And For My Next Test….

Imagine a big, fat, horse tail hair stuck in your throat.  No matter how often or how hard you try to clear or swallow, it stays right there.  That might faintly resemble this test.

I’ve had allergy test after allergy test, throat x-rays, video throat x-rays, a stomach acid prescription, two visits with a speech therapist, and an upper endoscopy in an ongoing effort to discover why I daily, and in some episodes constantly clear my throat (and cough). 

None have solved the mystery, or even discovered a clue.

These next tests (Esophageal Manometry/Motility Study and 24-hour PH & Impedance Monitor Study) took place in the sixth week of my daily radiation treatments.   It was presented as a 24-hour monitoring test involving a tube through my nose and into my stomach. 

That sounds much less medieval than pushing a two-foot wire up my nose.  The test began when a nurse squirted a horrible tasting numbing agent up my nose.  You sniff it in and swallow.  

In a moment, when you notice it has become difficult to swallow, it’s time to lube and push the first tube into the nostril.  It looks like a semi-rigid strand of beads.  The beads are pressure sensors and will measure the target depth for the next probe, the wire that will remain for 24 hours.

The first probe was unpleasant, the second was quite painful.  There is a sharp turn southwards early in the passageway from my nostril to my stomach.  The beaded tube made the turn without much resistance due partially to the fact that its dimensions are close to the dimensions of the tunnel it’s slithering through.

The second intrusion, the wire, having a smaller diameter and being more rigid, needs to ram its blunt head into that sharp turn corner a few times until it realizes the path of least resistance would be to JUST MAKE THE TURN!

Once in place, the exposed, plastic covered wire was taped to my face.  I thought that was to keep it from accidentally pulling out of my nose, but I soon discovered that when I eat and swallow solid food, the ascending food pulls the wire with it deeper into my stomach. 

The wire would draw annoyingly into my nose, trying to go farther in each time I swallow, removing any joy there might have been in the meal.  I had to pinch and hold it in place while eating, in order to win this tiny but extremely irritating Tug-Of-War competition.  Or, did I have a fish on?

The dry end of the wire is connected to what looks a bit like a portable CD player.   It’s worn like a shoulder bag and has numbered and symbol buttons of various sizes, and a digital back-lit display screen. 

When I clear my throat, I push button #1, when I cough – push button #2, take a pill – button #3.  There’s a button with an icon for I’m eating,  another with an icon for I stopped eating.  There’s one with a symbol for I’m horizontal and another for I’m vertical; and one more for I’m having sex. 

“Really!?” my wife asked.  I tried to bolster my case by showing her the icon button that could possibly be misunderstood, especially if you looked at it from the proper angle.  “Come on, it’s a medical test” I assured.  I think she bought it for just a fleeting moment.

Here are the immediate test results:

If you are annoyed by people constantly greeting you, making eye contact and smiling, speaking to you without invitation; if you prefer to be almost invisible, you should put one of these wires up your nose, tape it to your face, connect it to a box with buttons.

You can then stroll around in public – as a ghost.  Anyone who sees you will quickly look away – turn away – and walk away.

There might be an untapped market for something that looks like the real thing but would only need to go a short distance into your nostril.  Who would know?  Who’s going to check?  

If, despite the wire up the nose, someone should dare to approach, just start coughing and throat clearing as you busily push the beeping buttons on the control box. 

Maybe I should make and market this, “become nearly invisible” system in my retirement.

Cancer Is No Fun, but I had a little

My first radiation appointment (in this series) had no radiation, it was a planning session.  While being mapped, I asked the two young lady technicians if they had a most memorable patient.  They said no, patients come and go daily, no one has really stood out in the parade. 

After a while, one of them remembered a tattooed patient who, for his final treatment had printed THANK YOU across his chest with a big felt marker.  He was the most memorable. 

I told them my prostate surgery seven years ago was on the morning of St Patrick’s Day, and how I was going to tie a green bow on myself so when the surgeon pulls back the sheet to operate, he would say, “Oh – Yes… it is St Patrick’s Day!” 

But, I confessed that I chickened out.  That doctor and team didn’t know me and could possibly suspect I was a weird-O.  One technician thought that was really funny and wondered if I would do something on my last visit here.  

I had seven weeks to consider it, and they had seven weeks to determine the odds of me being any kind of weird.

My daily radiation treatment routine is as follows:
  • Allow time to drive to my appointment considering traffic and parking
  • Schedule myself to arrive with a comfortably full bladder 
  • Go directly to the radiation dispensary department
  • Remove pants and shoes
  • Put on a hospital gown
  • Visit in the waiting room until escorted to the Radiator
  • Reciting the magic words (my birth date) gets me through the last door 
  • Lay on the slab
  • Put my legs into the don’t move mold made just for me
  • To expose my new hospital tattoo laser targets: slip my underwear down to the borderline that separates PG-13 from RATED R 
  • The machine orbits my equator once while performing a scan, and once again delivering radiation

I drove the 21.8 miles once again for my 38th and final radiation treatment.  In the changing room, I switched to my brand-new, carefully chosen, Wonder Woman underwear. 

We shared a good laugh and the technicians were properly dazzled when I laid on the slab, drew open my hospital gown and presented my new colors.  They were even more impressed when I lowered them to reveal the message my wife had carefully inscribed just north of the border with a king size Sharpie, “THANK YOU x38.”  They said it made their day and would be talked about for a long time.

I hope that was my final radiation treatment
And, my Temporary Tattoo

Writing About Writing

In an attempt to successfully express a thought, to paint a word picture…..

A handful of words will get a foot-hold in my mind, something someone said or something I saw.  It might be a deep memory coming up for air, a thought that becomes the birth of an idea.  

Once it begins to form, I’ll pour it out in bulk and then re-write – edit – re-write – edit, back space like a machine gun, highlight and drag to move. 

And the punctuation!  Will a comma do for the perfect hesitation, a colon; or should I go all out with……. repeating periods? 

And then- does anyone even notice words in italics?  Maybe I should break that mile long freight train into two or three sentences.  Blatant repetition?  Open the thesaurus! 

I love writing the construction zone phase (if the idea survives it).  Yeah, BOLD!  BOLD CAPS – OUTSTANDING!!  And what about those curved bracket parentheses (probably overused)?

And then there’s the circle, that elusive, sweet – satisfying return.  I’m sure real writers have a term for it.  If the words I’m brewing are great enough in number, and if down the page, I can circle back to a key element highlighted early on, that can create an especially delightful circle within the story.  I love it when that happens!

Better phrases will knock on my mind’s door when I’m trying to sleep (thinking they’re all that important).  The exact right words will push their way through to the front of the line while I’m driving.  I’m not creating a “Master Piece,” here, but still, I’d better write them down or I’ll torture myself because I forgot that gem before getting home. 

What’s amazing to me is that I can delicately, meticulously replace one little word with another I think conveys better, and impress my amateurish self with what a critical, but subtle difference that word made. 

I will read and re-read again until I can get all the way through without making any (many) changes; sleep on it and read it again.  If I can get to the end without revising, it might be finished. 

So now what?  I wrote it for my own therapeutic entertainment, and/or for my personal library.  If I think someone else might enjoy reading it, I’ll probably make it available.  If you read it, you will never know how many words I discreetly pruned or plucked.  You’ll have no idea how many times I read what you’ll read just once. 

The funny – “human nature” thing is……  If I’m successful at practicing the magic of written expression, you might come away with something resembling the idea I began with at the top of this page.

Too busy for Cancer, way too busy to die

Most mornings, I wake before the alarm.  My sleeping mind seems to be already busy when it joins my waking mind.  I give myself an hour before I must leave for work, but if I deviate from my routine, I’ll probably have to drive. 

I normally walk the commute, it’s not a race, but there is no time to stop and smell the roses.  I usually have a few minutes to quickly check email and a news site before the clock strikes eight. 

I always try to work at a quick, efficient pace, there’s way more to do in a day than I can get done.  My walk home could be more leisurely, but I hurry again to get busy on my unfinished or my next endeavors.  A life overflowing with God’s blessings is a very busy life. 

I hurry to get something done before dinner, and chip away at more until bed time.  I might stop and join Diane for a little TV watching, then hurry off to sleep, and begin again.  There’s much to do and time seems short.  I’m too busy for Cancer, way too busy to die.

Out for a drive in the Chevy – Thanks, Diane MacDonald, for the picture

One day years ago, my job took me to an elderly man’s house.  It was practically on the campus of the university in our town.  The old timer seemed to know everyone there, and they all addressed him, “Grandpa.” 

I quickly learned that he was deep in the pursuit of Genealogy, and that he had, “much yet to discover, record, organize, and share.”  He was sure the Lord wouldn’t be, “calling him home” before this massive mission of lineage research was completed.

One day recently, my job took me back to the Campus Grandpa’s house – to his vacant house.  I wonder if he had enough time to feel the satisfaction of a job well done. 

Nothing I keep myself so busy with would sway the Lord to let me catch a later flight (I don’t believe it works that way).  My projects, my lists from top priority on down doesn’t even make a blip on the radar screen of the important things in life. 

The most important things I’ll ever do, have probably been done, and would probably be done better if I could do them over, but that’s life.

My job took me recently to another house.  There I recognized someone there who recognized me.  Our kids were friends in school.  She asked, “How have you been – didn’t you have cancer?” 

I told her I’ve had three cancers, and one is incurable, but right now I’m doing okay.  Her tone lowered just a bit, and in a reluctantly accepting voice she said, “Well, I guess that’s life.”  I added, “Yea, or maybe that’s death.”