Friday, November 30, 2018

Christmas Lights Hope Lights


I think we're going to drive through and see the Christmas lights on the Fab 40's in Sacramento tonight. We have a very early appointment for a pulmonary function test and decided to drive in tonight and stay in a hotel. Not the place we stayed that terrible week straight out of the hospital. Not a glamorous hotel either. Just a nice place where I got a nice discount with a special code for transplant patients. We have lovely friends we can stay with, but we're setting out almost with a little holiday in mind, and a hotel for just one night on my terms sounds a little dreamy.
 
And this day, this is Dominic's birthday. Not his actual birthday, his second chance birthday. The feelings all pulsing through my heart are palpable. One year ago, we watched the bright coral colored stem cells flow into Dom's body, and we went to bed that night in the glow of my battery operated Christmas lights with the knowledge that he'd made it through that first big hurdle of accepting the cells. We fell asleep feeling like our whole lives were before us.

It really felt like an actual shift. All the chemo is behind us. All the anticipation.

Well. Not all the anticipation. We still anticipate what is next. But the donor had been found, and the job was done. So now, we hope. We persevere.

After almost exactly a month in the hospital, we were free to move into our temporary place. After a month of being in an enormous room with people peeking in the door out of curiosity, people walking through the door to work, and the lights and beeps, we were released, and though where we moved was not literally quiet, in my heart it felt like the quietness you feel in a snow fall when sound is muffled by snow flakes falling and collecting all around.

With Christmas just days away, and our newfound freedom, we bundled up and set out to see the Christmas lights.

Which is the same place we're heading later tonight. I'm also jumping out of my skin because after the appointment  in the morning, we're meeting with one of our most favorite nurses to catch up. It's been too long and we're delighted to finally try and meet up. Well....we tried before, but timing thus
far has been off. Fingers crossed, because we really miss her. And there's some synchronicity both in seeing the Christmas lights and seeing our nurse.

We'd see this nurse throughout the months of chemo, waiting in agonizing anticipation for a donor. In the middle of the night she'd come in to make the beeping stop, but she was never our nurse. We immediately liked her, and I'd wonder out loud when she'd actually be assigned to us. I later realized she only works with patients after transplant. So finally, after months of visits to the hospital, she would actually be the one to carry Dom through the night. And tomorrow again, after months of agony we will get to connect with her. Even though she was our nurse again during the very difficult time, I don't think about that. I associate her with being part of the other side, the other side of transplant, the other side of gvhd. We are being ushered beyond these milestones.

And the lights. Last year, we drove through feeling a deep kinship with Christmas and new life and the wonder of it all. Tonight, we'll have this whole year behind us. And though the whole year is behind us, it almost felt like a wrinkle in time, where the past 6 months of the horror of gvhd are in that fold, and we can meet again the feelings of hopefulness we had a year ago, the feelings of being in a cocoon in the hospital and in our apartment in Sacramento. While we always longed to be home, we also felt so safe being in the hospital or so near the hospital. And while I greeted that old feeling of security again, that I associate with that time in anticipation of driving through a twinkly wonderland, I also feel like we're truly being deposited on the other side. I finally have a sense of relief that this time, Dominic's new immune system is going to kick into gear and do what it is supposed to do. What better bookend to this year than sparkling lights and sparkling friends? Dominic is getting his sparkle back every day. Our ground zero now is a little more ground zero than last year, but we're more resilient, more tenacious, and more experienced. 2018 threw us a sharper curve ball than 2017. As I think about all these comforting things on Dominic's first birthday, I am convinced that 2019 will lob an easy home-run to us and we'll look back on his second birthday with even more joy and life to celebrate.


Tuesday, November 27, 2018

All the best people are:

Dom's new birthday is in one day! I should be writing a celebratory post about the fact that he has lived a whole year as a miracle. And I will?

But for now, I feel like speaking to the care-taker of a blood cancer/ bone marrow transplant patient.

Let's climb into the Wayback machine to returning home after the initial diagnosis and two and a half weeks in the hospital, which felt like too long, but would in fact be only a drop in the bucket.



There is this thing called neutropenic which is a state that anyone undergoing a white blood cell killing chemo will be in. It means they have no immune system. It means you dear Caretaker may be out of your mind wishing you could get your hands on a giant bubble like the one John Travolta lived in in the movie Bubble Boy.

It means you will go through all your knives in one day because once the butter knife touches the bread, if you need more butter, you'll have to get a new knife because crumbs can't contaminate the butter because mold may grow? I was out of my mind friends. Now I just let the cats lick the butter knives clean before I go back for more.



I'm not going to say relax Caretaker. But relax. It could be a long road and you'll need to pace yourself and your butter knives.

I bought stacks of towels to pat things dry with and immediately put in the laundry before they become mold infested colonies.
Hey. That's not a bad idea. Have you seen studies on towels? Ew.

You yourself may undergo some bodily changes Caretaker. That's okay. You may be faced with a dilemma of not wanting to eat because you're so upset, but then you almost faint because you're actually quite hungry and once you start eating, you can't stop. That's okay. If your partner finds they can't eat because of chemo or the dramatic changes in their body post transplant, you'll wish you could actually eat for two like a pregnant woman because, well, you are eating for two. That's okay Caretaker.

And while we're on the subject of moms and babies, you're going to be tired. So tired. Like you've never known. Or maybe you have, who am I to say? But take naps if you can. Take naps if you can't. Sleep is a friend like no other.

Speaking of friends, sometimes, you'll feel isolated. It will be lonely. If you, Caretaker, are married to the person you are care-taking, at times, you may feel like you've lost them. What is important is that you do not lose you. They are still there, they just may have to do a caterpillar thing for a while, but they will emerge. You must take care of you. You are emerging into something new too.

You'll feel isolated because it's a tightrope you'll walk between letting people know you have to exercise extreme caution to not get the patient sick, but also that you are dying inside looking at the same four walls and you neeeeeeed a friend to reach out and risk everything just to make you smile. You need someone to sacrifice a little bit to meet you where you are. I'm hanging from that tightrope myself friend, so I'm not sure how to advise you on this. But just know precious Caretaker, that some friends will absolutely amaze you in the way they show up. Focus on that.

You will get a lot of advice Caretaker. A lot of advice. Advice is the currency of help oftentimes. It is almost always well meaning, and so here is how you take it: take it as love in your bank. I urge you Caretaker, to not actually follow all the advice given. Lots of people read lots of information and sometimes the sources are dubious and sometimes anecdotal and sometimes it may sound good to just drink fruit smoothies to fight the cancer instead of undergoing gut wrenching chemo. Don't do that. Chemo is like the tongue. The same tongue that can kill a person can build a person up. Chemo allows your partner to be rebuilt. That's a good thing.

You will feel like you've been placed on a conveyor belt and you can't get off. You can't. You must buck up and try to adapt to the speed of the conveyor. Sometimes, you will feel like Lucy. That's okay. There's nothing wrong with a little chocolate on your face.
So hang in there dear Caretaker. There will be time to sort things out. Feel all the feels and accept the help and do actually eat the chocolate.



Friday, November 16, 2018

Rebuilding this house.

An overflow of flowers from a friend. 

It's difficult and easy to believe I have not blogged in three months.

I don't know if it was a lack of time or a lack of heart or both. The first month after being in the hospital, all I could do was look after Dom and sleep. I gave myself permission to do just  that after I'd done whatever work had to be attended to.
Looking back at our time in the hospital, it's almost surreal. Living in a hospital is weird enough. Constant noise, interruptions and lack of autonomy. Constant dread regarding Dominic's well being. That alone is exhausting.  I guess even the luxury of cathartic writing was too much.

The beauty of it is, when I look back on our time in the hospital,  I don't remember (mostly) the exhaustion. I think of the nurses we had relationships with. I think of the warmth of the staff. I think about how much people cared for Dom to get better. I think about how grateful I am that we are home now.

But 3 months! Where has the time gone? 4 months since we've been out of hospital.
I guess I have less material as I'm not in a hospital full of characters any longer.

And, to be honest...my spirits have definitely taken a hit.

It's difficult for me to be cagey, so it's easier to just not write at all. Because heaven forbid anyone actually see me!

As I sit and write, Dominic and I are watching The British Baking Show; they are making Samosas. The first Samosa I ever had was when I visited our good friends in Edinburgh attending University. I think that's funny. I traveled to the UK only to fall in love with an Asian dish. My friends were fortunate to live down the street from a little market that sold the best fresh homemade Samosas.
Dominic and I watch a lot of food shows as he forges a new relationship with food. Eating still causes a bit of pain for him. Too often, quite a bit. (If I could add a sound effect, you'd hear a record scratch here. Science corner time. The pain he is feeling is not something that can be cured by what he chooses to eat. This pain is his new immune system attacking his gi tract as an enemy.) We look forward to the day he can just eat and be merry. Will that day even come? I tease that when our trips to Sacramento come to a slow drip, I can get a job as a line cook in a breakfast restaurant, as each morning I fix eggs, sausage, toast, tea and sometimes a bit of leftovers in the mix.
Last night, Dominic made a simple apple bake he'd come across. We've made some apple dishes together where he sits at the table peeling and coring and I navigate the rest. We have to be so intentional right now. There's the chore of eating for him, and the pleasure of eating we're looking for. (I've unfortunately found too great a pleasure in eating this past year plus.) We both need to stop and recognize we're not just jumping through a hoop. Life can seem mundane; particularly when you're as severely limited as we have been. As Jane Austen says, life can seem a quick succession of busy nothings. Especially when it is punctuated by one doctor visit a week that has lately made him sick. Anticipating and recovering; round and round we go. If we're not careful, the days slip by into oblivion.
Even as I type, I'm mindful that we've not been mindful enough.
I'm juggling my part time job, care-taking the ranch and Dom. Instead of having a schedule I can follow, I feel like there is a rope around my neck and different tasks yank me in every direction. I'm sure I am not alone in that feeling. I'm sure lots of my friends feel this way, juggling children, parents, jobs, and all the curve-balls of life. I keep trying to put it into perspective, but perspective gets whacked everyday. I've been living in survival mode for so long, I can't catch up.
If this blog post were a dubstep song, this is the part where the bass really drops.

I'm struggling. That rope around my neck yanking me along would be tolerable if it wasn't accompanied by another rope that regularly chokes me with the whatifs. Whatif he is in constant pain the rest of his life? Or the dreaded and common whatif it comes back? Or the ever so slighter tug of how long before he is strong enough to walk up and down our hill again, or drive? (Or even bring me coffee.) I try and push it back. That alone is exhausting. Without diminishing the true exhaustion my fellow humans feel, what I would give to be exhausted by a career or a child or a social life. Sometimes I feel like people think what Dom and I are experiencing is over. Solved. Complete. How I wish it were. Since our immediate needs are met, I think people forget we have heart needs. We have long term needs. And every day I remember it's no human's job to meet our needs. But it brightens my day immensely to know that people care about us, about our hearts. Sometimes silence is brutal. But little messages checking in, short visits, phone calls. That's everything to us right now.
.
California is struggling. Again. Fires to the north and to the south. I was glued to the news the day the fire broke up north worried for a work associate and his family. (They are safe, they lost everything.) Then I worried for other friends a little west of the fires. They are safe. My heart has ached right along with so many aching hearts seeing so much loss and tragedy.

I listened to an interview with a woman who barely escaped. The way out of Paradise is narrow. (I can't help but see some irony here.) She sat in her car for many hours barely creeping down the road. She was interviewed because people want to know what it's like to barely escape from a fire. We're curious people. We gravitate toward the sensational. As she shared her harrowing tale, I'm sure listeners can see the flames coming up behind her. We can imagine six hours in a car wondering if we'll outrun the fire or if we'll be overtaken. While I think we can all empathize with that experience, we'll never know exactly what the people coming down the hill felt, as they people got out of their melting cars and ran for their lives.

But I feel like I've been driving down that hill for 18 months now. Trying to outrun the fire with Dom. It's so hot I wonder if we'll withstand the heat. The cancer diagnosis was like that rush of adrenaline you feel when you realize you have to flee. The transplant felt like losing a home. But this graft versus host, this feels like being stuck on a hill wondering if we'll make it down the hill or if the flames will overtake us. And Dominic is the one getting singed along the way as my knuckles are white gripping the steering wheel.
It's terrifying. And exhausting.
And as much as we put on a brave face, and try to be positive and grateful....this journey is more than we can always bear.
It's incredibly lonely.
Friends have shown up in the most unusual ways. Friends I would never expect anything from have offered a shoulder, a house, money, food. I'm in an awkward position of feeling like I don't have enough time, but feeling like I need to connect with people.
We're not out of the woods friends.
We're pleased with the progress Dom has made, but he has such a long way to go. We thought he'd be free to live a normal life by year one. And now it looks even more far away than we ever could have imagined.
As is always my way, I do not like to close on a sad note. A weakness in my personality is that I like to be understood. Once understood, I like to sigh a contented sigh and press on. This is probably the most difficult thing Dominic and I will ever endure. And yet, we are always held. Always loved. Always cared for. Cared for in miraculous ways. And the season of Thanksgiving is here! We have much to be thankful for. I don't have to live in that car careening down the fire hill. I can live in gratefulness for all that is going well, for all the ways we are lifted up and for all the love shown. Resting in that and enjoying some twinkle lights of the season sooth my soul.