Paul's Heart

Life As A Dad, And A Survivor

Archive for the month “February, 2016”

The Classes Of Survivorship


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As an advocate of cancer patients and survivors, I have met so many people over the years who have beaten cancer and moved on with their lives with only having to deal with follow-up visits.  But there are also many people that I have met who have had to deal with late developing side effects from the treatments that saved their lives, only to struggle with these new physiological issues.  Sadly, whether because of ignorance of medicine to recognize these health issues, or the body simply not able to handle any more trauma, survivors who have come into my life, pass away.

It does not get any easier, as yet another survivor dies.  It does not matter the circumstances.  In dealing with my own late term survivor issues, with the announcement of a fellow survivor passing away, it is a brutal reminder just how delicate not only my life is, but as I am certain, my fellow survivors will echo the same.

For those who are fortunate enough to not only have never dealt with survivorship issues, or even a cancer diagnosis, it is impossible for you to truly grasp that we cannot “just move on” with our lives.  But as I mourn yet another survivor, and how she lived her life, I began to think about the topic of this post.  Just as there is staging in a cancer diagnosis, if it has not been done yet, then I think survivorship should be staged, or classified as well.

The first classification I would give, would be to those who finish their treatments, and other than their follow up appointments, which coincidently will continue for the rest of their lives thanks to survivors like me who proved that surveillance must be done to stay ahead of any developing late side effects, will get to go on through the rest of their lives without a care in the world.  Their magical 5 year mark will come and go.  For the majority of patients, according to statistics provided by various resources, they will not have to deal with any late side effects because they do not have any.

The next classification of survivors are those who are done with treatments, continue to be followed up, but as time goes on, develop health issues that cannot be explained.  Mysterious maladies and complaints that cannot be diagnosed simply because the experience and education of the treating physician just is not current.  The medical professionals unaware of, or worse yet, unwilling to recognize the late developing side effects from diagnostic procedures, and chemo and radiation therapies, leave patients frustrated, scared, and hopeless.  Many of these patients succumb to a treatment related side effect, and no one ever suspected or diagnosed it.  They also do not even live near or have access to the limited cancer survivorship clinics that specialize in dealing with late effects.

I would place myself in the third classification.  I am aware of my late issues of which I have many.  Although I currently do not have access to my doctors, when I am able to see them, I am subjected to annual testing and procedures to see how far my irreversible and progressive issues have gotten.  But as I  found out with my emergency heart surgery, without awareness and being a strong self-advocate, I would be dead.  But this has been a Pandora’s Box because with the knowledge of my late effect issues (cardiac, pulmonary, muscular, spinal, gastrointestinal, endocrine, urinary, immunological… there are more but you get my point), I cannot turn off the concerns for my mortality.  Because of the increased risks, most of my issues can only be managed, meaning, I have to tolerate the pains, the discomforts, and do my best to prevent the inevitable.  Oh and yes, it is managed only until the issues become bad enough that the risks of correcting are less than the risk of the progression of the issue.  To give you an example, my carotids are fried from radiation damage.  But the risk of correcting them, are too high of a stroke.  Therefore, I have to wait until they are constricted enough that a stroke is risked, only then will surgery be considered.  This is how I go through my life every day, knowing that I have all these issues, and some day, just as with my heart (and other incidents), I will have another issue that has to be dealt with, and hopefully it will be done in time.

The last classification would be of my fellow survivors whose bodies have gone through so much trauma, more than 3 times the surgeries, secondary cancers, health issues.  It is hard enough to believe all of the things that I have to deal with.  But I know of survivors who have survived longer than me, and were treated with much more harsh treatments than me.  And today, their bodies have all but given out.  There are not many options.  They are finally at the crossroads as I mentioned in the last paragraph, the risk of correction is less than the risk of the eventual fatal event.  I know so many people who are in this position right now.  And I often scratch my head wondering why so many continue to fight on.  But they do.  And they continue to experience memories that they never thought they would see.  And even more amazingly, the often offer support to others in need, never revealing just how sick they truly are.

But it happens several times a year in my life, a survivor in this stage, can take no more.  I want to be clear, they have not given up.  Their bodies just cannot take anymore.  And it happened again just recently.  And it does not get any easier to accept.  But there definitely is no way to “just get over it.”

 

It’s Not The Cold, It’s The Gloom


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My mother and my daughters recently visited with me in my Florida home.  What they returned back to was almost cruel.  In Florida, the weather was a very comfortable low 80’s, and nothing but sunlight.  Just days after they returned back to Pennsylvania, the area got walloped with over 31 inches of snow.

Of course with my health, I can only breath a sigh of relief that I do not have to deal with shoveling large amounts of snow, or deal with extreme cold temperatures.  And while the initial impact of the snowfall is quite beautiful, after the novelty wears off, reality sets in.

It is a phenomenon that I saw first hand in the Spring of 2014.  I picked up a friend from the Philadelphia airport in March, who had come to visit my dying father.  She came from Florida.  In just moments from leaving the terminal, the expression on her face changed as her view of the overcast skies, brown and barren trees, simply changed her mood to one of gloom.  And I am not talking about her pending visit with my father either.  She had just flown in from a place where the climate was still warm, and very sunny.  It was like watching air released from a balloon.

I really could not understand what I was witnessing, because the Pennsylvania overcast winter climate was all that I knew.  That is, until after I moved to Florida.  My first visit back home was in November later that year.  Coincidently, the area had been hit with an early snow storm.  And while initially I was dreading the cold, and possibly the snow, in just months, I had grown acclimated to the sunny climate of Florida.  It happened, the overcast skies caused an immediate change in my mood.  I had never experienced anything like it.

The skies remained overcast the entire weekend visit.  And the dreariness in my mood remained.  Upon my return to the airport, and I kid you not, a single ray of sunshine was piercing through the skies.  And from the highway, I could see that it was pointing right to the airport.

Do I miss the drastic changes of seasons up north?  Do I miss the changing leaves?  Do I miss snow?  We actually do have changing seasons down here in Florida.  I do miss a day up in the Pocono mountains to smell Fall.  And yes, I do miss the silent beauty of a snowfall.  But you know what I do not miss?  Constant overcast skies.

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