Monday, November 22, 2010

Tortilla Flats

As soon as they found the tumor I got started on a regular dose of steroids. It was a small orange pill I took times a day, and the dosage gradually increased. The theory was that it’d help to delay or slow the growth of the tumor.

What they didn’t tell me was that the steroids would screw with my sleep, make me ravenously hungry, gain weight and turn into a raging asshole at the slightest provocation.

I was effectively turned into Dick Cheney but with more hair.

All these things increased in severity as my dosage increased, but it was the sleep deprivation that was the hardest initially. No matter what I’d done during the day – exercised, read before bed, had wine at dinner, abstained from alcohol – and no matter what time I’d go to bed I’d wake up between 2 and 4 and be up for the day.
And as I was losing sleep I became more and more irritable. I wasn’t driving as much since my vision was getting worse. That was probably a good thing, since I’m sure I would’ve wound up in a fight or accident.

But as time wore on, the anger became harder to control. Sometimes I’d be angry for absolutely no reason at all – just a black mood. Other times I’d fly off the handle at the smallest thing. Scariest of all was the loss of control I felt when it would happen sometimes. At its zenith it was like an out-of-body experience; I felt as if I was watching myself behave like a two year old.

Even on a good day, I’ve never been a fan of the public. Factor in the steroids and it made for a bad combination.

One afternoon my wife and I were at the grocery store, looking for tortilla chips. She’d mentioned that we should swing by the health food section of the store. I was tired, feeling lousy and cranky as usual. A young woman was busy stocking chips, and smiled and asked if she could help us. Most of the chips in the bags I picked up had been smashed to bits. My wife said “Oh, we’re just looking for some tortilla chips” and I interjected “Yeah, do you have any bags that haven’t been sat on yet?”

Now, in my defense, the vast majority of the bags had been beat to shit, with small shards of chips clogging the windows of most of them. But still, this woman hadn’t done it. That gave me no right to act like a complete asshole, especially when she was trying to be helpful. As soon as the words left my mouth I felt bad about it, but let my wife do the apologizing. Needless to say, we wrapped our shopping shortly thereafter.

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

The Wind at Your Back

It's a cliche, but you really can't fight cancer by yourself. It truly does take a team. Not only of doctors, nurses and support staff, but friends and family. Their love and support can truly make a difference in ways you can't expect or even imagine.

But the most important person on your team, and one not everyone's lucky enough to have, is someone that's your advocate. Someone who will fight for you when the doctors are going down the wrong path. Someone to tell well-wishers that you've had enough for the day and need to rest. Someone who insists you need to rest. Someone to complain to. Someone to cry with. Someone who will make that midnight run for popsicles.  Someone that will sit with you as you writhe in bed with a roaring fever from the fucking chemo.

In my case, that person was my wife.

More cliches: marriage is a journey. Marriage is a union. Blah blah blah. Yeah, it's those things, but it's easy to be happy and content and in love when things are going good. That's the easy part. That's coasting. The real test is when the shit not only hits the proverbial fan but keeps hitting it. That's when you find out what both you and your partner are made of.

I was extremely lucky. I married someone who's smart, strong, caring, empathetic and has a strong bullshit detector. Over the course of my treatment, all those attributes came into play. There were peaks and valleys. People I didn't expect anything from came through in ways that were unbelievable. Others I thought I could count on failed spectacularly. My wife was there for every small victory as well as every little defeat.

Not everyone has that. Keep that in mind the next time you hear about someone who's sick. A serious illness in not only a downer, it's a fucking grind for all involved. It gets old. It loses its novelty. The phone calls and cards slow to a trickle after a few weeks, but the illness is still there. Often worse than before. Having an advocate; a partner who stands by you is worth their weight in gold. They deserve just as much recognition for all the bravery you're saluted for as you do. Maybe more. 

And so do your team of supporters. Their goodwill, positivity and smiles -- often the simplest things -- make a bad day bearable and a good day outstanding.

But that's a topic for another post.