Cancer Selfies

Wednesday October 19, 2022

Avastin, side effects and mortality

Cycle 3, Day 7

Its been a suboptimal couple of days. The new chemotherapy drug, Avastin, has new and exciting side effects that I was simply unprepared for. Avastin's purpose is to starve tumors of blood vessels, so it's a very important part of my treatment, but in doing that (I think) it's been giving me neck stress headaches. Yesterday, I made a delicious chilli, and ate too much of it. A mistake I hope to never make again, because the side effects have been making me suffer all day. I haven't been able to keep down over the counter medicines to help with any of the symptoms (I've called the hotline, I'm not in danger). I see a doctor for symptom management next week, as well as my oncologist, so these problems will be addressed soon.

To compound my difficulties, I've had two long phone calls - one, yesterday, with the cancer centre's social worker and mental health generalist, and while its fantastic to know (and like) my mental health professionals, my personal, pre cancer, history is heavy enough, and discussing how its evolved since August was draining before the side effects got mixed in. Today I spoke with a home care coordinator, mostly as an intake appointment, but we touched on the evolving nature of my needs. Friends, if this has been too much, duck out now. It's fine, I love and care about you all, I need to share this but you don't need to see it.


Right now, my needs are very basic. I need PICC maintenance once a week. We touched on how pain management tends to go, and the role home care nurses play as people move from lighter opiates, to more serious ones, to long acting ones to pumps, and how keeping good records on use makes it easier to justify stronger medications when the time comes. We talked how more time in bed can lead to bed sores, the early warning signs and the waitlists for PSWs and physical therapists. We talked end of life, mainly the where of it. Not because it's imminant, but because I have all my mental faculties now and need to be thinking about these things.

It's been an exhausting few days. And side effects have stolen some of my precious good days. But we soldier on. The chili was perfect, I've learned that I should be grazing rather than taking large meals, Thomasin has been paying her rent with wonderful cuddles, the birds and squirrels have been a source of delight all day. It's been a tough few days, but I've had much, much worse, and the next few days are hopefully looking up.

A man with long green hair wears pajamas while laying in bed, photo 1 A man with long green hair wears pajamas while laying in bed, photo 2

From the comments

James Petrosky: I wouldn't have written the hidden paragraph if I wasn't comfortable talking about it, but please either nest your comments carefully or message me directly. I'll get to you all as I have the energy.

James Petrosky: If you were close to me during any of the times my depression and later bipolar disorder flared up, you know I have no problem discussing difficult health issues. I have similar intentions here, serious health problems affect us all and need to be better normalized. I find Dave Warnock, a long time atheist/secularist activist who was diagnosed with ALS a few years ago, and has been very public about how that's affected his life, from diagnosis to end, to be inspiring and more than a little bit of an inspiration for these posts. His Dying Out Loud was important to me before all of this happened, and has taken a new importance since.

I have not accepted end yet. I'm very hopeful about surgery, and feel like I'm due for a win when it comes to the outcome of that surgery. But it's been an emotional couple of months, and the hardest week since I started chemo, and friends, I have no intention of hiding this messy stuff for you.

Monday September 19, 2022

Feeling good five days after chemo

Cycle 1, Day 5

On day 5 I finally felt good enough to actually do stuff. It's wild to walk out of Canadian Tire and feel "yes, that was a pleasant trip that I both needed to take and did not make me feel upset in any way".

My apartment has never had a number on it, which has suited my desire for privacy, but not being monstrous to home care nurses ranks pretty high on my list of desires.

Plus! The weather today is extremely late summer/early fall and the breeze is perfect. I might take a picnic to the water if the weather holds.

I still feel a little sick, like I could throw up, but not like it's iminant. I'm getting used to it, but I'm feeling unwell most of the time. I don't think I can enjoy apple anymore, at least for a while, which is a pain because apple sause is one of the main foods recommended for this sort of queesy feeling in general, and especially for chemo patients.

A man with long green hair and no beard sits in a car, Photo 1

Successful Canadian Tire trip

A man with long green hair and no beard sits in a car, Photo 2

Successful Canadian Tire trip

A man with long green hair and no beard sits in a car, Photo 3

Successful Canadian Tire trip

A man with long green hair and no beard stands in front of a post with a number 9 on it

Appartment #9

A man with long green hair and no beard stands in front of Lake Huron, waves crashing on the breakwater, Photo 1

The waves are very good today

A man with long green hair and no beard stands in front of Lake Huron, waves crashing on the breakwater, Photo 2

It's hard to keep the hair out of my eyes today

A man with long green hair and no beard sits in a computer chair, with an orange cat in his lap

Honourary Nurse Thomasin, asleep on the job

From the comments

James Petrosky: Eff it, it's a bit cool out (newly repaired thermometer reads 21.7C) but I've got the body fat to sit outside in the shade (one of the chemotherapy drugs makes you very photosensitive so it has to be the shade) so bonus recreation of an earlier profile pic A man with long green hair and no beard reclines in a folding chair on a patio