I finished my first full week with foreign chemical flowing
through my body. So, as many of my
friends have asked, rather gingerly at times, “How are you doing?”
I have to say I’m doing better than I expected to be doing
at this stage. But then my expectations
were based on a limited scope of knowledge.
Before you actually become a cancer patient yourself and you haven’t
been around someone with cancer, you really can be pretty insulated from the
process. You hear about people going through
cancer treatments; they lose their hair, lose weight, and they throw up a
lot. Then they either get better or
follow a long downward glide towards an undesired outcome.
So, how am I doing?
On a very positive note, I have not been nauseous. Not once.
Yay! Nowadays I’ve been told that
there are medications to help prevent the nausea, but having not experienced
it, my nausea medicine is just sitting idle in its bottles. Wendy suggested “Why take them if you’re not
nauseas? There are two drugs I’m supposed to take in ping-pong fashion every
four hours. One has the side effect of
“may cause headaches” and the other “may cause drowsiness.” So
while nausea is avoiding me naturally, I don’t need to take on those
side effects on as well.
My taste buds feel like a my tongue has a cardboard
filter. Most food tastes kind of
drab. Sweets sneak through a little bit,
but not enough to be very satisfying.
Crackers offer a decent eating experience with their salt and
texture. The worst so far was a fish
sandwich. - cardboard mush.
My voice this entire past week has been hoarse. I sound like a guy who spent all day yelling at a sporting event the day
before. It sounded a little more normal
today.
My digestive tract is affected. The plumbing is a little backed up. Aaaand, that’s all you need to know
about that.
My farsightedness is affected slightly. Things are a little more blurry without
glasses. My eye doctor said that chemo
can dry your eyes out a little, and vision can be affected as a result.
My father has multiple myeloma, in remission now. Once a week he got an injection of Velcade. Is the port used for chemo that's administered more frequently than once a week? His was a mild regimen because of his age, designed to buy him just two or three years. He didn't lose hair and never had nausea. Like you say, I never knew much about cancer until going through this with him!
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