Chapter 12: A New Leaf...Life After Treatment
Wow.
It’s been a
long strange trip up to now. I apologize to those of you who’ve messaged me
asking how I’m doing. I suspect when you follow someone writing about their
cancer journey and you don’t hear from them, you think the worst. So, I’m sorry
for the delay in posting but I’ll try to explain.
It is now
approaching two months since I completed my last chemoradiation treatment for
throat cancer. It’s been such a turbulent period of time, both emotionally and
physically, that I’ve not been in the mood to write. That’s probably because
I’ve been mired in a very dark and unsettled state of mind and it’s been hard
for me to make any sense out of what I’d been feeling. And given the fact my
feelings were changing daily, if not minute by minute, nothing I could have
posted would have truly captured the emotions surrounding this post-treatment
period. Suffice it to say, the new year started off sucking.
However, I’m
now in a much better place. In fact, as I’m writing this, I feel absolutely
wonderful. I’ve finally begun to rejoin the living. But it was an extremely rough
road getting here. What follows is a summary of all that’s been happening.
Let me begin
by saying we don’t know if my cancer is gone. In fact, we won’t have that
answer for a few weeks until after I undergo a PET scan at the end of March. It
will show whether radioactive dye injected into my veins reacts to the cells in
my upper body and head area. If not, I’m free of the beast, at least for a
while. However, if my cells “light up” meaning cancer is detected, then we’ll be
forced to forge yet another dark and formidable passage.
Surprisingly
however, I don’t have a lot of anxiety awaiting this test and the subsequent
results. Years ago, I’m sure this period of uncertainty would have launched my
thoughts into overdrive, frying my brain and wearing me out. But now I view
this future event as just another hurdle, albeit a huge one, in a very long and
intense journey of difficult hurdles. We’ll get to it…in its time. Meanwhile,
I’m focusing on reclaiming my will to begin experiencing life again. As I’ll
discuss, this cancer shit has a tendency to erode a person’s spirit, regardless
of how strong you might think you are.
The week of
February 14, I met with my radiologist for a follow-up appointment to discuss
my current condition. His comments basically mirror my own observations. Thus
far, I’m doing pretty well.
My speech
has markedly improved and my tongue now demonstrates a much greater range of
motion than before. This means the tumor at the base of my mouth has definitely
shrunk in response to treatment thereby loosening the strangle hold it had on
my tongue and surrounding nerves. Further, my tongue has begun tingling all
over which, to him, signals that the nerves are likely regenerating. All good
news. Finally, I informed him that my gagging has decreased in frequency to
once or twice a day as opposed to its hourly occurrence immediately following the
end of treatment. This means my throat is healing from the radiation burns and
requires lesser amounts of mucous to protect the sensitive skin surrounding the
inside of my neck. More good news. It also means I can quit buying bulk
quantities of paper towels I used to capture my mouthfuls of spit and mucous
gunk.
There have
been a few other noteworthy improvements over the last couple of weeks. For
one, my energy is slowly coming back. Right now, if I were to venture a guess, I’d
say I’m probably operating at 70 percent of my former self, and each day brings
with it a little bit more energy but with the caveat that, at times, I still
feel drained. In fact, some days feel like one step forward and six back. But
that’s the nature of this beast. Treatment beat the hell out of my body and the
repair work is going to take time and, more importantly, patience. And if this
miserable experience has taught me anything, it is how to be patient.
Perhaps the
most exciting improvement from my perspective is that I’m beginning to regain
my sense of taste. Like my other advances, this one is also characterized by
gradual improvement. For example, I can taste an orange slice for about two
bites and then the rest of the orange returns to basically a tasteless texture
of stringy pulp. But that’s alright. I’m thrilled to death to be able to muster
up a couple seconds of taste. Some tastes, like salt and particularly pepper, fully
register. In fact, small amounts of pepper overwhelm my taste buds and cause me
to spit out whatever I begin eating. Other tastes, like sweets, are very, very,
faint and almost unnoticeable which is unfortunate because my freezer is full
of the neighbors Christmas cookies that I’ve been waiting to scarf down.
The fact is the
full return of my sense of taste will likely take months and it may never
return to the level I enjoyed prior to this little excursion. We’ll just have
to wait and see. Nonetheless, I’m fairly optimistic since my capacity to taste
has started to return sooner than what I or the health professionals expected.
And if I happen to lose my sweet tooth, then that will probably be a blessing.
It’ll make it easier for me to keep fitting in my new size 31 pants. Yep,
through all this nonsense I lost about 30 pounds going from 195lbs to 168 at
last weigh in.
With the return
of taste, I’ve also reacquired an appetite. And with its return, I’m losing my
aversion to solid foods that I acquired this past November. Back then, I had
finally lost all interest in food and in eating. But now, food not only looks
good, it smells good too. So, I started cooking again. And while I’m still experiencing
difficulty swallowing and despite not being able to taste most of the food I
make, cooking is a way of forcing myself to begin the solid food process. It
also allows me a way to check out how my sense of taste is progressing. Besides,
my son was here for a month so I cooked some of his favorites and was pleased
to learn that, according to him, I still have it in me.
So, that
pretty much sums up the good news of recent. However, it follows perhaps the
darkest period of my life to date. But like some unknown sage once said, the
darkest part of the day is right before dawn.
New Year’s
through much of January remains mostly a blur. With treatment over, I found
myself lost in the sense I had a lot of spare time on my hands to spend alone with
myself and my ailing body. And sometimes being alone with myself is not a very good
idea, especially when things are dark. The month of January was one such a
time.
During
treatment I had created a routine, one that I became surprisingly comfortable
following. My time was fully occupied with things to do and people to see. I’d
start the typical day around 6 a.m. by feeding myself. That process usually took
about a half an hour. Then at 8 in the morning for the better part of seven
weeks, I was in the chemo room once a week getting infused with the chemical Cisplatin.
Then four days a week for two hours a day, I was in the same room getting my
veins flushed with saline solution. Then on every week day morning for thirty-five
days, I’d hobble over to the radiation department located two hallways away
from my chemo lounge and get nuked for fifteen minutes. Afterwards I’d drive home.
And when I
got home, I’d adhere to yet another routine, one that consisted of watching television,
reading books, tube feeding myself at noon, six, and again at seven-thirty, and
then bed. And of course, there were the frequent naps in between that could
better be described as unplanned moments I’d pass out from exhaustion on the
couch. All things said and done; my life had become almost as boring and
predictable as it had been before cancer notwithstanding the ever-increasing
agony inflicted by being zapped every day by a huge x-ray machine.
In a bizarre
sort of way, all this activity brought me some comfort as well as a degree of
stability. I had people around me and a time schedule I was basically forced to
adhere to. In essence, the treatment regimen gave my life structure and, as an
added bonus, kept my mind mostly focused on the present.
But after treatment
ended at the very end of December, I wound up pretty much alone at my house. My
brother had left for Florida and my son wasn’t due to arrive from China until
the late middle part of January. My oncology visits were limited to a couple
early morning appointments each week for lab work which lasted around a half an
hour. With the exception of three emergency infusions of blood and two unplanned
infusions of an iron supplement, my contact with the outside world was
extremely limited. Additionally, the weather (as well as the COVID variant) coupled
with my compromised immune system left me with not too many places to go.
Besides, I felt far too miserable to go anywhere anyway.
I soon felt my
spirit declining. I’m sure part of the decline was due to my deteriorating
physical condition and the fact they couldn’t get my bone marrow to produce red
and white blood cells. On at least two occasions, my hemoglobin levels fell to
alert levels requiring me to spend a few hours on three different days getting
blood. About the second week of January, I felt my absolute worse.
Physically,
my entire upper-body was reeling from the full effects of radiation. The
outside of my neck looked like I’d spent a week in a tanning bed and I can only
imagine what the inside looked like. The liquid codeine numbed that pain but nothing
helped me manage the tremendous quantity of mucous I was expelling from my mouth.
The amounts of mucous alone provided a pretty good clue as to the extent of the
radiation injury to the lining of my throat. And I’m not exaggerating when I
say it wasn’t unusual for me to fill a paper towel every hour with copious
amounts of thick stringy phlegm I’d often have to pull out of my mouth with my
hands.
By this
time, fatigue had fully set in. I had very little energy and my anemic levels
of hemoglobin plus the leftover effects from chemotherapy undoubtedly
contributed to my lethargic appearance and attitude. I later learned people who
had seen me around that time remarked to others that they worried about my
color. Even though I don’t remember noticing my color, I was worried myself.
Aside from
all the physical ailments that were plaguing me, I found myself witnessing a
mental decline I had never experienced before. Like most people, I’ve encountered
my share of traumatic personal events over the course of my lifetime ranging from
the deaths of parents and close friends to divorce and the unexpected loss of
intimate relationships. As the saying goes, shit happens as life brings with it
all sorts of twists and turns. And in the past, I was able to process my grief by
implicitly recognizing loss has its own time. Afterwards, I’d eventually return
to an emotional state of equilibrium.
But this
depression was vastly different from any of the lows I’d experienced before. I
suspect what made it so remarkable is that subconsciously, I was likely processing
the inevitability of my own death, an end-of-life event that seemed precariously
close throughout the previous months beginning when I first heard the C word. I
literally had never felt so hopeless in my life.
My mind went
off the rails, as minds often do when you’re at your most venerable. I began
spending time torturing myself by revisiting every one of my personal demons which
were more than happy to help me replay some of my larger regrets. The realization
also struck that I was running out of time in life to find whatever it is I’ve
always been hoping to find. It was an exceptionally gloomy period of time inside
my head matching the cold January grey that permeated the outdoors. Things had
gotten so bad that at one point, I actually wanted to die. I really had no
interest left in living anymore. Everything seemed to be going wrong with my life
as this monstrous disease continually battered both my body and my psyche using
my many regrets as its weapon of choice. I was simply an emotional wreck with
little will left to live.
I think I
remained teetering on this abyss for three or four days. Somehow it finally
registered to me that I might want to explore the topic of emotions surrounding
my particular form of cancer treatment on the internet. After all, it was the
internet which helped inform me about some of the many physical challenges I
had faced earlier as treatment began.
Specifically,
I wanted to know if I was the only cancer patient “defective” enough to beat
himself up and wanting life to end. So, I gathered up the energy to sit with my
computer and google search the effects of emotions surrounding chemotherapy and
the end of treatment. And low and behold, one of the first things I read was
that the second week of post-treatment commonly brought with it a period of
intense personal struggles for many patients. It was also reasoned that along
with the cumulative effects of treatment, one of the contributing factors was
the sudden change in activity levels. As a cancer patient you suddenly go from
a full schedule of events to being alone with sporadic medical visits here and
there.
The beauty
of this internet search was that I was able to prove to myself I wasn’t alone
with my feelings, that I wasn’t totally crazy. Through articles and blogs, I
learned what I had already intuited, cancer treatment comes with a very high emotional
cost.
Fortunately,
I was slowing crawling out of my hole when my son Ryan arrived from China
around January 18th. He spent the following four weeks staying with
me while working remotely at night for his company in China. His presence was
truly a Godsend.
Because of COVID restrictions here and in China, we hadn’t seen one another for almost two
years. Typically, he comes home in the summer for a few weeks and, in the
winter, he and I would meet at some warm, bucket list destination to hang out
and wander. Over the last fifteen years, we’ve been to Panama, Cambodia,
Thailand, Vietnam, Mexico, and some other remarkable locations.
And he
taught me a new way of traveling. Instead of preplanning our trips, we’d book a
hotel near our arrival destination and stay a couple of nights. We’d then use
the first days meeting people and learning about places that piqued our
interest. And then we’d go. For example, after seeing the canal in Panama we
were told of a charming little island on the other side of the country, so we
booked a flight and went there. It turned out to be one of the best parts of
our trip.
However, the
circumstances surrounding this most recent meeting were obviously far different
from the ones we’d enjoyed in the past. He was here to visit a father who has
(hopefully had) cancer. Nevertheless, this particular reunion was exceptionally
rewarding but on an entirely different level. That’s because we spoke about
death and I’m convinced there’s no more intimate of a conversation you can have
with a loved one than the end of life.
I suspect
for both of us, we had previously spent our lives together never considering
the stark truth that one day death would separate us. I certainly never gave my
mortality much thought before now. Hell, until recently, I still felt, thought,
and acted like I’m a man in my thirties. Some might go as far as to say my
teens. And they would probably not be far off the mark. But recent events
obviously made the truth about my finite existence more glaring and
inescapable. So, we chatted in depth about some very deep topics. And when Ryan
departed back to China, we left one another even more connected than I ever
imagined possible.
However, his
one month stay with me was more than just an occasion to ponder dark topics. We
wound up spending a wonderful month together doing meaningless stuff like binge-watching
television, playing games, and above all, laughing. We always laugh. I am truly
blessed by having the relationship I share with my son. It’s a relationship
that’s greatly helped me wade through these difficult times.
I had
originally hoped to take a road trip with him to the Alabama Coast during the
first week of February since that was the Chinese New Year and he’d be free
from working evenings on the computer. And I was seriously longing for an
after-treatment vacation to someplace on an ocean and moderately warm. But traveling away from home was never a real possibility given my condition and
low hemoglobin levels. Additionally, the beauty of a road trip down South is
the great food you find. However, my sense of taste was totally lacking when he
first arrived so great food, for me, was not in the cards. And besides, I don’t
think the temperature that week in Alabama ever rose about 50 degrees.
So, we
filled a large portion of our time together binge-watching television. We went
through three seasons of Yellowstone noting that while the story-line was
entertaining, it was pretty loosely put together. For example, John Dutton’s son
Jamie strangled a reporter who was writing a front-page story detailing his
father’s corrupt ways. He then placed her body in a kayak, flipped it upside
down, and watched it flow downstream to where it was later found. Her death was
passed off by the local officials as an accidental drowning. However, the show
neglected to deal with the fact that a routine examination of her body would
show ligature marks around her neck as well as no water in her lungs. But hey,
the scenery was great, there was a lot of gratuitous violence, and it’s hard
not to like Kevin Costner.
Then we
watched a German show on Netflix called Dark. We spent twenty-one hours of our
life trying to figure out which character was who as it flipped between 1890,
1920, 1983, 2018, and 2050 showing the same characters time traveling between
different dimensions. Through all the confusion, some of the characters came
back in time to be their own grandmother. Not only was the show about time, it
was a waste of time.
But the gem
of the month was Ozark. Unfortunately,
it ended with seven episodes remaining and Ruth on the warpath.
But Ryan is
now gone and my life is slowly returning to a new normal. Unfortunately, my
brother who helped me so much throughout my treatment, suffered a stroke when
he returned to California from a month long stay in Florida. Thankfully, he’s
doing well and I’ll be seeing him in June when he returns to our lake house in
Michigan.
I have a few
closing thoughts about my experience I’d like to share.
I’m doing
very well now and I truly appreciate all the many thoughts and prayers I’ve
been offered. Some of you have remarked on my “courage” and “strength” for
going through this and while I’m flattered, the truth is those adjectives are
misplaced. The fact is, I didn’t have a choice. I, like the vast majority of
cancer patients going through this misery, do what they have to in order to preserve
life. My hidden truth is I’ve been scared the entire time and there were many
times I masked my fears by acting calm and collected. What you didn’t see was
the child in me screaming and crying every time I encountered pain and disappointment.
I truly hope
no one reads this blog and decides to forgo treatment due to the fact I made it
sound so unattractive. As I stated earlier in my writings, the treatment for head
and neck cancer is especially grueling primarily because of nutrition issues
and the parts of the body that are being targeted. Nevertheless, I would always
opt for this path and a chance for life. And besides, other patients have
undergone similar treatment regimens and have suffered few, if any, effects.
Similarly, other
types of cancer in different parts of the body may have regimens that are not
nearly as aggressive. Again, every person experiences the physical effects of
treatment for their particular cancer a little differently. I’m likely one of
those whose tolerance was lower than most. But the fact I’m starting to feel
great again at times should be a testament to the efficacy of chemotherapy and
radiation.
In a related
vein, I have become so focused on cancer that I’ve basically ignored mentioning
the suffering of those who have contracted other illnesses such as heart
troubles or neurological disorders. They too have become warriors in their own
right as they fight their conditions and are deserving of our recognition and
prayers. And much of what I talk about regarding mental health issues surrounding
cancer treatment applies equally to them as well.
Having
cancer (or any other life-threatening ailment) means you are obviously experiencing
one of Life’s most challenging events. In fact, it’s such a momentous yet common
event, that one would think it came with some type of handbook explaining the
various emotional stages a person goes through to get to the end, whatever the
end may be. Yet surprisingly, I received little, if any, written information of
what feelings were to come.
Sure. I knew
what type of cancer I had and I was informed about my treatment plan. I was
likewise informed of some of the hurdles I would face along the way as well as
possible adverse reactions to various drugs. But in terms of being what I would
call “well informed," that job was left up to me talking with other patients and
exploring the internet. In fact, at times I got the feeling that I was just
another patient on a cancer patient conveyor belt. I think part of that feeling
is derived from the fact that the health care professionals are overwhelmed
with patients and have understandably grown numb to the suffering that
surrounds them.
Sometimes a
doctor would see me but most times I met with a nurse or a physician’s
assistant. Admittedly, they were extremely helpful answering my questions of
the day. And while I’m not trying to be critical and although I understand the
difficulty facing the medical community with treating the growing number of
patients coming through their doors, I think there could be a little more
emphasis on education as well as face to face contact.
The
education of which I speak is the dissemination of a written publication to
give to all patients when they are first diagnosed. The emphasis of the
book would be to inform the patient of the various stages and emotions likely
facing them throughout their cancer journey. In essence, it would be a guide
outlining the basic treatment plans and goals but more pointedly, detailing the
various emotions a patient can expect to experience at various junctures from
diagnosis to post-treatment. And given the huge number of patients oncology
centers see daily, there is a wealth of experience to draw upon both to explore
and record those common feelings and emotions. It could go a long way in lessening
the horrible isolation one feels at times while traveling this journey.
I also believe
that the infusion room would be a great place for a cancer information
specialist to visit on a regular basis to answer questions or to offer support
in general. When you are receiving chemo or infusion it’s usually for an
extended period of time while you’re confined to a lounge chair. There’s no
better time to take a few minutes and engage the patient. And if somebody doesn’t
want to talk, just move on. There’s usually a dozen or more people being treated
at the same time so somebody would probably want a question addressed. I
suspect those moments could likely turn into a type of support group meeting.
So anyways, thanks
for reading about this little piece of my life. I’ll update this blog once I
have my PET scan. And as always, if anybody needs anything, please don’t
hesitate to message me.
Btw…thank you
for all your help Richard.
This article contains a lot of critical information. I'm dazed by the idea of the information and moreover it is a useful article for us, Gratitude for share it.Certified Cancer Care Nutritionist
ReplyDelete