Food & Drink Magazine

Stories from a Thoroughly Average, Beautiful Life

By Feedmedearly @feedmedearly
Stories from a thoroughly average, beautiful life

This is supposed to be a blog about life after cancer. 6 weeks post-recurrence, I'm still wrapping my head around the fact that this blog is now about life with cancer.

I apologize for my absence. It's been weeks since I've felt comfortable enough to publish a post.

It's not that I haven't tried. A desktop folder, creatively-titled "Update" houses seven versions of this post - "Update", "Update on lungs", "Update-2" - each no more than a few sentences. All cut short once I've realized that the tone is too personal, too optimistic, too vague or too depressing.

The root of my writer's block is that steady states don't exist. There are tremendous highs. I've tucked the kids into bed at night and promised to stay strong. I've told them that I want to exercise and get into great shape. "What kind of shape?" Lauren teased. "A square? A rectangle?"

We've laughed at the absurdity of this experience. Before I was wheeled into surgery, my Mum showed me a comment from the original cancer post. My good friend Hilary nailed it with both humor and timing:

"I know with all my being you will live until your boobs sag like droopy dog's ears."

And Hilary, by dog, I hope you meant bloodhound. An old decrepit fellow with a nose for good food.

Stories from a thoroughly average, beautiful life

But the inverse of levity is anxiety. There are days when I sit on the edge of sanity and wait for results...from surgery...from bloodwork, from scans, pathologies, treatment options....

I find it hard to be part of the real world. It doesn't fit like it used to. Beautiful moments are painful. Mundane moments seem bizarre and out of place. "Hi Jessica, did you know that July is National Hot Dog Month?" "Hi Jessica! Mary here with BE SOCIAL! One of my fun, delicious clients is...."

It's often easier to retreat. To find solace behind a computer screen and engage with others who understand this world and speak my language. SNB, BRAF, PD1, MEK, NIVO, PEMBRO, IPI, EORTC 18071, and the most important word of all: NED. No evidence of disease.

It may be an obvious point, but a stage IV melanoma diagnosis stacks the cards against you. According to a top melanoma oncologist, whom I visited for a second opinion, I have a 75-80% chance of recurrence and he can offer nothing in terms of treatment. Watch, wait, scan every few months.

Stories from a thoroughly average, beautiful life

My current oncologist - the person who's been responsible for my care since I was first diagnosed at age 25 - has a different plan. She wants to hit the disease aggressively with several months of adjuvant treatment, a drug called Ipilimumab that will rebuild my immune system.

My family and I had spilled tears of relief coming out of our visit. I'd emailed friends, ecstatic about what my doc had essentially hailed as a cure. "She won't say the word "cure", refers to it as a 4-letter word - but it's as close as she's come to seeing long-term remissions."

What she didn't highlight is that Ipilimumab only works for 1/5th of patients. That people often pull out of treatment because of the side effects, many of which last for months after the final infusion.

Though I love my doctor's positivity, she tends to focus on the best possible outcome, even if it happens at the bleeding right edge of the normal distribution.

But I'm not one to wait for cancer to return. A 20% response is worth the side effects, and it's a far better response than what was offered for stage IV patients just a few years ago.

Besides, I've got food and nutrition on my side.

Stories from a thoroughly average, beautiful life

I've been cooking as much as ever, finding inspiration in the fruits and vegetables that I pick up from my CSA and local farm stands. I've come to respect the healing power of turmeric; like flour on a baker, I'm often dusted with saffron-colored fingerprints.

I know that some of you have come to this site a few times in search of updates; I've had an easier time posting snapshots to Instagram, so wanted to point you in that direction should you worry about any silence on my end.

My goal is to make it through the next few months of treatment and get back to posting regular entries on this site. I miss it; I miss the friendships and the daily interactions. Most of all I miss telling the stories of mistaken identity, top secret GMO missions, and ruined Valentine's Day dinners. Happy stories. True stories. Stories from a thoroughly average, beautiful life.

I hope to see you back here soon...

Stories from a thoroughly average, beautiful life

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