Showing posts with label chemo brain. Show all posts
Showing posts with label chemo brain. Show all posts

Monday, May 14, 2012

Round 5 / A Long, Exhausting Day


Don't worry, I am not jaundiced! I just put on too much bronzer...

The following post may or may not make any sense since I wrote some of it at the hospital and some later at home. It also might not make sense because I am so tired after spending about 7 hours at the hospital that I almost feel sort of drunk.

8:45 AM : Arrived at the cancer center.

10:00 AM : I’m sitting in my “chemo booth” in the big chemo room at the cancer center, getting my IV pre-chemo drugs (steroids, nausea meds, Benadryl to prevent an allergic reaction). They do blood work before each treatment to make sure I am healthy enough to get the immune system killing chemo drugs and as always, I got the green light. I already talked to Dr. Gore (and gave him my painting!) before I came back to the chemo room. He decided after I get my chemo drugs, I’m going to get my abdomen tapped again. He noted that it is not as swollen as it was the last time it was tapped (after round 3) and that it took longer to swell up this time, which is good. However, because the fluids have returned, he is going to have them studied and I am coming back in next week for various scans to see how this treatment plan is going. After he looks at all the results he will make a decision about whether or not I will need more chemo than originally planned and if he needs to switch to different chemo meds. I really hope that I won’t need extra chemo, or if it is necessary to get more, he doesn’t switch to much harsher drugs. But yes, ultimately I care the most about killing all the cancer cells in me. 

11:15 AM : I’m currently being pumped full of taxol, the first chemo drug they give me each time. I took a half-asleep/ half-awake nap for a while. I take a lot of those kinds of naps lately because I can’t seem to fall all the way asleep most of time I’d like a nap. I couldn’t even fall half asleep at first because the woman getting chemo to my left had a very loud, talkative male visitor. I was extra annoyed because he wasn’t even talking about anything serious or urgent, it was just boring things like the board game “candy land.” Luckily, since I don’t really like confrontation, my sweet grandmother asked him very nicely to be a bit quieter. And thankfully he did quiet down and I was able to rest a bit. My dad brought me a chicken sandwich that smells really good so I’m going to eat that now.

1:15 PM : I just finished getting my second chemo drug, carboplatin. Now I just have to finish getting my regular fluids (0.9% Sodium Chloride) and then I’ll go over to radiology to get my abdomen drained. The woman that was to my left that had the noisy visitor finished a little while ago and an elderly woman with a temperature of 107 replaced her. This new woman obviously is too sick to get chemo today. Her doctor popped by to tell her he suspected her medical port was infected and now she is going to be admitted to the hospital at least overnight. I feel fortunate that I have not had an episode like that, even with the disadvantage of having diabetes. 

1:45 PM : Dr. Gore surprised me by coming by to talk to me again. I did not expect him to come back and I was eating a bit of a candy bar when he walked up because I was only hungry enough at lunch to eat a few bites of my chicken sandwich. I know I looked a bit guilty when he walked up because that isn’t exactly ideal diabetic food. However, he came to talk to me about something exciting and awesome! He had sent a picture of my painting in a text message to his wife, who is a retired gynecologist, and she loved it and said it should be submitted to a medical journal as a patient’s interpretation of her illness! Dr. Gore thought it might even be a good idea to also send the actual CT scan of my tumor as well for comparison. He said that he needed to ask my permission though and wanted to know if it would be ok to include my name and possibly my picture. I told him I thought it was great and I had no problem with any of that but for some reason he wanted me to wait and think about it some more. I just think it would be really exciting to be in a medical journal though I did tell Dr. Gore I would be a bit embarrassed that my painting wasn’t perfectly correct anatomically. He said that was part of what was good about it, because it was just my interpretation of what was going on in my body. I’m going to end up leaving out a lot of the details of what he said but I was so tired while he was talking to me, I had a hard time really focusing. 

By the time I was done talking to Dr. Gore, my IV fluid bag was finally empty so I could head over to radiology to get my abdomen drained (paracentesis). The two nurses that did the ultrasound to check out the best spot to slice me for draining did not think I looked swollen enough to be tapped. They said if the radiologist felt I didn’t have enough also, they could not do the procedure. I brought up the fact that Dr. Gore wanted some of the fluid to be tested (so they must have to get at least a little bit of it out of me somehow). Ultimately, the doctor came in and said he would go ahead with the procedure but did not feel that I had very much fluid to drain. I was anxious about the numbing shot since it hurt more than anything else last time so I sheepishly asked the nurse that seemed nicest if she would hold my hand. She was very sweet about it. Thankfully, the numbing shot didn’t hurt nearly as much as last time for some reason, but the stick-thing (I have no idea what it’s actually called) the radiologist had to insert into my abdomen to drain me hurt so much going in that I felt like I might throw up. I thought it was odd since last time that part was only mildly uncomfortable, but it could be because I had a lot less fluids in me. He was surprised that a lot more fluids came out than he expected though. I commented that the color of the fluid was different this time… last time it looked more like a dark beer (this time it was yellowish). He said, “You’re my kind of woman! This time it’s more like a Miller Lite!” He was an interesting character. When I was completely drained, I was so happy that it was finally time to leave the hospital. I set up the appointments to get my Neulasta shot tomorrow, my CT scan Monday, and an appointment to discuss all the test results with Dr. Gore on Wednesday. So next Wednesday is the day I will find out my fate as far as more chemo goes. I said goodbye to my dad and my grandmother, both of whom had stayed with me all that time and left the hospital with my mom at 3:40. I don’t think I have the words to describe how exhausted I felt (still feeling).

4:20 PM : Finally home! I’m so happy to be lying in my bed! Even though I can’t imagine being more exhausted than this, some good things happened today to help balance out the parts that were not so pleasant. I don’t know what I will do until bedtime but it will definitely be something that requires little to no energy. I’m sorry if this post is too long (I left a quite a few things out to make it shorter) and is a bit of a mess… I’m so tired that I can’t seem to think clearly or type things out correctly. Chemo brain is on in full force at the moment. 

I want to add one last thing before I go into rest mode. I felt kind of shitty that I didn’t have a painting to give to Dr. Barnes, the surgeon who actually removed the tumor I painted and who also put in my medical port. Maybe I can think of something to paint for him but I don’t have any new ideas at the moment. 

Oh, and one more thing that just randomly popped into my head. If you read this blog regularly, you might remember a post in which I talked about feeling guilty because I accidentally took a car air freshener without paying for it. Well, I am happy to report that I went back to that store this last Saturday to pay the $2 and some change I owed them for the air freshener! :-)

Tuesday, April 24, 2012

zombie mode


Today I went back to the hospital to get my neulasta shot (white count booster) and to get some IV fluids, because between the chemo and the steroids making my blood sugars high, I have been so damn dehydrated. Dr. Gore had put in an order for me to get fluids each time I come in for my neulasta shot the day after chemo. However, Dr. Gore is in Spain (still jealous!) this week and his power happy RN tried to tell me I didn’t need fluids. Um, well my doctor said that I do, so let’s just go with what he has ordered, k? I have diabetes and I’m getting chemo therapy… pump me full of those fluids! Luckily, I did not even have to talk to her today and got my fluids without any trouble. Dealing with someone on a power trip is never a fun experience. 
The happy moment when I noticed the fluids were almost done! Took over 2 hours!


I remember the good ol’ days when I felt good the day of chemo and the day after (today). Not anymore. I am sooo tired! And my skin is red today all over as if I got sunburned while nude (though I have not spent much time naked in the sun at all…). The nurse who was in charge of me today said it could be the steroids. My balance is also getting progressively worse. I almost fell when I went to get the mail after getting home from the hospital. I like being able to walk. I would like to keep that ability, please. I think when I started chemo and wasn’t feeling so terribly at first, and this is going to sound completely ridiculous, I just kind of thought of it as a new, interesting adventure. Venturing out into an unknown. Exciting. I no longer feel that way in the least and could slap myself for ever thinking that way. I will be so damn happy when this is over with. 

Every time I go in for chemo, the first thing they ask me is if I’ve been to the emergency room or been hospitalized since my last treatment. On a positive note, I have not gotten terribly sick at all since starting chemo so no, I have not been to the emergency or been hospitalized and am always happy to report this. I hope between the neulasta shots and the obsessive hand washing, it will stay that way. I am thankful I have not been stuck in the hospital since January. That was not a fun month for me at all. 

I haven’t made the progress I had hoped to make in improving my mind during this slow time (reading or studying Spanish or investigating something worthwhile) but maybe I can improve my body a bit. I get no exercise at all anymore and it makes me feel flabby and gross. I thought chemo would at least make me super skinny but my appetite has been fine and I have almost no issues with nausea now so I haven’t lost that much weight. I know I’m going back to being ridiculous again because I should be glad I’m not puking my guts out every day. Oh to be a woman in this society! So difficult not to be hung up on weight all the time. I am thinking of trying to go to yoga classes though. It might make me feel better. I probably won’t have the energy this week, but maybe next week will be better. 

And now I think it is time for a nap! I’m just not sure how to do it without waking her up…

Tuesday, April 10, 2012

Chemo Brain


In a way this blog is really good for me. It gives me something to do and I need to have things to do. I feel an obligation to write in it. That sounds negative but I like this feeling of obligation. I have very few responsibilities at the moment beyond show up for chemo and don’t lick doorknobs. Just a few months ago, I was very busy. I was responsible for school work, showing up for my job, and managing the only illnesses I was aware I had at the time. I enjoyed my level of stress to a certain extent and felt staying busy kept me happy. So I treasure this one small “responsibility” I have made for myself. However, this blog is also a source of some grief. I am highly aware that the chemotherapy and the exhaustion it has caused have dulled me down mentally. As I’m typing, I forgot how to spell words I would normally have no trouble with at all, will type the wrong word entirely, and make stupid grammatical errors. This is extremely frustrating for me and I reread my posts on average 3 times before I post them. Yet I have still have gone back and found errors later. I suppose I don’t need them as much at the moment, but losing my wits is painful for me. My mind feels like a Jackson Pollock painting sometimes. 

I guess when all this is “over” (I was told it won’t really be over for a long time), I get to call myself a cancer survivor. Sounds really dramatic to me. I might try to think of something else. “I had ovarian cancer but they got that shit out and now I’m minus one ovary” is a bit too long probably. 

I blew through 6 seasons of Weeds pretty quickly and I’m not trying to figure out how I can watch the seventh season without paying $21.99. For now, I started watching the series TEDTalks: Sex, Secrets & Love. “Would you die for love? Would you lie for love? These presenters' insights on sex, secrets and love are as surprising as they are delightful. Experts and humorists speak candidly about desire and attraction to illustrate the wonder of love.” The first episode was “Mary Roach: 10 Things You Didn’t Know About Orgasm.” It was interesting and I definitely learned a few things. She talked about a woman who for some odd reason would have an orgasm every time she brushed her teeth. I think some women might find this to be a fantastic discovery; but unfortunately, this woman was a religious zealot and felt she was possessed by the devil. She stopped brushing her teeth and switched to just mouthwash. Disgusting. I think it’s a shame that some people still view sexuality as something taboo. I guess for this women, brushing her teeth is a form of masturbation and she would rather let her teeth rot out of her head than masturbate. It’s very hard for me to try to see things from the perspective of someone like this. I feel sorry for her. 

I’ve been feeling a bit overwhelmed emotionally lately and hanging out with a depressed dog all day isn’t helping (I’m probably not good for her either) so I have an appointment with a new counselor next week. I hope she is much better than the last one… 


3,6,9
standin real fine
move it to you sing it to me one mo time
Get low
Get low
Get low
Get low
Get low
Get low
Get low
Get low
To the window, to the wall,
To the sweat drip down my balls
To all these bitches crawl
To all skeet skeet motherfucker
all skeet skeet goddamn

I have no idea if those are the correct words. Wow, that song really takes me back to a much simpler time… :-D

Tuesday, April 3, 2012

What a rough day…


Today was supposed to be the day I still felt ok because the steroids from chemo would hold me over and keep me feeling good until tomorrow. No, not at all. I feel horrible. When I went in to get my usual neulasta shot at 2:30, they also gave me a bag of fluids because my blood sugars wouldn’t come down and I just felt awful. On top of that, my skin and eyes and nose were burning… On the way to the hospital I had to stop for gas because I was sitting on empty. Well, when I pulled the pump out, I guess something was stuck because it immediately started pumping gas everywhere, including all over my pants and shoes. And literally as gas is pumping everywhere, some idiot comes up to me and I guess tries to sell me a CD. I yelled, “I don’t care!!!” as I’m trying to figure out how to make the gas stop. WTF?

I didn’t want to be late for my appointment so I went reeking of gas. Everyone who was anywhere near me at the cancer center thought something was burning. Midway through getting my fluids, I started crying because I felt so awful and the smell was so overwhelming, and I guess it sunk in that all the nurses told me I would feel worse with each treatment. They put my socks, shoes, and pants in a garbage bag and gave me some giant paper shorts to wear. A nurse offered to let me wear the socks she’d had on all day but I would rather go barefoot than wear someone’s grungy stinky socks. “No thank you. I’m ok.” 

I can’t write anymore right now. I’m exhausted. The fluids helped a bit but I still feel terrible. And this post might be a fucking mess, but let me tell you, chemo brain is a real phenomenon.  Warning: these posts might just be going downhill from now on, along with me, maybe. 

Not looking forward to tomorrow, the day that was supposed to be the shit day.