Today is Wednesday, and I’m finally feeling like I’m going to live again. Earlier this week, I wasn’t so sure. This chemo go-round is a little different than the others, although there are similarities. The after-effects seemed to hit me later (72 hours later rather than 48), and didn’t make me ache all over. I’ve had a little nausea with this treatment. No cravings this time. I still wore the red face for a couple of days, and was exhausted for several days afterward. I ran cold and hot again. It finally dawned on me that I need to eat every couple of hours instead of a couple of times a day. Working half days seems to be the way to go; I can’t make it through an entire workday yet. When I come home from work, I stay on the couch -- no errands, no laundry, no cleaning, no cooking -- until bedtime, which is ridiculously early.
Fortunately for me, my live-in, on-call “staff” has been very accommodating with errands, meals, and clean-up duty. (In fact, they are quite good, considering what they’re paid!) I am grateful to have sons who are so willing and good-natured about helping ol’ Mom. I’ve used some of the restaurant gift cards and what a wonderful invention those are! At this point, whatever makes my life easier is the way to go, and I’m calling in favors left and right. I can still drive, but my endurance is nonexistent, so once I drive myself somewhere, I don’t have the energy to do what I came for! Such is life. Temporarily, anyway.
Thanks for seeing me through this next chapter. I don’t know how long this one will last, but I’m glad y’all are here with me.
It's a short entry today, folks. Sunday was the day that flattened me, although I was expecting Saturday to be the day that did me in. Saturday actually went pretty well, and of course I was thinking (I really have to stop that) that maybe this won't be so bad after all. Oh, when will I learn?
I don't hurt, I’m just very tired. I went to bed at 9 p.m. on Sunday night, woke up often during the night, and got up at 6 a.m. on Monday to go to work. By 6:15 I was ready to go back to bed. I didn't (can't let the beast win), but I sure wanted to.
Now the couch is calling and it's music to my ears. Thanks for being here.
The new chemo
I’ve been feeling pretty good lately and healing up nicely from the last chemo & radiation regimen. My back has a nicely tanned, slightly textured spot where there used to be an open wound. I’m more energetic than I was 2 months ago, although I still have to walk slowly and go to bed early. My hair is growing quickly, it’s VERY soft and gray, and still looks sassy. Who knew gray could look this darn good? My appetite is back, I eat often and adult-size portions of food. And best of all, dark chocolate and I are buds again!
And so it’s no surprise that today, I got to stand on the tracks of the 2:10, and wait for the “A” train. Yup, today was the beginning of another round of chemo, this time using Alimta, my new drug of choice. It went pretty well, with one tiny exception. You-know-who was supposed to take anti-nausea pills yesterday, today, and tomorrow. Yesterday was no problem. Someone forgot the pills today and paid for it in the chemo lounge this afternoon. Yup, about 5 minutes after the start of Alimta, I got that “hot all over” feeling. And then my mouth started watering, and I was dreading the next phase. So I summoned my appointed nurse (before I lost my lunch), and she stopped the Alimta. Did she disconnect me and send me home? No. She gave me some Decadron and when it was gone, I got the rest of the Alimta. And then I was sent home, and felt fine. (I still have the rough days on the way, though.) My reward? To come back in 3 weeks and do it all over again.
Thanks for being here. I feel as though y’all have been carrying me for a long time, and I appreciate it so much. I could not do this alone.
The doctor visit yesterday went well. There were no surprises, I learned some good information, and got prepped for the upcoming chemo. Oh boy, this time, I get a shot every 9 weeks, and I’ll be taking some meds during chemo week. ( More stuff to remember to do—I’ll probably have sticky notes all over the house to remind me. Apologies in advance to my roommates!)
In a recent previous blog entry, I mentioned that I equated 2nd line chemo drugs with the 2nd level antibiotics—I thought they were more potent, more intense. I was wrong in that assumption. 2nd line chemo is just that; different medicines because the first drugs didn’t work.
My new regimen will be chemo every 3rd week (just like I did back in the summer), starting this Thursday. My new chemo drug is Alimta, which will take about 30 minutes to administer, so my entire afternoon won’t be spent at Happy Juice Junction. I’ll be able to drive myself to and from treatments, too. I asked if the side effects of the new chemo drug were listed in order of probability, and the doctor said not necessarily. They are listed in order of what the doctors can measure, and then what patients report the most. The side effects listed are: decreased platelet, white, and red blood cell counts, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, weight loss --really??--constipation, hair loss, mouth sores and a few more I can't remember. I might get them all, or I might not get any. Can’t wait for that, you betcha!
I told my doctor that I had decided against participating in the research study, and he told me that I didn’t qualify for it anyway. My liver spot is too small. So now I don’t have to feel guilty about not helping to provide data for cancer research. Good, it’s one less thing on the plate.
I’m having a hard time getting excited over this new round of chemo. I know it’s a good thing having options, and I’m grateful to have treatment available. But I know what’s coming, some of it anyway, and I’m not looking forward to that. These new drugs have different side effects than the last ones, and they may be more intense for all I know. My oncologist calls them 2nd line chemo drugs, and I’m getting those since the first line didn’t work as well as we’d hoped. I equate it to antibiotics: we always get the weakest medicine first, and if that doesn’t work, we get stronger stuff.
I have made a decision regarding the research study. I’m not going to participate. The benefits didn't outweigh the risks. I read the material, and wanted to confer with a trusted friend to see if I was reading the material correctly. As it turned out, we both read and understood the same things, and were concerned about the same things, and came to the same decision. (Thank you, E.!) I was asked recently if there was a chance that I’d get a placebo. The answer is NO. My health can’t afford one, and probably neither can anyone else who participates in this study. It’s my understanding that everyone in the study is in the same boat that I’m in; meaning that first line chemo didn’t work, and we need different treatment for this go-round. But that’s all moot now, since I'm not going to do it.
I decided to put a blog together for 2 reasons. I have cancer and am undergoing treatments. I wanted a record of events, and I also knew I wouldn't be able to update everyone constantly. You know how it goes: the first person who calls gets very good information. The 10th person gets, "I'm fine, kinda tired. Can we talk later?", which I thought wasn't fair. The response has been awesome; I never expected this kind of success. Thanks, Blogger! And thanks to all who read, respond, and care.