Almost-Daily Diary http://www.chainreactionblogs.com/diary/2023/08/16/wifes-health-takes-a-turn-for-the-worse/ Export date: Sun Nov 24 5:56:52 2024 / +0000 GMT |
Wife's health takes a turn for the worseI've been riding but not writing much, and it's not because I'm having a great time doing all sorts of fun things/too busy to write. Last Friday, we got word that my wife's breast cancer had returned, for a 4th time. We had a feeling we weren't done with this battle; family history is terrible, with her Mom and two sisters dying from breast cancer (the last one just two weeks ago!). For Karen it's been more of a process than anything else; Karen seemed able to take it on each time it came at her and win each battle. The news Friday was pretty devastating. You don't want to hear the words "Stage 4/metatastic", & "triple negative." The cancer is no longer confined but is now running loose. It was discovered by a routine scan, a check to make sure nothing was amiss after her last surgery back in 2016. They found a small spot on one of the lungs, small enough they gave us the option of waiting a couple months and seeing if it actually grew, or doing a biopsy (which would be difficult due to its relatively small size). And we're thinking, we didn't get this far by waiting and doing nothing! We're waiting for the details of pathology report, the all-important genetic testing that looks for all sorts of little details that help determine severity and the best course of action. The idea that there's no cure, that whatever we do we're just buying time, is tough. It becomes a short term life goal of learning how to buy the most time you possibly can. Two and a half years ago, here's what Karen's sister Jen, the one who died just two weeks ago, wrote in an email to friends & family. It feels like there should be a disclaimer put before it, like you have in those ads for financial companies that tell you "past performance is not an indicator of future results." But it feels, right now, like a mixture of hope and realism, the best and the worst, somehow not feeling like there's a contradiction between them. Hi family and friends, Jen's doctors were, it seems, prophetic. She lived about 2.5 years from her diagnosis, and all but the final two months she was in pretty good shape. I'm hoping, Karen's hoping, that those "cool new" drugs coming down the road are going to be there for Karen, that in 2.5 years they've made a lot of progress. That the time we're going to go out of our way to "buy" is going to allow us to buy even more time. We're shooting for that 10 year mark. Karen's pushing it even further; she wants 10 years + 4 days, so it begins and ends on our wedding anniversary. I'm down with that. And I recognize that we'll be greedy and think that's not enough, we want more, as we close in on that mark. But for now, I'm having a really tough time thinking there could be a day when I wake up in the middle of the night to go pee and she's not next to me, opening her eyes and getting up after me to use the bathroom as well. Kind of a funny thing, the way you sync after so many years. Earlier in marriage she'd complain about me waking her up or snoring. Now, 43 years later, or is it 44, things have changed and hearing her snore, or if I get woken up because she's moving around, it's comforting. I easily go back to sleep. Things are so much better today. How can that be taken away? Lots of crying, lots of praying, lots of trying to make sense of it. While at the same time I have to keep my concentration on finding out as much as I can about Karen's particular cancer, the best treatments, and how to get them. I have to buy time. Time to spend with the woman I can't imagine not going to bed with, waking up next to, taking vacations with, cleaning the kitchen, watching dumb Netflix series with, and being intimate with. I'm not giving up on that. We'll know more next Tuesday, when we have our first video appointment with Karen's Kaiser oncologist, the day after her PET scan. Tomorrow will be a brain scan. Yesterday I started the process of setting up a consultation with a Stanford Doctor, Melinda Telli, who is the world expert on triple-negative breast cancers and also studies hereditary issues. A match made in heaven, hopefully to selfishly keep Karen on earth a few years longer. Somehow I have to stay strong and remain analytical and perceptive and curious through all of this. It's going to be tough. |
Post date: 2023-08-16 09:02:31 Post date GMT: 2023-08-16 16:02:31 Post modified date: 2023-08-16 09:45:02 Post modified date GMT: 2023-08-16 16:45:02 |
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