I apologise for any grammatical or spelling errors in this post. It became a 'now' post halfway through, and as you will see, my editorial skills have been somewhat hampered this evening. I wish to give you advance warning of this. Feel free to comment on any obvious mistakes, I will endeavour to update them. I would say 'enjoy the entry', but I fear that you will not.
As my diagnosis currently stands yesterday was my second to
last chemo day. Occasionally, the excitement of this overwhelms me, images of a
late September swim in the charmingly blue seas of Mediterranean or the Adriatic,
or both, swell up inside me. A rare and jilted smile appears, showing my chlorhexidine
yellowed teeth. Today, however, I am not going to give in to that excitement. I
will leave it for another day, another post. Although I am not in an overly
moaning mood, Dante is trapped in a wall of ice, I feel there are issues I need
to address. I often find myself consulting Dr Google with side effects; new
biological developments are still occurring although I am six months into my fortnightly
treatment. Often Dr Google refers me to other’s blogs, where fellow patients
have addressed my concerns. I feel this
post ought to achieve a similar goal, even if only one person benefits from it.
This will delve into the depths of personal discomfort that in normal social
situations simply should not be referred to, and I must admit that I will not
reveal all. I do have an ounce of social awareness in this head of mine. Do not
fear, I will warn you before things become biologically personal, allow you to
skip certain paragraphs should you choose.
I must confess, I am resisting the urge to launch into
various top ten lists; ‘Top ten things Liv is looking forward to post cancer’ ‘Top
ten tips for Hodgkin’s Disease patients.’ I mean, I whored myself out to the
internet when I posted a picture of a cat on my blog, why not continue this prostitution
with a variety of top five or top ten lists? Watch this space. Another temptation I am resisting is to cry
out, loudly, from my balcony to the fresh blue sky ‘My tummy hurts!’ This urge
is harder to suppress. Instead, I screw up my face, lifting my top lip to the
base of my red nose in an entirely unattractive expression of pain, much like Sloth fit only for the basement not the balcony, and wait for these stomach pangs to
subside. Not an overly productive approach, I will give you that, but it seems
the only bearable one. I am not really in a self-pitying mood, more an oversensitive
Paul Morel mood, so it shall be interesting to see how these previously
undocumented physical qualms manifest themselves in words. I would more gladly
be addressing the doom and gloom that is the state of modern politics, the
varying possibilities of my future, and how to solve world hunger. These
topics, at least, would leave me with a sense of middleclass white girl angst
and sufficient inspiration to write something coherent. But then I run the risk
of getting all Steppenwolf again. And I have no answers to these unrhetorical,
somewhat pressing questions. My brain turns into the sort of Spirograph I
produced as a child; my limited artistic abilities forming indefinite shaky lines,
a clash of colours and scribbles with no discernible beginning or end. My lack
of patience may also contribute to this mess, both then and now. Oh but I am
sure you do not wish hear about that. It is physical issues I have promised,
not psychological ones.
For any reading this who are yet to begin chemotherapy, you
may be feeling frustrated at the lack of mental preparation the experts are
offering you. This was certainly something I felt. I cannot recall how often I
was told ‘Every patient has different experiences’ or ‘Everyone tolerates
[tolerate would not be my word selection] chemotherapy differently.’ Even down
to hair loss, each individual experiences different effects. They cannot
promise you anything, so are reluctant to do so. I understand this now, but at
the time, when I was facing a world of unknowns, my life plan becoming a six
month plan, not even six months, just each fortnight one at a time, well it is
difficult to be told ‘we cannot prepare you for what is to come’.
For example dacarbazine, that wicked drug, it hurts. It does not hurt for everyone, but for me the pain was excruciating. You all know this, you have tolerated [a more apt use of the word] my previous complaints about dacarbazine, over and over again. Now I look back on the arm pain, which barely exists since the insertion of my PICC line, and think that it was the only consistency in my treatment symptoms. It is not only the professionals who cannot predict what you may experience, but you cannot either. There is intra-patient variation as well as inter-patient. Personally, the only regular occurrence in my treatment regime are the emotional tears produced an hour or so before we are due to leave the house, and my bus ride solemnity. Any Brighton and Hove bus driver who happens upon the number one route every second Tuesday will probably assume I have the moodiness of a fourteen year old girl. Maybe they are correct. I was aghast yesterday when the CNS effects of the vinblastine re-established themselves; that awkward squidging in my oversized brown chemo char, the facial tingling; I haven’t felt that for a while. So why now? It makes little sense. I do not care for this unpredictability.
For example dacarbazine, that wicked drug, it hurts. It does not hurt for everyone, but for me the pain was excruciating. You all know this, you have tolerated [a more apt use of the word] my previous complaints about dacarbazine, over and over again. Now I look back on the arm pain, which barely exists since the insertion of my PICC line, and think that it was the only consistency in my treatment symptoms. It is not only the professionals who cannot predict what you may experience, but you cannot either. There is intra-patient variation as well as inter-patient. Personally, the only regular occurrence in my treatment regime are the emotional tears produced an hour or so before we are due to leave the house, and my bus ride solemnity. Any Brighton and Hove bus driver who happens upon the number one route every second Tuesday will probably assume I have the moodiness of a fourteen year old girl. Maybe they are correct. I was aghast yesterday when the CNS effects of the vinblastine re-established themselves; that awkward squidging in my oversized brown chemo char, the facial tingling; I haven’t felt that for a while. So why now? It makes little sense. I do not care for this unpredictability.
I am procrastinating. Even I, with my crass mind and
illogical sense of humour, cannot bring myself to delve into what I promised
earlier. This may be the paragraph that finally snaps that thin thread of
dignity I have been clinging to. This may also be one that some may choose to
skip. Assuming any readers are remaining. I have alluded to (piff alluded, I
believe I flat out announced) the culmination of various medications, cytotoxins
and destruction of mucosae resulted in the bowel movements of a newly
breastfeeding woman; well try six months of that situation. Despite using the prescribed
laxative juice sachets, startling imagery perhaps, but Laxido is not really that bad. The constipation could be deemed another
secure, regular symptom, as could the haemorrhoids that eventuate from that sad
state of affairs. I finally understand why one is told not to sit on hard solid
surfaces. No one should ever need to reach for an impromptu gag before attending
the bathroom. A rather awkward situation when your in-laws are in the adjoining
room, I can assure you. Or, should you happen to be at work with no impromptu gag, just the corner of your salmon cardigan. April, with a lingering UTI, I was near to developing a form of toilet phobia; more from fear of pain, noise and the eternity each movement took, rather than genuine parcopresis or pauresis. Enough already! Please be assured, that paragraph was as
difficult to write as I perceive it will be to read.
Shall I move on? To what? Upper digestive complaints? The nervousness to which I consume each meal, unsure if it will stay down or send me hurtling towards the nearest drain opening? Follicular irritation; everywhere. Not lymph node follicular, although with a little research I could probably drum up something there also, but ingrown hairs, on my scalp to anatomically name one victim, my hampered immune response unable to deal with these annoyances appropriately, and so all that remain are unattractive, concerning, painful little bumps. In a cruel twist of fate should I need to shave my head, my baldness will reveal these eyesores for the world to ogle. Ah. I can answer my pressing last meal question for you, nausea currently rising inside me, the background splenic pain intensifying, much like the quickening of a heart rate. Excuse me for a moment……
Shall I move on? To what? Upper digestive complaints? The nervousness to which I consume each meal, unsure if it will stay down or send me hurtling towards the nearest drain opening? Follicular irritation; everywhere. Not lymph node follicular, although with a little research I could probably drum up something there also, but ingrown hairs, on my scalp to anatomically name one victim, my hampered immune response unable to deal with these annoyances appropriately, and so all that remain are unattractive, concerning, painful little bumps. In a cruel twist of fate should I need to shave my head, my baldness will reveal these eyesores for the world to ogle. Ah. I can answer my pressing last meal question for you, nausea currently rising inside me, the background splenic pain intensifying, much like the quickening of a heart rate. Excuse me for a moment……
Sad face. An expected yet unexpected outcome; it never fails
to shock me. Not the childhood shock you get when you realise Kermit is not
actually playing the banjo in Rainbow Connection. Another Monkees scandal brewing;
Kermit did the past not teach you anything? Ok, I confess, Kermit’s faux banjo
skills have only recently become apparent to me. I have used childhood to describe
a state of mind. Anyway, that is not the shock I speak of. Maybe more like the shock of listening to ‘Playground
in my Mind’ as an adult. Given the recent developments of 1970s pop stars that
particular song takes on far differing connotations. Not that I am implying
anything!!! Massive disclaimer here. It was more the shock I was trying to
allude to, and an attempt at a joke. Let the internet outrage flow. The shock I
am struggling to describe goes something like this: collapsing on the cold
bathroom floor tiles, surrounded by my fallen hair strands, tears streaming down my
cheeks, unable to collect in my eyelashes as I barely have any, my oesophageal
epithelial cells indignantly offering their protestations using the art of burning
pain, I myself crying in a self-pitying and therefore repulsive tone ‘why, oh
why’ along with further blasphemous oaths, wondering if the reverberating sound
of my greenstone pendent knocking against the toilet bowl with each heaving
effort is a mocking applause or an ironic background drumroll. Argh, the nausea
has not really subsided despite my physical efforts to remove it.
No amount of toothpaste can remove the lingering stale
metallic taste that taints my mouth the four or five days after my chemo sessions.
The chlorhexidine mouthwash does help this; although the mint flavour resembles
rainwater pooled in an outside ashtray of a menthol cigarette smoker, there is
at least a taste other than the one that I now correlate with nausea. Does
nausea genuinely have a taste? This stale metallic one always accompanies the
nausea, so, much like my aversion to chamomile after adolescent chicken pox, an
irrational relationship is formed. Fortunately, my everyday diet does not
include metal. I am trying to type through this current nauseous preoccupation;
I confess I am struggling to do so. I do not really wish to conclude now, on
this bitter note, I have more I wish to say, content other than piles, ingrown
hairs and vomiting. If I finish now what shall I do for the remainder of the
evening? Sit around and feel sorry for myself? Things are not really that bad, they have been worse, far worse, they are merely
uncomfortable and distracting, much like my piles.
I am starting to visually resemble a cancer patient. This is
ironic. I am nearly a recovering cancer patient. A couple of chemo sessions back, I
left the hospital wearing a black woolly hat, to protect me from the May wind
and the post-chemo coldness I have been experiencing of late. We got to the bus
and I asked for two single tickets, a double take from the driver, he waves us
through, ticketless. Shit. I am one of those. The phlebotomist has started
calling me ‘dear’. That may have something to do with my spontaneous uncontrollable
hand tremors. My naturally thick, abundant, fluffy blonde hair has fared
remarkably well throughout this six month onslaught, however the bald patches are
starting to show. Comments from onlookers have changed. Initially “Your hair
looks great”, correct, I should have chopped it off years ago; then “You can
barely notice the thinning”, well I can, as can our shower drain; now “Oh, ah,
your hair is doing really well”, it is ok I am contemplating shaving it off. It is
kind of a reverse mullet at present. Long on the top and short/bald at the
back. A full-head comb over if you will, each remaining stubborn strand doing its part to maintain my vanity.
OK, I have gone over that past paragraph and the overall
bitterness still remains. Comedy is turning awkward, nervous glances to the
person beside you, a slight grimace, can I laugh at this or not? I want you to
laugh, but I fear it is not as comical as I intended. Which means I do indeed
need to resign for the night. I am unsure if this post counts as a ‘live blog’,
although it was written in real-time (ridiculous) and published promptly, there were not the real-time modern media updates 1612: ‘Liv has rushed to the bathroom, hand covering her mouth’; it was more like a sick new reality T.V. show, intended only for your
imagination. Do not get any ideas.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.