have changed. I think this is what I have struggled with the most, but you will find a new "normal." Whatever normal means anyway.
Life will also have a new flavor. You will appreciate simple things in a way that others, even those closest to you, cannot . Air will smell sweeter, colors will be brighter, food will taste as the first time you've had it because you are now a new person.
You will be born again but try not to allow yourself to become born again "hard" like I did. Refusing to feel, in the long run, is more detrimental than going through the motions. It may take a decade or longer and that's ok. Life on life's terms.
You definitely have inspired me to keep living my life my own way, doing what I believe I am supposed to do now.
Yesterday, I put down a deposit on a trip to Cuba for next year because I don't know what tomorrow may bring.
I know one day I will see you again on the world path that brought us together.
I'll be waiting for you there :)
All my love,
John
You gain strength, courage, and confidence by every experience
ReplyDeletein which you really stop to look fear in the face. You are able to
say to yourself, 'I lived through this horror. I can take the next
thing that comes along.'
-Eleanor Roosevelt