Archive for category Cancer
Seven years and counting
Seven years ago today, I was an emotional wreck. I knew something was wrong. The thing I had dreaded and feared since my dad got sick and died a few years before was now a reality.
I didn’t have an official diagnosis yet, but I knew. A few weeks prior I had been at the Y, really pushing myself. What felt like a good workout quickly turned into a severe pain in my lower abdomen. As I was poking around trying to figure out what was wrong, my hand grazed something hard that shouldn’t be there. I immediately recognized what it was, but didn’t want to admit it to myself.
Cancer.
It took a couple of weeks of sleepless nights before I made an appointment to see the doctor. Even then, I was too afraid to bring it up, instead asking for something to help with my insomnia.
Finally, the Thursday night before Memorial Day weekend, it came to a head. I could no longer ignore it – I either had to face the truth, or it would kill me.
I don’t generally believe God speaks to us in an audible voice – at least I’ve never experienced that. But as I prepared to call my mom to let her know what was going on, I felt His presence in a way I haven’t before or since. If I could put words to that presence, it would be “Don’t worry – I am with you. We will get through this together.”
I won’t go through the whole ordeal again, as I’ve blogged extensively about it in the past. But I feel compelled to document where I am around my cancer anniversary every year. While there are other days I could celebrate – the last day of chemo, the first day my tumor markers dropped to the normal zone, the day I was given the all-clear by the oncologist – I choose to celebrate the anniversary of my diagnosis. It’s the day that changed my life permanently – I became a cancer patient, and eventually a cancer survivor.
Going through a serious illness has a way of bringing your life in laser-sharp focus. The week after my first round of chemo, I was at a neighbor’s pool (oblivious to the fact that chemo makes you much more likely to get sunburned… but I digress). As I was trying to relax and ignore the waves of nausea and heartburn, I was thinking about my life and what I wanted out of it. I always wanted to be a husband and a father, but at that moment it became my primary goal. As I am realizing more and more every day, life is short. But it’s too long to go through alone.
I think back to that day, and look at where I am now. Seven years later, I’m a couple of weeks away from celebrating my first Father’s Day. I am blessed with two of the most amazing girls one could ask for – my wonderful wife and my adorable daughter.
Life is good.
Lucky 21
In early 2007, Emily and I were thrilled to discover that she was pregnant. It was particularly unexpected, because although we had been trying for a few months, the odds of it happening naturally were slim due to my chemo in 2003.
Sadly our little "Peppercorn" didn’t make it past the eighth week in the womb. So after a few more months, we decided to start fertility treatments. A year’s worth of IUIs were unsuccessful, so at the beginning of the summer we started IVF – In-Vitro Fertilization – and the real fun began.
Six years ago I was needle-phobic like you wouldn’t believe. I had often thought to myself that given the choice between dying from cancer and going through chemotherapy, I would pick the former option. Little did I know that would be stuck dozens of times myself, and that I would actually end up giving shots to my wife. But here we are, some 40+ injections later. At the beginning of July Emily started on Lupron (which halts the ovulation process), and a week later Follistim (which hyper-stimulates the ovaries), all in an attempt to create as many eggs as possible for fertilization. With regular blood tests, she was getting stuck 3 and 4 times a day. Even with my newly-developed tolerance of needles, if the roles were reversed, we would be adopting
She’s a stud.
Anyway, yesterday was retrieval day – we went to the fertility center and they removed all the developing eggs – all 21 of them! The average number is between 12 and 15, so to have that many was a big relief. A call this morning revealed that 19 eggs matured, and of those, 13 were successfully fertilized. Now, that doesn’t mean we’ll have 13 embryos to transplant, as some will not survive. But on Tuesday we will implant two or three strong ones and hopefully there will be a few more that we can put in cryo-storage for implantation at a later date.
At which point will begin the longest two weeks of our lives as we wait to see if Emily is pregnant again…
My Cancer…
has been in remission for five years! I did have a bit of a scare a month ago and ended up back at the oncologist on June 16 – five years to the day that I originally started chemo. But it was a false alarm and I am still healthy as a horse.
I would’ve written something about it sooner, but I have been negligent in my blogging duties. This article at NPR provided the necessary kick in the rear:
Purdue researchers develop technology to detect cancer by scanning surface veins
Of course, they discover this *after* I was given a clean bill of health… now if they could just figure out a way to give chemo without needles.
A new technology for cancer detection that eliminates the need for drawing blood has been developed by Purdue University researchers.
Researchers from Purdue’s Cancer Center, Department of Chemistry and Weldon School of Biomedical Engineering collaborated with cancer and biotechnology experts from the Mayo Clinic to develop technology to detect tumor cells within the human body. By shining a laser on surface veins, such as those on the wrist and inside the cheek, researchers are able to reveal and count circulating tumor cells.
Link dump
A collection of interesting links I’ve found over the past few months, but either didn’t have the time or inclination to write a full post about. Enjoy -
- Why does orange juice taste so bad after brushing your teeth?
- 10 most dangerous playthings of all time
- Scorpion venom could help treat brain cancer patients
- Worst-case scenarios
- US presidential speeches tag cloud
- How to survive a party when you don’t know anybody
- Thinking like a genius
- Doing Nothing: A History of Loafers, Loungers, Slackers, and Bums in America
- Myths, Lies, and Downright Stupidity
- A collection of the worst personal websites I’ve seen, all on one server
2nd Anniversary
Today marks the second anniversary of my cancer diagnosis. Not much to add other than that… check the archives for the full story:
Part One
Posting for the sake of posting
Posted by Lane in Blogging, Cancer, Health & Fitness, Politics & Religion on March 28, 2005
Well, I haven’t been able to bother with updating the blog lately. I’ve thought about writing about the Terri Schiavo case, but it just makes me so mad I can hardly see straight. My employer’s handling (or lack thereof) has been a big part of my frustration. They give a lot of lip service to how everyone should be treated equally, how all life is valuable, etc… except when it conflicts with their political (i.e. liberal) agenda. Then it’s just a pithy statement about difficult choices that gets buried under much less important news.
Anyway, enough of that. The real reason I meant to post is for a health update. I’m quickly approaching the two year anniversary of my initial cancer diagnosis, and so far so good… the only real issue I’ve had since then was my weight gain. I went from 188 after my first round of chemo, to over 210 at my heaviest earlier this year. Now that’s understandable for a while – chemo really saps your energy, well after the treatments are finished. And the testosterone imbalance I was dealing with this time last year didn’t help things either, not to mention the SSRI anti-depressants I was taking which often cause weight gain.
But at the start of the year, I realized that I no longer could blame any of those things for my newfound girth. Chemo was well in the past, my testosterone was at a good level, and had been off the lexapro for six months. The only thing stopping me from losing weight was me. So about two months ago I started running again, and following the South Beach diet… while I haven’t done either the running or the eating plan very strictly, the weight has come off… I’m now down to about 197 – the first time I’ve been under 200 since the summer of 2003. I seem to have leveled off for the time being, but I’m hoping I can get down to the mid 180s by the time summer rolls around.
Breast Cancer Foe Gives Big $$ to Top Abortion Provider
Posted by Lane in Cancer, Politics & Religion on February 22, 2005
(CNSNews.com)- A foundation that uses events such as the “Race for the Cure” to raise money to fight breast cancer is jeopardizing women’s health by using some of those funds to support local chapters of the Planned Parenthood Federation of America, according to a former advisor to the foundation.
Planned Parenthood clinics provide breast cancer screening and education, but the organization is also the nation’s top abortion provider.
“You can’t affirm life with one hand and support an organization that kills people with the other…”
Sad. Read the entire article here: Breast Cancer Foe Gives Big $$ to Top Abortion Provider
Cured: The John Cleland Story
Posted by Lane in Cancer, Health & Fitness on January 20, 2005
Ran across this article tonight – it’s about the first guy with testicular cancer who was treated with Cisplatin and Dr. Einhorn, who is the guy who discovered it and is still considered the leading expert in TC. Cisplatin is the miracle drug that took TC survival rates from 10% to well over 90%. Once it spread into your blood stream and lymph system, it was only a matter of time. Even in my case, though it was caught early, I probably wouldn’t be here today if it weren’t for Cisplatin and the research of Dr. Einhorn.
What’s even more amazing is that John was the first person to be treated with Cisplatin – because all other options had failed. And yet he is still alive and doing well 30 years later. Amazing stuff:
http://www.curetoday.com/currentissue/features/cured/index.html
