It is after 10:30pm. I've already taken a sleeping pill, and yet I'm here on the computer, typing. I was laying in bed, when a memory from thirteen years ago hit me and I really felt a strong need to type this blog post. I don't know which one of you needs to hear this, but I sense that this is something I need to share.
Thirteen years ago, shortly after Jason and I were married, I went through an incredibly difficult time emotionally. One night, I cut on myself with a razor over forty times. The cuts weren't deep, but they were a sign of a serious problem. Jason drove me all the way from our apartment to a hospital in Portland, OR about 25 miles away. Jason was a paramedic in Portland at the time, so for privacy concerns (he didn't need his co-workers asking him why his wife was in the ER), we were put in a room and they closed the curtains. Unfortunately, the social worker thought the closed curtains were a sign that we had already been helped and we waited a LONG time, I believe it was about an hour and a half, before the social worker realized that no one had been in to see me yet and finally came in to talk to us. By that time (45 minute drive + 1.5 hr wait), I had calmed down and was back in a "rational" frame of mind. Because I had already begun seeing a therapist the week before and didn't want to harm myself at that immediate moment, they sent me home with no treatment whatsoever. No lock up. No meds, and I don't believe they called my therapist either.
Fast-forward to last October. I downed a bunch of Ambien in a suicide attempt. I was taken by ambulance to Memorial Hospital, then transferred to Doctor's Behavioral Health (Mental Hospital), where I was put on a suicide watch for two days. I saw a psychiatrist there twice, for about ten minutes each time. I declined meds, and was released, with no follow up. I was not under the care of a therapist or a psychiatrist and no appointment was made for me by the staff to see one.
Why am I telling you these things? Because I want you to understand that if you have someone in your life who is struggling with depression, who is hurting themselves in anyway, you CANNOT count on the institutions or the hospitals to make sure they are safe and/or getting the treatment they need. I also want to point out that most people with mental illness, be it anxiety or depression (I can't speak for any other mental illnesses because I haven't experienced them), are incredibly overwhelmed. Even the smallest decisions of day to day life can seem insurmountable. When you can barely drag yourself out of bed and can't decide what you want to eat, or even if you want to eat, calling the insurance company, finding out what your coverage is, then calling several doctors before you find one who is accepting new patients, then making an appointment, getting to that appointment and then explaining what is going on with you is about tantamount to summitting Mount Everest! If you have a loved one who is steeped in depression or overcome with anxiety, offer to help them navigate the world of insurance and doctors. You may not want to be "pushy" or "interfere in their business" but I'm going to say it again: the institutions will not keep them safe. They may help you figure out how to keep them safe, but if you check them in and leave it at that, more times than not, they will not get adequate help. I honestly don't know where I would be today if I didn't have the help and support of my husband through those incredibly challenging and dangerous times. So be nosy. You just might save a life.
Saturday, May 25, 2013
Thursday, May 23, 2013
That's a wrap!
I have made my decision. I will not be doing the Taxol portion of the chemo treatment, meaning that my chemo is over. YAY! And yet I'm terrified! Not about the cancer. There are pros and cons to either decision I could make and I made the best one I could. I'm not really scared about the cancer coming back, or anything like that. If it comes back, we'll deal with it then. What I'm really struggling with is returning to "normal" life.
As strange as this may sound, my cancer has been a shield of sorts for me. Coming off severe depression and a nasty, painful situation with the ministry I was involved in, having cancer provided me with a blanket of sorts. For the last six months, I have been flooded with love and support. Even perfect strangers have reached out and loved on me. The wounds of the two years prior began to heal and I started to feel loved again. Emotionally, I started to feel stronger and stronger. To be honest, I felt like once my chemo was done, I would be able to take on anything that was thrown at me. But now, my chemo has been abruptly shortened by three months and I don't feel so strong anymore. I'm scared. I'm scared to face the big, scary world out there. I'm scared about how things will change.
We came to Covenant Grove Church two weeks after I was diagnosed with cancer, so from day one there, I have been a cancer patient. They have loved us and supported us and we have started to develop some good friendships there, but, like I said, from day one, I had cancer. I was the needy one. Every week, people would ask me how I was feeling, if I needed anything, how things were going. Now...now things will change and that is unsettling to me.
When I was depressed, I was tired all the time, but it was something I fought and was ashamed of. When I was going through surgeries and chemo, I was tired all the time, but it was expected, and naps were encouraged. If I had insomnia, it didn't really matter because I could sleep whenever I wanted to during the day without anyone thinking anything of it. I had help with the kids, with the house, with meals. I was incredibly blessed and spoiled. I'm scared now, now that I have to be an adult again. What if I'm still tired? What if life becomes overwhelming again and I can't hide behind my cancer?
Don't get me wrong. I didn't exploit my cancer. I tried very hard not to take advantage of people, but people are naturally more likely to help when you are sick and bald. Not so much when you look "normal".
Cancer also protected me from myself. I needed to distance myself from some unhealthy situations I was in and undergoing chemo forced me to do that. I was physically unable to put myself in some of those situations without seriously endangering my physical health due to low blood cell counts. Soon, however, in a matter of four weeks or so, my immune system will be back up to par and the choice will be mine. I will have to decide what is healthy for me emotionally and what isn't. I will have to make those choices, and they scare me. When I was laying in bed, sick from the chemo and the anti-nausea meds, I thought I could take on the world if only I wasn't so sick. Now, I don't feel so strong. I feel vulnerable, and the pains of my pre-cancer world haunt me and try to rob me of my peace.
One of my go-to verses during this cancer journey has been Romans 8:28 "And we know that in all things, God works for the good of those who love Him, who have been called according to His purpose." My depression? For good. My cancer? For good. My broken relationships? For good. My chemo? For good. Covenant Grove? For good. ALL things. In ALL things. I just wish I felt stronger emotionally...but then, if I did, perhaps I would start to rely on myself again, and forget the Source of my strength. He is my Rock. He has been my Rock through terrible, horrible, God-awful storms. I read the following quote after my first stay in the mental hospital and have found it to be so incredibly true. "Sometimes God lets you hit rock bottom so that you will discover that He is the rock at the bottom." - Tony Evans.
I don't know what the future holds and it does scare me. But Jesus is sleeping in my boat, and I know that should any storm arise, He can quickly calm it...or He can hold me while it rages, and promise to see me through.
As strange as this may sound, my cancer has been a shield of sorts for me. Coming off severe depression and a nasty, painful situation with the ministry I was involved in, having cancer provided me with a blanket of sorts. For the last six months, I have been flooded with love and support. Even perfect strangers have reached out and loved on me. The wounds of the two years prior began to heal and I started to feel loved again. Emotionally, I started to feel stronger and stronger. To be honest, I felt like once my chemo was done, I would be able to take on anything that was thrown at me. But now, my chemo has been abruptly shortened by three months and I don't feel so strong anymore. I'm scared. I'm scared to face the big, scary world out there. I'm scared about how things will change.
We came to Covenant Grove Church two weeks after I was diagnosed with cancer, so from day one there, I have been a cancer patient. They have loved us and supported us and we have started to develop some good friendships there, but, like I said, from day one, I had cancer. I was the needy one. Every week, people would ask me how I was feeling, if I needed anything, how things were going. Now...now things will change and that is unsettling to me.
When I was depressed, I was tired all the time, but it was something I fought and was ashamed of. When I was going through surgeries and chemo, I was tired all the time, but it was expected, and naps were encouraged. If I had insomnia, it didn't really matter because I could sleep whenever I wanted to during the day without anyone thinking anything of it. I had help with the kids, with the house, with meals. I was incredibly blessed and spoiled. I'm scared now, now that I have to be an adult again. What if I'm still tired? What if life becomes overwhelming again and I can't hide behind my cancer?
Don't get me wrong. I didn't exploit my cancer. I tried very hard not to take advantage of people, but people are naturally more likely to help when you are sick and bald. Not so much when you look "normal".
Cancer also protected me from myself. I needed to distance myself from some unhealthy situations I was in and undergoing chemo forced me to do that. I was physically unable to put myself in some of those situations without seriously endangering my physical health due to low blood cell counts. Soon, however, in a matter of four weeks or so, my immune system will be back up to par and the choice will be mine. I will have to decide what is healthy for me emotionally and what isn't. I will have to make those choices, and they scare me. When I was laying in bed, sick from the chemo and the anti-nausea meds, I thought I could take on the world if only I wasn't so sick. Now, I don't feel so strong. I feel vulnerable, and the pains of my pre-cancer world haunt me and try to rob me of my peace.
One of my go-to verses during this cancer journey has been Romans 8:28 "And we know that in all things, God works for the good of those who love Him, who have been called according to His purpose." My depression? For good. My cancer? For good. My broken relationships? For good. My chemo? For good. Covenant Grove? For good. ALL things. In ALL things. I just wish I felt stronger emotionally...but then, if I did, perhaps I would start to rely on myself again, and forget the Source of my strength. He is my Rock. He has been my Rock through terrible, horrible, God-awful storms. I read the following quote after my first stay in the mental hospital and have found it to be so incredibly true. "Sometimes God lets you hit rock bottom so that you will discover that He is the rock at the bottom." - Tony Evans.
I don't know what the future holds and it does scare me. But Jesus is sleeping in my boat, and I know that should any storm arise, He can quickly calm it...or He can hold me while it rages, and promise to see me through.
Thursday, May 16, 2013
Taxol?
Next
Tuesday, the 28th, I am scheduled to begin my Taxol
regiment. I want to cry. The Adriamycin/Cytoxan has been brutal and I
so desperately want to be done. I want this “cancer” portion of
my life to be over and be able to move on, to what, I don't know, but
on from this.
I've been wondering if I should do the Taxol at all. At times, when I think about it, it seems like overkill, but when dealing with something that could take my life, is there such a thing as overkill? I sent my oncologist an email today with several questions, asking him to explain to me why he felt I should undergo further chemotherapy and what the long-term repercussions of this particular chemo could be. I also asked him what he thought of the “forks over knives” view of things, particularly that a vegan diet can slow or even stop the growth of cancer. This was his response:
I've been wondering if I should do the Taxol at all. At times, when I think about it, it seems like overkill, but when dealing with something that could take my life, is there such a thing as overkill? I sent my oncologist an email today with several questions, asking him to explain to me why he felt I should undergo further chemotherapy and what the long-term repercussions of this particular chemo could be. I also asked him what he thought of the “forks over knives” view of things, particularly that a vegan diet can slow or even stop the growth of cancer. This was his response:
There is no guarantee of benefit with any
of this therapy. It is possible you were cured as soon as your
surgical wound was closed in the OR. It is possible we could treat
you with chemotherapy constantly with a variety of drugs for many
months and the disease may still come back. Clinical trials would
suggest that with your particular disease parameters there appears to
be statistically greater benefit to adding Taxol (that tends to be
much easier to tolerate than Adriamycin and Cytoxan) than without.
Unfortunately at an individual level, this benefit can only be
expressed qualitatively and not quantitatively. It is like saying
there is a 23% chance of rain this afternoon; if it rains, do you
only get 23% wet.
2: There is a potential for permanent nerve symptoms about the hands and feet but that tends to be uncommon and mild.
3: My challenge to schools of thought such as "forks over knives" is to show the data in humans in similar clinical setting as you that specifically support what is being promoted. There are no data to say a vegan diet can be even remotely compared in efficacy in therapy for breast cancer.
Having said all that, the choice of what to do is yours. This issues cannot be effectively and adequately be discussed in an email like this. I would be happy to sit down with you and discuss all this further before you decide whether to continue with chemotherapy or not.
2: There is a potential for permanent nerve symptoms about the hands and feet but that tends to be uncommon and mild.
3: My challenge to schools of thought such as "forks over knives" is to show the data in humans in similar clinical setting as you that specifically support what is being promoted. There are no data to say a vegan diet can be even remotely compared in efficacy in therapy for breast cancer.
Having said all that, the choice of what to do is yours. This issues cannot be effectively and adequately be discussed in an email like this. I would be happy to sit down with you and discuss all this further before you decide whether to continue with chemotherapy or not.
So
the reality is that no one really knows if I need the next twelve
weeks of chemo, and I want to run screaming for the hills, or bury my
head in the sand and pretend that if I do nothing, all of this will
go away. And maybe it would. Maybe it's already gone. But then again,
maybe it isn't, and while the thought of spending my summer hooked to
an IV isn't exactly my idea of a great time, it may, in the end, buy
me years more of life.
I'm tired. I'm tired of being drugged up, tired of feeling weak, tired of fighting to muster the energy for every day activities. These months of chemo tagged on to two years of severe depression are taking their tole, and I'm just bone-weary tired. I do see the light at the end of the tunnel. I know it's there and I will be basking in its glow sooner than I know it. In the mean time, I ask for your prayers and rest in the strong arms of the One Who will get me through.
I'm tired. I'm tired of being drugged up, tired of feeling weak, tired of fighting to muster the energy for every day activities. These months of chemo tagged on to two years of severe depression are taking their tole, and I'm just bone-weary tired. I do see the light at the end of the tunnel. I know it's there and I will be basking in its glow sooner than I know it. In the mean time, I ask for your prayers and rest in the strong arms of the One Who will get me through.
Thursday, May 9, 2013
Comfort in the storm - Final A/C treatment
It is 3:30 am. In six hours, a nurse will be accessing my port and
beginning the premeds for my final Adriamycin/Cytoxin chemo treatment.
Following that, I will have twelve weekly treatments of Taxol, beginning
in three weeks. My stomach is clenched in anxiety and dread and my mind
is playing a revolving tape, sometimes in the background, sometimes on
the forefront. "God, please don't make me! God, please help me. God,
please don't make me! God, please help me."
As I was praying this prayer a few minutes ago, I was struck by the story of Jesus in the Garden of Gethsemane. Now don't get me wrong. What I am about to go through, and what He went through are hardly comparable, but as the dread of and anguish over the events looming just around the corner rob me of my sleep and steal my peace, I am reminded of a time nearly two thousand years ago when a man, the Son of God, was in anguish and robbed of peace. Here are two separate recountings of the same event.
Something else I noticed in the reading of Matthew's version of events is that Jesus didn't beg God the Father once. He, too, had a "tape" playing: "God, please don't make me. God, please don't make me. God, please don't make me." His anguish was deep. His pain was soul-wrenching. His plea was strong and heart-felt. And when He was done pouring His broken heart out to God, He got up and did what He had to do, for you and for me.
There is much about the Bible, Christ and Christianity that I do not understand, but this I do know. Jesus loved us with a love beyond compare. He faced an agony so intense because He knew what was ahead. He knew He would be brutally beaten and hung on a cross. He knew He was about to have the weight of the sins of the entire world cast on Him. His soul was in anguish, and still He went through with it...because He loved His Father and because, together, they loved us.
When you are going through something that is ripping you to shreds and you think that God just doesn't understand, think again. He does. He understands completely, but maybe His ultimate plan is not to save you from your pain. Maybe His plan is to walk with you through it.
As I was praying this prayer a few minutes ago, I was struck by the story of Jesus in the Garden of Gethsemane. Now don't get me wrong. What I am about to go through, and what He went through are hardly comparable, but as the dread of and anguish over the events looming just around the corner rob me of my sleep and steal my peace, I am reminded of a time nearly two thousand years ago when a man, the Son of God, was in anguish and robbed of peace. Here are two separate recountings of the same event.
Luke 22:39-46: "Then, accompanied by the disciples, Jesus left the upstairs room and went as usual to the Mount of Olives. There he told them, “Pray that you will not give in to temptation.”He walked away, about a stone’s throw, and knelt down and prayed,“Father, if you are willing, please take this cup of suffering away from me. Yet I want your will to be done, not mine.” Then an angel from heaven appeared and strengthened him. He prayed more fervently, and he was in such agony of spirit that his sweat fell to the ground like great drops of blood."
Matthew 26:36-46: "Then Jesus went with them to the olive grove called Gethsemane, and he said, “Sit here while I go over there to pray.” He took Peter and Zebedee’s two sons, James and John, and he became anguished and distressed. He told them, “My soul is crushed with grief to the point of death. Stay here and keep watch with me.”He went on a little farther and bowed with his face to the ground, praying, “My Father! If it is possible, let this cup of suffering be taken away from me. Yet I want your will to be done, not mine.”
Then he returned to the disciples and found them asleep. He said to Peter, “Couldn’t you watch with me even one hour? Keep watch and pray, so that you will not give in to temptation. For the spirit is willing, but the body is weak!”
Then Jesus left them a second time and prayed, “My Father! If this cup cannot be taken away unless I drink it, your will be done.” When he returned to them again, he found them sleeping, for they couldn’t keep their eyes open.
So he went to pray a third time, saying the same things again. Then he came to the disciples and said, “Go ahead and sleep. Have your rest. But look—the time has come. The Son of Man is betrayed into the hands of sinners. Up, let’s be going. Look, my betrayer is here!”A few things jump out at me in these passages. The first one is this. Jesus, in His anguish, was brutally honest. "I don't want to do this!! Please don't make me do this!" but He also never lost sight of Who He was and what He had come for "I want your will to be done, not mine." In response, God the Father sent an angel to comfort Him. He didn't remove the suffering that Jesus was about to endure, but He gave Him the strength to endure it. Sometimes we pray in our anguish that God will remove the storms causing us pain, but instead He provides us the strength to walk through them.
Something else I noticed in the reading of Matthew's version of events is that Jesus didn't beg God the Father once. He, too, had a "tape" playing: "God, please don't make me. God, please don't make me. God, please don't make me." His anguish was deep. His pain was soul-wrenching. His plea was strong and heart-felt. And when He was done pouring His broken heart out to God, He got up and did what He had to do, for you and for me.
There is much about the Bible, Christ and Christianity that I do not understand, but this I do know. Jesus loved us with a love beyond compare. He faced an agony so intense because He knew what was ahead. He knew He would be brutally beaten and hung on a cross. He knew He was about to have the weight of the sins of the entire world cast on Him. His soul was in anguish, and still He went through with it...because He loved His Father and because, together, they loved us.
When you are going through something that is ripping you to shreds and you think that God just doesn't understand, think again. He does. He understands completely, but maybe His ultimate plan is not to save you from your pain. Maybe His plan is to walk with you through it.
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