Friday, October 30, 2015

Check Out

On the wall in one of my oncologist's exam rooms, near the door, there is a sign that says, "Check Out."  

This is not the real sign

It may have been there all these years and I never noticed. Maybe I've never been in that exam room before. I'm not sure what it is telling me - is it reminding me to check out with the doctor's assistant before I leave?  Is it a reminder for the physician?  Perhaps that room was used for something else before it was an exam room.  The signage location makes no sense - stuck on the wall near the right side of the door where it can't be seen if the door is open.

Seeing a sign like that when you get bad news like I did is kind of like hearing the music to Jaws playing in your head when you go to the beach.  Ominous.

I wanted to take a photo for you all, but somehow, pulling out a phone to photograph a sign when your physician is sharing that cancer has exploded throughout your abdomen seems.....rude.

Perhaps even a little checked out.

I went for my usual therapy on Wednesday and asked for a copy of my latest PET results before I saw the doctor. Although he had called me to explain it, I was unpleasantly surprised by what I read, which was worse than I had anticipated.

I also realized I needed an anatomy refresher.  When my doctor called me with the news, he had told me that the cancer was in the abdomen, including the porta hepatis, which I thought was actually inside the liver. Well, radiologists don't seem to consider the porta heptatis as part of the liver tissue (or parenchyma, as they would say) as the report says, "no definitive metabolic evidence of recurrent hepatic metastatic disease."  The main areas of involvement seem to be between the stomach and liver; the porta hepatis is the gateway area that the veins, ducts and artery flows through to get to the liver. I also had to look up the other places cancer has spread:  the gastrohepatic, portacaval, and left periaortic regions.

Technically, "a 1.5x1.11 cm gastropheptac node, multiple adjacent/confluent upper left periaortic nodes, multiple-ill-defined nodes in the porta hepatis and portacaval regions" all with SUVs of 6.0.

I must have missed that day in med school.

Cancer is also in the subpectoral and axillary nodes, areas with which I am familiar.  It seems Machiavellian to now have cancer in my axillary nodes so many years after the original diagnosis. I remember clearly my old breast surgeon, Rockstar Raja, being elated that my nodes were clean despite extensive disease in the breast.

Devious joke, Mr. Cancer.   You got me.

Apparently, there is also disease in my left lung - four menacing, tiny lesions.  There are multiple affected areas in my upper abdomen,  far too many to list.  It's considered "moderately extensive" metastatic disease, an oxymoron if I ever heard one.  Only in medicine...

Well, shoot.

My liver?  Clean as a whistle.  A whistle which has been kept in a pocket, used and is covered with lint and dried spit.  That kind of clean.

So the plan is to get me on TDM-1, aka Kadcyla, as soon as possible.  "Within the week" my oncologist said, alarmingly. I'm not sure insurance companies do "within the week" though.

Oddly enough, I had a reaction to my old friends, Herceptin, Perjeta and Zometa.  I sat, happily hooked up to the drip,  watching the nurses swear at a new EHR system they are implementing.  As the Zometa started, my back started aching intensely and terribly. It felt as if a rubber band was wrapped around my intestines, and was being tightened.  The pain spread to the area that has been hurting all along -  my side, my left flank.  It was quite strange.   I've been on these drugs for years.   Having a reaction now would be bizarre, to say the least. But the pain intensified until I couldn't take it anymore, and I reached up and turned off the drip.  My nurse gave me some Toredol. I had some pain meds in my purse that I also took, which barely helped.  My nurse even thought I should go to the hospital but I nixed that idea, as I always will.  I'd rather suffer at home than be pain-free in a hospital.

Two hours later,  I was fine.

Mysteries.

If you are a newbie to disease reading this, and if you think that there is clarity in medicine, I smile at your innocence, charmed like a new mother seeing the world through her child's eyes.   In medicine, there are often more questions than answers.  No matter how sophisticated the machine or brilliant the doctor, sometimes, the unknown reigns supreme.

As an example, even with all the cancer in my body, nobody can figure out why I've been in so much pain or can't eat.  (I am now down to 90 pounds).  Sometimes, there are no obvious answers, and sometimes, people in medicine can't see the forest for the trees.

You know what I think?  Cancer hurts.

Cancer effing hurts, even if it's not technically impinging on something or interfering with mechanics.   It just does.

So another appointment over and another goal set:  I told my oncologist that my oldest son was getting married in May, and I want to live to be there.  As I stated my desire, I looked over his shoulder at the check out sign, and thought "not yet, buddy.

Not yet."







Speaking of checking out, is this a good time to remind you to start your Amazon shopping from the box on my page? Check out the right side, and click.    If you start on my page, anything you put in your cart and check out during that trip will net me a small amount.  With the holidays coming, and a new insurance plan with a $5,000 deductible, I am going to need all the help I can get.  Thank you.










Friday, October 23, 2015

In the Stream




I was on a live TV, web streaming show called The Stream yesterday.  It was an interesting experience.  Perhaps not my best interview, as it was done via Skype.  I had so much more to say! There was some lag so I could not hear when the other women were finishing speaking, and I could not see the other women because I had to look at my camera and not the screen.  Looks like some had the same issue as you could see us fiddling with our earbuds.

The messaging is important so while maybe not my finest technical interview, it's worth sharing!

Thanks to The Stream for having me on.

Wednesday, October 14, 2015

Time

Over the past four years since being diagnosed with mets, six with cancer, I have had approximately ten PET scans, about 50 CT scans, 24 MUGA scans and a sprinkling of bone and other types of imaging tests.

Imagine the time that takes - the driving, the parking, the waiting rooms, changing, prep, lying in machine after machine. Hundreds of hours I've spent - no, thousands - not only waiting for tests, but waiting for doctors and waiting for treatment. I have likely had 500 doctor appointments over the past years - often going several times a week. My life is thoroughly medicalized and has been since my initial diagnosis.

Lying in these machines, waiting for them to probe through my skin and reveal the secrets lying beneath - to learn whether cancer is growing or retreating, whether I have time to live or it is time to prepare for death - I think. I think about what it means to have this disease take away your life piece by piece, health, job, functioning..but also what it means to be one of the lucky ones who enters remission and gets a reprieve from cancer and gets some of that back.

And then, have it taken away again.

Which is what just happened.  My remission is over and I have active cancer again.

I think about how small we are in the grand scheme of things, and what makes us cling to life so desperately - and we all do, we all want life so much.

What I have mostly thought about is my family. I think about my loved ones. I submit my body to needles and chemicals and radiation and scalpels, for them, to see as much of their lives as I'm privileged to see.

In history, we are nobody. Only a few of us will have names that live past our immediate families: Steve Jobs, Bill Gates, Barack Obama. The rest of us, we'll be forgotten in the dust of time. And that's okay. Millions of people have come before us, each as individual as you or I. Each has had their life, their suffering, their joy, and their deaths and each is now gone. Billions of people, known only for 3 generations if they are lucky.

All we can do is try to do a little good while we are here; nudge the world in a way that we think it should be nudged. That can be done by something as simple as raising a decent human being. You never know if that person will truly change the word, be a President or Inventor, or will give birth to one. Not all humans must be great. Ultimately, what gives most of us happiness, what gives us the ability to continue on in the face of adversity, what gives us purpose, is being with the ones we love. Why is that so important? I don't know why, I only know it's the biggest part of humanity. So this time, as I sat in a darkened room with radioactive sugars dripping into my system, preparing for the test that will tell my fortune, as always, I think of my family.

My fortune was not difficult to tell.  In cancer, the crystal ball is not opaque.  What happened to me is what happens to all women with metastatic breast cancer.   Cancer grows.

All we want as we are scanned and treated is to live long enough for the next milestone: to see a birthday, a graduation, wedding, or a grandchild. Our lives are like fireflies in an endless sky, blinking out quickly. But we have value while we are here. Without us, the person who may change the world would not come about.

We are worth money, and research dollars, and hope.

My cancer regrowth is in a difficult place - abdominal lymph nodes and portal hepatis. Lots of important veins and structures there.    I'll have a radiological interventionist consult to see if it can be biopsied.  If not, then I will go on Xeloda, and stay on Perjeta and Herceptin.  And cross my fingers that I am allowed another little miracle.  The miracle of time.  There are more milestones to reach.

Monday, October 12, 2015

TCL Roku TV - Givaway!

I've been hinting on facebook that I had an awesome giveaway coming up - and today is the day it begins.  I cannot be any happier that I get to give away such an amazing prize. ::::drumroll::::

A 32 inch, TCL Roku Color Series Smart TV - with a colored bezel to match any decor!

I was sent one to review, and being a techie, I was tickled pink. (Hey, it's October.)  

I have a confession to make.  I've been wanting to get this off my chest (what chest I have left, that is.)  I actually do like the color pink quite a lot.  And these TVs come in three different colors, including pink.

Still,  the TV I selected is blue, to match my silver, blue and purple bedroom.  I would have felt guilty admitting to wanting a pink one.

Let's get this out of the way:  this is clearly not a tech blog, so why would TCL give me a TV to review and give away?  Well, they are donating $50.00 for every pink TV sold to the Breast Cancer Research Foundation this month.  One of the higher-ups in the company lost somebody to breast cancer, so this is near and dear to their hearts.  The donation this month is truly meaningful and not just lip-service to "the cause."   Trust me, I sent many emails back and forth before I agreed to this promotion.  They did their research and found a good charity - didn't reflexively give to Komen.  (I love all my readers and jumped at the chance to give you a TV, but I would not have accepted this if Komen was the charity.) As you know, I don't want the marketing of our disease to be exploitative, and I want it to go to a good charity.  TCL (The Creative Life) meets both criteria.

To show you how sincere they are, the company told me I didn't even have to mention the donation if it made me uncomfortable, but of course, I will because I believe it comes from a good place.

Back to the TV:

We women are also in their target demographic so there is more than one reason to have me review their product.  The TVs are attractive (the bezels come in blue, green and pink) and maybe tech manufacturers are starting to understand that a big black box that dominates one of our rooms should, you know, be stylish.  Women buy TVs, too.  Duh.

Not to mention that we are sick. The truth is, sicker people watch more TV than healthy people.  Despite my pronounced dislike for daytime TV in doctor's offices, I am an admitted TV addict.  I love to read but years of chemo has made concentrating much harder.  So I watch a lot of documentaries, among other (trashier) things.  I have a Smart TV already, so  I watch network shows, cable, streaming, YouTube - I have Amazon Prime, Netflix, and now Roku.  I have my media bases covered!  Tech cred:  I bought a TiVo in the year 2000 when my son was 3 years old, and in his entire life at home, he has never seen a commercial nor known that TV hasn't always been pause-able.   All that is to say is I'm not a grandma behind the times - at least on this one front.

I know that not everybody is as into technology as me, so I was eager to see how this TV worked.

The box arrived well-wrapped.


Packed beautifully


While I intend to mount it on the wall, for now I just put it on a side table in my bedroom, where it stood easily without tipping.  It is very light, and I was able to carry it myself.  People who follow me on facebook know I've been feeling quite ill, and yet I still had no problems unboxing or moving it.


My first impression was that the TV with the colored bezel was attractive.  It adds a subtle touch of color to the TV, a welcome change from the normal black or silver.  The color is not so bright that it will overwhelm a decor but it adds a much needed touch of charm.



Pretty colors! Maybe pink would have matched after all!

I know that for some, technology can be confusing so I paid close attention to the setup.  It was a breeze, and if you know your WiFi password, you can do this without having to call in younger family members.  Even my husband could do it!  You are guided through it step-by-step.  You enter your password, you sign up for a Roku account, and you are done.






The remote is simple  It only has the buttons you need.  You want to stream something from Amazon Prime?  Hit that button.  One button access is handy.  You can get exactly what you want - streaming videos and shows, with no difficulty at all.

The picture quality is fine at 720p.  I haven't spent a lot of time watching shows yet but I didn't see any problems with motion or color control.

I am not connecting it to my Direct TV system (or ATT or whatever it is now) so I can't speak to any complications that may bring.  It looks easy as the rest of it, but for me, this is a perfect bedroom TV, where I can watch some YouTube beauty gurus complaining about each other (hilarious drama queens on YouTube if you haven't seen them), or stream a movie while lying in bed.  I use my Direct TV DVRs to record all the shows that I want to watch, and my husband and I watch TV together in the evening. This is the perfect TV to put in a bedroom, office, or craft room and watch all that weird stuff your husband doesn't want to see.

Botched?  My 500 pound life?  Hoarders?  I'm in!

This may be a perfect TV for cord-cutters too.  It is not expensive, it's fashionable, it is easy to move and set up and it functions perfectly with all the streaming services available.  It also comes in larger sizes so is perfect for a living room wall/main TV.

And I cannot believe how good this is, that I get to give one to you!   I love my readers so much. You have propped me up during times good and bad, and I'm so happy to be able to give back this way.

Bathed in the glow of happiness that I can give you one too!  

So enter the contest below and good luck!  I am using Rafflecopter, which picks a winner randomly.

For more information about TCL, please go to http://www.tclusa.com/, follow them on twitter or Instagram at #tcl_usa.  To enter the contest, you get an extra entry if you send a tweet, so tweet away!

ENTER  HERE

Wednesday, September 30, 2015

Breast Cancer Deaths by Year. Simple Raw Numbers.

Here is a chart to start Pinktober:

 Overall Breast Cancer Mortality by Year - USA*
Year Source No. of Deaths
2015** Cancer.org 40,730
2013-2014 Cancer.org 39,620
201l-2012 Cancer.org 39,520
2009-2010 Cancer.org 40,170
2007-2008 Cancer.org 40,460
2005-2006 Cancer.org 40,410
2003-2004 Cancer.org 39,800
2001 Wiley Online Library 40,600
2000 TCSG.org (ACS) 41,200
1999 Cancer Journal for Clinicians 43,700
1998 Cancer Journal for Clinicians 43,500
1997 SEER 44,190
1994 Wiley Online Library 46,000
1992 CDC 43,063
1991 CDC 43,582
1988 New York Times Article
(indicates that the average in the mid-80s was 40,000)
40,000
1970 Wiley Online Library 30,100

**estimate

What is this chart, you ask?

For years, patients, advocates and activists in the metastatic breast cancer community have shared this fact: 40,000 women per year die of breast cancer, a number which hasn't changed much over the years.  Each one of those 40,000 represents a beautiful life, somebody loved, and we all feel sadness that number is static.

We all say it, but is it true?  I decided to find proof.  Like with the 30% of early stage progress to mets number I recently questioned, I got curious.

I was surprised to find there was nothing in existence that outlined this, so I dug around and created a chart myself.

Apparently, these raw death numbers don't mean much to epidemiologists, who are mostly trying to tease out underserved populations.  Like the other number I questioned,  it just doesn't seem to be important to anybody but those of us living with the disease.  We will likely never know the number who relapse after an early-stage diagnosis.

It's always been my feeling that as laymen we shouldn't rely on statistics and numbers too heavily. The old phrase "There are lies, damn lies, and statistics" is true.  They rarely mean what we think they do (as in the famous 1-8 statistic).  The same numbers can be used to "prove" different things,  and are probably best left to mathematicians. However, in this case, I know something else - that too many women are still dying of breast cancer.  These 40,000 are people, and I have known a few of them.

As for the chart - it's hard to go further back than I have, and sources get pretty shaky beyond 2003. The US does not have a national cancer registry.

What's the point of knowing this?  Elementary school kids wear breast cancer bracelets, and college girls do manual breast exams, women get their mammograms. If a lump shows up, their first thought is breast cancer - in fact, in the course of keeping this blog I've been contacted by numerous 13 year old girls terrified they had cancer. Awareness, I contend,  has been achieved.  It was once an important concept, back when breasts were hidden and disease was shameful, but times have changed.  The intense focus on "awareness" has not.  It's like the temperance movement, an anachronistic idea in today's times.

I'm not saying one should not be screened.  Of course finding breast cancer early may give you a better shot at survival - but it also may not save you.   Studies are showing that the idea of early detection leading to a cure is not as hopeful as once believed.  A scalpel to cancer at the perfect moment should stop it in its tracks, but we've learned the biology is too complicated. Like we once believed you had to remove the breast, the pectoral muscles and all the lymph nodes in a disfiguring surgery called a Halsted mastectomy, we now know that removing only the cancerous lump may be enough. Halsted mastectomies are not done anymore, and we know that even a small cancer can metastasize, sometimes years after original diagnosis and treatment.  

Times change.

But one thing hasn't changed.  40,000 wives, mothers, sisters, loved ones and friends die of breast cancer - each and every year.  Far too many.



***


I wondered how to deal with Pink October this year.  Years past, I highlighted the insensitive advertising, boob focus, and misleading marketing, giving many what they wanted - attention.  I was sarcastic and angry - I fired off too many angry emails that effected nothing.  This year, I am going to be positive.  I'll be giving people my truth, things to think about, and ways to effectively approach this month.  I'm changing my focus too - anger is useless.  The likelihood is in our lifetime Pinktober won't stopped.  Rather than fight each company who wants to capitalize on our disease, we must instead try to get them to give where it is needed, and have our friends and neighbors understand a different point of view and what is needed to solve the problem of breast cancer. And, we need ammunition, although perhaps not pink bullets.  Wouldn't it be amazing if people realized awareness has been achieved, and it's time to move to Phase 2 - a cure? What if Komen decided to give their multi-millions to research instead of creating more awareness pamphlets? Truth is, they aren't going anywhere, but maybe we can convince them to spend their money in a wiser way.



*My disclaimer is that I am a writer and a creative type.  Numbers, as Barbie says, are hard.  My son, who is majoring in math at Caltech, might disagree with that, but he is not here to proofread this for me..   If you see that I've transposed something, let me know.  But for those of you who like to to use that 40,000 number (and I know who you are!) here is something link to. Please use it responsibly and remember to keep it in perspective and understand it is not a definitive answer of anything - other than we are still dying.




Monday, September 28, 2015

Pity Party and a Breast Cancer Lesson

Six years ago, when first diagnosed with cancer, I did what many do, including you, dear reader, who is maybe finding my blog for the first time.   I searched online for breast cancer stories, to find other women like me.  The one burning question I had, that you have too, is "What is going to happen to me?  Am I going to die of cancer?"

We all think that at the beginning.  Every single one of us.

The computer savvy among us go online. We research statistics, even though we don't truly understand what they mean. We read studies without knowing medical terminology.  Most importantly,  we find stories.  We find people with our stage, our age, our type of breast cancer and scan their histories for clues to our future.   We look for similarities in others thinking that in them, we can find ourselves.  We join forums and inspect signatures, looking for smoke signals that say we'll be okay.  "She has HER2+ Stage 2 cancer and has been alive for years" we think.  "Maybe it's not so bad." Our minds are programmed to make sense out of randomness and we refuse to accept that life is unknowable.

Early on, I was as voracious in my studies as any first year medical student.  I spent many bleary-eyed nights reading.  I read blogs, I read statistics, books about statistics (learning that I couldn't rely on statistics).  I read science textbooks, as well as  CaringBridge diaries.   But mostly, I read forums.  I joined the breastcancer.org forums and Her2 forums, among others, where I found practical, interactive value.   Not only did I read, I could talk, and ask questions, and share my treatment and find out what others thought.  I discovered what therapies other women were getting, what should happen when, what to expect with surgeries, even where to go for help or hats.  I learned that coping mechanisms are varied: many women are terrified, but not all.  Many woman turn to religion and there are atheists in foxholes.  Many are hopeful and the same number feel profound sadness.  I learned that neither sarcasm nor earnestness always go over well in written form, and that cancer doesn't always make people kind.

Not even me.

As I progressed with my disease, forums and the give and take had less value, and eventually became a negative for me. I knew too many woman like me, who I'd talked to, been friends with, who had progressed and then died.  It seemed wrong, to me,  to read about the death of a friend, post about how much you cared in her thread and extend sympathies to her family, and then not five minutes later, move on to the next thread to discuss your hot flashes. It seemed disrespectful, discordant with reality.  Yes, we tell ourselves, life goes on.  But still....it felt dirty.   So I stopped and stuck to facebook.   But for a while, it was a lifeline.

During that time when the fear was fresh, I met some wonderful women, a few of whom I'd kept in touch with and some who I had not but who followed me on this blog and voted for me in the contests, etc.  One particular woman has been a faithful friend, always sending me cards and trinkets, never caring whether I was healthy or sick, able to respond or not; she was just always in my online life.   She told me that a group of women who all had reconstruction at the same time I did have been meeting in Vegas annually, which I vaguely remember from my time on the forums, and this year my friend, who was an early member of this group, invited me to go as her guest.

Normally, I would say no.   Travel is hard and my health is unpredictable. It seems unfair to spend money on a trip that my husband doesn't go on; we've gone so few places together the past decade. In truth, I realize most of the traveling I like to do is between the pages of a book, safe in my bed.  Plus, I thought,  I'm not a "Vegas Person."  I don't drink (anymore), gamble, and these days - eat.  There are a million reasons not to go, and I thought of all of them.

Southwest had a sale and I booked it anyway.

I can still surprise myself.

This was back in June, when I was feeling pretty good for living in CancerLand.  The pain that I had back then was the same pain I have had for years, manageable with medication, fine if I rest.   It's a sad fact that I can no longer live without pain meds but a happy fact that it is controlled well enough.  My inability to eat means I am weak and have no stamina, and my anemia means I sleep a lot, but for the most part, I felt I could enjoy a trip and maybe participate and there was no reason to think I couldn't even improve between June and September.

What is that saying?  Life is what happens while you are busy making other plans?  Intense pain started up in my left side, the same place I've always had pain.  It's like a knife that had been there for years suddenly was heated up and twisted.  The intensity came and went, starting as a burning coal in my left side, spreading through my flank and throbbing into my back, making sleep difficult.  I had an attack two weeks before my trip that had me retching on the floor over a red plastic bowl kept under my bed for past attacks of nausea and nearly forgotten about.  The pain is so strong I felt I should go to the ER.  (I'm stubborn, I *hate* the ER; I did not go.)  Next day, I made an emergency appointment with my oncologist.  In an illustration of how close the cloud of cancer is, his smile turned to knitted brows in a nanosecond - I had a CT the next morning and my doctor had the results before I even got home.

No new cancer.

The pain had already eased, at least back to slightly above normal knife levels.  Then it heated up again, and again, I was a rolling ball of drug-slamming hurt.  Because life loves to screw with you, the pain began on a Friday night.  Again I waffled about the ER but again didn't go. We now know it's not cancer, I'm not dying, all systems are functioning - so it can wait.  I'll call on Monday if it's still there.  And naturally, Monday rolled around, with my trip two days away, and the pain, again, had waned.  I was left feeling bruised, like a cruel boyfriend had kicked me in the side; but battered women get up every day, and so did I.  I packed.   People started suggesting it was kidney stones, and that made sense.  I drank a lot of water.

I sent vibes to the universe that the pain stay at the lowest level for the next week, packed my pain meds and a few extra, and got on the plane.

Vegas was beautiful, and one doesn't have to be a "vegas person" to be impressed.  My friend was everything I expected and more - a solid supporter and a person who took care of me - she even had a limo waiting for me at the airport, making me feel like a celebrity.

I've been so independent all my life that I'm slightly startled that somebody helping me is what I need now, but it is the truth.

My room (at the Arias, quite lovely) was an adjoining room with my friend next door.  She was sharing with other friends to keep costs down; I need my privacy more than money.  We kept the doors between the rooms ajar so we could chat.  While we were all getting ready to go to a reception, the pain started up in my side again.  Frustrated, I took some meds and rested on the bed, my favorite humor radio show playing on the phone to calm me down.  Next door, I could hear the women chattering eagerly and excitedly.  The music played, the wine flowed,  and they began singing.   As the meds took effect, I peeked in and they were doing that beautiful girl thing  - getting dressed together, blowdrying hair, all sharing a bathroom and singing and dancing with towels wrapped around them.  These women were mothers, grandmothers even, but still young and sexy, from all parts of the country - and sharing joy.  They had formed this friendship long ago and were uninhibitedly loving each other.

Like sisters.  There in front of me were the mythical breast cancer sisters we have heard so much about.  Like unicorns, so strong and solid and rare.

Aching with admiration and pain, I took video for them. Generously, they wanted to include me but knowing the pain was etched on my face, I insisted on staying behind the camera and participating that way.

On the way to the reception, walking with these unicorn women, men were falling over themselves to talk to them. These girls just strode through the Vegas strip, glowing, owning their space.  Heads turned. They had their power back and it showed.

And that's when I lost mine.

It's not my nature to feel sorry for myself but nature lost its way.  A tear slipped past my eyelash extensions as it hit me - we'd all been diagnosed with cancer at the same time, and for them it was over; in the past.   They felt good, they looked beautiful, they had their lives back. They weren't living in pain, taking medication with the spectre of death hovering near.  They could eat, enjoy their lives, and even drink and dance the night away as I would have done just a few years ago. They had developed these friendships and grown their lives while I'd been sick, doing chemo after chemo, and sleeping.  They got to be the mythical survivors, and I didn't.  They were done, and I wasn't.  They were healthy and I was still sick, in treatment every three weeks, year after year, turning into a weakly skeleton.    It felt so unfair.

I gave myself a pity party.

I know.  Not my finest moment.

As a tear fell, I quickly brought the ever-present Perjeta/Herceptin drip Kleenex to my eye.  I hoped no one would notice my moment of despair,  but one of these girls, observant, asked "What's wrong, are you okay?"    And I briefly shared my thoughts, simply saying "You all look so healthy and for me it's not over"  and was rewarded with a gift of a simple kiss on the cheek and the comment, "You know what?  That really sucks."

Validated.  No false claims of "you'll get there too" or "you are doing so well" or "you don't look sick"   or whatever it is that people say that I no longer listen to.  Just the truth.

Yes, it sucks.

We soon saw a Vegas bride, standing in her wedding dress near a slot machine, her proud and slightly tipsy parents handing out flowers, her shell-shocked husband handing her a water bottle. She bragged that she'd found her beaded and tulled gown just the day before, and I realized this was all spur of the moment, a true Vegas wedding.   We congratulated her, and as I took a flower,  I transferred my sympathy to her as I imagined how her life, like all of ours, will not go as she planned this night.  She'll have too many babies or none at all, she'll get divorced or stay married but either way, there will be rough times. He'll cheat or she will, dogs will crap in the house and cats will scratch the furniture and they'll blame each other.  She will have love and sadness, grace and pain. She may even get cancer, or he will. That's how it goes, I thought, as we walked on, sniffing our posies.

At the reception, I met many women, some who knew me from this blog, some who didn't.  I was struck by the disparate group, seemingly having nothing in common yet sharing complete togetherness.  There seemed to be every difference you could imagine - ethnic, socioeconomic, age, nationality,  yet none of it mattered. They were  all coming together in what appeared to be true, loving friendship and sisterhood started by a common experience.  Real sisterhood, the kind that consists of unconditional support.

It just worked.  There was not a  moment of cattiness.  I dare you to find a group of 40 women who lift each other up like that.  There was love in that room, palpable as our lumps were so many years ago.  My eyes prickled again, this time in appreciation. They took an ugly, terrible, life-changing experience and turned it into a thing of beauty and are flashing life for the world to see.

I realized how trivial and self-centered my pity party had been. Deep-down, cancer is not over for any of them, which is one reason they meet 7 years later. They have fears of relapse. They have hot flashes and bone aches and tales of tamoxifen and arimidex and nerve damage leftover from chemo, they have anxiety about their next mammogram or oncology appointment, and they have friends, who like me, are metastatic and who they worry about. Yes, maybe my life is more difficult and will be shorter, or maybe it only seemed that way in that selfish moment.  I am here now, and now is all that counts.

Every year, these girls walk towards each other under the starburst lights of Vegas.  Some drive, some fly, some save pennies for this moment of rare sisterhood.  If you really are searching for the answer, here is the truth:  yes, you will die.  If not of cancer, then of old age.  The mystery of your future is really no mystery at all.  At the very end,  we all end up in the same place, with emerald grass waving over our heads inside an eternity of blue silence.  The lesson of cancer, of life,  is to find your family, wherever they may be and love them while you can.  Some get married by slot machines in Vegas and some find each other on stormy seas of disease.  It is who we cling to for comfort and friendship while on our walk through life that makes our journey sublime.


Tuesday, September 8, 2015

The Brobe - and a contest!



"It's my baby, just like your blog is to you," said Allison, as she wrote to me about her cancer-inspired bathrobe.

Her words caught my attention.  I have put a lot of time, energy and thought into writing this blog.  I am as protective of it as a 1950s teenager would be of the diary in which she wrote "Mrs. John Smith" over and over. Not that every word is perfection, of course; most are not.  I don't even agree with a few of the things I wrote early on.  But I won't change them or remove them, as they are a sign of my evolution. My heart and soul is here, and if you read it all, and are a discerning person, you will know me a little.

Can a bathrobe be that revealing, I wondered?  And, should it be?  Like a baby you nurture and help grow, she obviously had to adjust as new new ideas inspired, and had to have an end result for the market - unlike a blog which can keep going and going.....  (I shudder to think about my end result.)  She has hopes and dreams, of it helping people, filling a need, and making some money.

I agreed to review one - to babysit her baby.

Based on the Brobe, will I get to know Allison a little?

It's like one of those facebook games, "What does your design say about you?"

Here is the answer:

"Allison is a very clever person, organized and thoughtful.  She likes luxury and comfort, and is a problem solver. She has the ability to notice the tiniest nuances and details. She believes everything has a place and likes creative elegance."

The Brobe may initially have been designed for cancer patients, but it's useful for all women (and men, I daresay.)  The thoughtful design elements, missing from so many robes, are certainly useful for the breast cancer market, but would be wonderful for the Mommy market, the Grandma market, the Teenage market  - pretty much the Bathrobe market.

So what does it have?  All the things that women need in cancer treatment are there.

The fabric is very soft.  Cancer patients, post-surgery, during radiation, and because of chemo, tend to have very sensitive skin.   I am six years into cancer treatment and I rarely get dressed for this very reason.  Most clothing is not soft enough for my skin.  I'm like a toddler feeling every tag, and screaming "Mommy, cut it off!"  Only it's everything.  This is not a joke:  Before cancer, I used to come home and immediately kick off my shoes.  Now, AC, I come home and immediately kick  off my pants.

The Brobe comes with a post-surgical bra that's useful beyond post-surgery.  It's comfortable and yet supportive.  Plus it matches the Brobe, which helps with any gaps.  The bra opens down the front and closes with velcro.  Why velcro?  Because it's much easier to manage after surgery.    Many front close bras have hooks and eyes or zippers, something difficult to manage, especially if you end up having shoulder problems, as I did.  The bra comes with pockets, which can be used for ice packets or a prosthesis.  (She has one specifically for nursing mothers too, which allows a mom to expose one breast.)  This cancer bra (which I think would work for moms too)  is comfortable enough to sleep in, as I have done.  Post surgery, I find I cannot go without a bra - ever, and I'm pleased to have found this solution.   And if you need to go to the hospital at some future point (knock wood you don't)  you can wear this bra and doctors can have access to everything they need.  I was in the hospital for a week with c-diff, and I had an "over the head"  sports bra on when I was rushed in.  I wore it the entire 7 days.  Yes, it got rank but I'm so happy I had it.  This bra would have been better as I could have removed it for bathing if necessary.


Next up, I'll appear in Victoria's Secret Elderly Mastectomy Edition

The robe's large inside pockets are genius.  They not only hold drains, but are also big enough to carry things you might need.  A remote control,  a phone, a headscarf, just to name a few.  Of course, there are pockets for your hands too, and if you are anything like me and most Herceptin users - it's useful for tissues, tissues, more tissues and used tissues.  The many pockets are not limited to cancer patient items - in them a mom can put a bottle, a pacifier, a toy, a washcloth, a packet of baby wipes.  A college kid can stash a toothbrush, hair products, condoms, tampons and a notebook.  Granny can use it for her glasses, her Reader's Digest,  her dusting powder and her Life Alert.   It really is handy to have those large inside pockets no matter the age group.

There is also a separate shower drain belt, which is removable and which holds post-surgical drains, either for a shower or on the go.  While pinning drains on a tee shirt is a fine solution, I do find that this belt is well-designed and better than pins.  It is nice to have the drain belt and the pockets when you need them.  You can put on the belt and tuck your drains away and you don't look like a Halloween fright.

She didn't forget style!  It has two buttons in the front and a drawstring waistband, giving it almost a trench feel.   It is definitely something you can wear when guests come by and not feel like you are undressed.  And, and it's machine washable.  So far, my dogs' hair (which I think has magnetic properties that defy physics), has not stuck to it, and my dogs are fawn colored and my Brobe is Navy.

In short, this is an excellent product, and not just for a cancer patient. It's just a good robe.   It definitely fills the niche for a cancer patient, and I'm certain the Mommy version is just as thoughtful - but you don't need any special circumstances to find this a good robe.  If you don't have cancer or kids, and are just just living a regular old life, this is the Brobe for you.

So Allison, if this is your baby -  it has good genetics.  I hope that it's out of university and planning to buy you a house!

Allison has gracious agreed to two giveaways!  One lucky person will get the post-surgical bra (good for anybody as I said) and one person will get the drain belt. So if you are reading this and are going to have a mastectomy or know somebody who is, enter to win.  Go to my facebook page to find the details, which will be posted shortly.


Cute enough to entertain guests.



Fits good even for the booty-less.


Disclaimer:  I sometimes review products designed for cancer patients.  I don't get paid to do these reviews,  and I am not affiliated with the companies in any way.  The only thing I have received is the product itself. It would be hard to review something without seeing it,  although you'd be amazed at how many ask me to do just that!  Those of you who know me understand that I believe a product must have value for a patient for me to even consider posting it. I worry about the morality of marketing to cancer patients at a time when they are most vulnerable - on the other hand, I support people who see a problem and fill a need.  So when I do reviews, it's because I think the product does the latter.