Lea Lane

Lea Lane
Location
Florida, USA
Birthday
August 26
Title
author, Travel Tales I Couldn't Put in the Guidebooks, available at Amazon.com and on Kindle
Bio
“I’ve discovered the secret of life,” Kay Thompson, the eccentric entertainer and “Eloise” author, once said. “A lot of hard work, a lot of sense of humor, a lot of joy and a lot of tra-la-la!” And that's been my life: As a travel writer for over 30 years, I've been around the block (more like around the world), and I write true stories about interesting people and places. (Check out my travel site, Travels With Lea.) I've lived an unconventional life in conventional trappings. Been a corporate VP, worked with foster kids, acted in an Indie ("Nurse 1"), was on Jeopardy!. I've been managing editor of a travel publication, written for the Times, and authored books. OS is my home, but I also blog on The Huffington Post, and I've contributed (mostly anonymously) to everything from encyclopedias to guidebooks. Married young, divorced late; married late, widowed early, I dated lots in-between -- and survived a scary illness. After being happily, peacefully solo for many years, I'm now happily married again. I founded and still edit www.sololady.com, a lifestyle Website for single women. I'm truly grateful for each precious day, each well-earned wrinkle, my family, my cat. Truth, laughter, friendship, late love. And this blog -- on this wonderful site!

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APRIL 1, 2009 9:09AM

Six Months: Waiting for the Results

Rate: 72 Flag

 

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Our concept of time focuses around what’s important to us:  at our mother’s breast … weekends off from school … Christmas to New Year’s recess ... menstrual period to menopause …  summer vacations … semester breaks … baseball seasons … engagement through the honeymoon … ovulation … birthdays … visits from children … tax times …

and for some of us, blood test to blood test.

From right after you take the last one until three months later when you take the next, time flows pretty normally. And then, a couple of weeks before the test, you start thinking of it. And the day before the test you dwell on it. And the night before you can’t sleep and you get into bed early and wrap the covers around you and put on the TV to get to sleep and leave it on 6o-minute snooze, and you fall asleep to a rerun of Hardball. And you get up in the dark and obsess and think in clichés: you’re beating the odds, not out of the woods but ahead of the game.

You’ve been dealing with this for two and a half years now. The surgeon told you not to worry: “80 percent of people with your type of stage 1a make it past five years.” One day you took eight pennies (what else are they good for anyway?) and you added two dimes and you put them in a cup and you shook them up and you started picking them out to see the odds for yourself. How many times would you pick a penny? And when you started picking up the dimes you stopped and threw the change in the tip cup at the 7-11.

***

The day of the test you wake up and your gut feels punched or like falling fast in an elevator except it doesn’t go away it keeps getting stronger you make some coffee but you don’t want to eat in fact you realize you didn’t eat much dinner or maybe nothing more than an apple.

You shower longer than usual in fact you come out with pruney fingers and you wanted to wash away the fear but when you dry off the fear remains only stronger and you go through the motions and you try not to imagine your mother always said you were cursed with imagination and you comb your hair and you put on your makeup but not mascara in case you might be crying later.

And as usual you’ve told no one because you don’t want them to worry but you have your cell phone charged in case you have long calls to make from the doctor’s office and your car is filled with gas because if something happens you don’t want to have to stop and fill the car up.

And you drive to the oncologist’s office and you don’t want to get there too early or too late because both are stressful and you have enough stress.

And the receptionist greets you with a soft smile and a small voice and you notice that all of the nurses sound the same because they must be trained to be soft and small so as not to scare the patients who are already scared although we try not to admit it but come on this is grace under pressure this is serious stuff we’re talking about here not pretend serious like when you go to the dentist.

And you sit in the waiting room which is painted in a soft pink that you figure some consultant told them is soothing for people who might have to hear they aren’t going to make it and you look at all the other normal-looking people well some are bald and some are gaunt but most look like anybody else like you do.

And many are young and you feel bad and wonder if they have something curable which is slow or something bad like what you have although yours was caught early so it isn’t as bad although people when they hear what you have give you a look which makes you feel they think you are a goner and don’t realize the odds are in your favor despite the damn dimes that came up when you played the pennies game.

And some people in the waiting room are sitting alone like you and you wonder if they don’t tell anybody either or if they just want to be by themselves so no one fusses or if they have the kind of cancer that doesn’t require a person to accompany them.

And you sit and you look at the magazines and most of them are about surviving and scarves to cover baldness and you don’t want to read about that sort of thing right now and besides you’d rather go on the web since you have an iPhone and you connect to OS and you read funny posts by Sheldon the Wonderhorse and the squirrel and you forget for a few minutes that you’re waiting to go in the office in five minutes to find out if you’re going to live or die. 

And then you think we’re all going to die it’s just you’d rather put it off for as long as possible and you start to bargain again about building a house in Chile for Habitat for Humanity like your sister and brother-in-law did last summer except they said that it was 40 degrees in the mountains with no heat and you’ve got enough to worry about right here right this moment thank you very much.

And the nurse calls your name and pronounces it wrong again but you don’t tell her again because who cares there are more important things to worry about and you sit in the examining room with the green walls not pink but soft everything in this fucking office is soft except the big computer in the middle where the notes are recorded and the examining table with the paper where you always lie down after the doctor gives you the news about the blood test which so far has been good but if the news wasn’t good maybe you wouldn’t lie down.

And the young nurse comes in the one who is drawing the blood that in a few minutes will tell you if you are going to live or die and she takes your blood pressure and says it’s higher than usual well what do you think missy I’m waiting to hear if I’m about to die soon how would you feel calm and then she weighs you and says you’ve lost ten pounds since the last visit and looks a bit alarmed and you tell her you worked hard at that and exercised five times a week and ate smaller portions but all you care about is finding out from the blood  test if you will be happy and feel grateful or fall apart and she finally takes the blood and you feel better because the waiting is almost over.

And she leaves the room and you know that in the next couple of minutes the blood will be evaluated and you will meanwhile be sitting by yourself so you look around the room and it is pretty sterile and that’s good because it’s a doctor’s office after all and you don’t expect pillows and sconces.

And now each second is like a minute and you start to look at the door because maybe the test is ready sooner than you thought and you’re waiting for the oncologist to come in with the news and a smile because that’s always what he does because he knows you don’t want the small talk you want to know how the blood test went and he is kind so his smile signals within a second if you are alright.

But you know that one of these times he could come to that door and not smile and he could pause and let you realize before he tells you the bad news which you don’t want to think about.

And the time is passing like you are under the sea  and you are breathing deeply and bargaining heavily and staring at the soft green walls which are not soothing right now.

And then you hear the doctor in the hall and he is talking to somebody.

And you are waiting. And you are holding your breath. And you are bargaining one last time as fast as you can. You will do anything to see him smile.

And this time he doesn’t smile and say “You’re fine, we’ll just have to see you in three months.”

He smiles and says, “You’re fine, we’ll just have to see you in six months.”

***

And then the air fills with oxygen and the punch in the gut goes away just like that. Two seconds.  And you smile back at him -- a big dazzling smile -- and you ask him how his bike trip was in Barcelona.

And you realize you’re starving. And after you get up from the examining table you drive to the diner. And you order a deluxe cheeseburger with fries.

 

 

 

 

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This is amazing. I love what you've done with time. You've sped it up for us so that we may feel what it feels like. And that's magic. And I'm happy that you've got another six months until the day you have to do this again. But remember we're here and we're thinking about you. Thank you, Lea.
Lea, the mind is our greatest enemy at times like this. That old cliché: "Time will only tell" does not always have the answer. But as you said at the end of your post, in 'two seconds' all is fine ~ until six months has passed.

Great post
- rated
I read this and prayed hard for an answer that would be good.
I am happy you have six months. I used to do this as well till I had no more money to get tests.
Good for you Lea.
Good for you.
I am raising my coffee high and typing with one hand and shouting Hurray!!
Thanks, Lorraine. I held back on this but posted it after I saw yours. Opening up is tough. Showing vulnerability is tough. But you do, so I decided to send this out and see.
Lea ~
I love this from beginning to end ... especially the end. I wish my Mom had read something like this when she was wearing those nervous shoes and known that there was some other incredible lady out there feeling the exact same things ... what a comfort. Your experiences, shared through your writing, are such a gift to everyone who is lucky enough to read about them.

xoxo
Ann
I have a very close friend just finishing up with Interferon treatments to start this three month cycle. Thanks for the insights...
George, it sure is a head game and you use whatever you can to keep it cool. And up until the day-of, it isn't too bad.

Mission, sorry I kept you waiting like that but I wanted you to feel the suspenseful waiting much as I did. Well, it's not quite the same.

Ann, I felt the same way about the end. I liked it best of all.
Lea, I've been in too many of those "soft" offices. Fortunately, never as a patient but always as the friend of a patient. Thanks for the peek inside your head. And congratulations on the good news. Julie
This is so well written, and telling a story with a happy ending! (I was increasingly worried as I read... what will the doctor say? what will the doctor say?!), so I was with you in the waiting room. Congratulations for your writing, and lots of good luck.
My mom is going through this right now. I am so glad I am here for her and am able to go to the doctors office with her. You sharing this helps me understand what's going through her mind a little better. Hugs, Lea! xoxoxo
Geoff, lucky for me I have no treatments in my protocol. Just the waiting.

Julie, they try their best and I suppose if the walls were red and black it wouldn't work. But there's only so much you can do.

Marcela, yes I purposely wanted you to try and feel my apprehension and the nerves, but without the reality.

Screamin, it's so very hard to get in anyone's head with stuff like this. We are all different. I do best when I just keep busy and live my life. Some people need to talk it out more. But being there for people is wonderful.
Came to this almost immediately after reading FLW's latest post. I feel like I just got smacked real hard, first on one side of the head and then on the other. What a reality check. I hope, in a similar situation, I would show the grace and courage you have.
jane, I tried to get into my head here and I hope you found it ok. Time changes.

Boarnerges1, yes, when I read Lorraine's post I decided to put this in. Was debating. She is so open. It's quite tough but I think I was ready to do it.
Whew! Good on you.
Man, I held my breath until the very end.

I do that, too: stand under the shower and try to wash the nerves away. A great line!

You mentioned vulnerability. I firmly believe that all writers must have it in their work.

The piece showed a side of you that many people at some point can identify with, in different circumstances but the emotions haunt us.

Six months will be a life living then it will come around again.

I think this was only the second or third work here on OS that had me on the edge of my seat.

And it's 8:17am on the west coast!!

I'm so happy it turned out well in the end. Man, you should have heard me sigh...
Lisa, whew sums it up. (I could have skipped the rest.) I did write it for suspense as well as understanding.

Luis, you know I think you're a wonderful writer who has also held my attention all the way. Special thanks.
I hope the burger was as good as the news!
Lea,
I was there with you. I was having trouble breathing toward the end.
Then I breathed a sigh of relief with you. Beautifully written as usual.
Enjoy that cheeseburger!
Whew, Lea! That was so evocative of that wait.
Fascinating and gut wrenching. I can't imagine.....well. Wow!
Hawley, nothing ever tasted better.

ladyfarmerjed, yeah, you hold your breath.

Stellaa, I can tell the length of my shower how my emotions are going. I read where you can clean up in a couple of minutes. The rest is for the insides.

High Lonesome, I'm glad it was evocative. I tried to make it so.

Bill, hope you never have to more than this!
Lea,
I am the one who asked for help when my friends' breast cancer returned and you answered my plea with such insight and kindness. Now I know why. Like others, I held my breath while I read this right up until the end. Your words will help me to help my friend.
Congratulations on the good news. This was so well written. I'm in awe of your talent and your strength.
Brilliant! You made a first rate thriller out of the experience. A testament to the transformative power of great writing.
I often wonder, if I were in that position, if I would want to know... or if I would rather just go on with my life, oblivious of when or if it may end.
Yes, quite right, we all have to die sometime but we all want to put it off as long as possible. And doctor's offices are always stressful even if you're there for a routine physical, because once you've had something happen (whether to you or someone you love) it's always there in the back of your mind. Theater of the mind is the worst kind, because you can't get up and walk out and you can't turn off the projector.

I was feeling gut-punched right along with you, Lea. And I'm damn glad you got to have that cheeseburger. Exceptional writing, lady. Exceptional.
Holy crow - I was holding my breath with you. (Although I do think it would be interesting to have a doctor's office covered in pillows and sconces. At least the OB - more comfortable and you'd have something to look at.)

Congrats on another 6 months.
The fear is evident in the way your words hurry through each paragraph. I could sense everything, from the waiting room, the blood test, the doctor's tone of voice, and the delicious deluxe cheeseburger. --rated--
Marvelous. Thank you, Lea.
mamoore, I am soo happy to hear this helps a bit in understanding. You are a good friend in your situation and I know how much that means.

kaysong, thank you very much. :)

libertarius, it is a thriller of the highest order. Nothing comes close.

Crayons, up until fairly recently many people did not know and did not face this and families kept secrets about it. I think for some that is easier. But not for me.

Bill, yes theater of the mind. And when you are rather "imaginative" to begin with, it can take you all over the place. I'm fine till the day before, and then I imagine.

Annithyme, you would pick up on the sconces and pillows. A girly girl. I'm a decorator at heart so I notice those things too.

Mean Mr. Mustard, gotta say that I was so impressed with your "monster" post yesterday. It was one of the reasons I decided to post this. Life isn't all beautiful canyons.

Steve, thanks alot.
I loved this, Lea. I love the stream of consciousness style which completely brought me into the experience. It was so vivid and I was pulled along from word to word, anxious for the result, just as you were.

and of course, I'm thrilled for your good news!! that's wonderful, absolutely wonderful.
Forgot to say...the cheeseburger made me think of the advice that Warren Zevon gave a few years ago as he was dying from cancer (when asked what he'd say to people in that regard): "Enjoy every sandwich."
Great writing! Great news!

Who could NOT worry on day like that? Even those who aren’t “cursed with imagination” would worry on that day. Hope it was a good cheeseburger.
Lea, a perfect description of how it feels to wait like that. I went through an odd medical time in my 30's and I must say, I didn't handle all that waiting very well. I wasn't impressed with myself. Your post was honest and real and I was very relieved when I came to the end of it. Thanks for sharing.
Wonderful, Lea - the piece and the news. Have you seen the movie Wings of Desire, where the angels can hear what everyone is thinking? Libraries were loud for them, and I'm thinking Doctor's offices would be even louder....thanks for this.
Holy crap, I just realized the my five-year post treatment aniversary was last Saturday. Maybe I should blog about this.

This is a great post. Cancer surviving is a waiting game but it get's to be less burdensome as time goes on and your health stays good.
Silkstone, that bit of advice is good for every one of us, every day.

Denise, I notice we all are interested in the cheeseburger. I have a feeling not enough of us indulge in one, once and a while.

Mary, I think not knowing something like this is extremely nervewracking because you have zero control. You are like a baby.

Donna, I'm sure I've mentioned before that you give good comment. This was a classic.
Roger, I thought of you and others on the site who have gone through this kind of thing themselves or with loved ones. I hope I didn't upset anyone because I know this kind of thing is sensitive. I just decided to share since I go it alone it feels good to be able to.
Oh man, I could see all that so clearly. You really captured the feelings, the suspense, the what-ifs. You're pretty sure you're okay, but.... what if this time you're not? And now I feel almost as relieved as you do. =o) Rated.
Sometimes I find myself "speedreading" posts, but I really slowed down on this one, without trying. I have to wait a week or two for my "labs". I'm not sure which would be worse.

Great news that you get a six month reprieve before going through this again.

Hugs and a thumb.
Shiral, exactly. Thanks for empathizing.

Marple, yes hooray and pass the cheeseburgers.

RIF, I feel you, and wish you good news! I know when a post is longer like this the tendency is to skim a bit, so thank you for sticking with it, lack of punctuation and all.
Lea, I am more happy about the news than I am about the style of writing. I really don't care how you write I will read it. But I'm an old man and used to things like sentences with periods and paragraphs and all the other little reading helps that the author puts in the writing that makes it easier to read. But that's just me.

I am so very glad that you not only got good news but that the doc feel confident enough about your situation to move it to 6 months. I am at 6 months now for both of my skin cancers but I go bonkers every time there is a new lesion that I am not sure what it is. Some times I even go back to the doc even though the 6 months are not up just to quit worrying about it.

I am still on a 2 month cycle with the Cleveland Clinic to make sure that my other med problems are not caused by something deadly. So I know what waiting for those blood test results feels like. Being 100 miles away and them being slow on sending them out or having to call in because they forgot just about drives me over the edge.

I am very happy for you that your tests are now extended.

Monte
awesome Lea- just so well done
"grace under pressure" is how I'd describe all the cancer patients I've met
Monte, first I do understand how you feel, especially when you have to wait days. I chose this doctor because the med center is computerized and tests results are in minutes. Good luck and I hope you feel better.

And I know, the lack of punctuation makes it more difficult, but that was the point. It was difficult and my thoughts ran together and I figured that was a way to get my feelings across. I won't do it again unless I feel it is overwhelming. Besides, squirrel and others do a better job day after day.

luluandphoebe, good luck regarding your friend. There are lots of good therapies there. And I felt like you were all peeking into my mind at its most vulnerable, never mind the shower. That's why I hesitated before sending this.
And don't forget the chocolate shake!!!! Sounds like great news! I'll best those words rang over and over in you mind! And 6 months must sound like a lifetime compared to your trepidation walking into that office, wondering, waiting and listening to your heart beat.
You deserve a big fatty burger with all the trimmings, salty fries and go ahead and order the yummy, frothy milk shake!!! Yipeeeeeeeeee
My God, Lea... this is so haunting and beautiful and tragic and scary and so pregnant. much love.
Julie and Brian, thanks for reading. Yes, I think bullfighters feel grace under pressure according to Hemingway. And I get it.

Cathy, I should have ordered a milkshake, too!
dynomyte, the word "pregnant" is so interesting here. I can tell you're a poet; it is not a word I would associate with this, and yet ....
That is so weird. I didn't even notice the lack of punctuation until I went back to re-read after seeing your response and some of the other comments. Maybe that's what caused me to slow down and I didn't realize it at the time.

I really appreciate your explanation for the intentionality, but I think that it came through subconsciously on the first read. It sure worked for me. (sorry Monte)
RIF, then you must have been reading and empathizing and not that concerned with the form. I do that sometimes when I get going on a piece, especially if the paragraphs aren't too long. I feel good about that because I wasn't sure if I could pull it off. I'm no expert at letting loose.
Beautiful. Both the writing and the results. As a co-survivor (did I just coin that? It seems like it ought to be in use.), I can attest that every word rings true. But Lea, next time do the statistics right, at least -- they all have to be pennies or dimes, else the test is flawed :-). But more importantly, statistics don't mean squat for the individual circumstance -- as you are the living proof of. Woofs to the nth power.

WOOF
Reading this I had this awful sick feeling in my gut, nothing like yours, but enough to help me understand a little of what you had to endure. The stream of consciousness method was perfect for this. Incredibly powerful writing.

But most of all, I am now happy that the news was good, and that you are well. Very happy, in fact.
I sat here for a while after reading this because finding the proper words to express how your post made me feel is difficult. You are a courageous and graceful woman, Lea. Thank you for sharing this and helping me to gain a better perspective.
CCC, it never did make sense but I just tried it for awhile. Glad you're fine. Your last post was amazing.

Cindy, I know you have your hands full too. Oh well, day by day.

Steve, thanks for the empathy and good wishes and for reading this so carefully. Not for the faint-hearted.

Natalie, I so appreciate your words. You felt what I was trying to do.
Gripping, sad, beautiful, powerful, wonderful. Glad to hear this news.
Oh my god, Lea, I'm crying and I didn't even realize til the end when I let out the breath I was holding and the tears spilled out too. Why didn't you TELL ME??

This is just spectacular. First, the news. Second, the way you crafted this, you keep us and bring us with you to worry, see, feel, clench and finally unclench with such relief.

L' Chaim, Lea. In both ways. He wouldn't want you with him yet.
This is as good as anything you've ever written. I've used the endless sentence on occasion to indicate panic or emotional floodgates opening. Much different here. Calm, observant, one detail after another filling the picture of a woman sitting in a room. my sister sends me e-mails every six months saying the test was okay, and I think, of course it was okay, why wouldn't it be okay. It's supposed to be okay. I guess now I know and ought to be a bit more compassionate. Thanks for helping me understand. A wonderful post. I think you could write anything you care to.
My brother-in-law had throat cancer...and I know for us the sweetest words were for him the same ones you heard. Glad you get a breather.

Great piece of writing, was right there with you....except the only way I am going to eat a cheeseburger is through vicarious pleasure.
Beautifully written Lea. Makes me feel ashamed of whimpering about my recent test for prostate cancer. Even though I'm barely into the age group where it starts to be likely, I was freaked for a while though my innate level of denial helped. Tonight I shall drink to your next six months, and many more after that.
Cartouche, thanks. We'll talk further.

Sally, how do you know just what to write? L'chaim is right.

Jimmy, you who write about such difficult things. Much appreciated analysis, and I'm glad you got a bit more insight from this.

Buffy, those words are sweet indeed. And you keep on hoping to hear them, forever (but of course, none of us can). I'll eat another cheesburger for you.

GeeBee, your feelings are your feelings. We can't compare them. Just feel them and empathize better perhaps with others going through this stuff. Thanks for the toast.
I think those offices would be immeasurably nicer if there WERE pillows and sconces, Lea. And massage.

Great stuff. Rated. Here's to six long months.
everyone has said everything that i could say. i'm grateful to you for taking people who don't know what this is like right in there, under the sea where everything slows down and you can't breathe and that nameless dread is hovering in your gut. word on a cheeseburger with fries and fuck you, cancer. love love love and gratitude for your honesty and flawless writing.
Verbal, one of those massage chairs would be perfect. The color of the walls wouldn't matter.

Theo, thanks. I made the font bigger, as you requested.
You are an amazing writer, which I'm certain you hear all the time. You are just amazing at conveying emotion without ever saying what the emotion is. Its a true talent.

Glad you're okay.
Kasienda, a lovely comment. Thank you.
I'm with you every step of the way.
You show a lot of courage.
A big virtual hug.
WONDERFUL. And so scary how time slows down.
Peter, Odette and Mary, thanks for reading. In that time frame you are aware of every thought.
What a powerful, beautifully told essay. You capture those feelings of fear so well; the slowing of time, the sickness in one's gut, trying to read the expressions on the staff's faces. I am so happy the Dr. came in with good news and I wish you good news every single time. (and that cheeseburger sounded great! Perfect treat - I was starving along with you!)
dcvdickens, thanks alot, and I can't get over how everyone seems to love those cheeseburgers. I think we are cheeseburger deprived.
Harrowing. Beautiful.

I sent you a PM.
Thank you Sandra. Those words so often describe *your* writing.
Holy crap - breathtaking! Viva six months! Excellent excellent post, Lea. Thanks for sharing!
(Lea, thanks for the compliment way back up there! It made me want to have a cheeseburger too :)
i woke up from an overly long nap and got on OS...i was cranky, like i normally am after overly long naps. and i found your post, and started to read...i was literally holding my breath until the last couple paragraphs...because i wanted you to be okay. i wanted something in this crazy place and this crazy life and this crazy world to go the way things are supposed to go. i wanted a good person to get a good answer to a freakin scary question. i kept thinking "surely she'll be fine" but then i had to tell myself "but it's not a movie...what if she isn't fine" and my breath caught, and caught, and kept catching, and finally you said that about six months...and it all went WHOOSH and i found myself smiling and thinking that it was just a really beautiful day after all :)
Oh, goodness. My eyes just teared up with relief for you at the end. Is this a true story? I am glad you received good news. Good writing. Whatever sentences were running on a bit, just added to the intensity for me.
Sheldon, now I have a dog (CCC) and a horse liking this. What about squirrel?

Donna, I meant it.

Collegekid, that was a most exceptional comment, which I truly, truly appreciate.
Waiting to hear when the next appointment will be scheduled and then hearing that it'll be twice as long until the time you anticipated is so sweet. I can imagine the relief and the tension flowing out of you when the doctor said six months. Well told story, Lea. Another chapter in a life well lived.
Jennifer, glad it worked for you. And yes, it's true.

Coyote, yes, it was a gift. Beautiful words to hear.
Great job, Lea. Oh life. So sweet, every once in a cheeseburger.
My son was very ill a few years ago with a blood disorder that was a life threatening complication from mono. For a while there were concerns it was leukemia, but a bone marrow biopsy was negative. He still has abnormal counts, and while the doctor says he is fine, he must be checked every 3-6 months. He is 21 but we still go to the children's oncology clinic. This is a post I have not written yet- too terrifying a time for me, but it is in there. Your thought process is all too familiar and superbly written.
I am very happy for you!
Beth and Gary, thanks a cheeseburger.

M B, I know it's tough, and tough to write about. So many of us or our loved ones have to face those fears every few months. All best with your son.
This was posted on April1 and I kept thinking maybe just maybe it was all a part of the "fools day" myth. With you in spirit!
Oh my, I wonder if any other people were thinking that. I didn't even realize it. No Traveller1, all true. I wouldn't kid about this topic; would be too painful for any involved in any way.
I held my breath, Lea.

denese
Bone scans. Those are the worst. And you're getting one because someone is worried. "Your MRI showed what might be a spot on your skull." "Let's just do a bone scan to check out that hip pain."

I actually liked MD Anderson's cattle call testing. You troop around from test to test with groups of other people. First-timers are more nervous, the ones who have done the MD Shuffle for a few years chit-chat. "Colon? Oh, I'm breast." "Breast? Melanoma here."

Time passes, and the scare wears off gradually.
So well written, and you do a remarkable job of expressing the fears and tensions and, eventually, relief. I haven't much time for reading all that I would like to read here on OS, but try to "catch up" on occasion. Ironic that today would be the day I found this, as it was my six-month oncologist visit. My first since I "graduated" from every 3 months. I sort of think I was more relaxed because the longer time between visits allows me to feel "well" more than the reminder that the every 3 month visits seem to bring.

Anyway, congratulations and here's to continued uneventful onco visits for both of us and all the other cancer survivors out there!
Thanks, denese.

Gregor, I know. It starts to sound so matter of fact. And yes, the scans, every six months to a year are the scariest of all.

Susan, here's to our good health!
Michael, I'm not sure if that's good or bad. I do know it's different.;0)
Back from a trip and catching up on some posts – and I’m very glad I caught this one. It’s marvelous. Both the news and the writing. Simply marvelous.
Just reading this now, as I was not on Open Salon in 2009. Wonderful, as always, even though the subject matter was tough.

But you made it, with mascara and more intact. Have another cheeseburger.