About KIBAdmin

Born in Houston, Texas May 12, 1972. Grew up mostly in northeast (Connecticut) went to Choate Rosemary Hall (1990), Georgetown University (BSL 1994) where I majored in French Literature and Harvard Law School (JD 1999). Law clerk 1999-2000 for federal judge in New Orleans. Worked as a corporate associate at a large NYC firm from 2000 to 2004 at which time moved to Boston area. Began design studies at the BAC in Boston in 2009. Currently living in London with husband, Bill (fellow HLS class of 1999) and two fabulous daughters, Isabel (7) and Charlotte (5).

Eye Bags

Okay, people. I have serious eye bags. Not acceptable. Despite a generous amount of eye make-up ( I even did in the crease with a darker colour!) I do not look rested and when my husband came home he announced that I looked tired. Not hello, not how are you. Just “you look tired.” Great.

Well that does it. I am going to have to go to bed. Now. Sorry folks but if I try to keep up at this pace I may end up on a drip and I have got to try to stay on schedule. Don’t want to throw things off, screw up all my plans to jet set all over Europe this summer. I wish.

Plus, I have to save up my energy so that I can write a nifty post tomorrow, which, you guessed it, is the day before chemo #6. Sort of snuck up on me there. Time flies when you’re having fun… and I really have been. So. Much. Fun.

I have all sorts of important things to do like plan my next chemo outfit, write a good post about killing it with lots of unnecessary profanity in it, and so on and so forth. And I need to look good, because that is a big part of it. Looking good and feeling good. Or at least as good as possible. Being a cancer patient is easier when people say “you look great!” What have you been doing to your skin? What you don’t want is the dreaded duo: (a) you look tired and (b) you’re too thin.

So you have yourselves a groovy night and if you are having a drinky-poo have one for me too, would you? Because I have to get my beauty sleep.

G’night.

Writer’s Block

It has occurred to me that at some point I may get writer’s block. In fact, it is almost a sure thing. How could I not at some point struggle with what to write on this blog or how to write it?

I was thinking about that yesterday. Then I considered that, provided I stay on schedule, only one month from today I will receive my last chemotherapy treatment. After which I will have five weeks of radiation, five days a week, which should prove anticlimactic comparatively (from what I have heard). More on that later.

I thought, dang, what if I have nothing interesting to write after chemo is over? No more interesting chemo ensembles (see What I Wore To Chemo Today)… No more entertaining other patients in the chemo suite with my antics and bad behaviour (oh I forgot to tell you that the last time I was there this one dude kept coming up to me and telling me he was really feeling my outfit and he was there with his wife, who was the patient!  Shameless!)… No more bizarre, unexpected “side effects of the week” (more on that later too)…

I mean, every time I gear up for and go to chemo I am inspired to write something. There is a ton about it I haven’t even told you yet and I still have three treatments left. It’s just excellent fodder for the blog. So it will be a real shame when it is all over. Not. Chemo sucks. But I won’t be too hard on it since it is killing the hell out of anything floating around in there that doesn’t belong.

I suppose when I do radiation I can still yell “die, motherfuckers,” and imagine my heroines (see Chicks I Dig Vol. 1) going in there with their signature weapons and obliterating any microscopic cells that dare to remain near the original site of the tumours. (That and cross my fingers that the radiation doesn’t burn my skin too badly and otherwise complicate the final stages of my reconstruction, because in the end I would really like a nice “set” out of all of this nonsense.)

I just don’t want my posts to become boring. Or predictable.

When my hair grows back I won’t be able to write about being bald anymore and all of the interesting things that go with that particular side effect. Or take anymore badass “I’m bald and I’m killing it” pictures. But I suppose I will have been there and done that, so maybe that’s not the worst thing. I mean how many times can I take a picture of my bald self looking pissed off and post it and think “I really like what I’ve done here.” (A lot actually — you should try it sometime it is pretty great.)

Who knows where all this will take me. I just hope that you’ll continue to tag along. I need you. I want you. I have to have you.

Speaking of which where are you right now? Are you in the US or the UK? Kenya or Kuwait? Why do you read this? Do you know me? Did you once? Is or was someone in your life touched by cancer? Are you a survivor? Are you just curious? Tell me… I’ll be right here. Killing it.

Why Sometimes I Let Myself Go There

For some reason whenever I ride the tube in London I get introspective. Especially if I am alone, quietly observing the other passengers as the cars clickety-clack along. There is something about sitting there without speaking that makes me wonder what other people are thinking.

Today I needed to take my younger daughter to a birthday party in Northwest London and, being at a friend’s house about an hour away in Southwest London, we had quite a journey ahead of us. For about the first nine stops there were no seats and Charlotte and I stood side by side, holding hands. When I am standing I feel more powerful and imposing, because I am relatively tall. I don’t wonder so much what anyone around me might be thinking. But when I sit down and shrink to everyone else’s size, I start to feel a little vulnerable.

When we made our switch there was one seat available and I told Charlotte to take it. The man next to her looked at me and offered me his seat. I happily accepted and thanked him. I wasn’t sure if he gave it up so that I could sit next to my young child, or because he knew I was a cancer patient.

I started to think about how I perceive myself versus how others perceive me. Do I look like a cancer patient even when I don’t feel like one? And how about when I do? When I am tired and have dark circles under my eyes do people notice? Do I make them feel sad? Or disgusted? Today, did that man look at the five-year-old child by my side and pity her? Did he wonder if she would have a mother in a year or two? Did he think that it was unfair for such a young child to have a mother like me?

These thoughts violated my mind in rapid succession as the train hurtled toward Bond Street, where we would get off and meet my husband. He had finished work for the day and had agreed to take Charlotte the rest of the way to the party, shortening my journey and enabling him to spend some time with her.

We found him on the platform. I handed her off and gave him a quick peck. Then the next train came and they were gone. I started toward the exit (“way out” we call it here). I paused. My hand felt conspicuously empty. I looked at it. Reminded myself that I was no longer holding Charlotte’s hand, that I had relinquished her and the bag containing the birthday present, card and directions to the party to Bill. She was safe. She was okay.

I walked up the short flight of stairs and rode the long escalator up. Stopped in an inexpensive store to study a collection of clip-on flowers for my head scarves. I bought three. Felt a little bit better. Then I emerged from Bond Street Station and looked up Oxford Street. A light drizzle spattered my parka, which I had hoped by now would be stored until next winter. I looked toward Selfridges department store, looming across the street with its grand facade and its flags. Glitzy retail beckoning. But I didn’t want it. Not today.

I crossed the street. H&M was right there. More my speed. Cheap. Almost disposable. I walked in and was assaulted by pop music, whatever sweet perfume they were pushing and brightly coloured sequined tops and tropical-print bikinis. I found the accessories and selected more flowers. I had now amassed a bouquet, but wasn’t ready to leave.

I surveyed the store and picked up an inappropriately short colour-blocked mini skirt and a gauzy leaf-print beach cover-up. There was a long line at the fitting room. I bought everything without trying on. Screw it.

Pure unadulterated retail therapy. Cheap retail. Maybe the best kind and the purest form.

My mood lifted. I’m killing it again, I thought, picturing myself striding out of the house in that striped miniskirt with black combat boots and a black beaded flower perched on the side of my head.

This was one of those days. When I let myself go there. I let myself think about the fact that I have a life-threatening illness. About what it could mean. About what it has meant for others before me. But then I pull myself back. I was just visiting. I won’t linger. I will not. It won’t be me.

It’s okay for me to visit. I never stay long. But then I know that I am really dealing with this and it isn’t all for show. Not just a brave facade. Not just for you. I know what could be. And have chosen to reject it.

Because I’m killing it. Fuck you, cancer.

Night Off

I decided to take the night off and not do a post.

My husband was supposed to fly to the US for a partners’ retreat in Washington DC but he got some new deal and had to cancel his trip and spend all day in the office. Bummer. Meanwhile plans were already made for the girls and me to spend the long weekend (this Monday is a bank holiday in Britain) at his law partner’s house in Southwest London.

The real reason the plan was put in place, of course, was so that his lovely wife could babysit me in case I had some unforeseen medical emergency and keeled over while Bill was away — which was clearly not going to happen. But still, a weekend in someone else’s house sounded pretty good. No cooking, no cleaning and a little adventure in a new location. Oh, and built-in entertainment for my two girls in the form of twin eight-year-old boys. Thus avoiding another grey Saturday with no plans filled with “Mommy… Mommy… Mommy!!!!!!!!!!!”

Anyhow I’m taking the night off. I thought about doing a post, since I have pretty much done one every day since I started this blog. And I feel a little bit guilty and self-indulgent about this decision, really. I don’t want to let anyone down. But the truth is that doing a post every day is quite tiring. Some days I do something short and quippy and it seems to flow out of my fingers like molten lava, taking only an hour or so. But the heavier posts, such as Breast Cancer for Dummies Part I and Part Deux, took a hell of a long time and were mentally draining to write. I’m starting to get sleep deprived and I am a cancer patient for Christ’s sake!

So, tonight we are lounging on sofas and watching The Voice UK and Britain’s Got Talent. The cheese factor is extreme on both, which really hits the spot. And I’m having a peppermint tea and some oatmeal raisin biscuits with my “cheese.”

I guess that means you get the night off too. But don’t abandon me, because I’ll be back tomorrow. Bonne nuit

 

 

 

Chicks I Dig Vol. 1

No, this is not a post about my long-lost lesbian loves. Hate to disappoint. (If you don’t get that joke read May 1st’s post — it’s a shorty — entitled Spam spam spam spam….) Rather, it’s about the famous female characters who have inspired me over the years and why I dig them.

It’s almost like someone out there knew that I would need serious inspiration of the female persuasion later in life, so they started to stack the deck for me when I was but a tender age.

No. 1: Wonder Woman

Come on, WW = hot! She has a great rack… and that outfit! To die for. I love that she could look so badass but at the same time still manage to have a slightly vulnerable expression on her face (while kicking your butt). If I encountered this (or I should say these) in an ally I would just surrender my weapon and bow down. She may not have been a killing machine per se but she was definitely killing it. Go Linda.

PR NewsFotos

When I was five I had a Wonder Woman bathing suit. I wore it around the house (and at other people’s houses) at all times, refusing to take it off. Of course, I was a kid with legs the diameter of pencils, stringy brown hair and buck teeth, so perhaps slightly less badass in my ensemble. But still, I thought I was the shit. By the time I outgrew that bathing suit, the thing was so faded it looked as though it had been left out in the desert for a year.

No. 2: Beatrix Kiddo in Kill Bill Vols. 1 and 2

My favourite killer of all time. I mean, she’s killing it (or preparing to kill it) for practically the entire thing, totally righteous and smokin’ hot in every gripping minute. Even after she is buried alive and emerges, mad as hell and covered in dirt from head to toe, and walks to that diner to ask for a glass of water, she looks wicked pisser (that’s South Boston for super fine).

I’m gonna have to get me a yellow track suit for one of my chemos… Alas, so many fashion ideas and so few treatments left. I also need to book a flight to Japan and commission a Hattori Hanzo samurai sword in case anyone even thinks about messing with me. You can’t lose with Uma. She’s a first-class assassin.

No. 3: Katniss Everdeen in The Hunger Games

Now before you get all excited there will be no picture here because I have deliberately not seen the movie yet. I have read only the first book and do not want images of actors colouring my perceptions while I finish the trilogy. So this heroine for me is as she exists in my own imagination.

I picture her with bow and arrow drawn, dark lustrous hair pleated down her back, tan skin smudged with blood and smelling slightly of earth and sweat and hope. Poised for the kill that she was forced to make for her own survival. Sound familiar? She did what she had to do. And damn did she kill it. And kill it and kill it and kill it.

God, I love these chicks. That’s why I’m bringing them with me every step of the way and beyond. For fuckin-ever.

How To Tell Your Children That You Have Breast Cancer

One of the hardest things my husband and I have had to do since all of this started, and indeed, ever in our lives, is to sit down and tell our young children that I had breast cancer.

We waited until a few days after my diagnosis before we let on that anything was going on. This was very difficult, because during those initial days leading up to and following the diagnosis I was on the phone so much that I was constantly tiptoeing around the house, shutting myself in rooms and hunching over the receiver trying to arrange doctors appointments, get my pathology slides FedExed to London from the US and other delightful logistical nonsense. All while pretending to be same ole Mommy.

The “you have cancer” call came the evening of the girls’ first day back at school after Christmas holidays, January 3. That was a Tuesday. Bill and I decided that we would tell the kids that weekend so that we could (a) have time to figure out how to do it, (b) procrastinate it for a few days for mental health reasons, and (c) keep a close eye on the girls over the weekend in case they seemed anxious or upset following the big talk.

As I think back to that time, which seems like ages ago but in fact was not so long ago at all, I can tell you right now that my thinking was not nearly as clear as it is currently. I was still reeling from the news, as was Bill, and I really wasn’t sure how to go about telling the kids. What was clear from the get-go, however, and what we both agreed, was that we would tell them. We never considered otherwise.

Let me give you some background.

Our girls, who were seven and four at the time, are no slouches. They are smart and perceptive. The first-born is fairly high-strung and a bit of a worrier, which I consider to be unsurprising for a first child. The little one is more laid back but highly sensitive and empathetic and seems to notice everything around her even when you think she is not paying attention.

Some people hinted that given their ages, the kids, particularly the “baby,” wouldn’t really “get it.” That they wouldn’t understand what was going on and the whole thing would just wash over them. Whenever I fielded a comment such as this I tried to let it slide, fighting that honey badger instinct to tell the well-meaning yet misguided person, pardon my French, that that was a load of bullshit. No one knows your own children the way you do. Trust your instincts.

So, we set the date. We would tell them on Saturday morning after breakfast so that they would be fed and comfortable and then we would have the whole rest of the day and the next day to watch them, let the news percolate and evaluate the fallout.

In preparation, I did a little bit of internet research on some cancer websites. I watched a video about a woman telling her kids she had breast cancer. That particular video involved two children with a large age gap (one was a teenager), so the mother decided to tell the kids separately because they would have different levels of understanding and different emotional needs. I thought that was an excellent point, though it didn’t apply to our children. We would be telling them together.

Then, at one of my doctors appointments, I was given a book about talking to young children about early stage breast cancer entitled Mummy’s Lump. It goes very briefly through the mother finding a lump in her breast, going to the doctor and being told the lump is bad and is breast cancer, and the mother having surgery to remove the lump, then chemotherapy and radiation. At the end, the family is pictured on the beach and the mom is in the water, her hair having grown back, playing with one of the kids. Short and sweet.

I flipped through it and decided that it wasn’t half bad and would use it as a prop to guide my discussion. Now that I reread it, four months later and with some perspective, I actually think that it is pretty well done, considering the topic. Here’s why:

(1) It uses the word “cancer.” Using the c-word allows YOU, the parent, to contextualize the disease for your children, who may have terrifying associations with the word (or may develop them if you fail to contextualize it and they later hear or see something) if they have heard or seen something about it, say on TV or from a classmate.

(2) It explains that the cancer is not contagious, and that it is not the children’s fault (or anyone’s, indeed) that it occurred.

(3) It depicts the mom in a nice hospital room with flowers and chocolates (hey, these things are important!).

(4) It briefly outlines the treatments and explains that such treatments might make the mom feel poorly but that they will ultimately help (kill it!) and then she will feel better.

Now, there is no one perfect book for everyone. For instance, it appears to me that this particular book was written about someone having a lumpectomy rather than a double mastectomy with several reconstruction surgeries ahead. This doesn’t matter. You can pick and choose what you want from this or another book and fill in the rest.

When we told our kids about my cancer, it was very early in the process and we did not know what treatment I would be having. Nevertheless, we talked about chemo and radiation to help prepare the kids in the event I needed those treatments. We decided not to wait until we had a clearer picture of what was going to happen because the slinking around the house was getting old fast and Bill and I both knew that the kids would start to figure out something was wrong. Not telling them when we did, in our view, would have been insensitive and disrespectful.

Here is what I did not find in the book, and my own two cents, having thought about these issues and discussed them with a preschool educator whom I highly respect:

(1) Do not lie, but at the same time do not reveal to your young child any anxieties you have about dying. Your child wants to know that he or she will be cared for and that you will be around to do that. Sharing your own thoughts regarding this could produce a great deal of anxiety in a small child.

Let me qualify (1) above by saying that I am not giving any advice about later stage cancers or circumstances in which it is known that a parent is not likely to recover. I am focused here on early stage breast cancer, for which there is a good recovery rate. I am also not talking about discussing these matters with older children, which is a different ball game altogether and something that I haven’t had to think about.

(2) Explain to your children that it is all right to feel sad or upset about the cancer (and all it entails), and that it is okay to ask you questions about it. When we talked to our children, we told them that they should feel free to talk about the cancer and to ask me any questions they had about it, at any time. Of course, this has come back to bite me in all sorts of hilarious ways — but that is fodder for a separate blog on the funny things children say, which I promise to do in the near future.

I found that if I talked regularly (and joked, frequently) about my cancer with the children, it became less of a scary thing. I sprinkled it into conversations here and there, and it became the new (temporary — because I’m killing it) normal. Taboo isn’t good when it comes to something like this. Respect your child and allow them to hear about, process and talk about the issue. Then it might be a little less scary.

(3) Find someone at your child’s school (teachers, guidance counsellor, etc.) who is a safe person to talk to for your child and reach out to them to make sure they are keeping an eye on your child. Let your child know that they can go talk to this person about the cancer if they want to, but don’t force the issue. I know that my seven-year-old doesn’t talk about it at school. School is a safe haven for her where she doesn’t have to talk or think about my cancer. But she knows she can and whom she can go to if she ever wants to.

So how did it go? Well, I’d have to say really pretty well. The older child looked a bit stricken and went silent for a while. She had heard the word cancer before and definitely had some associations with it so I was happy to leap in and contextualize it for her as a disease that can be beaten. The younger child seemed to focus on the chemotherapy and the fact that I might lose my hair. She didn’t like that one bit and kept asking me (every day practically) if I would need “the medicine that would make my hair fall out.” Well if you have read my post “Cold Cap: From Rapunzel to Rambo,” you know that in the end she decided that bald wasn’t so bad. So for her it was all just a matter of easing into the idea.

What you don’t discuss can become very scary. Like the boogeyman. What you do discuss, however, you control to a certain extent. You can contextualize it. You can mock it. You can rock it. You can KILL IT.

You certainly can’t control everything, but feeling some control here is a very very good thing. Trust me.

 

Vag Toupee

WARNING: If you are a prude this is not the post for you. Take a deep breath and click on the following link, which will guide you to a topic equally fuzzy but more appropriate to your delicate sensibilities: http://www.dailypets.co.uk/.

Okay. Have we weeded out all the nice nellies? Good. Onward.

When I found out I was going to need chemotherapy earlier this year, a lot of jokes came to mind about losing hair in all sorts of places. Losing it on your head is obvious, of course, and people who haven’t been touched by chemotherapy (or alopecia caused by something else, such as an autoimmune disorder) might not stop to consider that there is a great deal more hair on the average (particularly adult) human body than on the head.

Most chemo patients I have spoken to or read about have lost at least some of their eyebrows and eyelashes in addition to the hair on their heads during treatment. And many have joked about no longer needing to shave or wax their legs or underarms in order to optimise appearances in the latest jort or halter top (both of which most people shouldn’t be wearing anyway — ah-hem — whether or not they are currently featured in InStyle Magazine).

I started to consider the possibilities. This could be a good thing, I thought. After years of unsatisfactorily bleaching the brunette peach fuzz on my upper lip, which frankly resulted only in a blonde moustache that caught the sunlight just so, I might be able to cut down my personal grooming efforts by a sizeable chunk every week.

Yessir. Goodbye as well to plucking those pesky industrial-strength eyebrows that once threatened (they’ve given up a little after years of maintenance, sigh) to weave my two prominent arches into something resembling Bert on Sesame Street or the actor, Peter Gallagher.

But what else? Ah yes. The bikini area.

Although initial thoughts of losing my hair “down there” made me cringe, because I don’t fancy resembling a prepubescent girl, it didn’t take me long to find humour in the situation.

“Well,” I joked with my very best friends who were already intimately acquainted with my raunchy self, “if the pubes go I can always just get a ‘vag toupee.'” I laughed at my own joke and started to come up with alternative names for such a prosthesis (although vag toupee is kind of my fave). “I could call it a ‘vig,’ after ‘vag wig,'” I quipped. Peals of laughter. “And if you would rather not have hair but you want something down there you could bedazzle your area and have ‘vling!'” (Umm, that’s “vag bling” for our octogenarian readers).

Little did I know, I was not original. Not even a little bit. That’s right; it turns out the vag toupee has been around for a very very very long time. I mean longer than chemotherapy. Longer than America has been independent. Seriously!

And this brings me to a brief history of the vag toupee, a/k/a the merkin.

The Oxford Companion to the Body dates the use of a merkin, or pubic wig, back to the mid 1400s! Back in the day, women used to shave their pubic hair to ward off crabs. Prostitutes would take it all off to hide evidence of sexually transmitted diseases. In both such cases, a pubic wig was employed in order to hide the evidence and make their goods look, well, good.

But wait, that’s not all!

Today, merkins are used by fetishists and drag queens (everything else on a drag queen is false so why not the muff). In addition, Hollywood employs merkins all the time to cover up inappropriate pubic hair styles (for example, if the movie takes place in the 1950s and the actress has a Brazilian, which is not true to the period), to make an actress’s cuffs match her collar (e.g. The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo) and perhaps most often, to conceal the labia so that a film doesn’t get the dreaded NC-17 rating, which is somewhat lethal to wide cinematic distribution.

Sort of ridiculous, by the way, that a man can have his hog out in a film and it doesn’t warrant an NC-17 rating, but God forbid a labium creeps onto the corner of the screen and everyone runs for cover. Puh-lease, people. But that’s a blog for another writer. I am not here to protest inequalities between the sexes. After all, men can get boob cancer too!

Total aside — if you have ever seen Last Tango in Paris, that was not a merkin. That was a real bush. It is no wonder the poor actress who played that role was so screwed up after that movie. If zillions of people had seen my vag fro looking like that I would have been screwed up too. Actually I don’t think I could even attempt that look without a dozen merkins, or at least some pube extensions. Just sayin’…

The long and short of it (tee hee) is, I got an unexpected education on the subject of the vag toupee when I started to poke around there (tee hee hee — sorry I couldn’t help it). And when you think about it, the merkin really is a clever little device.

But I am sorry. The word merkin is completely unacceptable. I don’t care what the origin is, and from what I have read it may be a variant of the word malkin, meaning “mop.” See http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?term=merkin.

Vag toupee is much better.  🙂

Spam spam spam spam…

My blog has been up for what, two weeks, and the bloody spammers have found me.

When I initially set up the blog, I read that spammers could clog up one’s site with “comments” on posts. I even thought I had set up a nifty software plugin to deal with the issue prophylactically, should they ever find me. But apparently I forgot to activate it (until just now).

So for the last few days I have been filtering some pretty dumb crap on ole killingitblog. I’ve been marking such crap as spam one comment at a time. Not very technologically advanced and about as much fun and effective as swatting flies one at a time with a month-old ham on the counter and the back door wide open.

Well here’s a little bit of advice for all you spammers out there who thought it was a good idea to post comments on my website, which in case you hadn’t noticed, is about breast cancer and shit:

(1) If you tell me that my blog is “one of the best you have ever seen” and that you will “subscribe to it if I will try your pills” it sounds a little disingenuous, dontcha think? What are you, eight?

(2) I am not interested in buying Viagra, whether you ask me in English or in Flemish, whether you spell it with a capital or a lowercase “v.” I do not have a penis, and if I did it would not have erectile dysfunction. Rather, it would be a sizeable, virile, killing it machine. Naturally.

(3) Despite the fact that numerous surgeries are in my future, none of these surgeries involves a sex change or otherwise getting a penis. So I do not need any Viagra. Are you getting this, you daft prick?

(4) I do not need to “get my girlfriend back” so you can stop posting dumb comments on my site as well, thanks very much. If you read anything I have written you might clue into the fact that my female issues, although quite plentiful, don’t involve a long-lost lesbian love. Or getting her back. Although that might spice up my “journey” and increase readership.

Now LOOK: if you have a question to ask me, even if it is just a “yo how r u” or “where u at,” or you have some feedback on an issue (“you swear too much”) or a correction to offer (“your science is all wrong”), please do post a comment on my site. Comments are nifty and I so enjoy sifting through them when they are legit.

But you spammers beware, or I’ll go all honey badger on your ass.

That’s all I have to say about that.

 

 

Breast Cancer for Dummies Part Deux

Because I started my blog in the midst of chemotherapy, rather than at the beginning of my story, I have jumped around quite a lot. This has turned out fine, because — at least in my experience — life is rarely linear. However, I do feel that it is time to continue with the story of how I ended up here, five out of eight chemos in, fighting breast cancer. This leads me to the second instalment of Breast Cancer for Dummies.

As I mentioned in my first post on this topic, “Breast Cancer for Dummies Part I,” I am not a doctor, nor do I have any expertise on this subject other than what I have learned along the way in dealing with my own disease. Nevertheless, I believe that you will find the following useful if you ever wanted to know more about breast cancer without reading a text-book, or if you are just curious to know how I got to this point. If this grabs you then you should start with Part I above if you haven’t already read it, or maybe give it a skim to refresh your recollection if you have read it. Conversely, if you find this all too technical and “involved,” fear not. More silly posts about this, that and the other thing are forthcoming. And I won’t be offended if you skip this one.

Moving right along…

Where did I leave off? Ah, yes. I took you through finding my lump, having imaging, getting biopsies and initial diagnosis. So here we are in the first week of January 2012 and we have, in the right breast, multifocal, ER+, PR+, HER2-, Grade II Ductal Carcinoma in Situ (DCIS) and Invasive Ductal Carcinoma (IDC) with no apparent lymphovascular invasion. The biopsies reveal at least two tumours, oriented radially, each appearing to measure under a centimetre.

Oh, and I won’t make you take a multiple choice quiz this time because I know you were upset about that in Part I and it made you have flashbacks from the SAT or whatever torturous British or [insert appropriate nationality] exams you had to take. I don’t want you breaking out into a cold sweat and shorting out your computer, tablet or smart phone. Isn’t that nice of me?

Anyhoo, when we left off I had just been diagnosed with breast cancer. What then? The first order of business with cancer like mine was to see a breast surgeon. When I was told this it sort of took me aback. What about an oncologist? What about “the whole picture?” Well, how it works is, they like to get the tumour(s) out of you first and then they figure out the whole picture. So breast surgeon it is. He looks at the pathology from your biopsies and your imagining and recommends what kind of surgery you need. This becomes step one in the big “killing it” game plan.

I found that putting in place the game plan was a big deal. Once I began to do so, I started feeling a hell of a lot more in control, because I knew what step one was. This was instrumental in moving beyond the initial shock of “how can I have cancer?!” and “why me?!” and all of that unproductive Nancy Kerrigan-esque jazz. No one likes a whiner.

Now, if you read my first post, “Halfway Through Chemo… How Did I Get Here?” you may recall that having spoken to Beth, my plastics/breast reconstruction surgeon buddy, I had already begun to wrap my head around removing the entire breast (maybe both) even before I had my diagnosis. Beth had seen and heard about a number of women who had opted for lumpectomies and then ended up with a recurrence in the same breast and thus a mastectomy anyhow. She had also seen women who had opted for a single mastectomy who ended up back under the knife for mastectomy number two after a recurrence in the “healthy” breast.

That being said, the most common surgery for breast cancer remains lumpectomy. With lumpectomy, the tumour is removed and then generally the patient is given radiotherapy to reduce the risk of a local recurrence in case any cancer cells remain at or near the site. Sometimes more surgery is required after the pathologist examines the removed “lump,” which you can think of as a cube of tissue, each side of which is rubbed with ink to determine whether there are “clean” or “dirty” margins. This is not an exact science, but the gist is that the surgeon wants to get a clear margin around the tumour so that dirty a/k/a cancer cells are not left in the patient.

So there I was, back in London, armed with my initial pathology. And I needed a breast surgeon.

One of the greatest sources of stress we faced was figuring out whether we were going to be comfortable doing my surgery and any additional (if any) treatment in London, having lived here for exactly five months, or whether we felt we needed to haul ass back to the US. So after we made some enquiries about the best and the brightest — hee hee! I almost wrote “the breast and the bightest,” — I started calling around. I went totally honey badger on the situation. (By the way if you still do not know what the honey badger is, I am going to get a little annoyed at you. So please watch Randall’s YouTube video linked above and get caught up.) I managed to secure two appointments with London-based breast surgeons on very short notice. A good sign.

Days later I saw the first guy. He was both a breast and reconstruction surgeon. He recommended based on my pathology and imaging that I have a mastectomy in the right breast and monitor the left breast. He ordered an MRI to try to get a better sense of the locations and sizes of my tumours.

Three days later, I saw the second surgeon. He also did both breast surgery and reconstruction and concurred that I needed a mastectomy. That the cancer was multifocal warranted removing all the breast tissue. I was comfortable with this and frankly relieved that both surgeons recommended the course of action I had already envisioned based on my conversations with Beth. I thought about the healthy left breast. I had been told that in the UK, many surgeons are loath to do a risk-reducing mastectomy when the unaffected breast can be “monitored” going forward, as surgeon no. 1 recommended.

I have to say, I didn’t like the idea of that. I did not ever want to deal with this again. Plus, I figured at the end of the day if I was going to lose one boob I might as well just do them both. One boob, two boobs, whatever. Just kill it.

I pushed the second surgeon on it. “If I were your sister, would you advise me to remove the other breast?” His head nodded an emphatic “yes” before “breast” even left my lips. His eyes never left mine as he said the word. Okay, this was my guy. He was honest and straightforward and aggressive. That was what I needed, wanted. So I decided I would have them both done. By him. Step one of the game plan firmly in place. Check one box. Kill it.

I know. This post is kind of heavy, not as much fun as the beer fermenting in the bathroom or wearing leopard print to chemo. But you have to take the bitter with the sweet, my friend. It is part and parcel of the whole picture and I want you to understand where I am and where I was.

And did I mention there is a silver lining? When you do a bilateral mastectomy, you do tend to have an easier time getting a more symmetrical cosmetic result. So that was a plus in my mind right there. No cancer and matching boobs. Good show!

Step two was a visit to a reconstruction surgeon. Now, as I mentioned, some breast surgeons (these are the folks who do lumpectomies and mastectomies — their job is to remove the cancer) do their own reconstructions and are “oncoplastic” (onco being cancer and plastic, well, duh…).  But there are some pretty tricky reconstruction procedures to choose from these days, and many breast surgeons do not dabble in some of the more involved techniques.

I was told I could have an immediate reconstruction following skin-sparing bilateral mastectomies, which means that they were going to give me new (temporary) boobs right away after removing all of my breast tissue, but keeping as much of my own skin as possible. That way you look down and see your own skin. It’s just what’s inside that’s all new.

This is quite a departure from a radical mastectomy, which for years was all that was available to women, leaving them with a scar from armpit to midline. Of course, some patients today still require a radical mastectomy, depending on the extent of their cancer. Yet for many of these women, a delayed reconstruction remains a possibility. I was simply fortunate enough to be a candidate for instant gratification. An immediate boob swap, as it were.

But what kind of boob swap?

I went to see the breast recon guru so that I could consider all the possibilities. This guy is known not only for his excellent breast reconstructions but for his fabulous boob jobs to the stars. Aim high, I always say. I liked him immediately. He was gentle and kind and sympathetic, and I felt comfortable in his hands (literally — I mean all modesty goes out the window with this, people). I stripped and he felt me up. And then he pinched my tummy and my bottom and the inside of my thigh. Why? He was weighing his options. There are some pretty amazing microvascular surgeries they can do now where they take a bit of tissue from your abdomen, inner thigh or rear-end and make a boob out of it. Really. The benefit of these surgeries, although they do involve a site scar and require a long recovery period, is that the reconstructed boob can last indefinitely if all goes well. This is because it is made of your own tissue and fat, so it looks and acts more like a natural boob, which is — as we all know — mostly fat.

He didn’t pinch me for long, however, before it became clear that these fancy procedures were not an option for me. Not enough extra tissue, he said. I hadn’t eaten enough fries (chips if you are a limey). In a way I was relieved. It was sort of nice to be told that I was too thin for that option (aw shucks). Also, then I didn’t have to decide whether I wanted to deal with a seven-hour surgery that would require months of recovery while trying to take care of a five-year-old and a seven-year-old.

Now don’t get me wrong, the autologous tissue flap, as these things are called, is an excellent and desirable option. If done well and pulled off without complications it yields a more natural breast and can last forever. But it is a big deal. And there just wasn’t enough fat on me to do it so that was that.

Implants it is, he said. Okay. Do it up.

Have you ever seen a silicone implant? Most of them are shaped like M&Ms. They are symmetrical. But being in Europe has its advantages. Here, they have been using “shaped” implants for well over ten years, implants that are still in clinical trial in the United States. These are also known as gummy-bear or 410 implants and are made from cohesive silicone that is less liquid-y than the traditional silicone implant (thus the comparison to a gummy bear, though I wouldn’t want to eat one). These implants are interesting for breast reconstructions because they are shaped more like a natural breast, with a slope and a projection. That is, they are flatter at the top and rounder and fuller at the bottom. More boob-like.

Well, thanks to a friend of mine whose two buddies recently had breast cancer in the US and whose surgeon happened to be participating in the clinical trial, I knew about the gummy-bear implants. I asked the recon guru. Yes, he said. He liked them and would use them on me. But first I would get saline expanders (basically temporary implants that are inflated with salt water) in order to make a nice pocket for the permanent silicone implants. Getting them primed for boob swap number two later on down the line. Patience is a virtue…

By the way did you hear about that son of a bitch in France who sold all those implants made out of industrial grade silicone? I cannot even tell you what I want to do to him but I think you can imagine. It involves a honey badger.

Okay then, step two in place: reconstruction. I had started to assemble my dream team. And they would work together, the breast surgeon doing the mastectomy on one side with the reconstruction surgeon following on his heels, and then onto the other side.

But we need to back up. There was another order of business to address. This was the sentinel node biopsy. Before beginning the mastectomies, the breast surgeon would remove one or more lymph nodes from under my right arm to find out if they contained any cancer cells. The sentinel nodes are like the guardsmen lymph nodes — the first line of defence. A technician locates them by injecting you with a radio isotope near the tumour and then tracking to which lymph nodes that isotope drains. X marks the spot and the breast surgeon removes this node(s) at the beginning of surgery so that it can be tested for cancer cells, often while the patient is on the table. If cancer cells are found, the surgeon will perform an axillary lymph node dissection (ALND), which is when they remove a number of other (or all) the lymph nodes.

The long and short of it is that you don’t want to find cancer cells in your lymph nodes, because it means that the cancer has started to spread. You can still kill it of course, but it isn’t what you want. If they find cancer in your sentinel nodes, they remove more nodes to see how many of them contain cancer cells. And all of this factors into your treatment plan. Whether you will need chemotherapy to seek and destroy any cancer cells floating around in other parts of your body/bloodstream and/or radiation to kill any cancer cells that are hanging out at or near the site from which the tumour was removed.

The night before the surgery I slept well. Really, I did. I was calm and ready to get on with it. D-Day was February 7 and I had waited about a month after diagnosis for my surgery. Although this sounds scary, I was assured by doctors on two continents that unless you have a very aggressive form of cancer, waiting a month or even two should not make a difference because breast cancer is slow-growing.

Still, the waiting was not easy. Indeed, it was the hardest part. This is because you cannot progress with the next step of your game plan until after the tumours are removed during surgery and then analysed by the pathologists. So you wait, and noodle and try not to be too mental. I dealt with it by going to the gym a lot, which you know if you read “Work It Out.”

The morning of the surgery, my husband took me to the hospital, to be joined later by my mother who had stayed at home to see the girls off to school. Once I was in my room, each surgeon came to see me, separately. Each explained what he was going to do and the recon guru marked up my boobs with a permanent marker and took pictures. Again — all modesty out the window. I smiled for the camera. A little while after that, I waved to Bill and they wheeled me out of the room. The anaesthesiologist had me out in about 20 seconds.

I woke up to my name being called. “Emily… Emily.” I blinked, had no idea where I was. I snapped back into focus. “The node, was it negative?” I asked. The nurse didn’t know. “The node…” I said. The anaesthesiologist rounded the corner and confirmed: the node had been negative. I exhaled. So they hadn’t removed any other nodes. All had gone according to plan.

Shortly thereafter, they wheeled me back into my room. I started ordering my poor husband around immediately, telling him to send an email to everyone that all had gone well and I was fine. I had killed it.

But alas. I still had to wait for my final pathology report. And that is why cancer is such a BITCH. Because just when you think you have won one battle, it sucker punches you right in the face.

I went into the hospital on a Tuesday. On Saturday morning, (still in the hospital) the breast surgeon came to see me. I was happy to see him. We chatted briefly before he got that serious look that doctors get and told me he had some pathology results. Bill was still at home with the girls.

“Were there any surprises?” I asked. “Yes,” he said. I got my notebook. Sat down.

They say that when you get difficult news, you should always have someone with you because you only absorb about 20% of what you are told. I’d like to give myself credit for about 80%, but it is harder when you aren’t prepared.

The breast surgeon said that there were three things we had not expected:

(1) The tumours were larger than the imaging had indicated, because one area of what appeared to be discrete little spots were actually interconnected and therefore counted as one tumour. That one measured 30 mm or 3 cm. The other one was about 14 mm. Shit.

(2) Although the sentinel nodes were clear, two other tiny nodes that happened to come out as part of the mastectomy revealed “micrometastases,” which are bits of tumour that are 0.2 mm to 2 mm in size. These nodes needed to be further analysed to determine whether the cancer cells were in fact that tiny, and therefore less significant, or whether they were bigger and posed more of a threat. If “macrometastases” were found, they might eventually have to go in and do that axillary dissection.

In any event, (1) + (2) = chemotherapy for me. This was not easy news to digest. But I kept writing, determined to take intelligible notes so that I could make sense of it all later.

And he wasn’t finished.

(3) Even though I had had all of my breast tissue removed (the whole point of the mastectomy), the margins of the tissue removed in the right breast were not great. Tumour was “present” at the margins, meaning in my case that it had abutted the natural barriers of my chest wall, posteriorly, and my skin, anteriorly. Therefore, he thought, I needed radiation, something we had been about 85% sure I wasn’t going to face.

That Saturday was rough. And it marked the beginning of yet another waiting period.

But the next bit of news we got was good. A week later, we saw the oncologist and he confirmed that the nodes had only micrometastases. Micro mets used to be undetectable but modern technology has allowed us to find these tiny cells. Some doctors treat the presence of micro mets no differently than finding nothing in the nodes (i.e., they treat such a patient as “node negative”). My doctors, although very encouraged by this news, did feel that the presence of the micro mets plus the size of the tumours warranted a more aggressive stance on both chemotherapy and radiation, tipping the scales in favour of both. Part of this had to do with my age. They tend to be more aggressive with breast cancer when you are young.

When I asked the breast surgeon why there might have been tiny deposits of cancer in these random nodes that “happened” to come out with the mastectomy but not in my sentinel nodes, he indicated that when one has cancer there are probably micro mets present somewhere. It happens. And this does not mean that they will ever grow into tumours. Or that you have a bigger metastasis elsewhere. But it still blows your mind.

And that is how I ended up where I am today, five treatments in. Counting down to June 7, five short weeks from now. My last chemo.

Two weeks after that I will begin radiation, five days a week for five weeks (my, that’s a lot of fives). Whew.

If you got through all of that I commend you. It sure as hell pooped me out.

Belgian Saison In the Loo

“I don’t know why it should be a crack thing to be a brewer, but it is indisputable that while you cannot possibly be genteel and bake, you may be as genteel as never was and brew.” Charles Dickens, Great Expectations.

Did you know that my husband brews his own beer? Yessir. And he is damn good at it. Must be something about having been a chemistry major at Harvard College and working as a partner at a law firm. He possesses that crucial combination of the knowledge and the work ethic to make a good batch – because believe me it is too easy to screw it up. One false move and you contaminate the beer and end up with something that tastes like metal or bananas. Not good.

When we moved to London from the US last July, we sold our house and with it our spacious and attractive backyard and finished basement, both of which were perfect for his home brewing gig.

Bill threatened to sell off his gear or, even sadder, leave it to fester in storage. I put my foot down. “No way,” I said. You have to keep this hobby — this is not something that you give up. We will find a house with a garden and you will bring your equipment and you will brew. I mean, this was more than a hobby. He liked it enough to upgrade equipment at an alarming rate (and call or email excitedly to check to see if such had arrived at the house while he was at work) and to grow and harvest his own hops at his parents’ house on Cape Cod.

If you brew it they will come.

So he did. Admittedly, he had a few start-up issues. A lot is different here in England. The fittings for the hoses are not the same, among other things. So Bill had to improvise. At times he became very frustrated and used foul language. But if you don’t struggle you don’t learn, I reminded him, and so he worked it out.

He ended up having to order a number of fittings from — get this — a Scottish avionics catalogue. There was a lot of nonsense about male and female ends and tapered threads and what-not. He also had to figure out how and where to order “beer gas” in order to carbonate a batch once transferred to a keg. They don’t call it CO2 here even though that is precisely what it is.

On the upside, the tap water in London tastes fabulous and doesn’t need to be filtered. Of course, despite the fact that it has rained every bloomin’ day for weeks, there is currently a “drought” and a “hose-pipe ban,” which basically means that you cannot use a hose in your yard. Even though I am about to line up the animals two-by-two, for crying out loud.

I knew that things were looking up when Bill went to John Lewis, a well-known British department store, and selected a small fridge to house his keg and CO2 canister (oh, sorry, his “beer gas”).

The first batch was a triumph. Our English gardener tried it and proclaimed he would “pay for the stuff.” In fact, there hasn’t been a bad batch yet.

But recently Bill decided to make a Belgian Saison, a summer farmhouse ale that demanded to be fermented at a high temperature in order to activate the special yeast contained therein. But where oh where to put this stuff?  What was the hottest room in the house?

Well guess what, it is the guest bathroom, which I have taken over because I like to take baths rather than showers ever since my surgery and our master bath has only a shower. The guest bathroom, my private haven where I luxuriate in the tub with rose bath oil while listening to genius salsa mixes on my iPad and contemplate the meaning of life. My haven that happens to hover at around 80 degrees (Farenheit, duh) because it is also home to the hot water heater.

“Um, how long does this crap have to be in here?” I asked. “Just a few days, a week tops,” he says.

Oh sure. That carboy (a huge, ribbed, glass container full of fermenting beer) was in there for weeks, belching away while lovingly wrapped in a men’s extra-large fleece and babysat by a thermometer, which Bill checked morning (noon if it was the weekend) and night. And then he decided to bottle it rather than keg it so now the bottles are in there, fermenting some more. 

Really though, I cannot complain. The beer is not in my way and I enjoy looking over at it from the tub and thinking, “this is something special that my husband has made and makes him happy.” And when it is ready I will get to sample it.

We just have to come up with a better name than Scheisshaus brew, don’t you think?