
For Mr. K, who never misses a beat.
February 2024: More, and More
One night during the icebreaker for a Very Important Zoom Meeting (VIZM) we were asked “What goal do you have for the coming year?” People named wanting to learn to play the cello, go sky diving, visit Ecuador, that kind of thing. I smiled cheerfully and said I looked forward to painting with watercolor. What I didn’t say was I want to stay alive.
Somewhere in the midst of the hospital visits and chemotherapy a strange rash emerged across my torso. Dr. Oncologist recommended I see a dermatologist, and I made an appointment. The soonest one I could get was a few weeks out. By that time the rash was gone, and boy, did I appreciate that. I kept lifting my shirt and looking at my clear, pink stomach. So smooth! So untarnished! So healthy!
But they say you should see a dermatologist once a year, so I kept my meeting. On the day of the appointment I could barely walk the short distance from the parking garage to the office building. Luckily there was a bench on the way. I really grew to appreciate benches during this time.
I pointed out to Dr. Dermatologist a pinkish spot on my nose that had been there for years. I figured it was some sort of sunburned patch, and I had been massaging Vitamin E into it. He took one glance at it and labeled it “pre-cancerous.” Okay, didn’t see that coming. He said that there was a one in ten chance of it developing into cancer. We could just watch and see what happens. Or we could get rid of it now.
Old RunningBarb would have said “A one in ten chance? That’s nuthin.’ I don’t think I’m going to get cancer. Let’s just wait.” Today’s RunningBarb, harboring a disease that occurs in 10 in a million people, replied “Let’s get rid of it.” So we did.
After my latest jaunt to the hospital I was assigned yet another Heart Failure Nurse. This time she provided a service I needed. From time to time in the evening I noticed my heart rate suddenly spike. I was not short of breath, but I was worried I would be soon. I wanted to do everything I could to stay out of the hospital. So I would call her and she would figuratively hold my hand until my heart rate went back to normal. It was probably more of a psychological help than anything, but it was valuable to me. She also checked in with me from time to time on Zoom. I liked being able to see her when we talked. I trusted her and was glad she was around.
But every time I saw my monthly lab reports I was pretty horrified. This number was too high, that one was too low. There was a lot of red – not just red, but fireworks in the sky red – indicating bad news. There was very little green. How am I still alive? I wondered.
Then, I received a notification on my watch that I was not up to speed on my six minute walk test. Six minute walk test? I had never heard of it either. Turns out there is an evaluation used for people with heart failure to see how far they can walk in six minutes. If you can walk 500 meters in six minutes you pass. I couldn’t even do that but hadn’t known it. Thanks, Apple, for brightening my day!
On the other hand, during all this time, with all these shenanigans, what were those crazy lambda chains up to? Guess what? They were dropping. Three weeks after my first treatment they were just above normal, and five weeks after that they were normal, where they have (mostly) stayed. A lot of my other blood work still was crazy, but this was the main source of the trouble, and it looked like it was getting under control. “Complete hematological remission” declared Dr. Oncologist. Science, right? Modern medicine, right? Doctors who know what they’re doing, right?
Despite the good news with my lambda buddies, I still felt grey and was dealing with intermittent heart racing. One night I was in another one of my VIZMs when I received a notification from my watch telling me that my heart rate was 123. While I was just sitting there. Doing nothing more than thinking and talking. I could feel it pounding. This was nuts. And back in the regular world it was just getting harder and harder to go for even the slowest, most mellow walks. I felt like someone was squeezing my heart. Dr. Oncologist had reduced the dexamethasone dose a time or two in order to help take the strain off my body. Still, I was not in a good place. But my only choice was to stick with the chemotherapy the eight more weeks until it was over.
Despite these bad feelies I knew I was better off than many. The disease itself can cause severe fatigue, shortness of breath, swelling in the legs and feet, numbness and tingling in the hands or feet, weight loss, and a lot of other icky stuff. My only symptom was not being able to exercise as vigorously as I had previously. Then, the treatment can cause additional bad stuff than what I experienced – nausea, vomiting, constipation, neuropathy, muscle weakness, and on and on. I might have been queasy around food, but I always managed to eat and keep everything down. My muscles twitched and cramped at odd times and in unusual ways, but it was not something I couldn’t deal with.
The bottom line of all of that is sometimes people die from amyloidosis, and I was still kickin’, That was good, right?
Aside from that, there’s a lot of other stuff people have to get through in life. I volunteer with an organization that supports letter-writing to incarcerated individuals. I often communicate with guys who have had a lifetime of traumatic experiences and are now sitting alone in solitary confinement. People face seriously tough challenges.
Soon it was time for a meeting with Oncology Nurse Practitioner. You have to know, RunningBarb normally would rather eat worms than complain, but. . . I kinda let her know what was going on. She listened.
Then I went to another part of the hospital for my treatment. A few minutes later she showed up, pulled me into a private room, and told me she had consulted with Dr. Oncologist, and they agreed that I could stop the weekly chemotherapy and just continue Daratumumab on a monthly basis.
Because I gave birth to two wonderful Darlings, I don’t want to say this news made this day the happiest day of my life. So I won’t. Buuuuuuut . . . . . . . . .
Chemotherapy was over. No more cell-and soul-killing Cytoxan. No more fluid-retaining, sleep-depriving dexamethasone. No more Bortezomids knocking around those proteasomes, whatever they are. No more grey.
Take that, six minute walk test! Take that, crazy heart rate for no reason! Take that, yucky yuck feeling! Just one shot a month, and my body could start to recover from the ol’ chemotherapy one-two punch. It was good news.
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