January 4, 2014
The big news today is that my lymph nodes are clear. They removed five yesterday, I thought they
were only removing one, but I guess with the blue dye thing it lights up the
sentinel nodes and if you have multiple that light up they take out
multiple. Anyway, they were all clear
which means the cancer hasn’t spread. Which
also means unless something crazy pops up, the Stage 2 diagnosis is still
accurate (bc of the size and dynamic cancer cells). I feel a lot more optimistic and calm
today. *Deep breath*.
For those who like to know the details about this journey, let
me explain how we ended up in surprise surgery on Friday. (happy early bday to me, I guess!) We went into our scheduled surgical appointment
on Thursday and were informed that we were scheduled for surgery the next day. Apparently getting on a surgeon’s calendar
when it’s not emergency surgery is a small miracle and so we got “squeezed in”
once I informed the oncologist and surgeon earlier this week that I was doing
surgery first and chemo second. This may
have been a blessing in disguise bc I cannot put into words how much I panicked
over the next 19 hours or so leading up the surgery. It was bad. I cried a lot. I was not functional. So if I had received more advanced warning,
perhaps that panic would have been prolonged.
Who knows. Anyway, so we had the lymph
node surgery yesterday, and I will talk more about that below, and then my big
surgery is scheduled for January 23rd. Based on that timing, chemo will be scheduled
to start probably beginning the second week of February. I wonder if there is a special Valentines dinner
venue for bald cancer patients? (Ugh, I
am so sad to lose my hair, but even more so to lose my eyebrows and eyelashes,
you guys are going to hear a lot of worry and complaining about that, apologies
in advance.)
Our check in time for the lymph node surgery was 7 AM so I
woke up about 6:15 and started crying right away and didn’t stop for about 2 ½ hours
until I was wheeled into radiology and the radiology tech was incredibly kind
and calmed me down. It was weird too because
no one else in surgery check in seemed scared or upset. I felt really stupid and immature and
embarrassed but I could not stop. I was
scared shitless of getting anesthesia, which I have never had, but also of the outcome
of the surgery. What was I going to do
if the cancer had spread? Anyway, I can’t
even describe it but I was STRESSED OUT AND SCARED. So much so that I swear I was the “special
case” in surgery that day. EVERYONE
stopped by to check on me and they had my sedatives ready before I went to radiology
even though my surgery wasn’t for another 7 hours. My surgeon was even called in between
surgeries to come talk to me. And as I
said before, she totally seems like someone I would be friends with and she
said she would probably be exactly like I was if she had to have surgery, she hasn’t
ever had surgery before and she once had a dream she needed surgery and was
terrified. It made me feel a little bit better, but still the tears
flowed. So it was time for me to go to
radiology and I am a crying mess being rolled through the hospital in a
wheelchair and everyone is giving me those sympathetic smiles along the way and
it is actually making me mad, but then I get to radiology and the tech there is
like this golden goddess of compassion.
She has long golden curly hair and golden brown eyes and a slight
accent, maybe Persian (?) and she leans over and asks me, “Sherri, honey, what’s
going on?” like we are best buds. So I
weep out that I am really scared and I know I’m being ridiculous but I can’t stop. So she sits down and says “Let me tell you a
story. My mom was diagnosed with stage 3
breast cancer 18 years ago. She was 70
years old. She had diabetes, heart
disease, high cholesterol and was overweight. Her doctors told us they were
going to let it run its course bc she wouldn’t live through surgery. But we told them NO. If she is going to die of the cancer
eventually, and there is a chance she might live through surgery and then not
die of cancer, we want to take that risk.
(And they had to fight apparently fairly aggressively to make it
happen. But they won.) So she had a mastectomy on the right side and
she lived. And she lived another 11
years cancer free and then sadly died of a heart attack. But we had 11 more years with her. She got to meet my daughter. And she didn’t die of cancer. And you, Sherri, you are only stage 2 and you
are in excellent health. You are going
to beat this and you are going to be so proud and your kids are going to be so
proud. And all you have to do is be
brave enough to show up, like today. I
know it’s scary but you are here. You
showed up and you are doing what you need to do. You should be so proud. OK?” I
responded OK, and it totally worked. I
didn’t cry the rest of the day. Which was really funny, bc when I was wheeled
back down to surgery they were like, OK, ready for your IV cocktail? And I was like, nah, my surgery isn’t for
hours, and they were like, are you sure?
And I swear they came by like every 5-10 minutes to check-in because
truly I was their “special case” for the day. SO EMBARRASSING.
The other new thing we learned, which is disappointing and
terrifying at the same time, is that if my tumor tests negative for HER2, then
I only have one option for chemo drugs.
I don’t think I wrote about this before, but with a HER2 equivocal
result (which is what I have now, which is a result saying they basically don’t
know whether the tumor will be receptive to Herceptin or not) I get treated as
if I had a HER2+ positive result which offers two different chemo options. One is the option which has been used for a
really long time and has great results which is the one Robin Roberts used but
it also has the risk of causing leukemia (which happened to Robin Roberts) and
it also can potentially cause heart disease.
Isn’t that bullshit? We can cure
your breast cancer, but you might get another worse cancer that can only be
treated with bone marrow (for which I would probably have no doners bc I don’t have
any full blood siblings) and it might wreck your heart. Or a second newer option which was developed
at UCLA that has very similar survival results but offers a shorter cycle, and
no risk of leukemia or heart disease (well other than the Herceptin risk, which
is a separate medicine, and there is no getting around that.) So that seems like a no brainer – the newer
version, why anyone would NOT pick that version I don’t know. BUT, if my HER2 test comes back negative,
that is not an option bc it was specifically developed for HER2 positive
results which used to be a really bad result.
So I explicitly made the decision to do surgery first bc I want to know
whether the tumor is HER2 positive or negative so I can get the RIGHT chemo
treatment which might be the old school version
which has way worse side effects. It
totally sucks. But again, at least there are options, right? With so many cancers,
there aren’t.
So I think that’s it.
Leading up to the big surgery on the 23rd, we have a bunch
more appointments. We have our consult
with the City of Hope on Monday, a consult with the West LA Kaiser the week of
the 13th to learn more about the flap reconstruction procedure where
they reconstruct with your own tissue instead of with implants, and then a
whole bunch of pre-surgery stuff. I also
made an appointment to get my hair cut off.
I need to find a short short style I love bc after the surgery I won’t
really be able to wash my hair all that much and I would rather have short hair
fall off during chemo than long. We also
think it will be less stressful for the girls.
I’m pretty sure the husband is going to spend some time during this
period perusing Victoria Secret’s catalogues for my new, potentially bigger
perkier boobs, which I suppose is his one benefit of having to go through this
shit with me. And of course, I’ll try to
spend as much time with the kids as possible so when I can’t they don’t think I
suck.
I’ll be going back to work on the 8th (which is a
relief, I was really worried that there would be no transition period and my
work/team would have to pick up the falling pieces with no guidance) but will
only be working around the millions of appointments and will then go onto
disability for the surgery on January 21st. I have no idea how long I’ll be out, I
imagine anywhere between 8 weeks and 6 months depending on how tough the chemo
is on me. Which is also weird. I get more disability time off covered for an
illness than I do for having a kid…which I’m not going to complain about, I
need the time, but my thoughts on the crap that is US maternity leave could be
a whole blog of its own.
I’m also keeping a list of actions I can take to make my
personal experience with breast cancer have some meaning. Like, I really think there should be some
education to first time moms who give birth after 35 about their increased risk
which encourages them to be diligent about breast self-exams and just awareness
around breast size, shape and changes. I
had NO IDEA that there was an elevated breast cancer risk to me having my first
kid after 35. So I need to figure out where to go with that, like how to make
that a public health thing. And I have a
whole list of Kaiser operational things that I am going to send to them. Ah, the benefits of treating an Ops Manager,
I guess. (Hmm, there is an idea, maybe I
need to be an ops manager at Kaiser for their breast cancer clinic, I would be
SO good at that!) Also, I am totally doing every breast cancer walk/run I can
afford to do because there is still the need for so much research. The whole chemo thing with the side effects,
it pisses me off. One treatment to save
your life shouldn’t cause another disease that can end your life. But when I tell people (and this is mostly
men, no offense) that I have breast cancer, they are like, oh well, if you are
going to get cancer that’s the one you want.
NO ONE dies of breast cancer anymore.
Um, fuck you. Yes they do
ass-hole. And there is the need to do
more because of the number of women, especially YOUNG women that it affects. I also signed up for one of Susan Love’s
research studies through her Army of Women initiative. (despite the fact that her stupid cancer book
is like its own little cancer with the plethora of bad news contained in those
pages, I had to stop reading it bc it felt like the rest of my life I was going
to be in pain and would hate my reconstructed boobs, etc)
Oh and lastly, for those wondering, I am strongly leaning toward
the double mastectomy. Stupid Susan Love
would call this an American epidemic of consumerism where people think more is
better, and my oncologist said NO ONE medically would recommend I remove a
healthy breast, but after the scare on Monday, honestly, I don’t ever want to
go through that again. I think I will
die from heart failure if another lump is found and I have to go through the process
of having a biopsy and WAITING to find out of it’s cancer. Removing the second breast means I go from having
about a 1 in 6 chance EVERY year of my life of getting breast cancer on that
side to a 2% lifetime risk. I plan on
living at least another 40 years and 2% TOTAL risk sounds way better to me than
17% annual risk. I’m also leaning toward
implants over the flap surgery bc the flap surgery to me just sounds super
invasive and gross. But we’ll see if the
second plastic surgeon sells me on it.
I think that’s it. As
usual, thanks for all the support, flowers, books, calls, IMs, jokes, emails, “fuck
cancer” product links, “They’re fake bc the real ones tried to kill me” product
links, thoughts, advice, etc. It is sort
of sad to me that my network is so virtual as the vast majority of you are not physically
close, but you are all totally in my heart and I appreciate you so much.
Thanks for reading.
Much love.
Sherri
ME BEFORE SURGERY (probably yelling at Chris to NOT take my pic!)
Sorry the person who got leukemia is Robin Roberts I think the gal from TV.
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