Showing posts with label chemotherapy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label chemotherapy. Show all posts

Monday, September 21, 2009

Late for Work

I arrived at work late this morning, having paid a visit to the oncology center for my regular checkup. Since undergoing chemotherapy, the frequency of such visits has gone from once a week to once every other month.

Today was the first day for the temp nurse who drew my blood. She’s filling in for one of the regular nurses while she’s out on maternity leave.

“I used to have great veins before I started coming here,” I warned her.

She spent a minute or two trying to spike the chemo-scarred vein inside my left elbow without striking paydirt. “Try somewhere else?” she asked after noticing my obvious discomfort.

“Please.” She had better luck with the back of my hand.

“That one just kept rolling out of the way,” she said, indicating the fruitless vein near my elbow. “If I were you, I’d tell everyone to just stay away from that one, as it’s basically kaput.”

The subsequent checkup went off without a hitch. Blood counts were good – or good for me, anyway. No signs, no symptoms. My doctor asked if I’d be participating in the Komen Race for the Cure again this year. I’ve walked with his team for the big annual fundraiser, geared specifically toward breast cancer (though I had non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma), every year since I finished treatment.

“Absolutely,” I said. This year will be my third walking with them.

“Great,” he said. “We need your support, not to mention that picture of you jumping through the fire.” He grinned at the mention of the profile picture I use on my fundraising homepage. He likes the picture, and from what he’s said, I gather there are few pix of his “alumni” leaping over bonfires.



On my way out of the office, I stopped by the front desk to schedule an appointment for my quarterly CT scan. I didn’t even recognize my friend Jeff nearby; rather, it was he who noticed me.

“There’s my friend!” he said with a big smile. I turned and smiled, and nearly at once realized who it was.

“Jeff!” I said, and we shook hands. I’d venture to guess Jeff is in his early 40s, and I’m ashamed to admit I don’t recall the exact type of cancer he was facing treatment for. For some reason, lung cancer comes to mind. We first met around the time I was finishing my treatment. We’d pass each other in the waiting area, or in the hospital hallways outside the oncology center. When I’d last seen him, nearly a year earlier, he was lean (though not alarmingly so), and his hair had just started falling out from a new treatment he had started.

But this morning he looked different. His head was topped with the soft, fine, wispy hair of a cancer patient, but his face and body were extraordinarily bloated – likely the product of steroids that comprise part of his treatment. He looked tired, though his expression suggested that seeing me had mustered within him genuine enthusiasm.

But the most notable difference this morning was that Jeff was in a wheelchair.

The receptionist called his name, indicating that it was his turn to head back to see the doctor. A young woman stood up from one of the nearby chairs and walked over to wheel him back. Jeff introduced her as his wife, and we shook hands and exchanged a few more words.

“Stay strong, Jeff,” I said, “and I will see you soon again.”

He smiled as his wife took the handles on his chair. “You…you have kids, don’t you?” he asked.

I nodded. “One,” I said. “He’s three.”

“Oh,” Jeff’s wife said, kindly. “We have a 3-year-old, too.”

I smiled. “They’re a handful.” We all laughed, and with that they disappeared down the long, bright hallway that leads to the nurses’ station – and the infusion room.

I was 31 at the time of my diagnosis, my son, just 13-months-old. When the word “cancer” was first suggested to me, it drove everything else in the world from my mind – everything, except for him. Hardly a day goes by that I don’t think of that, and I hope he was young enough at the time that he will have no memories of the whole ordeal.

My next CT scan is scheduled for five weeks from now – just before my next oncology checkup. I picked up the appointment form, put on my sunglasses and walked out into the warm morning light.

I was 90 minutes late for work.

And when I got there, I cried.

Wednesday, July 22, 2009

Yoga/Wellness Benefit This Saturday to Benefit Local Cancer-Stricken Child

As many of you know, I am a cancer survivor myself – over two years out from diagnosis, and still clean (knock on wood). But even my darkest of days pale in comparison to the hell little Baltimore-area resident Serena Lambert has endured.

On June 23, 2008, at age 3, Serena was diagnosed with Stage 4 High-Risk Neuroblastoma Cancer, a particularly aggressive form of childhood cancer that attacks the adrenal glands. In Serena’s case, it has affected every vertebra in her spinal column and the bone marrow throughout most of her body. In the past year, she has been through seven rounds of high-dose chemotherapy, two surgeries, 12 rounds of radiation and a bone-marrow transplant. The hope had been that Serena would be cancer-free following the bone-marrow transplant; however, her scans are still positive. The fight continues with radioactive iodine therapy, more chemotherapy, 3F8 monoclonal antibody therapy, and, finally, Accutane.

Not surprisingly, the costs associated with such treatment are astronomical. Nevertheless, Serena has proven herself a survivor, and her family and friends continue offering positive thoughts to help her through this fight. As such, in an effort to help with the costs related to Serena’s medical and living expenses, a Yoga and Wellness Benefit for Serena Lambert will be held from 2:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m., Saturday, July 25, 2009, at Evolvewell Healing Arts Studio, 4800 Roland Avenue, Suite 301, in Baltimore, Maryland. The event will include six donation-based yoga and meditation classes for children and adults, chair massage, acupuncture demonstrations, Thai massage, a silent auction and refreshments. The yoga schedule is as follows:

YOGA SCHEDULE:
2:00 p.m. – 2:50 p.m.
Studio 1: Kids Yoga
Studio 2: Adult Vinyasa/Flow Yoga

3:00 p.m. – 3:50 p.m.
Studio 1: Adult Intermediate Yoga
Studio 2: Adult Beginner Yoga

4:00 p.m. – 4:50 p.m.
Studio 1: Kids Yoga
Studio 2: Adult Pranayam/Meditation


All proceeds from this donation-based event will go (and checks should be made payable) to the Serena Lambert Pediatric Oncology Fund, P.O. Box 4014, Timonium, Maryland 21094. For more information, please e-mail Marley Keller at Marley.Keller84@gmail.com. Remember, through yoga and wellness, we can help one child fight her battle with cancer and live a better life.

Times are, indeed, hard for all of us, folks, but never forget, they are a whole lot harder for someone else. And, having survived this wicked disease myself, please trust me when I say that every little bit of support helps.

Wishing you health and happiness, and thanks for your support!


WPT


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2009 St. Vincent's Foundation Swim Across the Sound



For the last several years, my uncle has volunteered the use of his boat (a 39-foot Hatteras, I believe) to escort a relay team across the 25k course that comprises the St. Vincent's Swim Across the Sound. For two decades, the Swim, according to its website, has raised money for "providing cancer education, screening, and prevention programs at low- or no-cost for the elderly and underserved. In addition, the SWIM helps individual cancer patients on a case-by-case basis with specific needs, such as the funding of wigs and prostheses, medication assistance, free transportation to treatments and appointments, day-care scholarships and support groups" - virtually everything but research. Last year, the Swim raised more than $2.5 million.

The race kicks off from Port Jefferson, Long Island, destined for Bridgeport, Connecticut, just across Long Island Sound. For years, my uncle had been trying to draw me up to Connecticut for the first Saturday in August to help me crew the boat; unfortunately, the scheduling never worked out for one reason or other - until last year. I had a blast, even though a line of strong thunderstorms that blew through the area forced the powers that be to call the race nearly halfway through. Determined to see the thing through, all captains took in their swimmers and hightailed it Captain's Cove, in Bridgeport, where time was optimal time was made at the bar. ;)

Well, the 2009 Swim is next Saturday, August 1. And when the boat leaves, I'll be on it. As Kim, captain of the swim team my uncle has hosted for several years attests, "Once they get you, they've got you for life."

Indeed.

Monday, July 20, 2009

I Have a Favor to Ask

In the summer of 2007, while undergoing chemotherapy, I discovered this band out of the New York area called the Lost Patrol. In a word, I’d describe their sound as cinematic, a broad mix of influences that conjures everything from surf guitar, lounge, Ennio Morricone and David Lynch to desert skies, Joy Division and film noir. It really clicked for me, especially at a time when I couldn’t do much more than lie back and listen to music while the poison in my veins did its job.

I contacted them on MySpace a few months later, to tell them how much I appreciated their music and how, for me, it provided the perfect soundtrack to cancer treatment (if that can, indeed, be considered a compliment). To my surprise, they wrote me back, saying how much they appreciated my story, etc., and since then we’ve actually become friends.

Unfortunately, the last time they played Baltimore, in November 2008, in support of their most recent album, Midnight Matinee, about six people (including myself) showed up. Granted, it being a Sunday night didn’t help; still, I wouldn’t have been surprised if they (understandably) never played Charm City again after that turnout (or lack thereof).

Nevertheless, they’ve told me how much they like Baltimore and, fresh off a west coast tour that included the legendary Whiskey A-Go-Go, they’re coming back to Mobtown to play a gig at 8:00 p.m. this Friday, July 24, at Cyclops Books (on the northeast corner of Maryland and North Avenues).

The Lost Patrol have received a lot of critical acclaim, and I quite seriously think there is a broader audience out there (and here, in Baltimore) for them. That said, I plan to go see their show this Friday night, which, depending on the turnout, will hopefully be followed by more down the line.

Which (rather longwindedly, I know) brings me to that favor: if you have the chance (and even the slightest curiosity), please visit their website, which includes a handful of MP3s of their music. And if you like what you hear and/or happen to be free this Friday night, please consider coming down to Cyclops at 8:00 p.m. for their show. (I’m not sure how much the show costs, but I can’t imagine it will be very much at all.) As a friend, I would greatly appreciate it, personally, and I know they will, too.

Hell, I’ll even bring the booze . . .

And thanks for listening, as well as your support!


WPT


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Thursday, July 2, 2009

Yoga and Wellness Benefit for Cancer-Stricken 4-Year-Old

Friends of Eight-Stone Press,

As many of you know, I am a cancer survivor myself – over two years out from diagnosis, and still clean (knock on wood). But even my darkest of days pale in comparison to the hell little Baltimore-area resident Serena Lambert has endured.

On June 23, 2008, at age 3, Serena was diagnosed with Stage 4 High-Risk Neuroblastoma Cancer, a particularly aggressive form of childhood cancer that attacks the adrenal glands. In Serena’s case, it has affected every vertebra in her spinal column and the bone marrow throughout most of her body. In the past year, she has been through seven rounds of high-dose chemotherapy, two surgeries, 12 rounds of radiation and a bone-marrow transplant. The hope had been that Serena would be cancer-free following the bone-marrow transplant; however, her scans are still positive. The fight continues with radioactive iodine therapy, more chemotherapy, 3F8 monoclonal antibody therapy, and, finally, Accutane.

Not surprisingly, the costs associated with such treatment are astronomical. Nevertheless, Serena has proven herself a survivor, and her family and friends continue offering positive thoughts to help her through this fight. As such, in an effort to help with the costs related to Serena’s medical and living expenses, a Yoga and Wellness Benefit for Serena Lambert will be held from 2:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m., Saturday, July 25, 2009, at Evolvewell Healing Arts Studio, 4800 Roland Avenue, Suite 301, in Baltimore, Maryland. The event will include six donation-based yoga and meditation classes for children and adults, chair massage, acupuncture demonstrations, Thai massage, a silent auction and refreshments. The yoga schedule is as follows:

YOGA SCHEDULE:
2:00 p.m. – 2:50 p.m.
Studio 1: Kids Yoga
Studio 2: Adult Vinyasa/Flow Yoga
3:00 p.m. – 3:50 p.m.
Studio 1: Adult Intermediate Yoga
Studio 2: Adult Beginner Yoga
4:00 p.m. – 4:50 p.m.
Studio 1: Kids Yoga
Studio 2: Adult Pranayam/Meditation

All proceeds from this donation-based event will go (and checks should be made payable) to the Serena Lambert Pediatric Oncology Fund, P.O. Box 4014, Timonium, Maryland 21094. For more information, please e-mail Marley Keller at Marley.Keller84@gmail.com. Remember, through yoga and wellness, we can help one child fight her battle with cancer and live a better life.

Times are, indeed, hard for all of us, folks, but never forget, they are a whole lot harder for someone else. And, having survived this wicked disease myself, please trust me when I say that every little bit of support helps.

Thanks for all of your continuing support!

Wishing you health and happiness,

William Patrick Tandy, Editor
Eight-Stone Press
Http://www.eightstonepress.com
wpt@eightstonepress.com
Facebook: “William P. Tandy”


PS – Please do not hesitate to share news of this event with your own network of friends and family!


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Friday, June 19, 2009

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

ALTON ELLIS - "Girl, I've Got a Date"

While undergoing chemotherapy in summer 2007, I listened to a lot of music, and one song I played the hell out of was "Cry Tough" by Jamaican singer Alton Ellis & The Flames, a great little rocksteady tune that particularly resonated with me given the circumstances.

During the course of that summer, Ellis was listed to play some kind of reggae show in Anne Arundel County. However, with nearly four months' worth of treatment under my belt at that point (not to mention an obliterated immune system), I didn't make many concerts, let alone the Ellis show. Nevertheless, I hoped to one day have that chance...

Unfortunately, it never happened. Alton Ellis died the following year, in October 2008 - ironically (for me), from cancer: