During a
time of illness and recovery, with all the uncertainty inherent in the
situation, a multitude of questions may occur to family, friends, and
yourself. Here are a few we pondered
during the time between my treatments in May and November.
“Nana, why
are you walking so funny?” asked my grandson, as I shuffled from the dining
room table to the couch. “I don’t know, Sweetheart. My feet just feel heavy,” I replied. It was during the time of deep fatigue, and it
seemed as if there were weights around my ankles holding me down. I simply couldn’t lift my feet off the floor. Fortunately, with time my gait returned to normal,
even though my pace might be as slow as a turtle.
“Mom, do you think you’re getting the best
treatment possible?” I believe this
question was prompted both by love and by fear.
My husband had died suddenly and unexpectedly while my youngest was still
a teenager. Our family had gathered for
a festive Easter dinner and an afternoon of playing board games on April 15,
2001. Four days later Andy suffered a
fatal heart attack. Now, my children’s
usually energetic and active mother had a serious diagnosis. It was troubling and even scary.
We arranged
for consultation with a doctor associated with the University of Pennsylvania’s
respected center for liver cancer research and treatment. He noted that our liver doctor had been
trained at their center, and that she was following the protocol they might be
using for my case. There were some other
approaches and trials at U Penn that I might qualify for, and one additional
test they would recommend, but my Tucson-based treatment plan looked good. We decided to keep my care here, but to
request the additional test. It isn’t available yet in Tucson, and it also presented
an insurance-related challenge. However,
it has now been authorized and scheduled at a cancer center in the Phoenix area
on Christmas Eve.
Another
question: How many of the symptoms I was
experiencing were related to the cancer, and which might be for other
reasons? The persistence of considerable
intestinal distress, despite some interventions built into the treatment plan,
bothered me. I finally decided to return
to my GI doctor to see what he or the nurse practitioner might think. They gave me a test which revealed a problem
unrelated to the cancer. I’m receiving
treatment and relief. The lesson? Listen to your body and don’t hesitate to seek
further medical advice if particular health issues persist.
“What about
milkshakes?” This became a source of a
bit of family controversy. A couple of years before my diagnosis, I had worked
hard to lose weight for the sake of my health and had reached my goal. Now, because of the cancer and radiation
treatment, I lost 15 more pounds. My
doctors instructed me to gain it back, which was, for me at least, easier said
than done. Besides healthy and balanced
meals, I was encouraged to snack between meals on nuts, fruits, cheese, even malts
or milkshakes. But some members of my
family were concerned about sugar feeding my cancer and contributing to its
growth. Even though I found inconclusive
and contradictory research on the sugar issue, one or two folks continued to be
concerned. From my perspective, milkshakes
had been a rare but special treat in the past.
Now I had a reason to indulge without guilt. With the blessing of two of my doctors, I added
milkshakes to my diet, and the weight came back slowly.
Finally, I would
ask myself every so often whether I were spending my remaining time in life in
the best way. Finding balance between
service to others and taking care of myself, between action and reflection, has
always been an open question for me.
Illness makes this question particularly relevant and urgent. Several new considerations enter the
equation. My body puts limits now on how
many meetings, demonstrations and events I can attend without tiring too
much. My plan to leave my affairs in
order so my children will have the information they need when I’m incapacitated
or gone demands an investment of time and attention. I long for more time to visit and share
experiences with friends and family as well as to meditate and to
exercise. I’m frustrated—even angered--
by the truth that despite my desire, there is no way to borrow or create more
time!
Resources
during the time
between the first radiation treatment at the end of May and the second one in
November:
A friend
gave me a book, Cancer Free with Food:
A step-by-step plan with 100+ recipes to fight disease, nourish your
body, and restore your health by Liana Werner-Gray. It has a list of the 15 top cancer-healing
foods. I had never heard of broccoli
sprouts, but they can actually be found in Safeway.
Delicious and easy to incorporate into salads and sandwiches. Most of
the foods were familiar and already part of my diet, like blueberries, dark
greens, broccoli, grapes, tomatoes and quinoa.
Other were new to me or foods I seldom ate, like turmeric, tigernuts,
raw garlic and ginger root. Some of the
recipes look quite good.
A book that has
been a rich source for meditation during this time is My Grandfather’s
Blessings: Stories of strength, refuge,
and belonging by Rachel Naomi Remen, M.D. The book is a collection of stories drawn
from her life as the granddaughter of an Orthodox rabbi and her work as a
physician and therapist. It’s the kind of book that invites re-reading because
of the depth of insight and hope it offers.
Besides
classical music, I enjoyed listening to Sweet Honey in the Rock singing “Somebody
Prayed for Me” and Odetta singing “This Little Light of Mine”.
During the
most difficult time of fatigue and persistent gut discomfort, I was reading Sister
Joan Chittister’s little book Between the Dark and the Daylight: Embracing the contradictions of life. She writes, “The light we gain in
darkness is the awareness that, however bleak the place of darkness was for us,
we did not die there. We know now that
life begins again on the other side of the darkness. Another life.
A new life. After the death, the
loss, the rejection, the failure, life does go on. Differently, but on. Having been sunk into the cold night of
despair—and having survived it—we rise to new light, calm and clear and
confident that what will be, will be enough for us.”

Thank you for your honesty, hope, and sharing. Namaste.
ReplyDeleteThank you for sharing your journey. You are such an inspiration to so many of us �� We continue to pray for you.
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