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cancer patient's blog |
by Hugh Cook |
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Section 137 Entry 0001. Date: 2005 March 28 Monday.
(diary) (previous) (top) (bottom) (next) (topics) (contents) Easter was bright, noisy, sunny and social, garish with the voices of children. Talking, eating, drinking wine - that was enough to leave me exhausted by the end of the day. On Easter Sunday I was at my sister Catherine's place when the phone rang. It was the Easter bunny calling with the first clue for the children, Miss Two and a Half and Master Almost Five Years Old. The first clue was the letter box. Loot bags in hand, the children set off, and retrieved shiny Easter eggs from the letter box, plus a piece of rhyming verse giving a clue to the next treasure location. Step by step they discovered their way to each cache. The very last cache was a BIG one which included not just stuff for the littlest ones but, also, Easter Egg packages addresed by name to individual adults, including me. Sunday, the Easter egg hunting day, was a family only day. But today, Monday, other parents showed up at my sister's place, bringing with them other children for an even noisier, more active time, creating a warm, active world ... a little exhausting to be a spectator to. Today Monday, at my sister's place, I ate couscous for only the second time in my life. The first time I ate it was in Morocco, years ago. And yesterday, Sunday, I was introduced to a kind of spread which looks a bit like pate but which apparently is based on eggplant and is called babu ghanoushi (say "genoosh"). Easter, then, was a break from the routine. Tomorrow, Tuesday, the world resumes as normal, and for me "normal" will include showing up at hospital to have a lumbar puncture so (a) yet another sample of cerebrospinal fluid can be taken and (b) so I can receive another injection of the anticancer drug Ara C. Section 137 Entry 0002. Date: 2005 April 01 Friday. (diary) (previous) (top) (bottom) (next) (topics) (contents) |
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I am lost in a world without platforms. Peering through a blur of squashed fishes I look in the darkness and find Nothing but the eye of a needle. Randomized choice: this is my problem. Cut free from my timetables, alienated Into the void of options. My rectangular certainties A bifurcating octopus, Dissolving. In the darkness of nowhere The trees are punctured by petals Huge with anthracite. We cannot build a world Out of cabbage leaves. At liberty in the desolation of a collapsed context I endure. From a pinnacle of terrifying black A volitional vomiting of watermelons, Obsessive compulsive, Blurts through the night. Job, house, baby, wife: A slurry of meatloaf. Flushing. Walking on dissolving shadows, I find my alarm clock, Swallow it, And wake. |
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Section 137 Entry 0003. Date: 2005 April 11 Monday. (diary) (previous) (top) (bottom) (next) (topics) (contents) This morning I kept a 10:00 appointment at Auckland Hospital to find out how my chemotherapy has been going. At this stage I've been through four cycles of chemotherapy (four of a projected six) involving the chemotherapy agents methotrexate and vincristine, and, additionally, I've had six lumbar punctures involving injecting a third chemotherapy agent, Ara-C, into the spine. So how am I going? Well, it's a good news bad news situation. Good news: I am done with lumbar punctures. No more needles into the spinal area. All finished. The last samples of cerebrospinal fluid have been clear: there is no more lymphoma left in the spine. Good news: the latest MRI scan of my brain shows that the lymphoma tumor which was conspicuously evident earlier has shrunk away to leave only, as far as I can follow the explanation, a skeleton of itself and some kind of permanent residual damage (the brain does not revert to its original pristine state), and that this response is a "first step" on the way to a cure (assuming we are going to get a cure.) Bad news: my latest lab tests (both blood tests and a urine test for something called creatinine clearance) indicate that my kidney function has taken a fifty percent hit (compared to what it was earlier). This raises the possibility that there may be methotrexate crystals in my kidneys, but that's just a possibility. Today I had a fresh blood test and the results of this will determine whether the remaining projected cycles of chemotherapy, cycle five and cycle six, do or do not proceed. If the methotrexate is in fact threatening the kidneys, then cycles five and six will probably be canceled, and we will probably skip ahead to the next step, which is radiotherapy. On the other hand, depending on what today's blood test shows, it's possible that I could still be admitted to hospital on Thursday, as originally planned, for another five days or so of chemotherapy: cycle five. Subjectively, today I feel fine, so the news that my kidney function is down (on a temporary basis or a permanent basis I have no idea) does not alarm me. It's like the news that there's residual battle damage left in my brain: if I'm functioning okay then I don't see that I should be fussed about it. However, there are days on which my energy levels are conspicuously down. I just run out of steam and feel exhausted. Why? The answer that came back was that it's probably the cumulative effect of the chemotherapy, and that I should expect to continue to quite possibly have energy level problems during the projected radiation therapy, too, since fatigue tends to be one of the consequences of radiation therapy. Anyway, having received both the good news and the bad news, my mood on this bright sunny autumn day (magnificent blue skies weather!) is relaxed and optimistic. |
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