Yesterday I got another chance at my prime lesson in battling cancer: letting go of the illusion of control.
No
sooner had I established (at the encouragement of my oncologists) that I
was meeting or exceeding all my markers for a good response to my
initial rounds of chemo-therapy, then a blood draw Monday turned up an
adverse number, triggering a sea change in how I was being assessed.
In
particular, there was a rise in the amount of "light chain protein" in
my blood (there's also a heavy chain protein, but it's the light ones
that are used as a marker of my cancer's progression) and this is
something that the doctors think is critical to keep at a minimum
leading up to my having a stem-cell transplant.
While
there's part of me that's amazed and shaken that a single test could be
so destabilizing to my treatment plan, this has not eroded my
fundamental faith in my doctors. We will be in this together, wherever
it leads.
In
any event, after first laying out the expectation that I'd be entering a
relatively quiet maintenance phase of the chemo protocol from now until
a July transplant at the Mayo Clinic, all of that shifted yesterday.
Determined to get back on top of the light chains, the doctors in both
Duluth and Rochester have agreed that a more aggressive plan is in order
that will entail the introduction of some additional new drugs.
This
new cocktail is potent enough that I'll be readmitted into the hospital
for five days, starting Monday, followed by a crucial week of
observations to see how I respond. The doctors were straight with me.
This will be my most severe test yet, and there's no guarantee that I'll
survive it. (Quite the change from the calm waters I had woken up to
when the week began!)
Once
again it's time to set aside all other concerns and opportunities to
prepare myself to simply ride the waves of my treatment, doing all that I
can to be my body's ally. It is not yet time to be planning
presentations or to be crafting book outlines. First I have to get well.
While it has been a jolt to have my plans knocked down (I liked
the picture of a predictable, playful spring) and to again be staring
down the chaotic barrels of what my cancer hath wrought, there is also a
part of me that is relieved to be facing the hard stuff sooner, with
minimal delay. It was always coming, and it feels better to be turning toward
the boogie man, rather than away. If the cancer is stronger than I, so
be it. If I am stronger, let's find out now and move forward.
Saturday, April 2, 2016
Fortunes Reversed
at 3:21 PM
Labels: treating multiple myeloma
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2 comments:
Ouch! I was also hopeful for your spring play time. You have given so much to so many and I would like to see you enjoying some spring time. My prayers are with you. Hugs, Becky*
Hi, Laird: Jim and I are thinking of you, and sending you our very best wishes through the tough trial during the next couple of weeks. Ali
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