2/8/2012
Chemo Day #1 Round Three
After six days of feeling quite good it’s time to
face the music again. I’m hooked up and
ready at nine AM with today’s gang of fellow infusionees. The Marmalade Lady has just entered the room her
knitting needles and sonic voice confirm the sighting. We’ll have to wait and see whether today will
have a topic for her. There’s another
lady stretched out in one of the lounges not hooked up to anything but asleep
and snoring up a storm. Another pair of
patients in quiet conversation and a Sudoku puzzler is hard at in in another
chair. So far I’m the only overtly chemo
bald person I’ve seen in the treatments so far.
I’ve suspected a few wigs along the way (in a quick room scan there are
two pretty certain cases today) so I guess I sort of stand out. Well, the hat was getting itchy so I’m
letting the head shine in all its glory.
Today’s the day when, along with a few other odds
and ends, I get the Rutuximab (Rutuxin) infusion. I got the bill for the chemo drugs
administered by infusion the other day and Rutuxin is definitely the big ticket
item costing excess of 3000€ or $4000.
The mice used in the process of growing the monoclonal antibodies that
make up Rutuxin must be pretty well paid.
My hemoglobin is down a bit but still in the
acceptable range at 9.0. I’ve been
feeling quite strong – I even skipped the elevator this morning to get up to
the treatment center. The lowest I’ve
seen it was 7. The day I had that
reading was he day when death truly looked like a likely outcome of the
disease. Blood transfusion rectified the
problem but today I don’t need one. The
slowness at which my hemoglobin has run down over these past few weeks is
really quite encouraging and gives me hope that treatment is doing what it’s
supposed to do.
Diane and I had a taste of home last night for my
“last supper” before a round of chemo. A
local supermarket was advertising “winter Kabeljau”, German for codfish. Sure enough that’s what it was – fresh cod
filets with the skin still on thereby confirming the species. So, creamed codfish was last night’s entrée
(Carl had dinner out with his German teacher and two other classmates as a
reward for having spoken the most German during their weekend in Munich) and it
was delicious. I’ve been craving decent
seafood of late and I don’t think there’s much better a way to ingest protein
that fresh fish. Apart from bouncing
grandkids on my knee and seeing family and friends, fresh seafood is what we
miss the most living here.
All is quiet from the Marmalade lady and the
dopiness that is part of today’s infusion is beginning to manifest itself so,
until later, Tschüss! (informal greeting/goodbye now banned in favor of Grüss
Gott in certain Bavarian public schools).
Back from the edge of drowsiness and I look around
the room seeing that some of the characters have changed. The Marmalade lady knits (looks looks a
mitten) on but remains conversationally quiet. The snorer is hooked up to something now and
there are a few new faces. Day one of
the two day cycle runs five to six hours for me so there’s lots of time for the
actors to change. The cast of sunlight
has shifted about 45 degrees along the floor and walls and I hope to be out
before I become a direct recipient of its rays.
The snorer has awoken, been disconnected and bid Adieu to us all,
I was listening to music while in and out of sleepy
mode and it’s always a powerful thing. I
started writing today with no particular “message” in mind, I just wanted to
give a first hand “real time” impression of the chemo therapy room
experience. But the songs once again
force reflection. Twice, in the last
twelve hours, two different people have asked me how I’m “doing spiritually”. It’s a question caring brothers and sisters
of faith who’ve achieved appropriately intimate levels of relationship and respect
are entitled and, indeed, encouraged to ask of one another. It’s more that a Hello, how are you sort of
question and it deserves an honest answer.
(in part because they know it might come right back at them!)
So, how am I doing spiritually? The short answer is, “I’m doing well” but
that certainly could use some definition.
The greatest anchor in doing well spiritually these days is the anchor
of peace. God has granted to me and to Diane
as well, I believe, and, as is promised in Scripture, a peace that passes all
understanding. We are firmly assured,
convicted and convinced that God is powerful, loving, strong and good. He’s also in charge whether or not we
recognize that so we might as well recognize that. We know that when all is
said and done, what is important boils down to being found in Him. In future posts I want to explore some of
these ideas but for now just listing them is meant to identify the roots of our
peace. That peace ranges from enjoying
each day in Him and with each other to, while missing the classroom that I love
so much to being OK with not being there to whether this disease is beaten on
this or the other side of eternity.
The last tune I listened to before picking up the
computer again was David Crowder’s Never
Let Go. It pretty much sums up where
I’m at right now.
When clouds veil
sun and disaster comes
Oh, my soul, Oh,
my soul
When waters rise
and hope takes flight
Oh, my soul, Oh,
my soul
Ever faithful
ever true
You are known
You never let go
You never let go,
you never let go, you never let go
You never let go,
you never let go, you never let go
When clouds
brought rain and disaster cam
Oh, my soul, Oh,
my soul
When waters rose
and hope had flown
Oh, my soul, Oh,
my soul
Ever faithful
ever true
You are known
You never let go
You never let go,
you never let go, you never let go
You never let go,
you never let go, you never let go
Oh my soul
overflows, Oh what love, oh what love
Oh, my soul fills
with hope
Perfect love,
that never lets go
You never let go,
you never let go, you never let go
You never let go,
you never let go, you never let go
Oh, what love, Oh, what love, Oh, what love
In joy or pain, in sun and rain
You’re the same,
Oh, you never let go, you never let go, you never
let go
So, I’m doing remarkably well spiritually. No great revelations these past few days, no
mystical heights or depths but peace. In the face of this great and good God and
in the grip of His tenacious love I’m not in the mood to rant and rage (and
yes, I know it’s OK if I do – I believe that, I’ve read the Psalms – but I’m
not “there” right now).
I’m OK and to those of you with whom I’ve earned
the right to ask I will ask – “How are you doing spiritually?” For all of time and beyond it is the most
important question to which you can and should seek an answer.
6 comments:
Russ,
Great how you can talk about your butt one day and then point us to our loving Father who "never lets go" the next. Keeping you in my prayers.
Praise God from whom all blessings flow......
We continue to pray God's peace for you. Peace because He LOVES you! Thanks for posting....it encouraged my heart today! Jan
The 7th grade and I have you on our permanent list now, both for Troubled Tuesday and for Thankful Thursday!
Thanks for this post - I'll be singing that song in my sleep now, as I drift off with the "how am I doing spiritually?" question on my mind. I'm so glad you're well in the ways that most matter.
Thanks, many prayers, and Grüß Gott!
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