Today's post is by my wife, Leslye:
I am Leslye, Paul’s wife of 19 years this April. I think it is great he is writing this blog
and I sometimes gain insight from it.
I have always known him as a kidney transplant recipient and I
understood his need for medicine, blood work and doctor visits 4 times a
year. It wasn’t’ until around the 4th
skin cancer biopsy and/or removal that I started to realize I was going to be
losing him biopsy bit by excision bit. I
didn’t like it but what could I do?
Sometimes I would wish he wasn’t quite so diligent and not always have
something open and bloody. Plus the pain
of the freezing…I don’t know how he does it.
There finally came a time I just got mad at his suppressed immune system
that was allowing these stupid Squamous and Basal cell cancers to continually
invade his body-my body that I loved
to stroke. He always seemed to be going to the dermatologist/ARNP; I know we
bought him a boat or two. I am now eternally thankful to the ARNP for doing the
shave biopsy that showed MCC.
I guess I put too much faith in medical science. The worse part of Paul
losing his kidney was watching him ‘wind down’ like a wind-up toy. It was frustrating because everyone knew Paul
would need a transplant and his brother was a perfect match. Need kidney, have one, put it in, get on with
life. For whatever reason, they had to
let the old one run its course and we all suffered by watching him get sicker
and able to do less. *Stupid*. Because
of my faith in medicine I never gave thought to idea that he could reject the
kidney. I knew everything would be fine,
it was and continues to be.
Ten years ago I never gave “the Big C” (my dad’s term) any
thought. It did not affect my life. Then my [step] grandfather was diagnosed with
lung cancer and died within a few months.
I never got to say goodbye. I
hated cancer because it had so quickly taken away my grandfather. Five years ago, his son, my [step] uncle was
diagnosed with advanced lung cancer. HE
WAS IN HIS MID 40s! Roger immediately
quit smoking (big duh there) and did *everything* he was told to do and then
some to prolong his life. He even
participated in a study or two. Nothing
would stop the spread of cancer and he died almost 2 years later to the day of
diagnosis at the age of 47. I HATE
CANCER!! Cancer doesn’t care who you are
or what you do to stop it. It just keeps
growing.
The thought that this MCC may take my husband’s life enrages me. And it scares me to death. Really scares me…a lot.
I know that life is not fair but damned it, this is not fair! Paul has been through so much: his kidney
health scares, our ‘high maintenance’ kids (16 & 18 now), skin cancers and
now this *%#)*@! MCC comes from out of nowhere.
One of the things that makes me mad is that it had the nerve to grow over a scar from yet another BS or SC.
How dare it!
So here we are 2 months after hearing the term Merkel Cell
Carcinoma. You have read what Paul has
gone though and I am with him every step of the way. I find myself slipping and saying ‘we’ have
an appointment when it is really Paul who has the appointment. I go with him for moral support, to be a
second set of ears and note taker and be in the background. That last one is a challenge for me because I
am a take charge type of person. I have
to remind myself that I am with Paul during appointments and procedures for
HIM, not my need to know everything.
2011 is all about my husband Paul, his needs and his BEATING this
cancer.
I am a better wife now. I am
less self centered, less demanding of our 16 yr old, and try to be much more aware
of Paul’s needs. I kiss him every opportunity I get and tell him I love him
more often than when one of us leaves the house. I now go to bed when he does and we snuggle
in bed for an hour on Saturday mornings.
I want to give him the best care, support, nurturing and love he needs
to get through the upcoming treatment.
The thing I hate more than anything, cancer, has made me a better
person and wife. I am not going to lose
my husband to it without a heck of a fight.
Streams in the Desert, January 20, based on Eccles 7:3 ~ "Sorrow makes us go slower and more considerately, and introspect our motives and dispositions. It is sorrow that opens up within us the capacities of the heavenly life, and it is sorrow that makes us willing to launch our capacities on a boundless sea of service for God and our fellows." Deovotional written by Mrs. Charles E. Cowman in 1925. This is my favorite entry in this little book. It has been a comfort to me and others I've given it to. God's peace be with you both, Dara Burke
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