Minty Fresh

Big day! I brushed my teeth with grownup minty toothpaste today. My teeth feel so clean. This is a game changer. Constant nausea and crazy amounts of fatigue seem to be the biggest side effects so far, which suck, BUT mouth sores and gum sensitivity are not side effects which. is. awesome. I've been using children's "rainbow flavored" toothpaste for the last 3 months. Does anyone know what a rainbow tastes like? I do! They taste like your teeth might fall out. 

I had an epiphany regarding why so many women are better at handling this than I am. It's because they've carried children. That is a toughness I will never know. All you ladies who have functioned through morning sickness, I salute you. I am in awe of you. I'm proud to call you my sisters. 

I got nosebleed during the infusion. Good times. Check out my freckles!

I got nosebleed during the infusion. Good times. Check out my freckles!

Anyway, Yeah, I started the new drug. The first few days were pretty rough. I'm waiting to see what else it brings. Here's a picture of me getting chemo (in case you were dying to see what it looks like.) 

My mom stayed with us until Wednesday to take care of me. She made me tea and toast and homemade vegetable soup. (My sisters sent up care packages with bone broth, mashed sweet potatoes, and cauliflower soup {and bandannas, and coloring books!}, so I've had lots of easy things to eat.) She came with me to a couple of follow up doctor appointments. You know how there are only a few people in the world you can stand to be around for long periods of time? My mom is one of those people for me. She's the best.

There have been some residual side effects from the last cycle of chemo that should be faded soon. I'm looking forward to that. The neuropathy (numbness/pain/nerve damage to my hands and fingertips) was starting to get bad, but supposedly is over now and since it didn't get too far, it should (might?) heal. My fingertips permanently look like they've been in the water too long and skin on my  hands burn in warm water or when I try to open things like bottles or those flat, black plastic take out cartons- those are murder- anything that requires a grip. My nails have started to separate from my nail beds a little. That's pretty painful but I filed my nails really low so they don't get thumped as much. I'm not sure if that's from the neuropathy or a different side effect. Nurse Nicole told me it should stop happening now on the new drug and has me soaking my fingertips daily in a vinegar solution to make sure they don't get fungus (super sexy and my hands smell delicious!) Typing doesn't hurt as much anymore so it's definitely fading. Makes for much easier blogging. (Hi! I missed you!) Oh and this amazing lady at the drug store helped me find this moisturizing cream called Excipial for my feet. The dryness side effect, which will not wear off yet, got so bad my heels started cracking and bleeding. I went to a podiatrist and he prescribed a 20% urea moisturizer, which I did not know does not require a prescription. I was near desperate at that point- having walked to the drug store on my bleeding, cracked heels to get the cream only to find out they didn't have it. The woman at the counter saw my face and left her post to help me find a replacement. Excipial rocks and I was feeling better within 2 days of using it. I love her and I think I'm going to buy her a thank you cactus. On the subject of dryness, if anyone knows of a natural/organic super-hydrating face moisturizer please pass it on. Pre- cancer my skin was so sensitive that I used a homemade blend of organic jojoba oil, carrot seed oil, and a few essential oils, but that's not cutting it anymore. The other side effect I can't wait to kick is the skin discoloration. My face is covered in freckles (previously, these guys only come out when I'm in the sun without sunblock) and there's discoloration around my chin and mouth. With that, the dry skin, and this new funky peach fuzz my head is desperately trying to grow (you can do it, buddy!), I'm starting to resemble Gollum. 

I mentioned in my last post I was starting to feel a little down. I think I hit a low spot when I had to miss my niece's 6th birthday party. I really wanted to be there, but after talking to my family we all decided it was best if I didn't make the trip. I would have had to drive 2.5 hours (if I was lucky and didn't hit traffic) each way alone. And, I would have been around kids who just spent the day at a trampoline park with hundreds of other kids, which is basically a germ factory. So I stayed in NYC, a very safe distance from colds and flus and that nasty stomach virus I keep hearing about. I know it was the right choice, but I was really bummed. I'd had a somewhat "normal" week, where I went into work twice and spent some time with some friends on Saturday. Two of my old friends came to visit and meet David finally. They brought lots of snacks and we spent hours catching up. It was so nice to feel almost not sick. Missing her party the next day was just a bad reminder that things are not okay and it really brought me down. I did get to Facetime with her though. We talked at the end of the night after everyone went home while she was getting ready for bed. She had a great day and to be honest, didn't even miss me and totally understood why I couldn't come so that made me feel better. I got to say her bedtime prayers with her too. Since she found out, every night she closes her eyes and shoots lasers at my cancer. When she runs out of ammo, she reloads and shoots again. My sister said the night she told her about me, she overheard her praying, "Dear God, Please help Aunt Faith be strong and beat cancer and please make her not need chemo. But if she does need chemo, please just let her be like, 'Okay, I'll do it!'" I may have mentioned this before but her father was diagnosed last year and is already in remission, so she had a good understanding of what was happening. When her dad's tests came back clear, she said the reason he's better is because she prayed A LOT. And when she found out about mine, her response was something like, "...well we prayed for Daddy's and his went away, so we'll just pray for Aunt Faith and hers will go away too." I love that kid. Do you see why I was so upset about missing her birthday? She's something special.

So I'm pulling it together. I spent some time out on my terrace today and got some real sun. It's so gorgeous out. I even put on shoes. But I think it's time for a nap now. All this typing is enough excitement for one day. 

No Title

Hey hey. It's been a while. I've been a little down and didn't want to put up a whiny post so I've been lying low. I'm tired of this. I miss feeling normal. 

I'm on my way to get the "red devil." Then, it'll be infusions every two weeks. I'm nervous about the side effects. I'm nervous about losing that solid recovery week. I'm just scared in general. But my mom's here with me. David made me a good breakfast with home fries from scratch, and eggs. I got a good night's sleep (Thanks, Benadryl!) I prayed and meditated this morning. I'm as ready as I can be. Lots of people have done this before me and they're fine. I'll be fine too. I'll report back later with an update.

Back To The Beginning

We have a wedding planner! I feel like she's going to be my paid best friend, which is also my therapist's job but she and I are much more long term. Wedding planner is just a temporary position.

I feel relieved. It wasn't something I had planned on, but these days I'm happy to have help. I already did most of the big stuff. Venue, caterer, food, DJ, and photographer are all figured out. She can help with details like flowers and hotel blocks. Plus, in the weeks leading up to and on the day of, she'll be all of the vendors' point of contact. Which is awesome. The last little bit we're nailing down for now is which wines to serve. It's been a while since I've had a glass a wine so I asked a few people whose opinions I value. I think that's about done. And now I'm done deciding what to do next. That is now Planner's job. Yay!

David came with me to get my infusion on Monday. I'm not sure what's different but this one really wiped me out. I haven't posted in a while because all I've been doing is sleeping. The fatigue part really caught up with me this week and the gross tasting food stuff snuck in early. I had a migraine 3 days in a row and a low running fever hovering around 99.6 for a few days. Maybe I caught a little something or maybe I'm just run down. I left the house today for the first time since Wednesday. It felt good to get out, but of course I fell asleep as soon as we got home and slept for 2.5 hours. I'm so boring.

Presents! Dammint Doll, bracelet, necklaces, and SOME of the crystals I received.

Presents! Dammint Doll, bracelet, necklaces, and SOME of the crystals I received.

That is another reason I haven't posted. I've nothing to talk about. I got some really nice gifts sent to me including a bracelet that says "Wake up. Kick ass. Repeat." from my cousin in Tennessee. Our friend who was doing all the cooking for us sent me 2 adorable little gold necklaces with uplifting messages. I got some crystals specifically for healing from 2 different old friends. One of them is a necklace with an angel cut from rose quartz. I'm loving the smoky quartz and rose quartz these days- like I'm really attracted to them. I used to collect these as a kid, but I got rid of everything when I moved to NYC. It feels like they're all coming back to me now. Back then, I was not really aware of all the properties and uses they have. I just thought they were pretty. So this time around, I have a chance to use them.  A friend who is a pilot and stops in to visit from time to time when he flies through NYC sent me a Dammit Doll and he sent David a Wii remote.* And, a friend from high school sent me a mani-care.com gift certificate which I can't wait to use. They are a mobile manicure service. They do other things too, like pedis and massages. They'll even go to a hospital bedside and do your nails. It's a really thoughtful gift if you know anyone home bound or stuck in a hospital, and they give 10% of their profits to a few good charities so it's double karma points. 

(*I hooked up my old Wii system, which hasn't been turned on since 2009, and it still works. BUT I'd left batteries in 3 out of 4 remote controllers so only one controller works correctly. The other 3 randomly turn off, which I can only assume is due to 8 years of battery acid corrosion. Of course, when David and I tried to play, I used the good one and his turned off a few times mid-game. I was fine with this arrangement, as it guarantees me several wins I otherwise would not have gotten. But Pilot found this very unfair, so he sneakily sent David a brand new Wii remote and a note about "fairness.") 

Once again, the people around me have blown me away with their thoughtfulness, support, and prayers. My grandmother has her whole church praying for me and there's a friend I used to work with who has family all over. She reached out to them so she's got me on church prayer lists locally, in Georgia, in Canada, in England, and in St. Thomas. She's got quite a network. :)

I looked back and saw that I never told the story of how I found out I had cancer. It's a question a lot of people ask me but they seem hesitant to do so. I guess maybe they feel it's personal. I'm not sure why that would matter considering I write about my armpits here.

I started this blog so that I could keep my friends and family updated without having to tell the same thing over and over again. And it's been a great tool for that. It's nice to hop on the phone and to listen to what's going on with them because they already know my news. But the blog has turned into more for me. It's been an outlet for my crazy head. It's given me something to do on the days I'm too tired to leave the house but too restless to sit and read or sleep. And it's been a good way to chronicle this strange new experience in my life.

So in an effort to fulfill most of those roles, I'm going to tell you how I found out. I think it's important information because maybe you can use it for yourself or a loved one. And the truth is if I hadn't been so lax about it or so concerned about missing too much work (I used to be quite the little workaholic), I would have caught it at an earlier stage. In the 3 months from when I first noticed a pea sized lump to the day I was diagnosed, the very aggressive form of cancer I have grew from "probably nothing" to stage III locally advanced. Which means if I had just listened to my body earlier, it might not be in my lymph nodes and it also means that if I had waited another month it might have spread beyond my lymph nodes. But you know what I say about "almosts," so it happened how it happened and that's that. Maybe the only thing I can offer regarding this is if you're going through the trouble of checking, continue on to the next step if you find something suspicious. So without further ado, here's the story. (It's pretty long and could warrant its own post, so I'll also put in "Back Stories" for easy access if you're tired of reading now. Also, back stories will finally have a post!)

In August of 2014, right after I turned 35, my doctor wrote me a prescription and told me to go get a baseline mammogram. I blew it off. In August of 2015, at the age of 36, my new doctor wrote me a prescription and told me to go get a baseline mammogram. For no reason in particular, I listened. They told me that I have dense, fibrous tissue, and an ultrasound would be needed for a clear view. This was not news to me. I had a biopsy in 2006 that came back benign. Lumps come and go. I'm lumpy. I don't get worked up about it. The ultrasound came back clear, but they suggested I get annual mammograms starting then instead of waiting until I'm 40. In February of 2016, I had my annual check up with my primary care doctor and nothing was out of the ordinary. In August of the same year, I received a letter from the radiologist's office reminding me of my yearly check up. I blew it off. That same August I found the lump. It was small, pea-sized, and the only reason it caught my attention was its location. This one was up near my armpit. I noticed it while checking to make sure I had done a smooth shaving job (Hey. We're all friends here.) I mentioned it to my mother. She told me to keep an eye on it. "If it feels like it's getting bigger, go see someone about it." I kept an eye on it. It got bigger, but I did not go see someone. It grew to the size of a peanut, then maybe a small grape. It was turning oblong instead of round. But for some dumb reason that September when I went to visit my doctor for another reason and she asked "Anything else?" I said no. Something jumped up in my head and I thought "the lump!" but still I said no. She asked on a whim if I ever had a chest X-ray. I said no. She wrote me a prescription and told me to get a baseline chest X-ray. I blew it off.

By the end of September, what felt like a second lump popped up next to the first one. This one was right at the top right of my breast. It didn't feel round or even oblong. It felt bumpy. When I picture it in my head it looks like the surface of the moon. Other things were happening too. I was getting tired out easily and migraines which have been a problem all my life, started becoming chronic again. I remember telling my body out loud, "If something's wrong you need to be more obvious. I'm not getting whatever you're trying to tell me." Meanwhile, a third lump popped up. This one was small and felt like the first one in the beginning.

I realized sometime in the middle of October that the third one was not actually a new lump, but part of the bigger misshapen "cratery" one that was now growing in farther toward the center of my breast. For the next two weeks, I became obsessed with these lumps. Checking them every chance I got. Were they getting bigger? Am I being a drama queen? Is this my imagination? Am I overreacting? Could it really be cancer? No way. I'm only 37. I'm healthy. It doesn't run in my family. It would be such an inconvenience. I don't have time for this. It's nothing.

On October 21st, Sara came to visit. She had a party to go the next day so she came in early and stayed at our place so we could get a little time in together and catch up. David hung out with us for a little bit and then went to bed. Sara and I stayed up talking about girl stuff and our jobs and wedding plans. I mentioned my lumps. She said to go get them checked. And I went on this whole thing about how it's nothing and they're gonna make me do a mammogram and an ultrasound and a biopsy and I've had a biopsy before and it's a waste of time and I'm gonna have to miss work because it's not just the tests, it's also all the bulls**t follow up appointments and it's going to be, like, a month out of my life all for nothing. Sara patiently sat through my diatribe and just said, "Right, but what if it's something? Just go see your doctor." So I promised I'd call the following Monday.

On Sunday, David caught me feeling myself up yet again, and asked, "Lumps?" And if I look back now, I think I can say this is the moment I really knew something was wrong. It was because of my initial reaction to his question. I got quiet and protective and defensive and couldn't look him in the eye. As if something in me knew I'd been irresponsible for not going earlier, but I couldn't have said it out loud at the time. I looked down and mumbled I would call the doctor in the morning. I already promised Sara.

I called Monday, October 24th. My doctor told me to come in later that day so at 1:30, I left the office and went to see her. She agreed it was weird and said I'd need a biopsy right away. She had her assistant pull up some nearby places and suggested I call them today. Then she took me aside and told me they won't start with a biopsy. They'll have to do a mammogram and ultrasound first. And then she gave me some very good advice. She said that I should not go the same radiologist I went to before. They are a stand-alone office and it will be impossible to get my records from one doctor to another. It'll waste too much time. She told me to go to a breast cancer center where they do everything under one roof. All my information would be in the same system and it would be much easier to make appointments. She said I should go right then to the radiologist from before and get my records on a CD- to bring them with me to my mammogram so they can compare. Don't waste time. She gave me a prescription for a mammogram and ultrasound and as I walked out the door, she called after me, "Good luck, Faith." And then I knew she knew too.

I left her office and went immediately, as she suggested, to the radiologist and got my records. That baseline information turned out to be very important and I'm glad I (finally) listened to my doctor. After that I got on the phone with my insurance company to find out which major cancer centers in NYC they cover, got some phone numbers, and went back to the office. It took a few calls, but I finally got through to the correct desk and they had availability that Wednesday, the 26th for both a mammogram and an ultrasound.

The mammogram and ultrasound were routine. Tears rolled down my checks as I watched the monitor during my ultrasound. By now I was already sure I had cancer and was just going through the motions I knew I had to go through to get the official diagnosis. I prayed. A lot. I prayed for patience, for strength, for faith. The screen was mostly white. The technician moved the wand around and these large black masses would come into view. It looked like space or maybe the ocean. The front window of the submarine or spaceship is totally clear, then a giant shipwreck or massive planet rises in front of you, larger than life. I liked that. I was humming the Space Odyssey theme song in my head, pretending it wasn't my body.

Since they were able to compare the previous baseline images with the new results, they were able to see immediately that these things had grown quickly. They also had blood running through them which means they're definitely masses, not cysts. The doctor said those 2 things, the shape, plus the 2 swollen lymph nodes were "very worrisome" but she couldn't say anything for sure until they were biopsied.

We had to schedule the biopsy a week out because I take aspirin. That was a "very worrisome" week. I actually called the next day and told the scheduling lady I was going crazy and I wouldn't last a week. She said since they had to do 3 biopsies, they needed a 3 hour block and my upcoming appointment was the first one available anyway but that if anything sooner opened up she'd let me know. It was a very kind, diplomatic way to say "Everyone wants an appointment ASAP. No."

So I waited a week and went in for my biopsies the next Wednesday, November 2. The week wasn't as bad as I expected. I focused on work, on other people, on prayer. It gave me time to adjust. As I said, by now I was sure, but I figured if I was wrong I'd be pleasantly surprised. I didn't plan on telling my mom or my sisters. I didn't want to unnecessarily upset them or make them wait that week out too. A friend reminded me that these things are the types of things mothers want to know and would hate to find out later. So I told my mom Friday. She was grateful for my friend's good advice, and she told my father and encouraged me to tell my sisters for the same reason. I didn't realize it then, but now I think it's information easier to swallow in bits. The "maybe" gives you time to think about it, adjust, game plan. Waiting until I knew for sure would have been a surprise cancer bomb to just drop on my unprepared family. So, I'm glad I listened.

The biopsies weren't very painful. Seeing the tumors on screen again wasn't as jarring as the first time. Now they were becoming my frienemies. "Oh hello, guys. You can stay...for now." I was calm by this point and ready for the diagnosis. They patched me up, and sent me home with ice. They told me I'd either hear from the pathologist or my own doctor in 2-3 days. I prayed they'd do it in two so I wouldn't have to sit through the weekend. In the dressing room, I noticed in the bright fluorescent lights that I could now see the bigger tumor. It was forming a dent in my right breast. I started to feel anxious for the diagnosis, afraid we wouldn't start treating it soon enough. Afraid that cancer cells were, right then at that very moment, breaking off and traveling to other parts of my body. Afraid they were already in other parts of my body. Every minute from then until the moment I started chemo felt like a gamble. And, I wondered who would call. Is it better to hear the news from my own doctor or from a stranger?

The next day, Thursday, November 3rd, I was sitting at my desk and I noticed a missed call from my doctor at 2:30. It was followed by a text message at 2:31 that said Please call me. I went to the ladies room and composed myself. My boss (BFBF) was away on meetings for most of that day, so I used her office for privacy and called back my doctor. She said, "Faith? I got the results. They're not good." I had 2 malignant tumors and the lymph node was positive too. I calmly listened to her advice on what to do next, took notes like a good student, thanked her, and hung up the phone.

I was prepared for this call. I knew it was cancer weeks before then. I was not prepared for the lymph node part. I burst into tears. My co-worker came running over and immediately hugged me. I told her I had cancer. It just came out. She was awesome. She went straight to her desk and started looking up doctors, and calling family friends who could recommend good doctors. I tried to finish up the project I was working on, and then realized it was useless. I called a friend who happened to text me at that moment. I was hysterically crying by then. She calmed me down (despite being in the middle of her own migraine battle at that moment <3 ). I hung up with her and made the call to BFBF, filling her in. She sent me doctor recommendations also, and told me to go home and take Friday off. On the way home, I called another friend and got advice on how to tell David and the rest of my family.

David was surprised to see me home early (workaholics don't leave work early) and then I had to tell him why. I hated telling him. I hated calling and telling my parents, my sisters. I felt so guilty for disrupting their lives and worrying them, as if I somehow failed them, and would be a burden now. David sat down next to me on the bed and put his arm around me. I started crying again and I told him I was sorry that this was the way we'd be starting out our lives together. He said, "Eh. We'll get the big stuff out of the way first." It was just about the best thing he could have said. For the next two weeks, I'd ask him to run his fingers through my hair at night because I knew it'd be gone soon. 

I think the rest is here pretty much- starting on day one of the blog. I'll try to put up more backstories while I wait for the Red Devil. 

Be Still

I'm really emotional this week. Yesterday, I was working from home all morning and David was out. I was pretty busy and caught up in my own head, buzzing away on my laptop. About 3 hours later, David came home and while he was talking about his morning, I had a chemo brain moment where I kind of forgot we were together and then remembered. I don't know how to explain it. I didn't forget about him or that he existed. It's like I didn't fully grasp that he was there and staying and with me and then I did fully grasp it. It's almost like for a few seconds I jumped back to 2 years ago when we were just friends and then I remembered I get to marry this man. I became completely overwhelmed with gratitude and love, and just started crying while he stood there talking to me. He was pretty confused, but relieved they were happy tears. This poor guy. I don't know how he handles me.

I had another moment while texting with my friend. In the middle of our conversation, I switched in my head and thought I was talking to my older sister. My friend was telling me about her move to Philly and almost finding an apartment and I became very confused and couldn't understand why my sister was moving. I was asking her what she was going to do with her house. Was she going to rent it out? And what about her daughter? Was she going to make her switch schools? I just seem to short circuit mid thought. 

I can't even blame hunger now because I can eat this week. Of course I was so excited that I ate way too much and made myself sick. Will I ever learn how to moderate anything?

My last THP chemo infusion will be on Monday. They'll also be taking blood to do my genetic testing for the BRCA gene mutation. It's pretty unlikely that I have it, but the results are a very big factor in deciding how the surgery will go. After this infusion, I start the second set of drugs, AC. I'm afraid of this one. I keep having to remind myself that everyone has different reactions. I stupidly googled it and found out that the nickname for this one is "Red Devil."   

...

Great.

I'm doing my treatments in a different order than a lot of ladies. It seems like most do AC first, then the THP cocktail. People are telling me things like "don't worry you're almost done the bad one, the next one is easier." So apparently, I've been on the "easy" one, and in a few weeks, I'll start with the red devil. I'm really nervous about it. But maybe it won't be so bad because I'm kind of getting eased into it. The other ladies had to start with the full-on worst one. I got 2 months to warm up. This one will be every two weeks, instead of 3, so I'm losing that recovery week I've had to gain weight back. I never thought I'd be concerned about being unable to *gain* weight.

Aaaaaand cue the nosebleed. They're not as often as they were when I first started chemo, but they're way worse. I've started carrying gauze and toilet paper with me if I leave the house because they go right through tissues. I had to abandon the tampon idea. If your nose bleed is gushing, do NOT use the tampon trick. Those things are designed to expand. I left one in for too long and my nostril was the size of my eye socket.

So it feels like I've reached a lull for now. Things aren't great, but they're certainly not terrible. All I've really had to deal with are all the weird chemo side effects, but since I can work from home, I have everything I need here to handle them. I think it'd be a much different story if I had to go into the city every day. I know how blessed I am to have the job I do with my BFBF, my reliable and competent coworker friends, and the technology to be able to work remotely. I hear about people who continue to go into work every day, women who put on a wig and pretend everything is fine, or children who go to school every day, and I'm over here going, "How!?" That hospital stay was all I needed to become a full on recluse. I'm too afraid to get on the subway. I spent $80 taking cabs to and from work last week. I'm afraid to drive because what if I get too tired to drive back from wherever I am? 

There are kids who don't fully understand what they're going through; who have to go into the MRI tubes, and get strapped to the bone scan table, and get poked and prodded, and lose their hair, and still go to school, and just have to trust that their parents know best. There are adults who are parents and continue raising their children with a smile on their face. There are people who have to continue going into the office every day because their companies don't have owners like mine, and they need the job because they need the health insurance. There are people who lose their health insurance because they can't work, but fight anyway and risk losing their houses. Some do lose their homes because of hospital bills, and *if they're lucky* have to depend on loved ones to support them or set up "Go Fund Me" campaigns and collections and fundraisers. There are people who have to go through this alone. And there are people who already know they lost, living out their lives on a tentative timeline projected by a doctor; finding a way to enjoy what they have left; spending as much time as they can with their loved ones, their children; and some even still working because again- health insurance. And there are doctors and nurses who have seen their patients lose their battles again and again and they also continue to go into work to fight every day. Those people are brave. Those people are strong. I am not brave. I'm just very, very lucky.

 ------------------

I'm not a big bible person, but I did go to Catholic school from grades 1-12. I still remember some of the readings. My favorite prayer is Psalm 23, but my favorite single line is from Psalm 46.

"...Be still, and know that I am God."

It stops me in my whiny, complaining tracks. I am safe. I am taken care of. I am loved. I am the luckiest girl alive.

The Things That Keep Me Up At Night.

I've been having a hard time sleeping at night. I think the steroids combined with constant napping are messing with me. I lie in bed for hours staring at the ceiling, meditating, counting the green flashes coming from my On-Pro shot bomb. 1-one thousand-2-one thousand-3-one thousand-flash. Over and over again. They gave me a prescription for Lorazepam, but I don't use it. It's a benzo and those are addictive so I don't want to introduce that to my body. I feel good enough in my sobriety to know I won't take them if I feel they're a threat. The thing is even if it's prescribed, and necessary, and technically not relapsing, once it's in my system, all bets are off. I get addicted to things very easily. About 10 years ago, I needed prescription drugs to get me off of Afrin. (Yes. Afrin. Shut up. I never said I was hard core. It doesn't get you high or loopy or anything close to that, but a body can physically become addicted to it, and congestion becomes your new normal without it. It's on the label. That's why they say not to use it more than 3 days in a row.* *This PSA was brought to you by sobercancerbride.com) A few weeks ago my sinuses were getting congested and I couldn't swallow pills so I thought to myself, "hmmm it's been a long time and I'm a responsible, sober woman now. Perhaps I'll revisit my self-imposed Afrin ban. I'll use as directed. This time, it won't get me." (This line of thinking, by the way, the "'Okay it got out of hand, but it's been [days, weeks, months, 10 years...] THIS time, I'll control it' followed by the inability to do so for any length of time before it gets out of hand again is classic alcoholic behavior. Remove "Afrin" and replace with any liquor, beer, or wine and there's a pretty good chance you've got an alcoholic on your hands [feel free to substitute with dry goods or food or sugar or gambling, etc.]. There are more indications. If you want to talk about that please feel free to reach out to me.) I'm sure you see where this is going. I lifted the ban and bought Afrin. I used less than as directed. I used it twice in a 72 hour period. That's one time, wait a day, one more time. And within 2 days I was irritable and like, "WHERE IS THE STUFF I PUT UP MY NOSE?!" So. Yeah. I threw away the bottle and, long story short: No, I can't handle benzos.

I saw one of those fancy Facebook pictures once that said something like, "What if you wake up tomorrow with only the things you gave thanks for today?"  It popped up in my head the night I had the On-Pro on so I added one thing I'm grateful for at each green flash. 1-one thousand-2-one thousand-3-one thousand-relationshipwithgod. (I had to say it quickly so I didn't mess up the timing) 1-one thousand-2-one thousand-3-one thousand-sobriety. 1-one thousand-2-one thousand-3-one thousand-David. 1-one thousand-2-one thousand-3-one thousand-family...friends...myjob...apartment...health insurance...car. That's the big stuff. Then I got into details. Food, bed, clothes, shoes, weekends, manicures (oh my god I miss manicures) And I started thinking about how freaking lucky we are to be alive here and now. You are somewhere far away reading from a computer monitor or tablet or smart phone. This use to require carrier pigeons and I would have had to write it by hand, like, a hundred times over and over and over again. Guys, we're, like, magic and we of average income live better than kings did. We have washing machines, air conditioners, and indoor plumbing. Do you realize how bad everyone would have smelled when you watch those fancy tv shows and movies with kings and queens and mutton and petticoats? Gr-oss.

---------

I went into the office this week! I couldn't stay long, only about 4 hours a day. I cried a little. I was so happy to see everyone. It wiped me out though. After the first day, I came home and slept for 10.5 hours. I had worn make up and passed out with it on so I woke up looking like Uncle Fester. I have a new found respect for women who put on a full face of makeup everyday and wash it off every night before they go to sleep. It takes so much self-care. It's such a pain in the ass. I guess I wore a lot of eye makeup in high school when I was angry and pierced and liked the color black a lot (black lip liner? Oh yes. Don't worry. I wasn't all dark and angry. I went through a silver, glittery phase too. I was wearing glitter on my eyelids before they even made eyelid/body glitter. I used primer, liquid foundation, and real craft store glitter. That's how trend-setty and old I am. I remember my dentist being really weirded out by it. At the time, I was sure it was because it was new and different. Looking back, it might have been because it was unsettling to see a 15-year-old with special effects previously only seen in a strip club.) But since then, I have not really been much of a makeup lady. Definitely not every day and if I did, just mascara and maybe would add eyeliner to my top lid if I was going out or something. I have yet to find a lipstick I like. That's not true. 14 years ago, Benefit made one called Sugar Cookie but they discontinued it after I went through one tube. So it's been 14 years since I've worn anything other than lip balm. I had to have my mom show me how to put on blush last time she was here. Maddy explained it well and I got the bronzer down but blush is hard!  And taking everything off at night? Jeeez, what a process. I used to use the Blinc or L'Oreal tube mascara. That stuff is great. It comes off so easily but lately the last thing I want to do is tug at my eyelashes. They're starting to come out just fine on their own. So I switched to a mascara that comes off with water and a sensitive-eye makeup remover. My little sister smartly recommended switching to a cream so it pulls less. I'll do whatever I can to salvage them until it's time to do false eyelashes. Women are lucky for that. Do they make normal eyelashes for men to wear or is their choice ridicu-lash or nothing? (That's "ridiculous lashes." I made it up myself 😁)

---------

I don't have news yet about a wedding planner. The lady I was talking with is really expensive. I might be able to negotiate down but it's a big gap so I don't know. I haven't had the energy to take that on right now. I'm on day 3 of the 4-5 no food days. David made me a fried egg Monday morning so I'm counting that as a food day. Since then I had 1 bowl of tomato soup Tuesday and 2 on Wednesday. It's Thursday now. This morning I tried bread. It was pretty gross, but when you haven't eaten for 2.5 days you'll shove it down past your gag reflexes. I took advantage and threw some ghee on there to get a little fat in. Now I feel nauseated but I'm about to take a Zofran so hopefully that will pass. By Saturday or Sunday I should be able to eat a real whole meal again. Maybe I'll revisit that negotiating thing when I'm not starving to death.

We've been working on our guest list. It's so hard. I want everyone there. We're starting out the way David's mom suggested which is to make a master list of all the people you'd like to invite. Then based on budget and venue size, you cut it down. My list alone without David's is 140 people. The venue holds 120. So I'm going to have make some decisions. I hate it. I wish I could send out a feeler invitation first.

'We are thinking of inviting you to our wedding. Please answer the following questions. 1) Do you want to come? Not "should" you or do you feel obligated to be there. Do you actually want to come to our wedding? We will not be offended. We promise. We get it. Traveling. Getting dressed up. Small talk. Line dancing. They can really suck. If you don't want to come, be honest. We really won't be hurt. You'll save us the trouble of cutting people we love and then awkwardly asking them in the second wave. We'll save you the trouble of having to come up with an excuse or having to begrudgingly sit through another buffet dinner. 2) Would you be genuinely hurt if we don't invite you? 3) Let's assume you're coming. Do you have an important significant other in your life that I don't know about? If I leave them off the invitation or write "and guest" instead of their name, will you be grossly offended? If so, when I send you a random text asking for your address, please write your name and their name in the addressee line when you send back your info. 4) If you're single, what's worse? Giving you a plus-one so you feel obligated to find a date or not giving you a plus-one so you have to come alone? If you know lots of people going and you will all be sitting together, does that change your answer? 5) Do you want your kids there? I do. I love kids at weddings, especially our wedding because it's on a farm with chickens and sheep and pigs and alpacas. But if you want a kid-free night will you be annoyed if everyone else's kids are there? We're inviting kids, so please refer back to question one if this makes you unhappy.'

And THEN based on those responses, we can figure out our guest list. Honesty is always the best policy. It would make things so much easier.

-----

I had dreams of the doctor calling me and saying she's so happy with the progress of chemo that they'll do a scan early and if I'm clear they can stop treatment. Except that won't happen. Even women who have mastectomies or lumpectomies with clear margins (it means no cancer cells are found in the outer edges of what was removed. Translation: they got it all out.) still go through full chemo after. It's to make sure nothing escapes. Every last cell must die. I guess I could opt to stop but it would take a tremendous amount of faith on my part to go against the doctors. Also, I'd like to be sure this sh*t is never coming back because I am not going through this again. But this is what we expected. I was never afraid of dying. Okay okay, in the beginning a little bit and at moments a lot bit. I was mostly more afraid of the chemo the whole time so we're right on track. I'm beating this. I just need to make it through the treatments.

-----

I've had this needling borderline migraine headache every day now since Monday. It's probably from not eating, so I'm not concerned but it is making looking at screens hard. So I'm going to cut this and post it. I've been writing it on and off since last Tuesday. I think we're caught up and I need to go close my eyes.  Muah.