Wednesday, September 20 – Symposium…

I didn’t really sleep.  I fell asleep last night, but I was awake again at 2 am.  I fell back to sleep after 5 am, and I woke up before 6 am.  This is now my thing.  I get ready, I have the Symposium today.  How do I act normal?  My world is upside down.  How do I do this?  My dragon is active, squeezing my heart here, punching my lungs there, kick to the gut, a whoosh through my head, remember to breathe girl, breathe.

I leave for the Symposium like it’s any other day.  A normal day.   You can do this; it’s just another day of the week.  You were looking forward to this.  You can do this.  I arrive at the location where the symposium is being held.  Lots of people I know and recognize, people I don’t know.  I should sit near an end where I can excuse myself if necessary.   Evelyn will be calling with MRI and HER2 results.  She may be able to get me in for Genetic Testing…

Act normal, smile, fake it.  Ten minutes before the opening remarks, my phone rings.  Evelyn.   MRI is clean.  No other lesions or lymph node involvement were spotted.  It’s a relief.  Exhale some of that pent-up anxiety.  HER2 is negative as well.  We’re confirming this is a triple-negative cancer.  And that little bit of anxiety just released is back.  Triple Negative sounds bad.  My husband begged me not to Google anything about cancer.  I will not go down that rabbit hole.

I can do this today.  Immerse myself in the day.  I signed up for this so I could learn more about this system.  I can do this.  I run into Rita.  I worked for her a long time ago.  During a break, it comes out.  I tell her I was just diagnosed yesterday.  She had breast cancer.  Different.  Slow growing, lumpectomy, radiation.  She will help me.  It helps knowing I have someone on my side.  I have her number.  I will call her.  I make it through the day.  I run into a few others.  I told an old colleague who was there as well.  I leave as soon as I feel it is appropriate.

Home.  I’m trying to be normal about this.  My world is no longer normal.  I email the family with the news of the MRI.  Small steps.  We can do this.  We.  We.  Me…  Husband insisted I had to join a support group.  Arrangements are made to be at the Friday morning welcome meeting so we can start that immediately as well.  How do I not have questions?  I do have questions about chemo; I know the basics.  How sick is this really going to make me?  Google that.  I can Google that.  It’s not answering my questions.  Maybe I need to be more specific on my cancer so I can get specific answers on the chemo.  Google: Triple Negative Cancer Chemo.  First sentence up: Triple Negative cancers have the lowest 5-year survival rate…  OMG, close, close, close!  Google is not my friend!  Stop trying to figure out what will happen with chemo.  My anxiety now contains some tendrils of fear, orange, and red, mixed in with the gray.  It is a hard ball in the center of the anxiety, making it heavy and nauseous.   I should catch up on work.  Work takes me away, do not think about that C word.  Don’t think about Triple Negative.  Don’t think about any of it.  Ignore the ball in my gut. 

What if I must have a mastectomy?  Do I want reconstruction?  Do I have to know this now?  What if I need a bilateral mastectomy?  Will they feel fake?  Will they feel at all?  My husband says he will love me no matter what.  He doesn’t love me for my boobs.  He doesn’t care if I have them or not.  But I think he might.  Do I want new boobs if I must remove my real ones?   One, maybe the other, is trying to kill me.  Why?  I should eat.  I can’t eat.  Maybe I’ll sleep tonight.  Do I want new boobs?  Do I want a prophylactic bilateral mastectomy?  I don’t know what I want…  my heart aches.  Will I still be me?  I know I am not my boobs, but I just don’t know how I feel about losing them or replacing them…

Life is broken.

Tuesday September 19 – Result Day

This morning finds me wide awake before the alarm goes off.  How long can I keep this up?  I feel wooden.  I am terrified.  Why am I so afraid?  It’s the unknown, yet known.  I’m afraid because deep down, I know what it is; I just don’t want to acknowledge what it is.  My hand creeps slowly up from my side, and I feel my right breast.  Damn, The Lump is still there.  The steri-tapes I was told to keep on for 5 days are really starting to make me itch.  It’s close enough to five days, so I can remove them before we go.  The anxiety is heavier this morning, and it has spread.  It’s now in my lungs and around my heart.  It’s up in my throat.  I take my morning pills, but I don’t eat.  I can’t.  The anxiety is a dragon unfurling slowly in my body, cutting off my ability to swallow, to talk.  There are moments when I feel like I cannot breathe.

My husband takes my hand.  It will be OK.  The dragon recedes just a bit.  I can breathe again.  We get in the car.  We drive back to the BDC.  I walk up to the front desk to check-in.  I have my pink slip; they look up at me.  “Oh, OK, we will take that.  We will be right with you.”  The first Oh, is filled with dread.  Then the voice turns perky.  My dragon tightens.  I sit with my husband and hang on for dear life.

Evelyn, a cute petite brunette with kind eyes and a beautiful smile, calls us and brings us back to an office, where we are directed to sit at a desk.  Evelyn is calming; she speaks softly.  She says Dr. R will be in shortly to discuss my diagnosis with us.

Dr. R comes in and introduces herself.  I know this is going to be bad.  I get out my notebook from my purse.  I am a visual, kinetic learner, so if I want something to sink in, even doodling will help me if I am seeing or reading something I need to understand.  Keywords and doodles help me commit it to memory if someone is speaking.  Dr. R said I get copies of all the pathology reports.   She’s going to explain what it all means and provide us with a recommendation on treatment.

She went through the pathology report from top to bottom.  As my heart constricted, my ears buzzed, and my stomach flipped.  My anchor was holding my hand, and my dragon was flipping inside my torso.

I have invasive ductal carcinoma.  It’s considered triple negative at this point, but they do not have final confirmation.  This means the current biopsy information provided shows this cancer is not receptive to Estrogen or Progesterone.   We ask what this means.   It means we cannot add hormone therapy to cut off the hormone supply to the tumor to weaken it.  They are waiting on the results for HER2 cells.  These are cells that, if present, are telling the tumor cells to multiply at an accelerated rate.  If this is negative, this means they cannot add an additional medication to chemo that will specifically target the HER2 cells to slow down its growth.  My mind translates HER2 cells to God Cells – go forth and multiply.

This is an aggressive tumor.  My Ki-67 came out at 80%.

Dr. R said if she were my oncologist, she would recommend Chemotherapy to shrink the tumor, lumpectomy, and then radiation.

She asked about family history, and when our response was negative and she learned of my previous bout with Thyroid cancer, she said we should insist on genetic testing for any of the 7 variants that indicate a risk for breast cancer.  Even if we have to pay for this ourselves, as the insurance may not want to cover the cost since I am over 50, get it done.  If I have one of those variants, she would change the treatment recommendation to bilateral mastectomy.

She emphasized that even though people say a triple negative cancer is bad, don’t think about that.  Think about the part that this type of cancer is very receptive to chemo.  This is treatable, this is curable, this is survivable, and this is temporary.

She said I would lose my hair, get a wig, or do whatever I needed to do to feel pretty and keep up my confidence during treatment. I asked about working through this. She didn’t say no, but she seriously did not think it wise and told me I should really use this time to take care of myself. If I wanted to try to work, there are a few who feel well enough to do this, but most do not.

She told my husband that his job was not to always tell me I must have a positive outlook every day. She told him there would be days when she would just need to let everything out, and that was OK. No one can always remain positive every day during this treatment. She has to have the ability to let her feelings out, and you need to be the safe place for her to do that. It doesn’t mean she is losing hope. She just needs to vent.

My anchor, my rock, looked shell-shocked, but he heard Dr. R. He committed to her to let me use him to vent on my down days in this process, and he would understand that I was not giving up.

She asked if we had any questions.  I am numb, I am petrified, how, what, how?  Why?  That dragon of anxiety, the curling gray fog, has engulfed my whole body.  My ears are working, but everything thing seems muffled.  We shake our heads, no, no more questions.  Wait, my husband has a question.  I hear it, but I don’t hear it.  He is trying to emphasize that I will live.  I have cancer.  I have a bad cancer.  I have a cancer that will require chemo, and surgery and radiation, and reconstruction, and, and, and…  I will live.  Dr. R explained that Evelyn would return to review more things with us.

Evelyn comes back in, she explains the diagnosis briefly, yes, we understand.  Dr. R and none of the oncologists who work at the BDC are part of our HMO, but there is a group under our HMO that works directly with the BDC and the oncologists there.  Based on my diagnosis, she has picked one who she feels will be a great match for us, and I have scheduled an appointment with her the next Monday.  Now, for a Surgeon, she checked with my primary care physician, was directed to the preferred surgical group, and matched me with who she felt was the best doctor there for my case, and that appointment has been scheduled as well.  She has also scheduled me for an MRI in a few hours at the BDC.  If there are additional lesions or lymph nodes that show signs of involvement, then I will need to be scheduled for additional biopsy and have those completed before my first Oncology appointment.

Then she opens a 2-inch wide plastic document case and starts going over resources and places to go for research and support groups. She highly recommends the Cancer Care Center, and we really need to get to the first welcome meeting on Friday before we can be signed up for a support group.  And here is information on breast cancer.  This will help you find local resources for wigs, scarves, and hats; here is information on nutrition.  Here is the surgical information, and Sentinel Lymph Node mapping will be done here before your surgery. Here is some information on that for you to read.  Here are contact numbers, and if you want reconstruction, let me know as I will get you matched to a plastic surgeon, and here, and here, and here…  I don’t know what to do, I don’t know what to say.  I’m a statistic, again.

Evelyn explains she is also a breast cancer survivor.   She tells us briefly about her diagnosis and her double mastectomy.  Her sister too.  She emphasizes that everything will be ok.   My heart aches; it will never be the same again.  My right boob is defective.  It’s gone rogue.  It’s trying to kill me. Evelyn tells me she is going to hug me now.  She is tiny, but I will survive. I am terrified. I can’t believe this is happening.  This is not my life.  If this tiny thing can do it, so can I.  I take some of her strength, I need it for the rest of the day.

We take our plastic document box with the handle, filled with way too much information to begin to digest in a few short hours and walk out of the BDC hand in hand, in shock, both of us silently trying to come to terms with what we have just been told. We have about two hours before we have to be back for the MRI. My husband asks me if I want to eat. Am I hungry? No, no, I’m not hungry. Let’s go home.

I called my boss and told him I would not be there the rest of the day.  Explain my diagnosis.  So many questions I don’t have answers to yet.  Can he tell people if they ask?  Yes, there’s no reason to hide this.  It’s my boob….  We arrived home, and my family was all waiting on pins and needles.  I can’t talk to them right now.  I have to tell them, but I am not ready for this.  I will send them all an email and then tell them they have to wait until Saturday before I can talk.   I will text them all to read the email.  My husband, Robert, texts two of the three kids to let them know.   I copied the letter sent to my extended family and sent it to them later.  I also IM the oldest son to let him know.

Letter sent to the family:  “As I am sure all of you have discussed, I found a lump in my right breast right before Labor Day weekend.  I already had a follow-up doctor appointment scheduled for the Tuesday after, so didn’t rush to make another appointment.

I’ve had clean mammograms for years, the last being this past January.

On Tuesday, September 5th, I told my primary care doctor about said lump.  She felt it out, we both agreed it was most likely a cyst, and she scheduled me for a diagnostic mammogram and ultrasound on Tuesday, Sept 12th.

That led to being scheduled immediately for a biopsy, which happened on Thursday, September 14th.

Today was results day.

The lump is 29 x 22 x 17 mm and is located on the anterior side of my breast 8 cm from the nipple.

It is an invasive ductal carcinoma, grade III

It is hormonal receptive negative, and the Ki-67 indicator is 80%, which means it is a very aggressive tumor, and there is not the additional plus of being able to cut off hormone supply to help stop the cancer.

It is in the early stages, 1 or 2.

The mammogram and ultrasound did not detect any additional sites or enlarged lymph glands.

I have already been scheduled for an MRI today to ensure no other lesions or lymph gland involvement before my first appointment with an Oncologist.

They are also trying to get me scheduled for genetic testing this week, but think it may not happen until next week when I meet with the Oncologist I have been referred to in my network.

The consulting oncologist we met with this morning advised if I were her patient, she would recommend chemo first, as this type of cancer responds well to chemo, shrinks the tumor, and then have a lumpectomy.

If my genetic testing comes back positive for any one of 7 variants for breast cancer, that would change from her original recommendation to double mastectomy to prevent further occurrences.

I will be losing my hair, and I may need radiation treatment, but that is still to be determined by the next scans and the genetic testing results.

I have a great medical team that is at my beck and call should I need them, even if it is only to help me with the doctors that are covered in my medical group or answer our questions.

I have been referred to support groups here as well.

The consulting oncologist and my cancer coordinator both emphasized this is very treatable, curable, and temporary.

I am in good hands, and this is being fast-tracked as much as possible so they can implement a treatment plan sooner rather than later.

This is all the information I have right now.  I am not ready to talk about this, and I still have to return to the imaging center for the MRI.  As soon as I know more, I will update you all.

Please do not call me today or tomorrow.  I have a lot of reading to do, and I have a full-day symposium scheduled for tomorrow that I really need to attend for work.

This weekend I will make time for phone calls.  I love you all, I thank you all for your understanding and support.

Love you all VERY much.”

I head to our bedroom and remove all my jewelry.  MRI, no metal.  I must remove the tiny stud in the second hole in my left earlobe.  It’s really supposed to be a nose stud, but I love the tiny blue chip of color that barely winks from my lobe.  I drop the stud.  I can’t find it.  Fuck my life.

Of course, my mother did not read the messages in order, so she called.  I can’t answer.  I can’t talk; we have to go back for the MRI.  Then my mom pocket-dials me.  I don’t know if this is a pocket dial, as I still cannot answer.  I want to yell at her,” READ THE FUCKING EMAIL”.  I want to yell at the world.  I want to stop the world and get off until this whole thing is over.  I want to wake up from this nightmare.  This is NOT happening to me.  I already had my cancer.  It was easy, it was stressful, I lost my sense of taste, I would forget what I was doing, and I ruined a perfectly good pot and made an egg in a shell catch fire and burnt teabags, but I aced that cancer!  I’m cured.  I should not have to do this again.  Why do I have to do this again?  FFFFUUUUUUUUUUUUCCCCCCKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKK!  I can’t breathe.

My husband takes my hand.  The constriction in my chest eases just enough so my lungs can expand yet again.  We have arrived back at the BDC, and now we head to the other door.  The door that says to me,” YOU HAVE CANCER”.  I am no longer just the woman coming in for my annual exam.  Now I am the woman with cancer.  Like I am defective.  I didn’t do things right, so now I have cancer.   I should have exercised more, lost weight, managed my weight, eaten better, and taken vitamins more regularly.  Only drank red wine, not the bubbly or the whiskey….  I am bad. I have cancer. It feels like a walk of shame.

As we walk through the door, I hold my head up high.

Sign in.  Wait, my name is called, and fill out more forms. Wait.  Called back.  I am taken to the dressing room, and the nurse explains how this will go.  This will be an MRI with contrast, so once I am changed, all clothes off, into the provided tie waist pants, and the gown tied in the back, I will be taken to a room to have an IV catheter started.  Once that is done, then I will have the MRI of my breasts, chest, and armpit area done.

As I prepare to change, the nurse brings me some socks to use as well.  She says it’s cold in the MRI room.  I then wait to be taken for the IV catheter.  When the phlebotomist comes to get me, and we go to her little room, I ask her if she has a warm blanket.

“Oh, are you cold?”

“No, but if you want to be able to find a vein, that will really be helpful,” I as I hold up my arm and show her my nonexistent veins.

She agrees; let’s warm up that arm.  As we wait for the warm blanket to work its magic on my veins, I give her the spiel on how this must go so the vein does not collapse.  She takes it all in and says, we’ll let’s start you in a reclining position first, and we will go from there.  She moves the chair around a bit so we can recline it, and then she competently goes to work, finds a vein, takes her time, and in it goes, no hesitation, and we’re done.  I thank her for doing it in one fell swoop.  She thanked me and said all the info I provided helped her, too.  Back to the small waiting room off the changing room, with the warm blanket held to my chest like a life preserver.

The MRI tech comes and gets me.  We go into the MRI room, and she explains how I will lay on the board with my breastbone positioned on a small pad on a bar between two rectangular openings where my beasts will hang.  She will place a pillow under my feet and a small support under my pelvis to help relieve some of the pressure on the breastbone.  My arms will be extended above my head like I am trying to fly like Superman.  One hand will hold a “ball” that will be my signal if I am in distress, squeeze the ball.  There will be three images taken without contrast, then the last image will be with the contrast.  My gown is removed and I lay down on the table, we adjust my placement.  I am provided with earplugs and earphones.  The tech drapes the gown over my back.  She places the ball in my hand.  She hooks up the IV to the contrast.  All set?  Thumbs up.  My breastbone hurts.  I feel exposed.  I feel like I am not a real person.  It’s hard to breathe.  The bed is raised, moved back, and then the tech asks if I’m ready.  No, but I don’t think I will ever be ready for this.

“The first scan will last 4 minutes. Please try to breathe normally; do not take deep breaths.”  Whir, cachunk, cachunk, cachunk, rrrrrrrrrrrrrrrddddddddddddttttttttttt.  Da tat, tat, tat, and on it goes, sounding its loud cacophony as images of my upper torso, my breasts, are made.  “OK, that was good. The next image will be 6 minutes.  Here we go.”  And more noise while I lay there wondering how I got here.  “One more, and then we start the contrast.”  Cancer is not dignified.  You are exposed, raw, and hurt.  Fear curls throughout you while you are bombarded with tests, x-rays, imaging, and chemicals.  You bare parts of yourself to strangers as if you do this every day.  Breathe.  Do not cry now.  Fucking lump.  “And now the contrast.  You might feel a little cold.  This scan will take 20 minutes.”

I am finally done.  My breastbone feels bruised.  The tech removes the catheter.  They use the stretchy cling tape instead of regular bandage tape.  Nice, no itching.  I get dressed, and we go.  I can’t do this.  I am not strong enough.  I’m just a little frightened girl.  We go home.  There is so much information.  I feel like I need to know it all before we meet the Oncologist.  I set myself up on the sofa with my “Cancer Box” and started reading.

I am overwhelmed.  This is too much.  IT’S TOO FUCKING MUCH.  I crawl into my husband’s lap, and he holds me while I cry.  It’s loud, sobbing, snot dripping, heart-wrenching, face swelling, can’t catch my breath agony.  Life is not the same.  Life is hard, life is short, life is unfair.

I don’t eat at all that day.  I can’t.  Finally, it’s bedtime.  I take a shot of Nyquil to help knock me out.  I want, crave, and need the oblivion of sleep.

Life is wishing for oblivion

September 18 Monday… D Day?

My alarm goes off at 6:20 am.  I think I should feel exhausted.  I have not slept a full night since last Thursday when that word was said that feeds the anxiety still curled in my gut, waiting for me to let it loose.  It’s getting harder to control.  I was awake for several hours in the middle of the night, falling back to sleep sometime after 4 am.  I was awake before my alarm went off at 6:20 am.  I lay there ignoring the alarm and check The Lump.  FUCK!  It’s still there.  Damn it.  I get up and get ready for work, packing my lunch.  I have an industry Expo in town that I need to get to try to do some networking.  We need more business.  But I want to get to the office first and catch up on all I missed on Thursday and Friday.

I am trying not to think about The Call.  The call that will schedule us to come back for the results.  The call that will change the rest of my life.  The anxiety pushes from its little corner; I push back.  My boob already hurts.  I can now take more than Tylenol.  Advil is my next choice.  I can take 3 extra strength Advil, which will get me through the day.  I work, get through emails, answer questions, help with billing issues, and check all pending to make sure everything looks right and there are no anomalies.

Boss arrives, we talk, review some things, asked when I’m going to the EXPO.  I told him I would finish up some rate requests, review some things, eat my lunch, and head over there.  Asked about The Call.  Not yet, as I shake my head, my cell phone rings.  Not a number I recognize, but it originated in the city of the Breast Diagnostic Center.  I hold up my finger to pause my boss for a second and answer.  It’s Evelyn from the BDC.  They will not receive the biopsy results in time to schedule a follow-up that day, but they will be in for a first-thing appointment on Tuesday.  “9 am, yes, that works, we will be there.”  Show the pink slip or tell the front desk you are there to see Evelyn.  They will take it from there.  The anxiety perks up, and it starts to unfurl, ready to go, but I am not ready for that yet.  I close my eyes, take a deep cleansing breath, and imagine good, purifying energies coming in, goldish, with a tinge of pink, entering my lungs, spreading through my bloodstream, fortifying my body, adding invisible armor, my protection from bad, and slowly exhaling.  My boss watches all this, and as I turn back to him, he says, “Tomorrow”, and I nod.  “OK.  Let me know how it goes.”

“I will.”

“Will you go back to the EXPO tomorrow?”

“Depends on what I find there today.”

“OK.  Then Wednesday, you have the all-day Symposium on the Software we use, correct?”

“Yes, I still plan on going to that.  I think there are tools we’re not using effectively.  This is a free way to find out what I am missing.”

“Good, we will see you back here for sure on Thursday.”

“Yup.”  And with that, I went back to work.

I like my boss.  I really like my boss.  I love what I do.  There are times when I don’t like my boss.  We have different management styles, and he can be overbearing at times.  He is quick to anger and VENTS.  But he is also quick to calm down.  When he is frustrated or angry, he will not listen.  There is no talking to him.  You cannot explain anything.  You just take the wrath, do what you can to fix the situation that started his frustration, and then present the solution you wanted to present earlier after everything is fixed.

He frustrates me to no end at times.  He makes me stretch and grow and learn new things, even when I don’t want to.  He is fair.  He believes that in a good days pay for hard work.  He expects hard work.  He is so much like my husband.  Cut and dry.  A wry sense of humor.  He’s a boob man.  I know this; he knows this.  He says things he shouldn’t say, but they are the same things I think or would say.  HR rolls her eyes at us all the time.  It feels like we are compatriots fighting the same fight.

He makes me laugh almost as much as my husband.  I respect him.  When he mentions my boobs about whatever we may be dealing with, it is usually funny, makes me laugh, and then I tell him I own his ass.  He laughs and agrees.  As angry as he can make me, and I am sure as hell, I can press all his buttons and piss him off, too, I don’t think I would find a better place to work than where I am now.

I was very happy for almost 20 years to work for a major corporation.  Then they moved all the jobs I liked to Arizona.  And not to a nice place like Prescott or Flagstaff.  I couldn’t do it.  I could not move with the jobs.  So, after almost 20 years with this company, I took the layoff.   Sometimes I think of my boss as almost a second father.  He is a good man.

Anyway, it took me a little longer than I anticipated to go over everything, get emails caught up, and answer all the questions.  I went and retrieved my salad from the frig and ate at my desk as I put finishing touches on things, then packed all my gear up and headed to the EXPO.  I walk in, and of course, I see people I know everywhere.  I’ve been in this industry for so long, and I happen to be the current president of one of the non-profit organizations in our industry, so I have had the great opportunity to meet many wonderful people.

I greet those I know, we chat, promise to call and get together, the normal stuff.  Then I will move on to see if there are any opportunities to grow our business here.  I stop at various booths, introduce myself, chat, swap stories, trade business cards, get goodies, the little marketing gimmicks everyone buys to hand out at EXPOs.  As I turn a corner and come to one booth, I recognize an old colleague.  The previous corporation I worked for has gone through many changes, including a purchase by another company.  Many of my previous co-workers throughout the country have left and gone on to other adventures.  The previous COO and the President of the Americas have started a new company based in Arizona with the primary footprint of the services and goods they offer in my neck of the woods.  As they have been expanding their footprint and providing offerings in other markets, they keep hiring more and more people to help them.  One of my previous bosses, who I loved working for, also works for this new company.  Here was yet another face from my past, becoming my present once again.  It was good to see him.

Once I was done grooming the EXPO, with very little to show for my efforts, but it was nice to have been able to get out there and talk to people I don’t get the chance to speak with very often, I called it a day and headed home.  Home, where we were still in denial about the word that had been spoken that directly relates to the C word. I was barely in the car before I unhooked my bra.  I am still uncomfortable wearing it.  Thank God for Advil.  Any maybe tonight I will drink the rest of the bubbly I opened last Tuesday.  Maybe this will help me sleep through the night.

We watch TV, I go through email again, and I drink the last of the champagne.  The anxiety is getting hard.  It has been this soft ethereal thing curled into a corner of my gut this whole week.  Now, it’s becoming hard, edgy, cutting, and heavy.  How am I ever going to sleep tonight?  I didn’t tell my husband that my primary care physician left me a voicemail earlier when my phone was snugged away in my purse.  She’s received information from the BDC about the biopsy, if there is anything she can do, I am to call her.  I am afraid to call her; I don’t want to know what she knows.

Life is denial for now

September 17 – Sunday, Tick Tock, Tick Tock

Sunday… the kids will be coming over in the afternoon for dinner.  For the first time ever I requested we watch the EMMY Awards.  I limit my award watching to the OSCAR’s.  But Stephen Colbert is hosting this year, and I really wanted to see what he does.

We had the normal banter going back and forth, we ordered Pizza for dinner so I would not cook.  I didn’t wear any type of bra, just a couple of knit tanks under my shirt.  The Lump, it’s still there.  The Lump is still hard and swollen.  My bruising is turning pretty colors.  The Lump is still angry.  The Lump is still there, damn it.  I keep checking, feeling The Lump.  This is unreal.  This is a dream.  I will wake up and this will all go away.  Life will be good again.

 

September 16 – Saturday still ignoring The Lump in the room

I found a sports bra I thought would work, and again, we took our time getting ready and drove to Disneyland to spend time with the family and celebrate my stepmom’s birthday.  The sports bra was a different kind of irritation to The Angry Lump.  The compression put pressure on it, making it ache instead of the cutting into it done by the underwire.  I can’t win here, but taking my Tylenol religiously, I ignored the discomfort and enjoyed my time with my family.  By the time we were done, I was ready to go with loose boob binding from that point forward.  A dull ache like that slowly wears on you.  For me, it makes me tired.  Sleep has always been my first reaction to pain and the general feeling of being unwell.

Life is still ignoring the lump

Friday September 15 – more of the same

Friday is much the same but with no ice.  I am stiff and sore.  The Lump is near the chest wall on the bottom side of my breast.  Very close to the chest muscle.  Moving my right arm irritates the soreness.  I wore a regular bra, and we took our time getting ready for dinner with the family.  The underwire of my bra quickly irritated The Lump.  It was a good night for dinner with my parents and other family.  We skirted the issue of The Lump and why my right boob hurt.  We laughed, shared stories, and ignored the giant lump in the room as much as possible.

Because of The Lump, we decided to limit our activities at Disneyland parks on Saturday and told the family we would meet up with them later in the day to still spend time with them before our dinner reservation.

I was in serious pain by the time we got home.  My bra caused most of the irritation and pain.  The Lump was now angry – hard and swollen.  That curl of anxiety perked its head, but I tamped it back down.  Not yet.  Life was going to be good for at least another day.  But I will get a new sports bra tomorrow, so I won’t have to fight with the underwire anymore.

Life is ignoring the The Lump in the room

Thursday September 14 – Biopsy Day

Thursday is here way too quickly.  I am dressed and ready to go, the anxiety just a small curl in my gut.  I sign in at the Breast Diagnostic and Care Center, go through the form signing, and wait.  I am called back.  I leave my purse and water bottle with my husband in the waiting room and am taken back to the room where the procedure will occur.  

The Technician walks me through a bunch of forms and confirmations of name spelling and items labeled correctly that need to be signed or confirmed and goes over the procedure once again with me.  I will change into a gown after disrobing from the waist up.  I will be laid down on the procedure bed with my right breast exposed.  They will cover me up with towels except for the area of my breast they need to work on.  They will wash my breast with betadine solution to ensure a sterile field.  Then Lidocaine will be administered to completely numb the area.   At this point, the ultrasound technician will provide a field of vision for the doctor to proceed with the biopsy.  I will feel pressure but no pain.  If there is any pain, I am to let them know so they can administer more Lidocaine. 

A small tube will be inserted into my breast right up to The Lump.  A tool will be inserted through this tube to take 4 to 6 samples of The Lump, which will be sent to pathology for analysis. Once that is done, the doctor will place a small clip in the middle of The Lump as a marker should we have to go back and address additional issues.  Once that is done and the tube removed, the technician will then place firm pressure on my breast to stop the bleeding.  This will take anywhere from ten to twenty minutes.  After the bleeding has stopped and steri-strips are applied, I will then have a mammogram done to ensure the marker can be seen in imaging.  Once I am cleared from that, I am to keep ice on my boob for a minimum of 6 hours, no lifting anything heavier than a TV Remote, my cell phone, an iPad, or my Kindle until Friday afternoon.

OK, I’m ready.  All the forms have been signed, i’s dotted, and t’s crossed.  Disrobe and put on the gown, opening to the front.  Done.  Lay down on the bed, right arm out of the gown, boob bared to the world.  A wedge is placed under my right side to elevate my boob to the doctor, and my right arm is raised above my head.  I am tilted to the left.  Tech starts draping me with blue surgical towels.  The doctor comes in and introduces herself.  She tells me not to worry; there are great new medicines out now that will shrink this tumor down before surgery.   Wait, what?  Tumor?  Shrink?  Surgery? No, no, no, this is benign; it’s a fatty tumor at worst.  That little curl of anxiety in my gut starts getting a little bigger.

The doctor keeps talking, and she’s asking me about any history in the family; no, not that I am aware of…  an Aunt passed earlier this year from Melanoma, but she was a teen in the ’60s and sunbathed with baby oil.  Others in the family are married in their kids, but I know nothing in my direct bloodline.  I did have thyroid cancer almost 20 years ago.  Oh, OK.  Surgery?  Yes, and then ablation with the isotope.  Oh, good.  Yes, it made me sick. Lucky me, half of one percent gets sick from it.  Ohhhhh and her demeanor changes slightly.  Not so reassuring, more, that is a little troubling.  Shit, shit, shit…  and the curl of anxiety in my gut starts to tighten.

She walks me through briefly what’s going to happen again.  I am nodding my understanding, concentrating on keeping my breathing even.   The technician and the doctor keep up a cheery banter as the doctor starts washing my breast with the betadine.  Swipe, swipe, scrub, wipe, repeat.  The technician calls for an aide to help ferry pieces around me, like the used gauze pads from the betadine wash and the mini scrub brush used in the first washing.

Again, my right side is slightly elevated by a wedge to make my breast the highest point.  My right arm is extended over my head, and I am tilted to the left because of the wedge.  As they start, I close my eyes and meditate to keep my parasympathetic nervous system calm.  Shit, in all the bustle, I forgot to tell them.  It’s OK, there is no IV, this is a simple procedure, like going to the dentist.  Drown them out.  I’m at the beach, I can hear the waves, take a deep even breath, in, one, two, three, pause, out, one two, three.

“There will be a little poke and a slight sting here for a second as we start administering the Lidocaine.”  Breathe, one, two, three, slowly, pause, out, one, two, three.  The ocean is calm, there is a slight breeze, you can smell the salt in the air.  There is pressure on my breast; I feel crowded even though my eyes are closed.  Breathe, inhale, slowly, one, two, three, pause, exhale, slowly, one, two, three.  There is lots of external activity around me, pressure, and more pressure.  Beach, sand, warm, breeze, salt, sun on my skin, gentle wave on my toes, breathe, one, two, three, pause, out, one, two, three.

The doctor says the tool I am using will make two clicks and then a much louder click as I take the samples. She demonstrates the tool’s sound by my right ear.

No, no, not now.  Breathe in, slowly; you can do this, beach, sand, breeze, sun, hear the surf, feel the wet sand, feel the breeze, smell the salt, in, one, two, three, shit, shit, shit, shit, no, breathe!  My face is cold, shit, breathe, sand, slow in one, water, two, breeze, three, sun, the cold, clammy sweat on the back of my neck, slowly exhale, one, oh god, the queasiness, two, I have to say something, they are in my boob, and I can’t move, I can’t throw up!  I can’t move; I need to move, tell them, tell them.

“Um, excuse me, but my BP is dropping; I need my feet raised up, please.”  The technician is on the ball, and while holding the ultrasound wand steady, she raises the feet of the exam bed I am on to elevate them.  She also told the aide to get ice packs on my forehead and the back of my neck.  The doctor asks me if this happens all the time.  It’s difficult for me to answer as I am still concentrating on trying to control this reaction so I don’t throw up.  Doctor keeps working as I answer “yes, kind of”.  At first, she says it’s just my nerves and then asks if I have a problem with needles.  Again, I know what I want to say, but can’t get the words out, so just say “yes”.  She can tell I am struggling to try to control this reaction, and answering her has taken my concentration off my breathing, and I am now starting to hyperventilate.   This has all happened in under 30 seconds.  The doctor is now talking to me, helping me slow my breathing down calmly, reassuring me that it’s OK, and it’s good that you recognized what was happening.  That’s it. Slow your breath in evenly. It’s good. Now slowly exhale; you’re doing good.  She continues working and is done before I can even say I feel the effects of my BP drop start to wane.   I hear the tech comment that may face is still ashen, I sense the doctor move away for a brief moment, there is a lot of pressure on my right boob, but no feeling.  Then the doctor is back; she is the one holding pressure on my breast, and the tech is now wiping the cold sweat from my face.  I am done.  Breathe, that a girl, slow even breath in and out.

I can feel the clamminess starting to recede.  Tech replaced the ice on the back of my neck with a fresh ice pack.  I hadn’t realized it felt so warm until the fresh pack was placed there.  The doctor remains holding the pressure on my boob.  Aid asks if she wants her to take over, doctor tells her no, she’s got this, clear the trash.  I feel the aftereffects start to come on, the shakiness, the flush of warmth moving out to my extremities.

The technician then says she sees the color starting to come back to my face.  Minutes have passed at this point.  I am starting to feel normal.  I apologize, I tell them my BP is on the low side of normal, how I didn’t think to warn them, and how sound is my biggest trigger, but yes I do have problems with needles, but can usually control that.  Now, the only time I really have this issue is when I get a new person who doesn’t believe me when I tell them how to start an IV on me or a phlebotomist who doesn’t believe me when I tell them where the blood comes out.

I was reassured that it was OK, and they were very glad that I could tell them what I needed and that I recognized what was happening.  The doctor asks me if I am OK now.  Yes, I just need some time to get over the shakiness.   She asks me if I would like water or juice.  “Yes, water would be lovely right now, please.”  She looks at me and says, no, I think you need juice.  Can you handle juice?  I think so.  Tell us if you think it will make it worse for you.  No, I can do the juice; I just need to sip it.  OK, let’s get you some juice then.  The aid is sent to get me juice, the tech is still holding pressure on my boob.  The doctor asks the tech if everything is under control and if she needs her to remain.  Tech says, no, we have it from here.  I am told to take as much time as I need to recover.

Before the doctor left, she told me that the biopsy results should come back by Monday, they would call me to schedule an appointment to review the results, and an Oncologist would be there at that appointment to explain everything.  That didn’t sink in at first.

The first thing that went through my mind at that point was that I was more used to being ignored, especially when I provided a warning of what could happen.  Most of the time, I am ignored or told they can do this without causing an issue.  When I do have the problem of the BP dropping suddenly like that, I’m used to being treated like an anomaly at best, or it’s my fault at worst.  To have a team so readily come to my aid while they continued to do the job that was at hand and treat me so kindly was so refreshing.   If I could have stood up at that point, I would have hugged each and every one of them for making me feel like it was OK to have this issue with my blood pressure.

As I laid there with an ice pack on my forehead, an icepack on the back of my neck, and the tech still applying pressure to my boob and the tremors working their way through my body after the doctor left the room, her parting words started to sink in, and that is when that slightly bigger, tight curl of anxiety started to take over my whole torso.

The aid returned to the room with a juice box, and the tech kept checking to see if the bleeding had stopped.  Finally, the tech said the bleeding had slowed enough that the steri-strips could be applied.  As I slowly sipped juice and moved the ice packs around to aid in recovery from the BP drop, I was asked if I wanted my husband with me.  Before I could answer, the tech said, yes, that would be a good idea.  I started to tell her what he looked like, but she said, I remember where you were sitting, I’ll be right back.

I closed my eyes and willed the anxiety back into a little ball; it was not working.  I couldn’t grab enough of its wispy edges to gather it into a compact area again.  I took another sip of juice, said a silent prayer to my guardian angels, and then my husband was there.  I just needed him to touch me, to give me an anchor.  I knew with an anchor, I could stretch myself further to gather in the ever-spreading anxiety.  It was like thick tendrils of grayish fog trying to roll its way through my body, to surround me and fill the entire room.  That word, Oncologist, was food for that fog of anxiety, like a triple hit of sugar to a toddler, making it spin out of control.

He held my hand as I lay there, now with an ice pack under my neck and one on my breast, sipping juice from a tiny juice box.   I looked at him and said, “It’s cancer”.  He willed that it wasn’t, denied that it could be, we didn’t know yet.  It could still be nothing.  As he held my hand, I saw in his eyes that he was going to continue to deny this, could not think of this until we had no choice.  I had my anchor; he would be there with me through all this.  I slowly reeled that monster of anxiety back into a ball and tucked it away.  It was still there, not gone, ready to pounce at the slightest release of control.  I could stand up now.  Still a little shaky, they asked if I wanted some crackers.  No, no food.  Just the juice for now.  Off for the mammogram to ensure the marker could be seen.  Two quick images: Yes, there it is. I went back to the original room to get dressed, go home, and wait.

Ice pack into the sacrificial bra, and then tenderly place my right boob into the already filled cup and gingerly move the strap up to hold it all in place.  Not too bad.  Loose sweater over the top of it, and away we go with my extra-large right boob, walking out hand in hand with the best man I know, being my anchor.   I had stocked up on frozen peas as they make some of the best ice packs.  I had a blue surgery towel to use as the insulator, and with instructions to change the ice every 30 minutes, I sat on the couch, prepared to binge-watch something.

As feeling slowly came back to my breast, the discomfort set in.  The sacrificial bra was tight and painful, so I gave up using the bra to hold the ice to my now bruised and bloody boob to just holding it myself.  Trying not to think about what would happen next week.  Ignoring the word spoken back at the Breast Diagnostic Center (that sounds like a store where you go pick out the ones you want, or buy the tools to renovate your breasts…).  That gray fog of anxiety, sitting curled in my gut, just waiting for its chance to take over.

I was allowed to take Tylenol for discomfort, and I did do so regularly from the time we left the Breast Center to ensure I stayed on top of any pain.  We didn’t talk about The Lump, the biopsy, or the word that fed the anxiety.  This was nothing.  It was Jon Snow – “You know nothing”.  (I read the books but have not watched the series.)  We went to bed; it was awkward with my now slightly swollen and sore right boob.

Life is frozen peas ice packs

Wednesday September 13 – Sleep? Happy Birthday my First Born

Sleep is not easy to come by all of sudden.  Even the techniques I have learned over the years to help me get to sleep at night are not working.  I fall asleep, but wake up at about 2 am and do not get back to sleep until about 5 am.  Then I am awake at the first crack of dawn, just as the sky outside my shaded windows has barely started to perceptibly lighten.

I am not a morning person.  I am and have been for as long as I can remember, a night owl.  Even as a child, I learned that if I lay in bed and imagined I was on a raft in a pool, or in a boat just watching the waves, this would help me fall asleep instead of laying there bored out of my mind.  I learned later in life this was meditation.  I was so smart.  In my teen years, meditation would help me get to sleep, but I found on occasion that staying asleep was not as easy.  But that only happened occasionally.  If meditation didn’t help me get back to sleep, I found that rather than stressing about not sleeping, I would just read for a while, and sleep would come back to me.  Dawns were not something I did often.  There were the few occasions when I would be up, right before or with the sun, but my usual pattern was an hour or two after sunrise.  I think I can count on one hand the number of times I remember being up by dawn of my own accord.

My husband arrived home Wednesday morning, and I am so glad to come home to him.  I am cheered he is going with me to the biopsy.  I am glad he is there to hold me and tell me everything is going to be alright.  Most people do not get our humor.  We’re both very dry and sarcastic.  He, much more so than me.  He is my perfect match as far as I am concerned.  He makes me laugh.  I know he loves me not only by him telling me so, but in all that he does for us as a family, and what he does for me to make my days a little easier. Despite saying things at times that most interpret as uncaring or callous, I know this is his quick dry wit and sarcasm coming through at its best.  I love him dearly and wouldn’t trade him for the world. I feel a little more centered now that he is back and can hold me.

When I first told him about The Lump, and we were discussing all the different possibilities, he asked me what I thought the worst-case scenario was.  I said it’s tender and big, and even though it’s nothing, they will want to remove it because of the tender/big part.  What will that do to my right boob?  It’s going to be a different size than the left one.  His immediate response was, “That’s OK they will just be Italian boobs”.  I thought for a second, I wasn’t getting the correlation.  So I said, “OK, I’ll bite, what are Italian boobs?”

“WOP sided,” says my partially Sicilian husband.  He made me laugh.  Life is always good with him, even in the bad, scary times. I love him.

Today is the anniversary date of becoming a mother, happiest of birthday wishes to my eldest child.

Life is good with my dry-witted sarcastic husband

Tuesday September 12 – Diagnostics

I go for the diagnostic exams. Feeling a little concerned, but this is nothing.  Just a little inconvenience,   First is the mammogram.  It wasn’t the little localized paddles, it was the normal paddles, and they didn’t even squish me that hard. It did hurt, but not nearly as much as I thought it would.  I did have one tear slip out and the poor tech was so sorry she was hurting me.  I felt bad as I think the tear was more from the anxiety than anything else. Diagnostic mammograms were really a breeze compared to what I imagined.  The technician excused herself to insure the radiologists had what they wanted on the images taken and then she was back hustling me over to wait for ultrasound.  I was a little alarmed at how quick she seemed to want to get the images to the radiologist, and she wouldn’t let me see the scans.  I knew if I really wanted to I could have pushed to see the scan, as it is my right, but I didn’t want to go there.  Besides, this is nothing, it’s a cyst.

I was taken in for the ultrasound.  The technician and I totally hit it off.  Trading stories while she saved images of The Lump.  Next thing I know, she too is exiting the room hurriedly,  to make sure the radiologist is OK with the images secured.  Now I’m starting to really feel like this may not be something so easy.  Next thing I know the radiologist steps into the exam room with the technician, and explains to me that The Lump is not a cyst and we need to do a biopsy so we know what we’re dealing with.

Before I can even process this news, the tech has me up and going over pages and pages of paperwork, and I’ve been scheduled for a biopsy on Thursday morning at 9:45.  I will not be able to work that day, as once the biopsy is done I will have to ice my boob for at least 6 hours.   Boobs bleed a lot.  Can easily reopen the wound, and my head is spinning.  This is not happening.

I managed to get a text off to my cousin between the announcement by the radiologist and the Tech telling me what will happen, when, how and what I need to do to prepare.  Text to cousin – “Fuck, Fuck, Fuck!!!!!!!  it’s not a cyst. Biopsy is next.”  Response “Oh Jesus!”

Now my world is starting to spin.  They are rushing this, is this is cancer?  How the fuck did I get cancer in my fucking right boob!!   It can’t be cancer.  It’s benign.  Breathe, slow, count to three, exhale, count to three.  Again, count to four, exhale, one, two, three, four.  I am out in the parking lot, oh my God, oh my God, oh my God.  Call my husband who is still driving from Boise to Vegas.  Don’t hyperventilate.  Husband says don’t jump to conclusions.  It could still be anything.  In my gut, I know its cancer.  The Lump – it’s trying to kill me, I just know it.

I try to remain calm that afternoon as I sort through my feelings.  My dad and stepmom are arriving Friday to celebrate her birthday at the Disneyland Parks.  We’re supposed to meet them for dinner Friday night, and meet them again on Saturday at the park, with dinner again already planned and reservations secured at the Blue Bayou.  My cousins husband is turning 50 this weekend, she is throwing him a surprise party.  We had already committed to my parents for Disneyland, we would not be heading up to the bay area for his party.  But my mom has flown in from South Carolina to spend a few days with friends from her old Temple in Northern California and finish it off with the surprise party.  I can’t make my cousin keep my secrets, not a secret like this, not one so big, not one that is now scaring the shit out of me.  I’m going to have to tell my mom at least.  And the kids.  Husband arrives in Las Vegas and we talk a bit.  It’s going to be OK, this is nothing.  Life is good.

I take a deep breath and call my mom.  Explain what has happened, and tell her about the biopsy.  I text my cousin, tell her I have told my mom, she doesn’t have to keep the secret.  She texts back she’d told her mom too, now.  I should be expecting a call from my aunt.  I’ve told all the kids.  Including the oldest son, who no longer talks to us because we’re the root of all evil in his life.  That is another story that for another place and time.  Despite his issues with us, he is still loved.  I call him and leave him a message.  Everyone that needs to know, knows.

My aunt calls me.  Reassured me this is nothing.  Both her and my mother (her sister) had to go back for additional screenings because of dense breast tissue creating shadows in their mammograms.  Both about the same age I am now.  Well, yes Auntie – I’ve had to do that as well a few years back.  I asked her if she could feel a lump when this happened to her.  No, oh, well, yeah, it’s nothing.  We left it at that, and I could feel the tiny seeds of fear starting to sprout roots in my gut.

I have made arrangements at work to be off Thursday and Friday to deal with the biopsy and all the steps I have to take to insure I don’t reopen the wound and have it bleed all over the place.  My anxiety factor has now been elevated.

Life is whispered secrets of fear

Wednesday September 6 – Calling my Cousin

I call my cousin on Wednesday, September 6th, ask her how she is faring.  Get all the details of her accident, and hear how she was treated as a female motorcycle rider.  There is discrimination there, subtle, but there.  The ER doctor, also female, after running tests and imaging to ensure nothing broken or uncontrollable bleeding, tells my much battered and bruised cousin she can go home, she’s being released.  My cousin asks about her hugely swelling knee and the doctor agrees that it should be wrapped; she’ll get a nurse to do it before my cousin leaves.  Then my cousin asks about pain relief.  This is some pretty serious bruising happening here.  She’s been hit by a car, flown through the air, and landed then rolled down the freeway!  The doctor kind of slyly smiles and says she can prescribe Flexeril, which is primarily used as a muscle relaxer.  There is that discrimination….

We then talk about The Lump, the diagnostic mammogram I must have, and the follow-up ultrasound.  We discussed how it’s tender and I’m worried they will be using the smaller paddles they used, when, thanks to my dense breast tissue a few years back, I had to go back for secondary screening on my annual mammogram.  That was very painful, and I was imagining this happening on The Lump.  I was cringing before it was even going to happen.  My cousin said she could send me some Flexeril.  I told her it was OK, I already have some.  We both laughed, I felt much better.

Life is good.