The evolving bucket list

Originally my sparse “bucket list” featured taking my family with me to the bottom of the Grand Canyon, where I had been but they had not.  Then there was spending relaxed time in France, which we did for almost two weeks last summer; and I wanted to go to England again, too (which I did last September with my mom and Spee).

Now the list looks like this:

  • Finish building a Little Free Library for QIVC and neighbors.  This is now 90% finished, thanks to this weekend’s focused work by my mom and her friend Paul!
  • Get the decorative railing at the top of the stairs finally finished (by our builder friend Glenn). Designed by me years ago, it was set aside so we could finally move in! and finish it later.  It is now over five years later. 🙂
  • Go to Montréal on Amtrak.
  • Teach Jesse how to shift gears.
  • Go to Chipotle with Will! Never been there, and he really likes it.
  • Some more time in New Orleans with my mom (who lives there) and her cast of friendly characters.
  • See the barn swallows return to their summer haunts around our house and build their yearly nests in our eaves.

Seems doable!

 

 

 

 

Post-chemo report

Today was almost completely taken up with “double chemo” along with a day-one-of-the-cycle appointment with the nurse practitioner who works with my oncologist. My oncologist is on vacation–and I hope he is vacating enough because he’s got to last me and not burn out!  How is that for thinking long-term?

I still like to think of these chemo days as pampering and “spa” days. I can ask for pillows and warm blankets and stuff from the nurses, and I know a lot of them by now somewhat, so the infusion suite is a friendly place to spend a few hours.

Seems like the first day in each cycle of Thursday chemo (Gemzar & carboplatin) is about four hours long, start to finish.  That includes blood work and an appointment with a practitioner before chemo.  And intrathecal methotrexate afterward.  today we left the house at 11 and returned at about five I think.

I felt like hopping into bed and invited some of my associates to watch a stupid movie with me. It was really stupid. I have a small headache and just feel kind of punky, but no nausea or queasiness – all that anti-emetic premedication really works. And in fact I am looking forward to eating some dinner.

Meanwhile, back at home, if you hold your arms just right…

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…Look what you might catch!

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Death Straight Talk (by Eric)

When your wife has stage 4 metastatic breast cancer, and has been hospitalized once for an upper extremity DVT, once for pneumonia, another time for malignant pleural and pericardial effusions, has had small pulmonary emboli, and then gets diagnosed with leptomenigeal carcinomatosis, and you also live in a world that has Google, so you can type in those terms (or worse click on the links some idiot put in a blog post) and get very detailed descriptions of these diagnoses and, more importantly, their prognoses, then, despite the doctors not coming right out and telling you so, you kinda have to face it that the most likely hand you’ll get dealt this year is to watch her die. Not just the mostly likely hand, but the most likely 99 hands.

We’ve tried from the start (of the stage 4 diagnosis), before the more in-your-face evidence (which for me was the hospitalizations) not to live in denial, and not to keep things from our two teenagers or our family or community. To make decisions taking this possibility/probability into real account. But this turns out to be much more difficult that I expected.

DST stickerSo this post is about a concept called Death Straight Talk (let’s call it DST. That way it sounds like the more familiar “DNR”). There are three arenas in which I want to talk about DST: 1) the medical world, doctors, nurses, and Medicine as an institution; 2) family, friends and community; and 3) the metaphysics of probability and how we think about our future. So here we go.

1) DST in Medicine: Hospice operates on an agreed-upon basis of DST. The idea is that “there’s nothing left to do” to prolong life (meaningfully), so shift the medical care to comfort, pain control, and getting the most of out each day. A Do Not Resuscitate (DNR) order is another form of DST in medicine, where the patient gets to issue a token that goes in their chart saying something like, “Look, I’ve thought this through and I’ve come to the conclusion that death is preferable to life after resuscitation, so let me go.” These are both DST items that have been embodied in institutional practice, the first at a more macro level, because, it turns out, Hospice care ties in deeply to the structure of how and what things get paid for and who gets to decide. (This in itself is worth a whole other post, but life’s too short for me to dig into that.) The second is at the more micro level, because it’s just about what to do under certain circumstances for an individual patient, whether in hospice or not.

These two patterns, Hospice and DNR, are formal recognition that near death, things are different, and we have to act differently. But now to my direct experience: despite an ominous prognosis, Ellen’s not at either of those two points yet, and so, institutionally, there’s practically no DST. It’s like a binary switch: either we act like you won’t die, and plan our doctoring on that, or we finally give up and off you go to Hospice. Here’s how this plays out. Hospitals are places full of protocols: vitals every 2 or 4 hours, neurological checks every hour, gotta pee before you get discharged, NPO (nil per os – no food or drink) before surgery, start a bag of fluids for practically anything, keep for observation for two days after X surgery, don’t go off the floor (or out of the ward doors), and on and on. Lots of protocols, mostly in place for good reasons.

But here’s the question: if you might have only 4-6 weeks left of life (if the current spread of cancer doesn’t respond to therapy) do those protocols apply? Should you really spend those two days under observation, living a substantial percentage of your remaining life in the hospital instead of at home? Should you really have that conversation you’re having with your family or friends interrupted so the nurse can write down your blood pressure numbers? Should you really have to spend the more than an hour a day (once you add it up) explaining your complex medical history over and over to each new nurse, resident, attending, etc., who comes to check up on you? Should you really get filled with IV fluids before a surgery to offset the dehydration risk that comes from the NPO protocol, which is there to mitigate the risk of throwing up under anesthesia, when those same fluids have a high risk – shown in the previous hospitalization – of causing swelling in your legs and feet which might make it painful to impossible to walk in your last weeks of life?

In our experience the protocols just don’t take into account DST. Here’s how I know: during our last hospital visit, I explicitly told nurses and doctors a story that approximately went like this: “Please treat us as if Ellen’s chart had a big DST sticker in it. It’s kind of like DNR but stands for Death Straight Talk [I really said that], which, like a DNR, is treatment instructions for you from Ellen, but what it means is: first of all, we can, and do, talk about death straight, but second and more importantly, in providing your care, think about whether your actions are appropriate for someone who will likely die soon.”

The results of telling this story were clear: after some initial shocked looks, we got different care. The doctors let us go home “early” after Ellen’s Ommaya reservoir implant; we got “off-floor-privileges” while awaiting surgery; they didn’t make Ellen start on fluids at midnight before the surgery, etc. The humans involved responded deeply and with compassion to the truth that was embodied in a simple acronym: DST.

2) DST with family, friends, and community: If you want to create drama, lie. Lie explicitly, unconsciously, or by omission. In our case, we might call that Death Curvy Talk, or Death Denial Talk (DDT). The other night Ellen and I watched a dumb movie called “Meet My Valentine,” which is about a guy diagnosed with terminal brain cancer who decides not to tell his family but instead find a replacement husband/father for them instead. As a movie it was really dumb because that DDT was so obviously poisonous. But as a metaphor it’s revealing. If I look at where things feel twisty and drama-filled and out of whack, I see that I haven’t lived up to DST. As I said at the beginning of this post, we’ve tried to face things directly from the start. But something interesting has happened since the introduction of the DST acronym. As a token that we can refer to, it’s given us permission, or an opening, or something to actually get to to the straight talk more quickly. Now that it’s there, we invoke it. “Hey, I have a DST thing…”

Here’s a quote from an e-mail from a friend: “I wanted to offer to help, if need be, to begin/continue/whatever, discussion of burial, funeral directors etc. I have, unfortunately, intimate experience with this recently, as you know, and might be able to bring some perspective to this part of DST.” What a relief and and efficiency that this provides. It feels to me that the more I live into DST, the more this experience goes from what I call “dramatic” to what feels “powerful” or “moving.”

3) DST metaphysics and probability: Here’s the problem with DST. It assumes we know the specific future. Of course in one sense we do. All of us will die, we know that, but that’s hardly a specific knowing. So, using DST, how do we also talk straight about that one other hand of cards out of the 100–the one in which it turns out that Ellen recovers and later quietly dies in her sleep at the ripe old age of 103 well after I’m gone? This is the hard part for me. I used the metaphor that Ellen’s disease prognosis is like drawing a hand of cards. But that’s, at the very best, only a partially valid metaphor. Probability provides a great tool set for assessing aggregate outcomes, but it also can have the effect of deep dis-empowerment at the individual level. Just because your chances of getting breast cancer go up by X% if you have the BRCA1 mutation doesn’t mean that you don’t have any agency in whether it actually happens in your own body. From all our reading, it’s pretty clear to us that cancer as a bodily process is connected to the immune system, which is deeply connected to the central nervous system, and also connected to physiological terrain. So what power does that mean we actually have? I believe that diet, and stress, and my thoughts have an effect on “my chances” of getting cancer, and these are things I have control over. Bookstores, however, are filled with conclusions from this that to me are just magical thinking: that you can just think yourself back to health. But I also read and hear people jump to “don’t blame the victim” as soon as you mention the ways in which we do have agency. It’s kind of a double bind: if you believe in agency, then if you got sick or don’t heal yourself it’s your fault. But if you just take it as luck of the draw (i.e., not your fault) then how can you activate where you do have agency?

So to me this is where I don’t know how to have real DST. What is the “straight talk” that both acknowledges and deepens the agency we do have, and yet doesn’t fall prey to either magical thinking or blame-the-victim? Just because the odds are 99 to 1, does that mean we have to match the relative percentages of our talking time to those odds?

I don’t know the answers to these questions. But the core move in DST gives me guidance: open myself to what exists, or at least turn towards it rather than away.

Modern disease prognoses provide odds based on existing historical records: scientific studies. Open myself to them. But also the evidence of agency affecting cancer outcomes exists. Open myself to it. My pain and my joy in these days exists. Open myself to both of them. Paradoxically, denial and hiding and self-veiling also exist. So that’s OK, too; turning-toward will also periodically involve turning-away. This isn’t about some moral claim. It’s just a wish, a longing, perhaps a stance, to turn towards what I see in front of me. DST. Last words: just because I don’t wish to turn away from that which I do see, that doesn’t preclude me from turning toward that which I don’t see: all the potential branches of the future. Because what else is creation?

–Eric Harris-Braun

Gallery Chemo-day update

About today and my current chemo schedule etc.:

After all of this, I felt a little queasy and rested In the car all the way home. But then I walked from the parking area to our house, ordered some food stuff from Eric, and marched up the stairs wearing my back pack foot-over-foot like a normal person (1 foot per stair).  Also, Spee and I took a 15-minute walk on the road in the snow just before Eric and I left for Albany. So although I am tucked into bed right now, I am feeling like I had an energetic day.

That walking up the stairs with the fullback pack myself was a first since early December. Never discount how bad pedal edema can be for your strength and health, That’s my device.,

Speaking of advice, at the end of our time with the nurse practitioner, I offered again my attention as a midwife, since she is due with baby number two in April and not having a very happy pregnancy. So I didn’t push. But she took me up on it today and we talked about the recommendation that she be induced for this baby because her first baby came pretty fast. She lives 20 minutes from her hospital. It was a very fun conversation to have because I got to use my midwifery skills right on the spot.

Now I’m back to resting my brain and body in bed with Eric next to me.

Hair fun

Lisa and Aaron, who visited to help out (tremendously!) for the past few days, did the clay-dye job the other night in the bathroom with friend Anne while Jesse supervised from the bathroom shower.

Hmmm, I look a little tired in that last photo.  Yesterday was my fullest and most energetic day in weeks.  Shivani and I went to midwifery peer review, driven by Lisa and Aaron, who explored Saugerties.  Nowdays I pay the next day for days like that–just in fatigue.

Plans for the rest of the day: a visit from the palliative care nurse, and before that some craniosacral therapy with my friend Meg. Then maybe a nap or Netflix before dinner.

I am still working on those voice memos for the blog. Let me know if they don’t work for you–hoping they are easy because they sure are easier for me.

Now for lots of pictures!  I am really enjoying pictures these days.

Shaker Lemon Pie story, plus.

Thanks to good drugs, I had no nausea or vomiting after my double chemo last Thursday. Go, Emend! I don’t care how expensive you are–I love you.  I do seem to be more worn out than usual.  Or than I expected.  Since my legs felt stronger, I went for a walk beyond the mailboxes on Thursday or Friday, and I made it back! With a few rests. But this weekend I have mostly sat around and indulged in Netflix, at least when not learning new blog posting technologies such as below.

In general, though, I feel all right and I’m doing pretty well at taking care of myself except for the things that require two functioning hands. Unfortunately, this includes putting on most shirts and other important self-care tasks. My hands are damaged from chemo-induced neuropathy and we don’t know yet whether, now that I’m on a different chemo regimen or two, they will get worse or better. My feet are still pretty bad, especially the left one, which feels like a block of tingly wood that does not want to be touched.  That left foot is the major cause of my unsteadiness walking.

Here is last week’s community Shaker Lemon Pie story out loud:

 

Lemons and sugar
Lemons and sugar
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One-crust pie

 

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Two-crust pie

Prevailing mood post-surgery on double-chemo day #1

Chemo took a long time today but went fine.  When we met with my oncologist beforehand, he noted that even with a brain bleed and a hospital stay–which always kinda takes it out of a person–I was definitely clinically improved compared to my last few visits (meaning he could see the difference in my mood, energy level, and strength).  That was sure true–I could feel myself getting stronger and more stable in the legs even every day I was in the hospital.  And being more able to take care of dressing and stuff, too, despite the lack of one functioning hand and having, still, one block-of-wood foot.

He could see that all 3 or 4 times he visited me up on D5East in the hospital too…the Stroke unit.  I was the healthiest person there since I hadn’t really had a regular stroke.  Surgery rounded on me daily because I’d had a brain bleed; neurosurgery rounded on me–at 6 or 7 AM–because I was scheduled for brain surgery on Tuesday; Rufus visited because he was on-call that weekend for NYOH and stopped by on his way to the office, too; my neurosurgeon visited separately from his team at a more decent hour Monday morning (7:15 AM after I’d been woken up and gotten out of bed and dressed); and the two of them gave the vexing question of my ongoing clotting-vs-bleeding anti-coagulation decision to a good, thoughtful internal medicine doctor, Dr. Tietjen.  Not surprisingly, he is a DO and chief hospitalist at Albany Med.

So, chemo today.  Never a dull moment in this life of mine!

We were in my regular “inmate chair,” off in a hall corner where it is very solo and secluded.  No neighbor watching TV.  Just can’t sit there when a prisoner comes at the same time..  When Rufus just came by to say hi, I told him I would even wear shackles to guarantee this nice quiet spot. He said darkly, “That could be arranged…”

I got the Methotrexate IT (intrathecal–via the newly installed brain port) after the usual stuff.  It is quick, low-volume, and I barely felt the needle even on my sore scalp.  We did it in the one small private room in the sprawling chemo suite, most likely to avoid freaking other patients out. I am not posting a picture of my head yet–there must be a limit of taste, right? Write me if you want to see it staples and all (they will be removed in 10 days or so).

Prevailing mood: deeply afraid of what could come next, except…I keep forgetting. 

Came home to be greeted by these, left by my friend Shivani:

Tulips
Tulips on my windowsill

After all, it’s not brain surg–oh, yeah it was!

Call went well with the surgery yesterday midday and Paul has gone well cents. Haahaa

(“All went well with the surgery yesterday midday, and all has gone well since.”)  Just thought you all might like to see what I have been trying to live with re dictation software so far!

We are home and some beef stroganoff awaits me for dinner downstairs…so that’s the news for now.

Resting up at home after a nap together
Resting up at home after a nap together