Saturday, November 27, 2010

The Upside of Chemo


In all my complaints of chemotherapy, I have a few pros I should share.


In the beginning, just before my chemo, a lovely oncology nurse gave me a folder filled with printouts of all the things that would be pumped into my body. She told me I may want to read them to be aware of the side effects. Now as a person, who prior to this, was rarely sick and when side effects were mentioned; I inwardly scoffed. My scoffing days over, the chemo gods laughed at me. Within two weeks of my first treatment I realized I had been thoroughly…side-effected.


One may not know that there are different kinds of chemo. The variation's range like the myriad of liqueurs. (However liqueur feels better once ingested unless one overdoes it.) My specific brew of poison (literally) caused hair loss. But while I was Mr. Clean’s look-alike I also did not have to shave my pits for four months. Some hair remained on my legs, although what was left behind was very thin and grew at an old, very old, snails pace. All in all, I had to shave about 3 times during my ordeal. My eyebrows almost became non-existent, the few that were left hung on as if they were stalactites. Thus, plucking eyebrows (or any other pesky stray hair) was crossed off the to do list. Showering became a breeze. I could even bathe, and for a bit the only stubble floating the tub was from my shedding, shaved head. So, we were able to pinch some pennies with shampoo and conditioner; soap worked just fine on my shiny, bald nugget. My head just became apart of my facial moisturizing regimen. Side effect one: Groom with ease.


As a woman, like pregnancy, chemo may offer you a token of reprieve. Even though I did endure a urinary tract infection (something I have had only once in my early teens), my monthly visitor went on safari. My ovaries were “tinged” (the moniker my oncologist named it). This tinging ended my period like a sentence and sent me into a mini-menopause. At 36, I was experiencing a heat that would start in the very core of my being, a heat that would make the sun blush. The heat wicking almost immediately to my head (which most of the time was bare) and I would have a moist sheen on top. So as instant as my head was wet …and hot, being exposed it would counter with a coolness from the surrounding air. It was so odd. This anomaly amused my mother, who I have picked on for years and now whose common predicament I share. Side effect two: We kicked Aunt Flo out but we relocated to the Sahara to be rid of her.


I had the fortunate coinciding of my chemo with the Halloween season. Normally, I am not really all that into Halloween. Even as a kid I never was very excited about it. But there was something liberating about the fact that I was free of hair; a trait not all are willing to “bare” (could not resist that pun) in the name of a great Halloween costume–mostly from a female standpoint. The characters of bald are quite a few: G.I. Jane, Mr. Clean, Kojak, Professor Xavier, that blue guy from the Watchmen and my chosen look-alike, The Last Airbender. I figured the kids needed to get some entertainment value out of this tribulation. Side effect three: Halloween takes on broader possibilities.


Lastly, my chemo ordained me, at time, with some enzymatic-action-in-the-stomach finickiness. When I did want to eat, I had the need for comfort food. As my treatments progressed, my appetite actually increased. My recipe of chemo, included a steroid, that kept me away from nausea, it also fatten me a wee bit. It took about 3 doses, but I finally just ate to feel better. I learned to be happy I was not feeling the need to vomit, but instead desiring chocolate cake! In the supposed words of Queen Marie Antoinette, I ate cake. Side effect four: Enjoy your lot, and your cake too!


It seems I should have a fifth item to tout, as if I were the fifth element, an end to the digits on one hand. But a new outlook would be the only thing I could share. I have lost my hair, which was a thick source of pride. I am about to loose half of nice rack. I have experienced strength I did not know was in me (not for me but more for those I cannot imagine life without.) If perk No.5 is anything it is of grace, it is of power, it is of knowing there is more than I have in my life, that I refuse to give up. Side effect five: A supernatural knowing that I will live longer than those feeling sorry for me. So…don’t feel sorry–feel strong!

Sunday, November 7, 2010

Patient patient.



This is a not a path I wanted (or would ever wish on anyone) but it one I have to finish, I will finish. And when I finish, my new journey will begin. But waiting for this journey to end, for this chapter of my life to end with that last period pounded into place; is trying my patience.


I started life as a patient individual. I was often praised for my patience. Then somewhere in my trek to self-awareness I began to feel that my patience was a cover for not being as assertive as I needed to be in areas of my life. It soon developed into being impatient with myself and with each new endeavor. Higher education, seemed too long of a wait, so far down the road when I was sick of school by graduation. I wanted to explore life outside what I was familiar with, an adventure! Each adventure just whetted my appetite for the next. I wanted to hurry to the next step because it never came soon enough. My frustration with obtaining a degree was the time line and deciding a major that would please my family. The oddity was it took me nine years, yep nine years to hone in on the BA. I went from taking a year off after high school to travel to the Dominican Republic, as a tutor for a missionary family. I returned home (spiritually stunned) and enrolled in college first as an undecided, then to pre-pharmacy, moved to Michigan (to screw my head and heart back on) there I started working for a chiropractor and trashed my faith in traditional medicine, so I started training to be a youth pastor. When the time for me to take my year as a youth pastor underling-in-training, I knew I had become what I said I would never be: self-righteous. So, I moved back home, decided that I was paying for the next stab at a degree; the choice I had wanted it to be in the first place, Art. I added my soul mate into the equation by my second semester. I received my degree in two and a half years, impatiently tackling new challenges that would enhance my resumé (and skipping some of the enlightening endeavors that may have been more fruitful.) I became impatient with the process of each adventure. I envisioned each and every goal and I wanted to get there as soon as possible. I became the embodiment of far-from-patient.


At age 9, I decided I wanted a non-boring life, I wanted adventure. I am ever reminded of constantly achieving this desire. Whether it be the excitement of my handsome, adoring, high-strung, never-met-a-stranger (or stops talking to that stranger) hubby; or watching my three children discovering the world each in there own individual interpretations; or handling some emergency (work, home or personal) that became so because of poor-planning on my part or some one else’s. I became impatient with a lot of this process. A process that I should have been drinking in and enjoying moment by moment.


Even now with my current predicament I find my self wanting to walk into the Bed, Bath and Beyond, where I happen upon a creepy Christopher Walken with his secret lair containing a remote for my life. I have so wanted to have it and fast-forward past the chemo, impending surgery and my newest discovery that I will have to be an uno-boob chic for a year! Really. Really…Great something else I have to break to my precious girls. The hair loss was easy, now I have to explain removing half my chest! Those words coming out of my surgeons mouth stunned me. I felt my heart and/or head plummet. I had to fight to keep my composer. Where is that damn remote? I want this over. Now.

I make to the car with only a couple of tears escaping. Once in the car, I unfurled the clouds that pelted my cheeks. I called my husband after I thought I had rid myself of all moisture in my tear ducts. I tell him the news, it was not new news to him. He informs me and reminds me that is what the doctor said on our first meeting. I had not heard it in information-overload mode or I had chosen not to except it. Then the hubby asked the why-does-it-sound-like-you-are-about-to-cry question. Because I was crying…again.


Deep breath. Be patient, patient. Urrrrrrrgh.