Showing posts with label survivorship. Show all posts
Showing posts with label survivorship. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 9, 2022

I Saw the Figure Five

I Saw the Figure 5 in Gold by Charles Demuth

When we think of things that come in fives, a quick list off the top of the head might look a little like this: five senses, five tastes, five arms on a starfish, 5=the atomic number of boron, five fingers/toes per hand/foot, five faces of Shiva, five wounds of Christ, five joys of Mary, five Pillars of Islam, five books of the Torah, five elements, Chanel No.5, five golden rings. We know the number 5 is freighted with symbolism across cultures, and it figures somehow in nearly every discipline from alchemy to zoology. 

It also figures in cancer statistics. Five years is one of the magic numbers by which we measure the prospective fatality or survivability of a particular cancer. Some cancer treatments have better outcomes than others, and some cancers are so slow growing, no treatment is ever needed, which makes the cancer "survivable" beyond the five or ten-year benchmarks of living we use to measure such things.



When I was diagnosed with lung cancer, the five-year survival rate for someone with metastatic disease (like me) was about 5%. Meaning that out of 100 people with metastatic lung cancer, after five years, only five of us would be left standing. That was five years ago, and the reality of that statistic was made manifest in several of my online lung cancer communities where new fatalities were announced almost every other day. Today, the five-year survival rate is 8%, so we've moved the needle perhaps with a little bit with research and better treatment (I'll save my pitch for why you should support lung cancer research for my next post!)

I think the odds of surviving this killer disease make me a bit of an outlier. Better yet, I'm gonna call my situation miraculous AF, because I believe in that stuff, and believe that science qualifies as miraculous. So here I am honoring the five years that have passed since the day I heard "You have advanced adenocarcinoma, a lung cancer." In that time I have lost three sweet friends to breast and ovarian cancer, and many many newfound friends who share my diagnosis to lung cancer. My mother also has been dealing with an early stage lung cancer diagnosis and some complications from surgery to treat that, and my youngest sister, Michele, was diagnosed recently with an early stage breast cancer for which she had surgery and will do follow-up radiation in the coming weeks. Cancer everywhere it seems, some days.

(An interesting side note here about my sister's situation...after mom was diagnosed with lung cancer, Michele tried to arrange a low-dose lung cancer CT screening for herself, given that two family members had lung cancer. The only other risk factor she had was long-term exposure to second-hand cigarette smoke, and her insurance denied the low-dose CT. However, in following protocol after a mammogram/biopsy diagnosis of breast cancer, she was granted a REGULAR CT scan, which did pick up some teensy tiny nodules in her lungs, not big enough to biopsy, but alarming enough for her medical team to declare she needed regular scan surveillance for both breast AND lung cancer. As we both say, everyone wants to save the ta-tas, so we screen and screen and screen every year, but the lungs...not so much. Sure...if you have breasts you can get breast cancer and if you have lungs...? Crickets.)



But despite the many difficulties of life in Cancerland (and Cancerland during a pandemic!), I've also traveled around the U.S. and overseas. I've gone to concerts, plays, and movies. I've hiked and camped and kayaked and biked, and I walked through some of the most beautiful parts of France and Spain. I've written LOTS of words, learned LOTS about lung cancer, and have met some of the most interesting, kindest, smartest people from around the world by doing all the things I got to do. So yeah, there have been some challenges, but many many many gifts.

Currently, my disease is not active. I've had other health problems this year, from COVID to some serious internal medicine-type-not-cancer issues, and so far, we don't see any sign that the cancer is stirring. Of course with each (all too frequent) report of a treatment failing or a fellow lung cancer patient struggling or dying, the day darkens with dread. We don't talk so much about cure for those of us with metastatic disease, but of managing the disease, keeping it in check so that maybe something else less awful and painful will end us. And until then, we keep the time best we can, making, working, resting, loving, traveling, celebrating, and recently...voting!

Bigger than the disease are the hearts of those who help me live with it day by gifted day—family, friends, medical teams, foundations, research and patient advocates, lung cancer community pals, creatives in the arts community, so many folk in my spiritual community (especially elders). They all look out for my well-being and give me hope that I'll still be writing and grateful five years from now.





Monday, December 28, 2020

Happy Fourth

 

Happy fourth day of Christmas! It's also my fourth Christmas season alive on the planet since being diagnosed with incurable cancer. Yay for survivorship! On top of that, it's the first year since that diagnosis that the awful cancer hasn't been actively trying to kill me—my most recent scans show I've had a whole year of disease stability, in this, the most unstable of all years my generation has ever seen. So, ya know, deep, deep gratitude here, because I love a cruel irony that keeps an otherwise healthy, travel-loving cancer patient from running around the globe doing bucket-listy things during said spate of good health. But there's privilege at work. I didn't do anything to deserve being cut such an easy break at such an awful time. 

So here I am, for the moment, well enough to work (yay for editing projects!), and fortunate enough to do that work from home. Also on the list of blessings: there's a stocked pantry and fridge (and liquor cabinet). We got to see the bright--heavy conjunction of Saturn and Jupiter just over the horizon a few days before Christmas. We decorated the bare Bradford Pear trees in the front yard with Christmas ornaments and put up some lights and garland, and it only felt a little forced. I made a wreath and an advent calendar (both of which turned out okay) and tried to learn knitting again, and failed, again. My family gave and received nice holiday gifts (nothing too extravagant, everything thoughtful); we had delish holiday fare on the table, and everyone in my household and extended household has kept well.

Still, the shadows fall deep in the winter darkness, and they chill some part of my soul with fear and anxiety. Two of my best friends risk their lives every day on the COVID frontline, and I worry about them constantly. One of them got the virus and, thankfully, recovered after being pretty damn sick. 
December has some tough anniversaries for me too. Last year in December I lost two friends to cancer, one on December 4 and one on Christmas Day. The year before that, my dad died on December 3. As we approach a new year, I'm reminded that I lost another friend to cancer in this past year, another 2020 shadow. In March of 2020, my city was hit with devastating tornadoes, and on Christmas Day, just four days ago, a man bombed our downtown. 

And I'm still alive.

I'm doing, what they call in Cancerland—or probably in any Gravely Ill Land—survivorship. I'm living, with the disease in the midst of all that is crazy in the world. Phrases like "for now" "at the moment" "stable" "disease in check" pepper my responses to queries about my well-being, underscoring the temporariness of it, the other-shoe-ness, but also calling attention to the fact that I am in the most enviable of positions. I am well. Well enough, anyway. And I have friends and family members who have cancer and/or other severe health problems who are not well enough, who are struggling with treatment decisions, suffering from severe treatment side-effects, struggling to access treatment, friends who are actively dying as I write this.

I don't say that to be grim. We all live in this world, with its shadows and griefs and aching hearts, with lives approaching terminus. I'm not telling anyone something they don't already know. The losses, the anniversaries of the losses, mark the time for us; weirdly, they become steady points of reference in the before and after of this crazy kinked and loopy path we're on. Periodically the iPhone and the social media accounts throw up "memories" (gee thanks) that startle—oh! that picture was taken BEFORE diagnosis; that one was taken the last time I saw Ann, and that one was the last time we were all together. 

The one for this post was taken for The Fourth Day of Christmas in the fourth year of diagnosis. Four calling birds. Three french hens. Two turtle doves. And a partridge in a (Bradford) pear tree. Counting blessings. So many. So very many.

A Bajillion Sonic Suns (Cancerversary #7)

What the heck? It's my seven-year cancerversary, and today I am at a writers conference listening to a guest speaker talk about publishi...