On Monday, I had a Mediport put in. I was supposed to get one about four years ago, when I was doing Brentuximab after the ABVD chemo didn’t get rid of all the Hodgkin’s lymphoma, but I thought I’d have only a few more months of chemo at the time. Now that it looks as if I’m going to be getting chemo and intravenous fluids indefinitely, I need something a little more permanent than a PICC line. This should make things easier. My veins are pretty beat up. Whenever I need an IV these days, it ends up being a small needle in my hand.

The port placement was an outpatient procedure, and I rested the remainder of the day. Since they didn’t really think about how I use my PICC line every day for fluids, they left the PICC line in too. I’ll probably get that out next week, when I go in for chemo. I’ll need to learn how to do an IV through my port.

No lifting more than 10 pounds for five days. After that, I am supposed to be able to resume normal activities, though I can’t play contact sports probably ever again. Since the last time I played contact sports of any time were miserable days of gym class in 9th grade, I can probably live with this. I do miss working out, but with my energy levels and sickness, that might be a long way off, if ever.

It’s been a disappointing several weeks, with the tumor-related side effects coming back with a vengeance after my first chemo treatment. I’m now giving myself three shots of short-acting octreotide (Sandostatin) every day, in addition to the long-acting shots that I get every month. After some desperate Googling, I had hoped one drug might work for the side effects, but it turns out that my tumors make VIPoma, not seratonin of carcinoid syndrome, so that treatment wouldn’t work. VIPoma is rare, and happens in 1 in 10 million cases per year.

I read that and bought a lottery ticket. I didn’t win.

The tincture of opium isn’t approved by my health insurance, but I’m not sure that it would help anyway. No one has officially said this, but it seems like the options are running out. The octreotide was the first step, and the doctors really thought the radiation would work. Now that the chemo isn’t working, I think things are looking grim. It’s a rare cancer without a lot of treatment options—and I’ve already done the surgery, ablation and radiation. Though the only tumors showing up on the scan are in the pancreas, they are inoperable, but the thought is that there is microscopic disease that is also producing VIPoma, which is making me so sick.

My last hope is PRRT (Peptide Receptor Radionuclide Therapy), which goes by Lutathera and was just approved by the FDA in January. Radiopeptides are delivered to the NET cells, which are hopefully killed and shrink the tumors. Both Mount Sinai and Memorial Sloan-Kettering are supposed to have this treatment available in April. I’m hoping my health insurance covers this, because it would be only four treatments as opposed to the Dacarbazine, which I would get every three months forever. Also, I think the Dacarbazine is what is worsening my symptoms, and this reminds me of last year, when the chemo would make me sick for a week and ultimately did nothing to stop the growth of the tumors. From what I’ve read, Lutathera could stop or shrink the tumors and buy me a few more years, but mainly I’m concerned about quality of life. I’m a little concerned since the octreotide hasn’t worked very well, that the Lutathera won’t work.

If the Lutathera doesn’t work, then…well, I think that’s it. The effects of the VIPoma haven’t been able to be controlled. I still do daily IV fluids for three to four hours and take a lot of supplements and give myself those three shots a day, but eventually, the dehydration and electrolyte imbalance take a toll on your heart. Sometimes you more or less starve to death or your liver fails or you might have some kind of attack.

I’m OK with letting go. I’m tired of the IVs and the procedures and the shots and wearing diapers and the feeling that something is always hurting all the time. As Leonard Cohen said, “I am ready to die. I hope it’s not too uncomfortable.” I’m aware it’s only been five years, and people live through many more challenges than this. Maybe I’m just tired.

Even though it was tough, I find myself looking back fondly on my recoveries after the stem cell transplant and after the Whipple procedure and after last year’s liver ablation. I think it’s because I had hope. I wonder if I’ll look back at this time with nostalgia, as a time when I hoped that this one thing would buy me some more quality time.


I am at urgent care again after this weekend’s setback. It’s just so they can do the tests more quickly and give me fluids if necessary, but since this is urgent care, it is likely I will be here most of today. It seems as if the radiation isn’t going to work and the chemo isn’t going to work either so I will probably have to give myself daily injections of octreotide, which isn’t doing much either. There is another drug that insurance won’t approve and then maybe one they will that may or may not help with these symptoms.

It’s all symptom control at this point. I had hoped to get better enough to function for a bit, but if that is off the table, then I am ready to go. I am tired. Most of my loose ends are wrapped up. I have spent the last five years seizing happiness in the well times (and in the sick times too). And, truthfully, I have always been obsessed with the fleeting nature of happiness and have always tried to desperately hang on to it whenever possible. (According to yoga classes, this is something you are not supposed to do, but it’s something I do anyway.)

I have made plans with some of you for the upcoming months, and I know I still need to get back to some others. If I haven’t gotten back to you, it is because I have been sleeping and staring into space a lot. So of it takes me a long time to get back to you, or I don’t, it’s because I don’t feel well, not because I don’t want to talk to you.

Last night, tired of winter’s grayness, I looked through some gardening catalogs and tentatively circled some plants I’d like for my garden plot this summer. Today, the catalogs sat at the edge of the couch, mocking my misplaced optimism. The entire time I’d been selecting the flowers, the question nagged me, “Will I be here to plant or enjoy them?” Everything in my life seems like it’s punctuated with a question mark. Except for one thing, but it’s the certainty that faces all of us.

Yesterday, I had been feeling a little bit better than Thursday, and I got some work done and cleaned up the apartment, but this morning, I felt even worse. I’ve spent hours napping. I feel like the doctors are running out of options. If this chemo doesn’t work—and it doesn’t seem like it is—then what? They keep trying things, and things keep not working.

A few months ago, I was planning what workout classes to take on ClassPass or places to check out for a possible vacation with my mom and some friends. Today I made a morose list—it’s something we should all do, I’m told, but it’s taken on more urgency—of things to wrap up, what to do just in case these tumors can’t be controlled. Nothing needs to be settled tomorrow and I assume I have more time, but I think I might have less time than I initially thought. I spent non-napping time thinking about the practical and impractical aspects of mortality.

I don’t have a lot of assets and have successfully avoided a lot of adult responsibilities, so I just have a few important things on my list and then a bunch of random concerns. I don’t want my social media lurking after I’m gone, haunting the internet with birthday reminders, so I have to pass along my social media passwords. I don’t want my posts floating around in the internet ether. I’m oddly surprised by how alive people are until they’re not. I know that doesn’t make any sense. But I had expected death from disease to be a slow evaporation, like I am lost molecule by molecule, until one day I’m just no longer around.

When I came home from the hospital, my stand-alone wardrobe had been reorganized a little bit, prompting me to engage in a manic closet-cleaning project to help my clothes find loving homes and to try to make some money. This clothes-selling thing is a whole other social network with its own wants and needs, however, and I don’t have the time to devote to it. I waffle between disappointment that the few things I managed to put up aren’t selling and relief that I don’t have to part with my beloved clothes and accessories, even though most of my days are spent in sweatpants, diapers and pajamas these days. Also, I don’t want really to get rid of anything. All my clothes bring me joy, and I regret every piece of clothing I’ve parted with. But that’s a whole other post I have yet to write. So I have one more password to pass along, to close the doors of my virtual closet.

As for my garden, I have a few perennials, and when gardeners move, they can leave plants up for grabs. Only a few hostas are sentimental—one is a descendant from my old yard in Ohio.

The cats will be OK. I like having relatively independent pets; that’s why I have cats. In taking stock of my life, I’ve had to come to terms with not having children—something I was never sure I wanted but also something I had thought, for a long time, would be a definite possibility—and at least I don’t leave children behind. Something about Ziggy, the two-and-a-half-year-old cat, always has broken my heart. He’s so needy. I feel bad enough leaving him behind. I look into his big Keane-painting eyes and worry that he won’t know that I had no choice about leaving him. That’s hard enough. And he’s a cat.

I’m relatively at peace with my life, but there’s the realization that the world will go on without you. A long time ago, I went to a talk about nostalgia and the speaker provided examples of how people throughout history have always thought they lived in the end times, in some part to avoid facing their mortality and ultimate insignificance. (Of course, environmentally we might actually be toward the end, but then when I Googled for a news story for a hyperlink, a lot of global warming conspiracy stories came up from “sources” like Breitbart and “American Thinker” came up. I feel simultaneously worse and then better about leaving this world behind.)

What haunts me are all the trivial loose ends, like my books-to-read pile. I keep thinking of the last episode of 30 Rock, which I haven’t even seen since it aired in 2013; it’s just a scene I’ve read about and haunts me. When Liz Lemon thinks Jack Donaghy is about to commit suicide, she pleads, “There’s so much to live for! Don’t you want to know how Mad Men ends?” What if I never find out who sits on the Iron Throne?

What if this, today, with my roiling insides, is the best I feel? I’m just not sure what else I can be doing if I don’t have the energy. It has been exactly five years since I found out I have cancer. Since then, I feel like I’ve adequately seized the times I’ve felt well. I’ve had a good life. It’s abbreviated, not yet over. Am I preparing or am I skipping ahead to the end too soon?

I couldn’t sleep. I started this blog around 5:30 am, when I finally realized I wan’t going to be able to go back to bed. One of the strange side effects of the peripheral neuropathy is that sometimes I feel buzzy and kind of manic in the middle of the night. I actually haven’t been taking Gabapentin for weeks, but tonight, my feet, ankles and calves started cramping up, so I took it again. It’s been a long, kind of strange day. I started chemo again and have been reunited with my old companion Dacarbazine, the D in the ABVD treatment for my Hodgkin’s lymphoma about five years ago.

I headed to see the doctor at Sloan-Kettering today, hoping there was a plan B in place. The radiation only slowed down the side effects of the tumors (namely, the diarrhea), but it’s still pretty bad. I’m on potassium, sodium bicarbonate, phosphorus and magnesium, as well as the daily saline bags, just to keep me stable and out of the hospital. Plus I take atropine and imodium to try to slow things down. In the hospital, I took tincture of opium but my insurance company didn’t approve it for outpatient use. If it sounds like something you’d see an ad for in a Victorian newspaper, laudanum was a tincture of opium; if you’ve read The Alienist, it should also sound familiar. It was used by poets and writers Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Charles Dickens, Bram Stoker and Thomas Coleridge. Laudanum is not the same drug that I received, and that’s probably why I produced no brilliant poetry or literature while in the hospital, only a few blogs and some drool as I fell asleep for about a day after the first dose. After that, I received a half-dose, some bitter drops from a bottle that were placed in a syringe.

As I suspected, the radiation worked a little bit, but it’s not what we all hoped for. Scans show only the tumors in my pancreas and lymph nodes, but the oncologist thinks that there is microscopic disease and that small undetectable tumors are also producing the VIP hormone that is making me so sick. I got an increased dose of subcutaneous injections of octreotide, which is also supposed to fight off the renegade hormone, so I’m a little sore.

So it’s time for Plan B, which is Dacarbazine, every three weeks, probably forever. I looked it up on my older blogs and realized it was my least favorite chemo drug. There’s another drug that just got approved by the FDA, but then the hospital has to approve it and the insurance companies also have to agree to pay for it, as it has a $50,000 per treatment price tag. But that drug is something I would receive only four times and then be done, so I’m hoping it’s something that insurance approves and that I can afford. I’m not hopeful as the insurance company does not want to pay for the last day in the hospital, because they deemed it unnecessary. The hospital was trying to prepare me for life on the outside, where I wouldn’t have a steady drip of fluids and drugs, and where nurses don’t check my vitals and blood several times a day and feed me cups of medicine on a regular basis. I was feeling a little better, but not great. I actually would have been OK staying through Friday to finish my radiation, but I knew the meter was running on my hospital stay. I still had to poop in a bucket until I left. I would like to send the insurance company a full bucket to show my displeasure, so hopefully we can straighten it out.

(An aside: I picture someone at the insurance company looking through my bills, stroking his horns. He leans into his computer screen, smiling, typing a few notes and checking a box. Then he sits back in his chair, wrapping his pointy tail around the base of his desk chair, a habit he developed as a display of satisfaction when he found something the company could argue wasn’t necessary. He picks up his pitchfork, which he uses to eat lunch, and heads to the cafeteria to eat from a warm/cold buffet with offerings like candy stolen from babies, heapings of human despair of the sick, and the fruits and vegetables no longer in the SNAP plan with “harvest boxes”.)

Yesterday, I stayed at the MSKCC outpost for the rest of the day, got my octreotide shots and then zipped upstairs for a bone density test because I have osteopenia, a long-term side effect from my lymphoma treatments. I’m oddly not worried about those results as it seems my long-term is becoming much shorter. Then I went to one of the chemo stations. I got a little bag of some type of steroid to ward off nausea, since Dacarbazine causes nausea for a few days. I suddenly felt an itchiness that spread from my legs to my back and asked the nurse about it. She said it would last only for a few minutes. It’s usually in a more diluted form but a hospital supplier was affected by the hurricane in Puerto Rice, so this one is what’s available. It was fine, but a little weird. (I also have to take Dexamethasone for two days afterward, as well as Zofran, for nausea.) Then I received my Dacarbazine, which take a little over a half-hour, and potassium, because I was a little low at 3.1 instead of last week’s 3.7. It was diluted in a bag of saline, but with my PICC line, it’s much easier to do the chemo and the potassium, both of which sting and ache through an IV.

That brings me to my next bit of news: I’m finally getting a Mediport implant. About four years ago, when I was on a Brentuximab trial, I was scheduled to get one but I changed my mind, since I had only about six to nine treatments left. Since then, I’ve thought that maybe I should have gotten a port. One of the nurses at one of my most recent hospital stays (before the PICC placement) asked about my chemo history as she searched for a vein for an IV, and I rattled off: six months of ABVD, three months of Brentuximab, two rounds of ICE, and a stem cell transplant (though by then, I had a leukapheresis catheter in my chest). “It looks like it,” the nurse responded. Getting a Mediport seemed like admitting defeat before, but now I think I will need it for the rest of my life, and it will make things so much easier. It’s a permanent marker of sickness. The big Whipple scar running down my abdomen doesn’t bother me so much, nor do the 10 radiation tattoos. (In fact, I love saying that I have 11 tattoos. Only one is “real,” a small Libra symbol on my upper shoulder that a friend got for me as a present when we were 20. After these latest tattoos, someone told me, “You’re like Tommy Lee now.”) But the port for me will likely be as forever as my tattoos. I am scheduled to get it not next Monday, but the following Monday.

I was hopeful the Dacarbazine would work, but I’ve gone from declining to taking a considerable turn for the worse. I’m back to wearing night diapers, and my neuropathy is back with a vengeance. This evening, I became snuffly and my throat started hurting, along with my lower back. I was worried to take my temperature, because a fever would send me to the MSKCC Urgent Care, but I thankfully have no fever. My cheeks were flushed when I went to bed, so I’m thinking it was chemo side effects. For now, after talking to one of the oncology nurses, we’re going to keep an eye on things and see how I feel.

I’m getting really discouraged that nothing seems to be working. At first, the doctors said I could have years or even decades. Steve Jobs had eight years. I know I’ve had the tumors for at least five years, and I’ve known they have been active for two. When I found out in July that I was always going to have cancer and that it would be treated as a chronic disease, I thought I still had some quality time left, and I’m surprised that I declined so quickly. I can’t continue living like this, and I’m a little worried it’s going to be downhill from here. This life of saline and diapers could be as good as it gets. When I was in the hospital, it felt like it was the beginning of the end. I was coming to terms with big life things I wouldn’t accomplish, but now I’ve had to cancel some short-term plans.

If all my fluid and electrolyte loss doesn’t get under control soon, then I’m going to have to give myself daily octreotide shots. The focus is trying to keep me out of the hospital.

I can’t be out for too long. I haven’t been able to work out or go to my beloved metal and goth cycling classes or in-office building yoga. I haven’t had any alcohol or caffeine since New Year’s Eve. (That’s why I’m against dry Januarys and cleanses. As someone who has not been able to eat for weeks or drink for long periods of time, I say you should eat, drink and be merry while you can. Then again, I’ve always been a hedonist, so I’ve always eaten the cake or whatever memes tell you to do to indulge in small pleasures during your short life.) But I’m trying to focus on what I can do and not what I can’t. I can have friends over and do some low-key things. I caught up on some TV. I have spent a lot of time with the cats. There lots of good things, but I’m not sure what the future holds. I found out I had cancer five years ago on February 18, and sometimes I’m just tired.

That’s a sad note to end on, so enjoy these photos of cats I’ve taken during my post-hospital life.

 

Cat with her paw on someone's hand

Lulu held my hand.

Cuddling cats

All cats love Lux.

A cat on a a table with roses and wine.

Handsome Ziggy on Valentine’s Day.

Three sleeping cats on someone's legs.

I was trapped under a pile of cats.

A cat in a u-pet carrier with stickers on it.

Lulu inside the space-age u-pet carrrier.

A cat wearing a tie behind a laptop

Ziggy wears a tie to help me with work.

Today, like every day, I had plans to be productive. But I’m often tired. It was rainy out. The apartment was relatively clean. I didn’t have any freelance work to do. I curled up with the cats, drank tea, ate some snacks and finished reading a book.

Since I’ve been out of the hospital, I haven’t improved much and so I’ve been more or less holding steady. I meet with the doctor on Wednesday to see if there’s a Plan B after radiation. I haven’t had much energy, and existing out of the hospital is more tiring. I have been bad about getting back to people or doing things. Sometimes, I have to make a choice between things I have to do—dishes, cleaning, work, laundry—and other things. Usually I can pick only one or two things to do. Even things like blogging or writing texts and emails seem like insurmountable tasks at times. When I have bursts of energy, I try to do a lot of things all at once. Today wasn’t one of those days.

I’ve watched a lot of TV. Thankfully, I was behind on a lot of shows anyway so I finally caught up on a few things I started watching while recovering from my liver ablation last spring.

My apologies if I haven’t been in touch. I feel as if I’m operating at 50-60 percent of my usual energy level. There’s not a lot they can do for these tumors, but hopefully the doctors will have a plan.