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Wednesday, September 26, 2007

the cancer

It's the last week of September 2007 now, which means it's been five years since I was diagnosed with Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma, or NHL. That's a weird thing to think about. It's been some serious downs, and some definite ups, and some things I didn't think I would make it through. But I'm here.


HOW IT ALL STARTED
Only five years (and a lifetime) ago I got "sick" - let's just say "blood" and "stool" and "more than 2 weeks" and leave it at that. I almost didn't even mention it to the doc, I was so embarrassed. I was raised not to discuss such things. But I said it. Just to be safe, the doc thought it was best if I got a colonoscopy. "I know you're only 29, and you don't get a lot of fiber in your diet, but let's just be sure." So for opening my big mouth, I got to get a colonoscopy. (Which you absolutely MUST do if even the tiniest thing seems wrong!) But I'll be honest with you - god does it suck. The stuff they give you to drink! It's so salty, and there's NOTHING that can cover up that taste. OMG it makes you want to gag. In comparison, having a camera on a snake tube stuck up your butt is NOTHING. When it was over, I got to see weird pictures of my colon, where it was just solid bumps. They took some out for a biopsy "just to be safe". And then began the wait.


THE CALL
In these five years, so much has happened, so much has changed, and my memory definitely isn't what it used to be. But I can still remember the doctor calling to tell me my biopsy results. In my mind, I can still see the notepad I wrote what he was saying down on, the scratchy feel of the paper under my hand. The afternoon light coming through the windows next to my cube. I wasn't sure what he was saying, but I distinctly heard "-oma" in there. "Multiple lymphomatous polyposis? What does that mean?" I asked. He replied, like a teacher to a kindergartener, "Well... polyposis means it's polyps, multiple means there are many, and lymphomatous... well, that's cancer of your lymph system, basically your immune system. So it looks like you have lymphoma which has advanced to the stage of causing many polyps in your colon. But MLP only happens to old men..." Apparently the fact that a 29 year old female had it was very puzzling to him, and the concept was much more intriguing than talking to the actual 29 year old female on the phone. He told me I needed to see an oncologist quickly, and he'd recommend a very good one. He gave me the number, and the doctor's name, and we were done.

I sat there for a moment, panicked. I didn't really know what all that meant. I had to call back to get some clarification once I could get my thoughts together, and he wasn't too happy about that either. I spent every spare moment online, looking up definitions and treatments, and terrifying myself with survival rates; since MLP is mainly an old man disease, the survival rates usually hover around 5 years. Five years!!! I was going to be dead in five years!

I went into all kinds of shocking feelings. I wanted to be left alone - I wasn't even going to tell my family; I'd handle this on my own. And then I felt I couldn't do it on my own, so I had to tell some people, but one of the women I worked with at the time had just been diagnosed with breast cancer and was about to start chemo, and I was afraid that if I told anyone I'd be "stealing her thunder" - I was thinking the craziest thoughts!


THE ONCOLOGIST
It was going to be over a month before I could get into the oncologist, so the colonoscopy doc called in a favor to get me in immediately. I got an appointment right away to see Dr. K, the best oncologist/hematologist at the Cancer Therapy Research Center, or CTRC. I think the appointment was at 1pm, and we were in the waiting room for over 3 hours. By the time I was seen, I was beyond frazzled. But the doc was very nice, and explained everything to me. Luckily I had my cousin, Erinn, and a friend, Mike, there to take notes because afterwards, I remembered nothing. He explained Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma, and the treatment options, and that I'd need MRI's and CT scans to see which other areas were involved. ("Other areas?" I thought.) Everything I'd read said you must get a second opinion, and I'd decided on MD Anderson in Houston, who had said all they needed was a bone marrow sample and the scan results. Simple.

It had gotten dark, and there were only a few lab techs and nurses left to help with the bone marrow aspiration. They laid me on my stomach and gave me Versed, which is a "twilight drug". You're not totally out, but you're not totally there either. They had to give me several doses because I could still feel pin pricks on my pelvis. When she saw the huge needle and syringe, Erinn had to leave because she was going to pass out. As the drug kicked in, I felt it was vitally important to tell Mike that we HAD to see Mortal Kombat in the immediate future. I couldn't get the theme song to it out of my head (you have to admit - it's a catchy tune).

And then the procedure began. Immediately I began to whimper and wail that it really hurt. Dr. K reached around in front of me to show me the ballpoint pen in his hand and say, "I'm only marking the spots where we're going to put the needle in." I didn't quite believe him. But he was right, because once the needle started going in, now that hurt like hell. Tears were streaming down my face, and I was involuntarily moaning louder and louder. They got the bone marrow for the test, and I got to feel like someone had kicked me with stiletto heels atop each butt cheek for a couple of days.


THE CANCER
All the test results came in, even from MD Anderson, and the final verdict was Stage IV, indolent (low-grade), B-cell, follicular Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma. Stage IV means that the cancer:
  • is found in at least one organ or tissue other than the lymph nodes and may be in nearby lymph nodes; and that
  • it affects lymph nodes or organs in all 4 quadrants (right and left side, above and below the diaphragm).

The lymphoma was in my colon, a chain of lymph nodes up the center of my body, my adenoids/sinuses, and my bone marrow.


THE CHEMO
The treatment plan would be 4 rounds of chemo, each a month apart; each round would be 3 days of chemo, 6-8 hours each day. I would be on a combination of Cytoxan, Fludara, and Rituxan. Some people are allergic to Rituxan, so we'd have to keep a close watch.

And then began the real roller-coaster ride. Everything became a blur. I think I was told the diagnosis and treatment plan on a Thursday, and Dr. K had me in for surgery to get a medi-port installed the next morning so it would have healed enough that we could start chemo that next Monday. I needed a medi-port for injection of the chemo because my veins are so delicate that they roll and are impossible to find; if you can find them they burst; and the chemo drugs are so damaging they'd ruin my veins even further. A medi-port is a little device that has a rubbery top that reseals (like the top of the test tubes they draw blood into) which they put under the skin in your chest and the underside sticks into a major artery. I think they suture it together. It was all black-and-blue and nasty looking when I came out. But I had bigger things to worry about.

My parents were coming in for my first round of chemo. I spent all my energy setting up my "chemo bag" so I wouldn't be bored. Books to read, coloring books, colored pencils and blank sketchbooks, my mp3 player, my laptop. The amazing people I worked with had organized a volunteer system of bringing us dinner, and later, volunteers to stay with me overnight for every round of chemo. You name it, it was covered. I was prepared. I went to bed early to get plenty of rest the night before my first day of chemo.

And then whammo! I woke up with the worst migraine. My sinuses were stopped up, and I'd gotten some sort of devil mix of sinus headache/migraine that made me so sick. I couldn't even lay down because I thought my head was going to explode. My migraine medicine wasn't working. I started panicking. How could the chemo do it's job if I wasn't rested? If I was throwing up all night and day??? Dr. K said we'd have to reschedule if I was that sick. I was crying, practically hyperventilating, which definitely doesn't help. And I was so exhausted - all I wanted was to sleep, but I couldn't lay down. My dad just took me in his arms and held me against him and quieted me down, telling me, "Just fall asleep. I'll hold you up." And he did. My dad held me up until I fell asleep, and he held me up while I slept, long enough for my medicine to kick in, and then he put me into bed, just like when I was a kid. (Just so you know, I'm sobbing like a baby as I write this, because that's the most amazing thing anyone has ever done for me. It is so touching, and protecting ... and fathering. It's beautiful.) That's my dad. This is the dad that has driven from Houston to San Antonio when I was so dehydrated from throwing up (after a night of heavy drinking) to buy me crackers and soda because I was so alone that no one cared enough to do that for me.

So I did get to start my first round of chemo as scheduled. I don't think I even used much of the stuff from my chemo bag. I had an allergic reaction to the Rituxan, they dosed me with Benadryl and Tylenol, and I zonked out. Eventually I got it down to a science. 3 days of chemo, recover for 4 days, and be back at work the following Monday. After my third round, I even traveled to Jamaica to "run" in a marathon for the American Stroke Association. I think I made it just over 6 miles. And then in the fourth month I bought a new car, and when I was done with chemo, I bought a house. The closing date was my 30th birthday. All of my end-of-treatment tests came out clean, and all that remained was 2 years of maintenance therapy with Rituxan.


THE FALLOUT
I started having trouble with Rituxan after the second round, was a complete wreck for the third round, and Dr. K decided not to do the fourth round because of my condition. My life was such a mess, personally and professionally, that at that time, I honestly don't know if I was so fatigued and incapable of getting out of bed from the Rituxan or from severe depression. I was bursting into tears at work, I couldn't focus, I couldn't remember anything, and I was overcome with stress. I had to take a month off of work on doctor's orders because it seemed like I might lose my mind otherwise. It was as if all the time and energy I'd spent keeping a brave face and working throughout treatment was being sucked away as a late payment. I had been terrified (and pretending not to be) for almost two years, and it caught up with me in a bad way.

It took a few things (good and bad) to shake me out of my stupor: meeting a great guy who cared for me and re-lit my passion for design and life, and my mom dying unexpectedly. Mom's death woke me from a bad dream and I realized I couldn't live the way I'd been living. Life was too short to be dealing with bullshit, working at a place I'd grown to hate, and feeling so stuck and worthless that I sometimes thought it would have been better if the cancer had killed me. That was no way to live!!! I decided to change my surroundings, my job, and make the most out of life; really start living! I got a great job at a dream employer, moved to California, and JR and I are living together; we're going to shows constantly, going on weekend trips, just enjoying the hell out of all of it. And now I'm so glad I made it.


THE PRESENT
All of my checkups had gone fine, and when I moved to SF I got a new oncologist, the actual doctor at Stanford Cancer Center who invented Rituxan! And then in May I started to have symptoms again. And after two weeks, I called him and he said, "We need to get you in for a colonoscopy ASAP." So, in the middle of the biggest hell week of my work life at the G, I had to take a day and a half off to do this, and then fret over how long it takes to get the results.

It's so weird what this does to your psychology; the colonoscopy photos and the results writeup sounded really positive to JR, but they sounded like a death knell to me. Underneath it all, I've been so afraid that it was going to take me out before I reached five years after all. But it actually was OK - no significant changes since the last tests. I think I now have four colonoscopies under my belt (so to speak!), and I still have to go back for checkups every six months (maybe I'll progress to a year between checkups eventually).

Dr. K said, "Once you've got this, you've got it for life." I understand that better now. It's never really gone. You are in remission, and you hope that it'll stay that way. But every little thing, every slight illness or pain you feel, you think it's the cancer, back to get you, and you panic. But that's normal. It'll happen for the rest of your life. You just have to remember: you're a cancer survivor. And if it comes back, you deal with that then. There was a great poem on the wall of the chemo center in San Antonio - I don't remember it exactly, but the gist of it is this:
"You have cancer. Don't let cancer have you."

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13 Comments:

Blogger Aaron said...

I still remember the meal I made for you and Julee: Spicey poached salmon with rice and steamed baby carrots.

I don't know if it's because I've been a bad friend or if you've just been so resolute and strong throughout this entire ordeal, but I have never seen you giving up or giving in.

I'm so proud of you, Ashley, and I'm so glad that we get to hang out again.

(I also cried during the father holding sequence... aaron.heartStrings.tug(); )

3:19 PM, September 26, 2007

 
Blogger V said...

thanks, aaron! i remember that meal too! every single meal, and every single person who took me to a treatment or stayed overnight to watch over me meant so much.

i'm glad you're here too.

4:59 PM, September 26, 2007

 
Blogger particleman said...

Dear V,

You are awesome. I really want to come to SF to see you and JR and lots of shows. How is spring in SF?

p-man

6:56 PM, September 26, 2007

 
Anonymous Shannon (Moore) said...

You rock, Ash. I said it then, and I'll say it again now, I suck at public displays of affection but you are an amazing person and I'm very proud to have had the honor of knowing you and working with you. And when I realized you and JR had hooked up, I had to smile. I felt the same way about working with JR (I still remember JR covering his ENTIRE CUBE in a complex logic flow diagram for a dotcom project... I think level term life insurance? or maybe the annuity project? anyway, doesn't matter... the WHOLE DAMNED CUBE. I'd just joined the team and thought holy-crap-I'm-done-for! hehe)

P.S. If I'd have cooked any meals for you, you wouldn't have lived through the night! I can't cook, but I will try, for Sara's sake.

P.P.S. I happened to walk into the company restroom when you were having a particularly hard day back then. Reading your words brought back the image to me immediately. I didn't say anything to you (you had two friends comforting you--Pam and Leslie) and I felt awkward, like I'd just intruded on something sacred/intensely personal. So, I probably didn't even seem to care, but I did (and do). And I've always wished that I'd gone up and told you later, once that moment had passed, how very strong I thought you were...that even in that moment, I didn't see someone weak and lost, but rather thought, "It's about time... she needs a release!"

--
What Cancer Cannot Do

Author: Unknown

Cancer is so limited...
It cannot cripple love.
It cannot shatter hope.
It cannot corrode faith.
It cannot eat away peace.
It cannot destroy confidence.
It cannot kill friendship.
It cannot shut out memories.
It cannot silence courage.
It cannot reduce eternal life.
It cannot quench the Spirit.

11:29 PM, September 26, 2007

 
Blogger V said...

thanks you shannon! now _i'm_ all teary-eyed! i think i was overcome with panic that day. almost like claustrophobia.

and JR is the greatest - i couldn't have gotten this job without his support and renewing of my love for design. i had lost so much hope at that place. they made me feel worthless, and JR was like a smack in the face saying, "hello!!! you rock!!! remember?"

so thanks for caring - it really means a lot to me. i love you guys so much! friends are the best. i miss everyone too.

11:00 AM, September 27, 2007

 
Blogger V said...

and p-man: spring in SF is just like every other season: great! and if it's not great in the city it's about a 20 minute drive to where it *is* great!

we would love it if you came out to visit. our guest room is always open. (and there's a Duvel with it's own special Duvel glass just waiting for you...) :D

and we could see all kinds of shows. just give us a heads up, and we'll find all kinds of stuff to do.

miss you!

11:03 AM, September 27, 2007

 
Blogger Shyer said...

I can't imagine a day without your shining face...reading this made me cry. I had no idea! I mean it's not like it just comes up in conversation, but wow! To imagine what you have gone through and here you are, always a breath of fresh air. You're an amazing woman Ms. Ashley and I am so glad that I have been able to get to know you, and am looking forward to many more years of hanging out with you and JR!

Much love for you!!

Shy

2:27 PM, September 27, 2007

 
Blogger V said...

oh, thanks, shy! you guys are a big slice of sunshine in my life, and in JR's. you're like sugar and spice and everything nice! :)

you're right - it just doesn't come up in conversation. but we'll be coming in to celebrate this week.

thanks for being our bestest new friends in SF. :D

2:42 PM, September 27, 2007

 
Blogger KCKoenig said...

thank you for sharing this with us, Ashley. I know it's hard to get to know each other across states - but I feel closer to you after learning this.

My bro is pretty great, huh? You've also done REALLY great things for him as well :) and I THANK YOU THANK YOU THANK YOU for that!

~C

5:29 PM, September 27, 2007

 
Blogger jonstovall said...

This post has been removed by the author.

9:24 PM, September 27, 2007

 
Blogger jonstovall said...

Just when I was getting to know you, I asked Jen if she wanted to see something by the one of the bravest people I've ever met. We looked at your pottery.

9:26 PM, September 27, 2007

 
Anonymous imelda said...

wow ashley! what a post. i am so glad you are doing so well 5 years out. you are an inspiration for living life to its fullest now and not waiting around for life to change for the better on its own. your mantra is always fresh in my mind.. thank you!

"Ashley: mantra: life's too short to hate what you do every day."

i wish you the best for the next 5 years and beyond!

11:16 PM, September 29, 2007

 
Anonymous Bo Lora said...

Ash,

I think many of us died "over there." I was willing to flip burgers if I could find a place that would pay me enough for my mortgage!

Every time I think about all the talent I worked with (like you) it is amazing. We really all learned from each other and there was a time when we really were ahead of things... but like you said, we got to a place of lost hope... but now so many of us are doing so well, outside...

I congratulate you on being a victor and not a victim.

The Bible says: Let the weak say, 'I am strong.' Joel 3:10

What I remember through your trials five years ago was that you stood defiantly and in your weakness you said 'I am strong.'

Thank you for sharing your story, I pray that it will bring value to many that are going through similar trials and it gives them hope.

Bo

p.s. I will be driving down to cali soon, my contract in Seattle ends in December...

12:31 AM, November 15, 2007

 

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