General status update:
Hair: I am not going to count how many hairs are left on the comb
every time I run it through my hair, because that would be the act of a crazy
woman. Also, since I don’t know the sum total of all the hairs that were on my head
to begin with, then I can’t subtract the daily number and then calculate the
daily percentage hair loss or make projections as to total accumulated hair
loss over the next 60 days or so. With graphs and things, on Excel. I have
better things to do with my time, so it’s a very good thing I am not going to attempt
any of these calculations. Obviously.
Nausea demon: I thought he might have become completely dormant, and stopped
taking the meds today, whereupon he woke up, yawned, stretched and kicked me in
the stomach.
Chemo Muse: She doesn’t like Excel, and numbers. She wants me WRITING. She
says that as far as she knows, there is no Chemo Excel Muse. She doubts Bill Gates
would allow it, frankly.
Chemo Brian: He doesn’t like my Gregorian chant, so he’s been countering with
The Doors. He actually witnessed the infamous incident where Jim Morrison
whipped his willy out at a concert, or so he claims. Am beginning to think that Chemo Brian’s
brain, what remains of it, is so scrambled that he is now just mentally Photoshopping
himself into any famous event in rock history that pops up into his head. He’s
very convincing, though, so it’s hard to be sure.
Sleep, lack of: you know, we may have to delete this category soon, because it
only now seems to apply to the first steroid-fuelled couple of days of the
cycle.
Fatigue/weakness: Annoying me a lot, this cycle. I want to be strong again. I want to swim 100
lengths of the pool without stopping. Or, as a perhaps more realistic goal for
this coming week, I want my legs to stop being quite so wobbly.
Anxiety level (1-10): 10 whole days until the next chemo cycle starts, so this is as good as
it gets.
State of mind: stateless, it is forced to sleep upon seats in cerebral
airports which it can never leave – the mental equivalent of Hotel California.
It’s the first Monday morning in September, 2012, four
days after I was diagnosed with breast cancer; R has gone to work, and I am
alone in the flat, deciding what to do next. I don’t currently have a
job to go to; since I returned to the UK a year earlier to make a life with R, after
taking several years out in Ayvalik to restore my house and camel barn and create the
library, finding employment has proved challenging.
Earlier in the year I worked for 3 months on a short
term research contract for a demographic think-tank in Westminster, but my
field is a narrow one, with jobs in short supply, and my age is against me. Over
the summer I have been spending a great deal of time – 26 miles worth of time - swimming, and have been wondering about doing
some kind of retraining. That will have to be put on hold for the time being,
while I try to deal with the cancer.
I’m sitting at my computer, and on the desk is the
card that the Breast Care Nurse gave me last week, from ‘The
Haven’, a charity providing support centres for people with breast cancer. I
find The Haven's website, and start to
read:
The Haven was founded in 1997 by a woman called Sara
Davenport, after her children’s nanny was diagnosed with breast cancer, and she
realised how very little support there was available to help women with the
devastating emotional and physical side effects of the disease and its gruelling
treatments. Since then, funded entirely by charitable donations, it has gone on to establish three centres which provide, literally, a haven for those affected by breast cancer, and outreach services for those who are unable to visit The Haven in person :
‘We provide, completely free of charge,
a wide range of therapies which help people to deal with the physical and
emotional side effects of breast cancer. Our specialist nurses and experts in
nutrition, exercise and emotional support provide tailor-made programmes for
every person who comes through our doors. Our outreach programme, 'Haven at
Home DVD', has been specially developed for people who can't get to our Havens
so they can benefit from our unique care in the comfort of their own home.
Our team is committed to improving the
lives of people affected by breast cancer. Our staff of clinical experts,
experienced fundraisers, communications experts and highly trained therapists
work across our Havens in London, Hereford and Leeds and are supported by our
administration and reception teams.
There are two easy ways access our free
Haven programme either by booking an individual appointment with one of our
specialist nurses or senior therapists or by coming to one of our Haven Introduction
Days. Either way, there is no need for a referral of any kind - you can just
ring us to make an appointment. We look forward to hearing from you.
At this stage, the physical side effects of the
disease and its treatment are some weeks in the future, but I am already aware
that my emotional state is bordering on the deranged: some kind of auto-pilot
in my brain enabled me to write the cheery, positive-sounding email to my
family and friends a few days previously, reassuring them that this cancer is a
fairly minor inconvenience, and that it will all be over by Christmas (the unlikelihood of which should have been apparent
to me, even then, by historical analogy alone), and the research I have
started into cancer is keeping me busy, but even so it is all wrong inside my
head, which feels as if it might explode at any time, and I am sitting here
alone and terrified, and I know that I need to get help of some kind, soon.
The London Haven is just
down the road in Fulham, and it says here on the website that you don’t need a
referral, you can just phone them. It says that they are looking forward to hearing from me, so I should phone them, shouldn’t
I?
I pick up the
telephone and, with shaking hands, dial the number.
When a woman answers, brightly, cheerfully, asking how
she can help, I am unable to speak. Tears start rolling down my face and I
start making incoherent sobbing, choking sounds.
‘Hello, hello?
Are you alright?’
Eventually, I manage to get out a few words. ‘I’m
sorry, I’m sorry…’
The woman at the other end couldn’t be kinder: ‘Don’t worry, that’s what we’re here for.
Now, how can we help you?’
‘I… I’ve just
been diagnosed with breast cancer. I want to come and see you. Please.’
‘You sound quite
distressed – we’re pretty booked up today, but I can try and find someone to
see you this afternoon, if you’d like to come in today. Or tomorrow morning – whatever
suits you best.’
Just making this phone call, just acknowledging that I
need to make this phone call, has
already been a huge mental effort, so I decide to leave it until the following
day to take the next step. An appointment is made for the following morning, and
I feel immense gratitude to the woman on the other end of the phone for her
kindness; at this moment I have no way of foreseeing just how much and in how
many different ways, during the painful months ahead, I will come to depend on
the kindness of strangers.
We are probably all guilty, to some extent or another, of taking those around us -- our lover, our family, our friends, our coworkers -- for granted at one time or another. The old adage -- familiarity breeds contempt -- is somewhat apropos. Subliminally, we EXPECT our loved ones to be kind to us. In fact, it's a memorable, often hurtful event when they don't treat us as expected. I think many of us expect strangers to be indifferent at best, or more likely as not, difficult. I'm glad there is a Haven for you and other women. I'm glad there are kind strangers in your life. I'm glad I found the Camel Barn Library because Blogger decided you should be a site for the day. As always, thoughts and prayers, CarFo.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Glen xx
DeleteI'm lost in admiration of the woman who set up the Haven - it must have been a very tough job, and she's created something quite amazing, that has helped, and is helping, so many people.