Ice Cream – I’ve Always Screamed For Ice Cream!

(image created via ChatGPT)
“Ice Cream! Ice Cream! We all scream for ice cream!”, the long time favorite chant. Today, thanks to a presidential act in 1984, is recognized as National Ice Cream Day. I say it is literally okay to have ice cream for breakfast, lunch, and dinner. Okay, maybe a little bit overboard, but… back in 1988, when I was going through chemo for my Hodgkin’s Lymphoma, it was not unusual for me to eat large amounts of ice cream (and pasta). Why you may ask?
Oddly, as part of my chemotherapy cocktail of MOPP-ABV, I won’t get into the individual drug names and issues related to each, I was actually restricted from certain foods, surprisingly and not a problem for me being a picky eater, the restrictions were for “healthy” foods such as brocolli and cauliflower, but also others that I did eat, such as processed foods like cheese, carbonated beverages, and bananas. The reasons ranged from contradictions to the chemo, to issues with bloating and gas, bacteria from eating raw or not cleaned well enough vegetables, or issues with high fiber which can be problematic if experiencing bowel or mouth irritation issues.
But do you know what was not restricted? Ice cream, and of course pasta. Again, mentioning that I am a picky eater, I had no problem with either of these options. However, a warning from my oncologist, “don’t go crazy on this stuff”, making reference to a major side effect from Prednisone, one of the chemo drugs in my cocktail, weight gain.
One thing that I had not expected going through chemotherapy, especially after going through radiation therapy having lost weight, was gaining weight. Anything I knew about chemotherapy stereotypes, was that patients looked almost waif-like having lost so much weight.
Unexpectedly, I gained fifty pounds during my chemo, I believe courtesy of the Prednisone side effects; increased hunger, fluid retention, metabolism changes, and yes, muscle loss. And when I say hunger, I mean ravenous. I could eat pints of ice cream at a time (which by the way also helped with the mouth discomfort), and quart containers of meals made of pasta.
The result of this diet? Something we in the cancer world describe as “moon face.” Now I am not going to post any picture examples of this, because this is definitely one side effect, next to hair loss, that really upsets us. But, just as it describes, the moon is round, and no matter the shapes of our faces, our faces look swollen, and much more round, like the moon as a result of the high dose prednisone intake.
Multiple drugs are often used to treat cancer together, because that is what was studied and determined to have the best chance to reach remission, and more importantly, stay in remission. And in particular, Prednisone actually helps to reduce side effects of the other chemo drugs, and has its own benefits of destroying lymphoma cells, in working with the other drugs to reduce any inflammation, reduce any potential allergies, and there is even a benefit to reducing (though not eliminating) nausea, that is what other drugs are for.
But it is that one super unfortunate side effect, increased hunger, that will easily cause a potentially major weight gain. Which to be honest, gaining some weight during chemo is not a bad thing. I do understand that the fifty pounds I gained was not good. Here is the important part.
Just like the hair loss, the weight gain is temporary. Just like the hair has already started growing back towards the end of the treatments, slowly but surely, so will the weight drop off. And if you use the hair growth by comparison, it is not going to happen overnight.
At the completion of my chemo, the date that I have marked on the calendar of this page, I gave myself a break for about two weeks just to soak in all that I had gone through, now in remission, gathered my thoughts, to produce a checklist of goals that I now wanted to achieve, and think how I could achieve them, and potentially how long they could take.
My number one issue was dropping the fifty pounds I gained. It definitely did not have me feeling well. So the easy part would be, focusing on my diet. Now off the prednisone and chemo, my diet was no longer restricted, and the amounts would be much smaller as my hunger had decreased. Exercise, even the smallest effort, such as a five-minute walk in the beginning and building up as time went on, would make a difference because for two years, I did nothing. As time went on, and I felt my body get stronger, I was able to do more. And yes, the weight did come off, all of it. It did take six months, and if you tell any of us in the beginning how long it would take, it would overwhelm us. But I am just being realistic. If you went through cancer treatments, you likely went through a year or more of some of the most difficult days. You can get through the recovery so much more easily.
The great thing is, of all the things that I “lost” my love for food-wise during my cancer days, ice cream is not one of them. Which is why I am definitely celebrating today.

(image courtesy of Simon Says Dip This)

(image courtesy of Istock)
And with three meals to choose from, it will help me not be limited to my choices… waffles and icream for breakfast, an ice cream sandwich with my lunch sandwich, and a nice sundae to cap off Sunday. Sounds like a plan.







