I'd
like to think that, generally speaking, I'm a quite positive person. More of a
realist than an optimist but I do try to make the best of things.
But I also have my down days; my introspective, tear-filled, sad days.
Fortunately they’re not very often but they’re there all the same.
Normally though, it’s just Mr P. that sees me like that.
And that’s deliberate. I don’t want people to feel bad for me, or sorry for me,
because I’m really not unique in what I’m experiencing.
However, that doesn’t make it less difficult. As a woman, it’s
very hard to have every aspect of your femininity, and how you view yourself,
taken away. Everything from your short-term cosmetic appearance - your hair,
eyebrows and eyelashes – through to the possible permanent loss of your
breast(s) and fertility.
I’ve deliberately only taken one photo of me without my hair
and that was before I lost my eyebrows and lashes. I know I’ll never forget how
I look but I don’t need or want a photographic reminder. In fact, apart from Mr
P., only my Mum has seen me in a full state of unadorned baldness.
However, that stage is passing. I do now have hair
growing on my head and I’m really hoping that it won’t be long before I can go
wig and scarf free. And not before time! The chemo-induced hot flushes are
doing me in.
Honestly, I would kill for a good night’s sleep right now.
Every night I sleep in one hour bursts, alternately waking up in sweats or
chills as I throw off the duvet or pull it back up in some kind of cruel nocturnal
Hokey-Cokey.
But through it all, I have never once thought ‘Why me?’
After all, ‘Why not me?’ If 1 in 8 UK women are going to get
hit with breast cancer, then sadly some of us will need to bite that bullet.
And all that it brings ...
Thursday, 28 June 2012
Tuesday, 26 June 2012
A week of two halves
The end of last week felt a bit crap: inconclusive meeting with my surgeon, dreadful joint and muscle pain, and don’t get me started on the England football team ...
Today though, I’m feeling good. Much perkier.
I’m finally starting to remember what it feels like to feel normal. To know that I don’t have any more chemo and actually have the physical and mental energy to get jobs done.
So I’ve been a busy bunny: getting things sorted at home, meeting up with friends and – shocker! – doing some exercise.
Mr P. and I also had a lovely little weekend break, which I’d booked months ago to mark the end of chemo. (I do LOVE a Groupon!) It was nice to get away, albeit just overnight.
In fact, it was a very English weekend: nice dinner and stay in a village coaching inn, full cooked brekkie followed by a little walk in the countryside. (I know anyone that knows Mr P. will find that hard to believe!)
We even clambered up a very steep hill to look at windmill. (Seriously) But not just any windmill. Oh no. Only the windmill from ‘Chitty Chitty Bang Bang’. Impressed? I thought so. ;-)
From there we set off to a local vineyard and brewery where we got to sample what is allegedly Prince Philip’s favourite tipple, Old Luxtors Gold Ale. Apparently the old goat likes to drink a bottle every day ... although I don't think that's how he ended up in hospital!
So lastly, after getting tipsy on real ale and damson vodka, we finished in Windsor for roast beef sandwiches at The Alma, the lovely little pub owned by Mr P’s friends. (Actually, that wasn’t the end of the day – we watched the England v. Italy game. But less said ... )
In short, normality is returning. I’m not in discomfort anymore, my hair is growing back and I’ve got lots of things to look forward to in the next two weeks before my operation, including lots of nice meals and watching some very talented friends perform on stage.
Most notable though, is my birthday / ‘Cancer can f*ck off’ drinks on Saturday. I’m very excited about this. It’s not a ‘big’ birthday (not yet!) but it does provide an opportunity to get everyone together that has supported me thus far on this journey. And that’s a lot of people!
We're going to a have a proper good English ‘knees-up’.
Today though, I’m feeling good. Much perkier.
I’m finally starting to remember what it feels like to feel normal. To know that I don’t have any more chemo and actually have the physical and mental energy to get jobs done.
So I’ve been a busy bunny: getting things sorted at home, meeting up with friends and – shocker! – doing some exercise.
Mr P. and I also had a lovely little weekend break, which I’d booked months ago to mark the end of chemo. (I do LOVE a Groupon!) It was nice to get away, albeit just overnight.
In fact, it was a very English weekend: nice dinner and stay in a village coaching inn, full cooked brekkie followed by a little walk in the countryside. (I know anyone that knows Mr P. will find that hard to believe!)
We even clambered up a very steep hill to look at windmill. (Seriously) But not just any windmill. Oh no. Only the windmill from ‘Chitty Chitty Bang Bang’. Impressed? I thought so. ;-)
From there we set off to a local vineyard and brewery where we got to sample what is allegedly Prince Philip’s favourite tipple, Old Luxtors Gold Ale. Apparently the old goat likes to drink a bottle every day ... although I don't think that's how he ended up in hospital!
So lastly, after getting tipsy on real ale and damson vodka, we finished in Windsor for roast beef sandwiches at The Alma, the lovely little pub owned by Mr P’s friends. (Actually, that wasn’t the end of the day – we watched the England v. Italy game. But less said ... )
In short, normality is returning. I’m not in discomfort anymore, my hair is growing back and I’ve got lots of things to look forward to in the next two weeks before my operation, including lots of nice meals and watching some very talented friends perform on stage.
Most notable though, is my birthday / ‘Cancer can f*ck off’ drinks on Saturday. I’m very excited about this. It’s not a ‘big’ birthday (not yet!) but it does provide an opportunity to get everyone together that has supported me thus far on this journey. And that’s a lot of people!
We're going to a have a proper good English ‘knees-up’.
Wednesday, 20 June 2012
And we’re off!
Well, almost. Saw my surgeon at The Royal Marsden today and it’s been
confirmed that I will have a lumpectomy and lymph node biopsy on Tuesday 10
July.
In the meantime, I’ll need to have a pre-surgery assessment
(bloods, ECG etc.) on 6th July and a radioactive dye injected on the
9th.
However ... the surgeon was also keen for me to understand
that there is still a 10% (ish) chance that I might need a second operation (i.e. a mastectomy).
Basically, the problem with having chemo before surgery is
that, while it can shrink the tumour and show which drugs are effective, any
dispersal of the tumour can be uneven and patchy and make it difficult to see -
and therefore completely remove.
So I won’t know until Friday 20 July, when I get the results
of the pathology report (i.e. the assessment of the cells removed), whether or
not I’ll have to go back and have my entire breast removed. I can see that
being an agonising 10 day wait ...
I really don’t know how I feel about all this. I had rather
hoped that the operation would bring me some sense of completion or closure but
now I realise that it might just be a holding position for something far more
drastic. It’s all very daunting. I feel like I’m in limbo (again!)
Added to which, I’m also still very uncomfortable from last
week’s chemo. My Mum has lent me a walking stick but I’m finding it very, very
difficult to get around and that, coupled with the increasingly frequent hot
flushes that I’m getting, resulted in more than a few tears as I limped to and
from South Kensington today!
Fortunately, the long-suffering Mr P. was with me. Holding
my handbag as I tottered unsteadily along and giving me cuddles each time I started
to cry. (Most notably in Outpatients when, after limping for twenty minutes to
get there, I was told that I’d been in the right place to start with!)
Anyway, we are where we are. And I’m now at home resting my
legs and Mr P. has gone to Royal Ascot. I’m glad he still managed to make it, despite
our protracted hospital visit, and I fully expect him to feel very unwell
tomorrow!
I even asked him to put on a few little bets for me, including
one on the ironically named ‘Rebellious Guest’. Appropriately, however in hindsight, it didn't win ... J
Sunday, 17 June 2012
Thank you!
In spite of everything that I’ve been through during the
last few months, I really do feel so incredibly lucky.
I have been truly overwhelmed by the amount of support I’ve received.
Both from friends and family, as well as people that I barely know – or have
never met! It’s been amazing.
Leading the charge though has always been Mr P. and this
weekend he surpassed himself, rallying a full-on ‘Ground Force’ style team to
come and blitz my overgrown garden.
Armed with strimmers, pick-axes and saws they came; digging
out concrete, chopping down trees and generally weeding for England ... while I
just looked on in awe, proffering tea and biscuits. It was a truly fantastic
effort.
So please can I say an ENORMOUS thank you to everyone who so generously gave up their time to
help: to Barry, Neil, Roger, Diana, Rachel and Craig ... but mostly to my
wonderful Martin (Mr P.) who I have NEVER seen work so hard!
Thursday, 14 June 2012
Where's it gone?!
My tumour is now so small that they can't even find it with a scanner!
We visited The Royal Marsden's 'Rapid Diagnostic Unit' today. It's very posh, like the rest of the hospital, and not all like any other NHS facility I've visited.
They looked at my chest and armpit with an ultrasound and, despite finding the 'marker' and what looked like scar tissue, there was no clear tumour to be seen. Hurrah!
Obviously this is brilliant news, especially as the final chemo won't even have taken effect yet. So we'll speak to the surgeon next week and get the plan of action, but it all seems to be boding very well.
In fact, I was so overwhelmed, I went back to the changing room and burst into tears. But good ones for a change. :-)
We visited The Royal Marsden's 'Rapid Diagnostic Unit' today. It's very posh, like the rest of the hospital, and not all like any other NHS facility I've visited.
They looked at my chest and armpit with an ultrasound and, despite finding the 'marker' and what looked like scar tissue, there was no clear tumour to be seen. Hurrah!
Obviously this is brilliant news, especially as the final chemo won't even have taken effect yet. So we'll speak to the surgeon next week and get the plan of action, but it all seems to be boding very well.
In fact, I was so overwhelmed, I went back to the changing room and burst into tears. But good ones for a change. :-)
Wednesday, 13 June 2012
So that’s that. Next!
Today was my sixth and final chemotherapy session. Although, instead of being a high point it did feel like a bit of an anti-climax.
Don’t get me wrong, the chemo ward nurses and particularly the
receptionist Stephen are all very nice. Apart from one bad experience on my
second visit, when the nurse botched the cannula, it’s all been pretty
straightforward.
Interestingly, it was the nurse from our second visit that administered my treatment today. Mr P. wasn’t happy about that but, in contrast to our last encounter, she was sweetness and light and even laughed at his jokes - so I think she was forgiven.
Interestingly, it was the nurse from our second visit that administered my treatment today. Mr P. wasn’t happy about that but, in contrast to our last encounter, she was sweetness and light and even laughed at his jokes - so I think she was forgiven.
And they all wished me luck as I left (and gave them a box
of chocolates in appreciation of their efforts) but I didn’t really feel any
sense of completion or closure. I guess because I know there’s still more,
albeit different and less gruelling, treatments to come.
It was a shame too, that I didn’t get to see my regular (the
senior) Oncologist yesterday. Instead we saw one of the Registrars who, if I’m
honest, we didn’t really like. Apart from being quite arrogant, he obviously
didn’t know me or my case, talked over me a lot when I was trying to ask
questions, and then didn’t want to measure my tumour because I’m being scanned
at the ‘Marsden tomorrow.
Nevertheless, I did insist: ‘I’d like a measurement anyway, please!’
And then discovered that the real reason was probably because he had to go and get
a nurse to watch him do it. Not sure why. Then he couldn’t find the tumour
anyway!
However, this is probably a good thing. If, even in his less experienced hands, it’s not obvious where the tumour boundaries are then it
must have shrunk a bit more. I’m hoping to under 1cm which, with one treatment
still to take effect, does bode well for ‘breast conservation’ – i.e. a
lumpectomy rather than mastectomy. It had been considered borderline before.
So it is good news, of sorts. I’ll be off to the ‘Marsden
tomorrow for an ultra-sound scan, so hopefully things will be a bit more
conclusive.
Which means that my treatment at Charing Cross is now at an end. As we waved farewell, I did take a moment to compose myself and then skipped out merrily to what I sincerely hope will be my last ever 'Chemo Conga' ... :-)
Monday, 11 June 2012
The home straight
So we’re nearly there. Tomorrow I visit my Oncologist for the last time and start the drugs for what, we sincerely hope, will be my final chemotherapy session.
You’d think that I’d be feeling chipper about this. And of course, to some degree, I am. However it’s been a tough couple of months and the thought of returning to treatment after an extended break is proving much harder than I thought.
Even though we’re so near the end, this has definitely been one of the worst cycles. Not physically, although the nausea did last into the third week, but mentally and emotionally.
I feel a bit like a London marathon runner who’s floundered at 23 miles. You know, the bit under Tower Bridge where they’re all limping with a teary but determined look in their eye.
I really just want it all to be over. To have my hair and eyelashes, to have a normal routine and to just have my self-confidence back.
In truth though, I know that some things will never be as they were and that the long-term effects of this treatment do mean that some doors - like having children - could well be firmly closed to me.
That’s not definite, I will need to ask for various tests, but I suspect from the way my body is now behaving that my options could be very limited. So it’s been an introspective few days.
Fortunately, however, I do have lovely, lovely friends who have been on a mission to cheer me up. In the last two days alone, I have been out to the pub, to a baby shower (brilliant fun) and to TWO West End shows!
And tonight, it’s England’s opening match against France in Euro 2012. Mr P and I are very excited and will be watching the game, like Howard and Hilda, in our new (and matching) England shirts.
I hope Roy Hodgson and the boys don’t let us down.
You’d think that I’d be feeling chipper about this. And of course, to some degree, I am. However it’s been a tough couple of months and the thought of returning to treatment after an extended break is proving much harder than I thought.
Even though we’re so near the end, this has definitely been one of the worst cycles. Not physically, although the nausea did last into the third week, but mentally and emotionally.
I feel a bit like a London marathon runner who’s floundered at 23 miles. You know, the bit under Tower Bridge where they’re all limping with a teary but determined look in their eye.
I really just want it all to be over. To have my hair and eyelashes, to have a normal routine and to just have my self-confidence back.
In truth though, I know that some things will never be as they were and that the long-term effects of this treatment do mean that some doors - like having children - could well be firmly closed to me.
That’s not definite, I will need to ask for various tests, but I suspect from the way my body is now behaving that my options could be very limited. So it’s been an introspective few days.
Fortunately, however, I do have lovely, lovely friends who have been on a mission to cheer me up. In the last two days alone, I have been out to the pub, to a baby shower (brilliant fun) and to TWO West End shows!
And tonight, it’s England’s opening match against France in Euro 2012. Mr P and I are very excited and will be watching the game, like Howard and Hilda, in our new (and matching) England shirts.
I hope Roy Hodgson and the boys don’t let us down.
Me and Mr P. in front of the telly ... ;-) |
Wednesday, 6 June 2012
"Congratulations and celebrations!"
What a brilliant few days. Although, I think I might remember them better than some of my friends ... !
Despite the on-off weather, I'm pleased to say that us Brits put on a 'bloody good show'. It was weekend of music, dancing, celebration and laughter ... and apparently the Queen had a bit of a bash too. ;-)
Mr P. and I were away from London celebrating the marriage of our good friends Mr and Mrs Robinson. The weather stayed dry for us, if a bit grey, as we supped Pimms, quaffed champagne and ate what I can honestly say was one of the nicest cheesecakes I have ever tasted!
It also provided a lovely opportunity to catch up with people that I had not seen since the Bride's hen party, way back in March. Many of you will recall that this was the weekend that I started to lose my hair, so it was nice to be able to tell them how well I'm doing - and that the end is now nearly in sight!
Indeed it was celebrations all round as we drank, danced (to superb music provided by Mr P. and Russy G.) and generally made merry to the wee small hours.
But now we're all back in London. The Queen is apparently still celebrating but for most of us the party is over and we're back into the old routine.
Which for me, of course, is getting ready for one more dose of chemotherapy next week. I'm not looking forward to it - obviously - but it will be good to finally get it out of the way.
And then we can have another party!
Despite the on-off weather, I'm pleased to say that us Brits put on a 'bloody good show'. It was weekend of music, dancing, celebration and laughter ... and apparently the Queen had a bit of a bash too. ;-)
Mr P. and I were away from London celebrating the marriage of our good friends Mr and Mrs Robinson. The weather stayed dry for us, if a bit grey, as we supped Pimms, quaffed champagne and ate what I can honestly say was one of the nicest cheesecakes I have ever tasted!
It also provided a lovely opportunity to catch up with people that I had not seen since the Bride's hen party, way back in March. Many of you will recall that this was the weekend that I started to lose my hair, so it was nice to be able to tell them how well I'm doing - and that the end is now nearly in sight!
Indeed it was celebrations all round as we drank, danced (to superb music provided by Mr P. and Russy G.) and generally made merry to the wee small hours.
The happy couple ... who, yes, really did trust me to do a Bible reading! I was very honoured. |
But now we're all back in London. The Queen is apparently still celebrating but for most of us the party is over and we're back into the old routine.
Which for me, of course, is getting ready for one more dose of chemotherapy next week. I'm not looking forward to it - obviously - but it will be good to finally get it out of the way.
And then we can have another party!
Sunday, 3 June 2012
In jubilant mood
What a glorious week it’s been. Gorgeous sunshine, dining with lovely friends and colleagues and now a four-day weekend to celebrate the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee (Cheers, Ma’am!)
Except, Mr P and I won’t really see much of the official celebrations as we have a far bigger more important event to attend: the wedding of our good friends Alan and Gemma!
It’s all very exciting ... and with the way I’ve been on these recent treatments, if I manage to make it through the church service – and especially my bible reading – without turning into an emotional blubbing wreck, it will be a miracle!
Normally, I would have expected to be relatively symptom-free this week but that hasn’t been the case. I’ve really felt quite nauseous at times.
Nevertheless, I do love Queenie and still wanted to do something for the Jubilee. Fortunately some more good friends got in touch and invited me to their street party in Wimbledon on Saturday. It was amazing! And incredibly well organised, if also peculiarly British with a load of middle-aged strangers doing tug-o’-war in the street ... (Men vs. women. Weird!)
Sadly now though, the weather has turned and it looks like the official Jubilee celebrations (and maybe the wedding) could be a very rainy affair.
But it won’t dampen our spirits – oh, no! – or our consumption of them ...
For God’s sake, we’re BRITISH!
Except, Mr P and I won’t really see much of the official celebrations as we have a far bigger more important event to attend: the wedding of our good friends Alan and Gemma!
It’s all very exciting ... and with the way I’ve been on these recent treatments, if I manage to make it through the church service – and especially my bible reading – without turning into an emotional blubbing wreck, it will be a miracle!
Normally, I would have expected to be relatively symptom-free this week but that hasn’t been the case. I’ve really felt quite nauseous at times.
Nevertheless, I do love Queenie and still wanted to do something for the Jubilee. Fortunately some more good friends got in touch and invited me to their street party in Wimbledon on Saturday. It was amazing! And incredibly well organised, if also peculiarly British with a load of middle-aged strangers doing tug-o’-war in the street ... (Men vs. women. Weird!)
Sadly now though, the weather has turned and it looks like the official Jubilee celebrations (and maybe the wedding) could be a very rainy affair.
But it won’t dampen our spirits – oh, no! – or our consumption of them ...
For God’s sake, we’re BRITISH!
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