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).

One Too Many

This morning I had my first post-treatment check-up with the breast surgeon. I will be alternating appointments between my breast surgeon and my oncologist so that I see one of them every three months for the foreseeable future. I haven’t asked recently when that will switch over to six months, and so on, because right now every three months seems pretty comforting. I’ll want that safety net there for a good long time before I walk the tightrope with only the cold, hard, popcorn strewn floor below, thank you very much.

Many people have asked me “what’s next” now that surgery (other than phase two of reconstruction a/k/a my tit exchange as one friend so aptly put it), chemo and radiation are finished. This is their gentle way of asking what can be done to make sure that I am okay and that the cancer has not come back.

People are often surprised to learn that these doctors visits will be composed mainly of a physical check-up and questions about how I am feeling. Scans are not always routinely performed on patients who did not have a lot of positive lymph nodes at the time of surgery and even when scans are done they do not tend to change outcomes.

Having thought about it I am not too keen on getting scanned and thus subjected to even more radiation on a regular basis. Some cancer survivors find scans comforting, but from what I’ve learned from my doctors, I might actually find them anxiety producing. Time will tell.

Blood tests are sometimes performed at the check-ups to test for tumour markers, etc. but the results can apparently be confusing. So again, the main tools used are the physical exam and talking to the patient. Old school.

That brings me back to this morning’s check-up. My surgeon examined me and said that my skin looked very good after radiation. He then palpated the skin around my expanders (my temporary, saline implants) and under my arms and finally did an ultrasound to see how the expanders were lying under the skin and whether and to what extent there was inflammation following my treatments. All looked good.

Following this, I showed my surgeon a small cyst on my right arm (people who have found lumps on their bodies that turned out to be cancer do NOT like to find random lumps on themselves) which he dismissed as a typical subcutaneous cyst, which probably predated my cancer. For good measure I had him look at a small, dark mole, which one dermatologist had insisted I biopsy immediately but which a second opinion had determined to be “nothing sinister.” He concurred with the latter opinion and said we could watch it.

Once I was out of questions about lumps, bumps and marks I figured I would get his input on the big picture. “Is there anything else I should be doing?” I asked. Now, I have already asked four oncologists their opinions about such things, given the morass of extreme cancer diets and information out there claiming that one has to do this, that and the other thing to stay healthy.

My surgeon knows how I am. In other words, he knows that I eat a relatively healthy diet, that I exercise regularly and that I am not planning to gain weight. And his answer was basically “nope.”

This is a relief because I hadn’t planned on going macrobiotic or anything. If I even tried to do that I might become psychotic, which could be a more serious health issue than cancer, or extremely bitchy and irritable, which could be a serious health risk to others around me. Or just a plain ole insufferable bore, which many people who embrace extreme diets and such are (sorry if you are one of them and you are offended but the great majority of people really don’t give a shit that you ate only kelp and green tea today).

While I was at it I polled him about alcohol consumption, especially considering a recent study I read indicating that as few as TWO drinks a week can increase the risk of estrogen-positive breast cancers. I really hate studies like that. I mean, two fucking drinks? Good grief. Not that I was a big boozer before all of this, but I do enjoy a nice glass of wine for crying out loud.

He said that it was very hard to separate alcohol consumption in those studies from other factors and that in the grand scheme of things he wasn’t too concerned about an increased risk if one didn’t drink excessively.

It all boils down to what my London oncologist said to me one day. “You have to live your life.” And you do. You can beat yourself up about every minute thing or you can get on with it and be reasonable and once in a while indulge. Isn’t that what makes life enjoyable on some level?

Therefore, when I got home this afternoon I took the last of the chocolate chip cookie dough (homemade gimme some credit) out of the fridge and baked up a sheet of cookies. My older daughter had a play date over so it was a good excuse.

“Okay, each child may have two cookies,” I said. Then when they weren’t looking I shoved four of them into my mouth in rapid succession. After a dinner of seared chicken breast, rice, mushrooms, roasted broccoli and purple cauliflower, which I swear tastes better precisely because it is purple — or at least that is what I told the kids when I said they couldn’t have any more cookies after dinner if they didn’t eat it all — and “one unit” of white wine, I ate two more cookies.

Following the sixth cookie I stopped, held my stomach and assessed how I felt. “Oh boy. I think I ate one too many cookies,” I told my five-year-old.

Without missing a beat, she responded, “I think I ate one too many cauliflowers.”

Ain’t life beautiful?

No More Weak-Ass Sh*t

I was at the gym earlier this week with my trainer (who is excellent and skilled and kind and lovely). We were in the midst of some squats with the bar and some (light — don’t be too impressed) weights and she asked me if I thought the workout was harder than the previous week. Immediately I thought I was slacking and that’s why she had asked me. But she said that she had increased the weights and wanted to know if I had noticed. I hadn’t.

Hot damn, I thought. I’m getting stronger and I didn’t even know it. It’s amazing how fast it’s happening. Two months ago I remember doing a workout with her. I looked in the mirror. I was bald and wearing nothing on my head because it got hot in the gym and by that time I really didn’t give a shit. That I had no eyebrows or eyelashes didn’t enhance my look, although I had drawn some eyebrows on with pencil. Anyhow, I spotted my reflection and the person (or should I say freak? — read my last post if you don’t get it) looking back at me was somebody else. Somebody pale and skinny who didn’t look strong. Ew, I thought. No like. Naturally, owing to my honey badger tendencies, I ignored the weak-ass spectre in the mirror and kept working out. It’s only temporary, babe, as my friend Susan Plum always put it.

I looked at myself during my workout this Monday. Night and day. I may have extremely short and ashy hair but it’s thick and it’s mine. The eyebrows and eyelashes have completely grown in. Sometimes I even leave the house without any make-up on, which is something I didn’t do for months. Although admittedly most days I lavish every single top eyelash with mascara because I am so damn happy to have lashes again that this ritual has taken on new significance.

Back to the gym. It’s Wednesday. Time for another training session. I spot a man doing suspended leg raises, you know the kind where you hang from a thing with your arms on pads and bring your legs up at a 90 degree angle to get a really good ab crunch. “Good Lord,” I thought.  No way I could do that. About thirty minutes later, however, that’s exactly what I was doing, but only because I am a good soldier who follows orders. It made me feel pretty badass.

The best thing was when my trainer told me that some gym buddy of hers had said “you know that lady you were training? She is really strong.” And then she told him about all the bull shit I had been through and his response was “you’re fucking kidding me.” She promises me that she didn’t make this story up but even if she did it totally worked because I felt very motivated. And did I mention badass? She told another one of her clients about me, a doctor, whose response was “poor girl.” She just looked at him and said “she is not a poor girl.”

I’ve gotten to the point where I don’t mind peeling off my long-sleeved shirt once it starts getting too hot because then I can watch my muscles. It’s just so damn nice to have some again because the chemo makes you atrophy like the deuce. Nasty shit that it is.

The curve is steeper than I figured it would be, which is a nice surprise. I’m literally stronger every week. I can open heavy doors that I struggled with a month ago. Fold down those jump seats on the tube without that telltale twinge in my pecks. Lift each of my children up above my head until my arms are straight.

So do me a favour won’t you? Don’t tell me to be careful or to take it easy. And don’t ask if my trainer is specially qualified to train “someone like me.” I know what I’m doing and I am not going to hurt myself. I am not, however, going to take it easy. I am going to do workouts that are hard and that make me feel tired by the end of the day. I am going to do the last repetition because she is standing there telling me to do it even when I start to shake. I’m going to get my ass kicked at the gym and then the next day I am going to enjoy the burn of that lactic acid build-up. Because that’s how I like it.

I don’t want to feel special and I don’t want a special assessment. I don’t want to be strong “for a person who just went through surgery, chemo and radiation.” I just want to be strong, period.

No more weak-ass shit.

My Latest WTF Moment

It’s sort of difficult running into people who haven’t seen me since I had long wavy hair and didn’t know I had cancer. When they recognise me (and it registers) I feel somewhat apologetic at the shock and horror they experience.

Then the usual happens. After the initial surprise wears off, they ask when I found out and how I am doing and tell me I look great, which is true, of course, so I smile and thank them. Ha ha.

Once in a while I get a slightly “different” response. The latest happened just the other day, in fact. I ran into a lady I hadn’t seen (well I had seen her but from afar and she hadn’t really seen me) since last fall. Let’s call her LB for short.

After LB and I exchanged pleasantries, she touched the side of my head and said “I wanted to ask you about this haircut!” Um, yeah. Je suis très chic, dontcha know. I explained that the haircut was not my choice and then the shock and awe part happened. It happened and happened and kept on happening and there were gestures and hands clapped over the mouth and lots of “Jesuses” and even a few “fucks” thrown in for good measure. And grunts and groans. And a “but you were so healthy!” It really went on for a while. It was like watching a broken fountain: the water just came out in fits and spurts and kind of all over the place. I just stood there waiting for it to be over.

She threw in a “we thought you were making a political statement!” I considered this. Hmm. This might have been a keen assumption had I also been sporting an eyebrow piercing or a fresh tat or had I been (at that moment) worshiping the devil, cultivating armpit braids or ripping up a picture of the Pope or something of that nature. But there I was, sitting cross-legged in my premium denim (no I won’t name names cuz then you will just have to run out and buy the same jeans) and a purple J Crew merino wool sweater (don’t care if you buy that) and flats. And I was wearing my diamond studs and mascara and shit. Let’s just say I wasn’t exactly channeling Sinead or a Nazi skinhead.

“Nope,” I said. Not a political statement. The malfunctioning fountain was interrupted by the speaker to whom we were supposed to be listening and as we turned our attention that way a warm wave of relief enveloped me. Saved at last. (Although during the speaker’s comments there were a few sputters and snorts, but they didn’t really rise to the level of what I consider to be verbal communication.)

Naturally LB wasn’t done with me. The questions started again the instant the speaker had finished. The pièce de résistance was when she looked at me and exclaimed “but I don’t understand; you have eyebrows and eyelashes!” “Yes,” I said. “They grew back. I didn’t have them six weeks ago.”

“Oh my God!” She cried. “What did you do? (imagine the crescendo building….) You must have looked like… a FREAK!”

Really? [Insert stupid Beavis and Butthead breathing noises and nervous laughter here.]

What did I do? Well I wore make-up. And then it was over and the shit grew back. And now here I am, for crying out loud. All freaky five feet nine (okay so maybe eight and a half) inches of me.

I’ve looked back at pictures of myself without eyebrows and eyelashes and hair and I do in fact look pretty weird without make-up on. But that is sort of besides the point, isn’t it, people?

Two excellent thoughts occurred to me during this episode:

No. 1: Thank God I didn’t run into LB while I had no eyebrows or eyelashes, the sight of which might have led to a water show that far outsputtered the one I witnessed.

No. 2: Boy will this be fun to blog about.

Luckily I have a sense of humour and am comfortable with my physical appearance. But here’s a little tip in case you aren’t sure: if you see someone who looks odd because they are bald and/or pale and/or have no eyelashes or eyebrows or you find out that at one time they didn’t have them because they had CANCER and had to have CHEMOTHERAPY for fuck’s sake, don’t say they look, or must have looked, like a freak.

Only am allowed to say that. It’s like people being allowed to make ethnic jokes about their own ethnicity.

At the end of the day I am really proud of my self-restraint. I could say a whole lot of other absolutely hilarious shit about LB now and make some truly witty ironic comments but because I am classy I don’t want to identify her.

Now if you’ll excuse me it’s Friday night and I have to get my freak on.

How to Talk to Someone Who Has Cancer: Take a Deep Breath and Pause

And now for the latest in instructional videos, Randall will discuss how to tawk (that’s Long Island for “talk” for you Indonesian readers who are confused) about cancer… just kidding. But seriously it would be great if he made a YouTube video about that topic. Really? You don’t know who Randall is? http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4r7wHMg5Yjg Come on.

This is likely a topic that will require several instalments (yeah that isn’t a typo the English spell it with one “l” I know so weird they do same thing with enrol I almost can’t take it). So here are some initial thoughts.

From the time I thought I might have cancer (last December) through my diagnosis (early January) and throughout treatment (February through July) and beyond (now), I have talked to an awful lot of people an awful lot about cancer. It has been unavoidable, and given my propensity for yakking, not surprising. Talking about cancer helps me cope — I am not one to shut things like that inside and hide myself away from the outside world. Putting it out there, and in doing so putting myself out there, has allowed me to feel some sense of control over the situation or at least some sense of power, if not control.

What has struck me time and time again is that people do not know how to talk about cancer. Even other people who have had cancer have said things to me that I really couldn’t quite believe. And it continues to happen all the time. Which is great in a way, because it serves as nifty inspiration for this here blog.

Now before I get into it I want you to know that if you feel that you are being singled out because you remember having said something similar or God forbid identical to what I describe below, you’ll have to get over it and promise not to be offended, horrified, guilty, angry, defensive, defiant or any other useless emotion. In fact I am probably not writing about you or something that you said, so don’t be “So Vain” as the song goes. And if you did happen to say some dumb thing to me or to another person who has or had cancer, don’t sweat it. Just hear me out.

Oh and here’s another disclaimer for good measure: I am well aware that all of the below is just my own personal take on the topic. I bet plenty of people would disagree with me. In fact I invite them or you to post comments disagreeing with me unless your big inspirational comment is that “most people mean well,” because that is the most useless bull shit comment ever and people throw it out there all the time. Of course most people mean well. That isn’t the point. I am not talking about evil here. None of the things said to me that have bothered me was intended to hurt me. I am 100% positive of that. I am just talking about what I don’t like and why.

Okay now I’m going to get into it.

One thing that really ticks me off is when people find out you have cancer and they tell you exactly what you are going to experience. I touched on this in the very beginning of my blog in an entry entitled Assaulted at the Global Festival: Things Not to Say to a Cancer Patient. If you haven’t read that and aren’t gonna I’ll recap: a lady who was herself a breast cancer survivor came up to me at a crowded event and outed me as a chemo patient, asked a lot of personal questions, proceeded to tell me I was going to feel like shit, physically and emotionally and indicated I wouldn’t feel normal for probably a year to eighteen months after my treatment ended.

This was not helpful. She could have been completely correct about all of those things (she wasn’t), but even if she had been, it was not her place to tell me how I was going to feel. Nor did I particularly want to be identified as a chemo patient at this event, for which I had put on a cute outfit and make-up so that I would feel as normal as possible, thank you very much.

Before that episode, shortly before I had even had my surgery, a friend and I did a quick clean-out of my closet. I took the nicest clothes to the consignment store after donating the serviceable yet not resalable things to charity. The owner of the store asked me what I’d like to do in the event that an item didn’t sell. “Would you like to donate it to cancer research?” She asked. I looked at her. “Why yes, I would,” I responded. “As a matter of fact, I would very much like to do that because I have just been diagnosed with breast cancer myself.” Big mistake. That’s what I get for being a blabbermouth. She launched into a mini speech about the treatments I would have even though she didn’t know anything about my particular case. When I made the second mistake of trying to correct her on some points she stood her ground and said she’d had a number of friends go through it and that indeed I would be having x, y and z treatment as she had outlined. That made me wish I had just dropped the clothes off and shut up.

The long and short of it is, a lot of people have cancer. Far too many. But their particular cancer and how they feel, both physically and emotionally, and the treatments they will have and how they will respond to these treatments varies widely. If there is one thing I have learned it’s that this is a highly individual experience. You talk to enough people going through “the same thing” to realise that they aren’t going through all the same things. And you need to be sensitive to that. One person might sail through chemo and another might end up in the hospital with a bad infection for two weeks during chemo. One person might experience a side effect that you never experience and vice versa. And you just cannot know. So you shouldn’t assume.

It didn’t bother me when people told me what they had experienced themselves. It just bothered me when they told me what I was going to experience in specific, sometimes preachy terms. It isn’t fair.

Another thing that thrills me is the whole “I have a friend, relative, etc. who had the same thing and they died.” I am a big girl and I know that cancer kills people. But it really bothers me when the first thing out of someone’s mouth when they find out I had cancer was that their aunt or cousin or buddy had cancer and died. It’s hard not to focus on the sad stories, especially in the beginning. Or at least it was for me. It’s pretty terrifying to find out that you have cancer, and that you are mortal is already going through your head a fair bit. So having the fragility of your life highlighted by stories about people who have lost theirs isn’t really what the doctor ordered.

I have stewed about these things and why people say them. And you know what? I think it’s because people want to find some common ground. They want to say something to you so that you know they are empathetic, responsive. They trot out the dead cousin or the “you’ll feel like shitola for a year” yadda yadda yadda because they want to relate personally to you and to your situation. Not doing so seems unfeeling or awkward. Not doing so isn’t human.

My final pet peeve (for tonight) is when people I don’t know well (or at all) ask “did they catch it in time?” Translation: Are you going to die any time soon? I suppose this isn’t fair of me. I mean, it seems to be a perfectly legitimate question when you find out someone has a life-threatening disease to discover just how threatening it is. But unless you know the person very well or they volunteer information, try to get the answers to these questions from someone else or learn to live with the uncertainty. I have had the luxury of saying to people “yes, we caught it fairly early.” But I know people who would have to say that actually the prognosis isn’t too great. And is it fair to put someone on the spot with this question about how long they think they might be around? Especially if you don’t even know them? I don’t think so. It made me feel as though I was being put into a box: check (a) for going to live and (b) for not going to make it. No. Nope. I don’t like it.

I think that people ask whether you’ve “caught it in time” because they desperately want the answer to be yes. Their subconscious is thinking, let it be yes so that I don’t have to feel so terrible. So I can be encouraging.

It is awkward and just plain painful to hear from someone that they have cancer or some other serious problem, be it a health problem or that their wife just left them (unless they are a schmuck and you think they deserve it — the wife leaving, not the cancer). It is. I often feel sorry for people when I tell them about the cancer. I feel guilty for making them experience the shock of it. It is such a blow to deal someone else. And when they are still reeling from the punch is it any wonder their response might be a bit flailing? Of course not.

What I think would be really great is if people could just get comfortable with a pause. Even a long pause. Take the deep breath before you dive right in. You don’t have to say “the right thing.” There is no right thing. And if you jump right in in order to relate to someone you might inadvertently alienate them. That is certainly true of the people who have told me what it’s going to be like for me as if they know.

At the end of the day, you don’t have to relate personally to it and sometimes you simply can’t. That doesn’t mean you can’t talk about it, but do not underestimate the power of listening. Do not underestimate the power of a little bit of silence. Don’t feel like you have to fill the void. You don’t have to. You can’t fix it. And that’s okay.

Now for all you jokers who plan to comment that people mean well even after I warned you not to, resist the urge or tomorrow I’ll short-sheet your bed.

Carpet Dude

So at the beginning of our street, or the end, depending on how you approach life, there is a small carpet store. In it work two men whom I pass pretty much every day on my way to the tube, the grocery store, what have you.

My daughter Isabel began to wave to the man she sees most often, the younger of the two, many months ago. And now when I walk by this man and I exchange a restrained knowing smile (close-lipped, corners turning slightly upward), and sometimes a little nod or wave.

I have never spoken to him. I don’t know his name and he doesn’t know mine. I know him only as “carpet dude.” Yet he is familiar because I see him so often.

It occurred to me as I hobbled by today (I am not injured I am merely suffering from lactic acid galore thanks to a pretty intense personal training session yesterday — it’s the good kind of pain though) that it’s funny how we see some people so often but never talk to them or get to know their stories. It made me wonder whether carpet dude has any clue what my story is. I certainly don’t know his.

These days when I pass by I am sporting a crew cut. But not so long ago I was wearing a headscarf and before that I had thick, dark wavy hair at various lengths (fairly long at first, then a bob, then a short cut for five days until I went all GI Jane and shaved my head… for more on that story and photos see Cold Cap: From Rapunzel to Rambo). Oh gosh I almost forgot that I also left the house on occasion in a pink wig named Candy Floss (and for more on that and photos see Zero).

I wonder if he noticed. And if so did he figure it out or did he just think that I like to change hairstyles frequently and/or am a real weirdo.

If it weren’t for my kids (the constants in this equation) I figure he might not have known that the lady with long wavy hair, the bald lady and the lady with the crew cut are even all the same person.

One day soon I might go in there and see about a new rug for the dining room and maybe some carpet for the bedroom too. I kind of hate to disturb the status quo of our relationship, however, because it is so amazingly low maintenance and stress free.

If I walk in there and speak to him and look at samples and get quotes and all of that it will complicate matters. God forbid there is some sort of problem with the order. Then I might be forced to avert my gaze every time I walk by. Life is complicated enough as it is.

But I don’t have to decide today or even tomorrow.

Maybe I will just go somewhere else so I don’t have to deal. Interacting with people can be so exhausting.

In light of this, it always amazes me how people feel they have to discuss the weather or some equally inane topic when they are riding an elevator together. Somehow it seems better than just standing there. Than just being for the thirty seconds it takes to get to your floor. It’s this uncontrollable feeling that you ought to interact, have an exchange. But you really don’t. You can just stand there and be.

I remember when I was working in the US they began installing TV monitors in the elevators in office buildings (reporting the weather and equally inane topics) so that you could pretend not to notice the other occupants and just stand there staring at the screen. Captivated — no relieved — by the loop of extraneous information for that whole half-minute ride.

This doesn’t seem to be as much of an issue here in London. People crowd onto the elevator and then they stand there until it reaches the correct floor. In the tube elevators they don’t even all stand facing the same direction since you aren’t always sure which way the doors will open, which is a really hard one for folks in the US to deal with.

The next time you walk into a crowded elevator in an office building I dare you to shake things up by facing the opposite direction in which everyone else is standing. It will make people really uncomfortable. But you have to keep a straight face. Or to really get them going pull a sort of Clockwork Orange look like this:

Or you can just make life simple and get on and face the same way as everyone else. The beauty is that you don’t have to decide today or even tomorrow.

I Smell a Rat

Like, literally.

So here’s how it all started. On the very last day of radiation treatment (#25 of 25), which was Friday, July 27, I was home puttering around in preparation for our trip to the States the next day and I popped outside (the British are always popping here and there to do things and this has thoroughly infected my speech patterns by this point so deal with it) to put the trash out.

After closing the lid of the rubbish bin (that’s trash barrel for you die-hard Americans) I caught something out of the corner of my left eye on my way back in the door. I directed my gaze down the precipitous steps leading to the basement.

And there it was, looking back at me. A rat. The size of the animal and the length of its tail betrayed immediately that it was no mouse.

I didn’t think much of it, though. I figured, it likes the trash. We live in the city. Until I went out and returned several hours later and saw it (or one of its pals) again in the same place. That did not seem like a good sign. And it had the nerve to peer up at me again before it slunk out of sight.

At the bottom of the aforementioned steps there is a water pipe/drain that leads into the house. It occurred to me that they might have found a way into the basement via that or other similar means. So I reentered the house and went into the basement from the inside on a recon mission. I saw right away that something (here’s a hint: it was a rat) had chewed up one of the tiles of the drop ceiling (you know those tiles in unfinished basements made of some sort of cardboard-like substance) and the debris from this gnaw fest was deposited below. Ew.

So on the eve of our departure I discovered that there were rats in the house, or at least in the basement, which still counts as “in the house” in my book.

Crap, I thought. Via my pal, Susan, I got in touch with the pest control dude, whom we had had out to the house to investigate whether we had mice in the basement only a few weeks prior. This was after my husband found a dead mouse down there (which I now suspect was not a dead mouse but a dead baby rat) and I had heard some scrabbling in the floor near the base of the main staircase. Nothing had been found.

In my absence, Susan and our nanny, Agnieszka, met the pest dude at the house a few days later. He placed some bait in the basement and checked for possible points of ingress, of which he identified two, one in each of the adjoining houses on either side of our house. “Don’t worry,” he reassured the ladies after placing the bait, “they won’t die in the house because they will go out looking for water.”

This statement was later revised by the dude to something like “they are very unlikely to die in the house.” Oh sure.

There are other points on which the pest dude was severely lacking. How about for starters that I questioned him long and hard when we returned from our trip about whether the rats could somehow gain entry through the water pipe or any holes near it where I had repeatedly seen the culprit(s). He said unequivocally no. But then the contractor who was working on the house next door and who knows this house like the back of his hand informed me this was total BS and of course the rats could get in that way and he even poked around and observed that there were holes around that drainage area. HELLO? I could go on… In fact I will, later. Read on.

Some days after the initial baiting, Agnieszka met the dude at the house. It hit them hard as soon as they opened the front door. The unmistakable stench of decomposition.

The dude descended into the basement but could not find the body. He told Agnieszka to light some scented candles and that everything would be fine and dandy. Just wait it out, he advised.

Horrified, Agnieszka scrubbed the floors and opened doors and windows trying to air the house and abate the stank. She purchased room freshener and a scented candle. All this while I was across an ocean, blissfully unaware for a couple more hours that our house had become a rat graveyard where a rat can’t get a proper burial.

Then I got the email from Susan. “Brace yourself,” it warned, “this is a stinker.” I read on. The pest dude sent a message about the fact that a rat had died in the house. The long and short of it was that this sometimes happens and that it isn’t nice but it is better than having rats running around down there.

I called him up and ruffled his feathers about his claim that the rat wouldn’t die in the house. He was somewhat unnerved by my American directness via pointed questions, though they did not rise to the level of accusations, my being a reasonable person and all.

From that morning I got the news I began to prepare myself. Tried to swallow that after all the shit we’d just been through, what would greet us upon our return to the Old Country was the reek of decomposing rodent in our home. For some reason, even though I was told that it would soon pass, this really bothered me. I couldn’t stop thinking about it.

An impending sense of horror insinuated its way into my consciousness. I would be distracted momentarily, but then something would jerk me back into thinking about the dead rat smell that awaited us. And the possibility of more rats in the house.

Our flight home was uneventful. When we opened the front door, we smelled it for sure. But it was not as bad as I had anticipated. It probably couldn’t have been considering how mental I had gotten about it. I thought to myself, “this is gross but I can deal with it.” We got settled, went out to dinner and came home and went to bed. We could not smell the rat from our bedrooms.

The next day, my husband went down to the basement to investigate, the real point of which being to determine whether any rodent activity had fouled his latest batch of home brew, which lay in waiting in the tiny finished room adjacent to the basement. He popped (there it is again) upstairs and informed me that he had heard a noise in the ceiling near the stairwell that sounded like an animal breathing or snoring. I thought he was kidding. But he persisted.

So I accompanied him back downstairs. We stopped. We listened. And by George, there it was. A sort of low, soft, exhale somewhere between a growl and a snore. We exchanged a look. I acknowledged that I could hear it. And at that moment we started to fear the worst. That there was not only a dead rat in the house but live rats as well.

As it turns out, we never did discover the source of that guttural sound. But it was enough to prompt a call to the pest dude to demand that he come out forthwith and deal with the problem in case any rats were still in the house. After some initial resistance, he agreed to come out. And it was during this meeting he informed me the rats couldn’t have come in at the base of the stairs where I had initially spotted them.

I began to lose confidence in him at that point and what made it worse was that he was, to put it mildly, rather verbose, or as a friend once aptly put it about his own loquaciousness, intoxicated by the exuberance of his own verbosity. My first clue should have been that when I offered him a parking permit and asked how long he thought he would be at the house that day, he rejected the half hour card in favour of an hour-long one.

The second inkling was that every time I asked him something that I believed to be relatively cut and dried (you know, straightforward questions), he looked pensive, hemmed and hawed, and said “let’s start at the beginning.”

Good Lord, I thought. We might end up needing an exterminator for our exterminator at this rate.

Shortly after his deficiencies became apparent to us, our estate agent hired another company and informed the pest dude of our transfer of affections to said company. He really had lost me when I suggested we plug an obvious rat-sized hole in the ceiling of the “beer room” and he said not to bother because for every hole you plug there are ten more where they can get in. And that hole led to the main part of the house! Why don’t I just roll out the red carpet, for fuck’s sake, and line it with biscuits and chocolate.

The next day I had an epiphany. Maybe the reason that the dead rat had perturbed me so — aside from the obvious “oh we have just been through so much and now we have to contend with a smelly dead rat woe is me nonsense” was the following:

You discover when you least expect it that a nasty, potentially harmful and most certainly unwelcome presence has invaded your home.

You do not know and may never know how it got there and whether it has friends and if so where the friends are and how many there are.

You set about finding out as much as possible about this unwanted visitor, and formulate a plan of attack based on the information available.

You poison the intruder.

Then you set about trying to prevent a similar intruder from returning.

You succeed in killing it.

The execution, however, is a highly unpleasant messy business with unforeseen consequences. The whole thing is rather an ordeal.

After the killing, there is a terrible stench. Everyone tells you that it will fade over time. You want to believe this but it is difficult to imagine because for so long you have smelled it, breathed it, lived it.

Sometimes you think that the smell is gone but then you catch a whiff and you know that the carcass will always be there, albeit out of reach. A reminder of your ordeal.

To tell you the truth I don’t care where the bloody skeleton is as long as it is dead as a fucking doornail. The smell is already a lot better. It will indeed go away eventually. But I will never forget it. I will always know that smell.

The really good news is that the beer was undisturbed. And is damn good.

It’s the little things in life.

How the Twins Made Out in Boston, Barcelona and London City Airports

For those of you curious about how I made out on my three flights following the bionic boob incident (well, it wasn’t really an incident, it just was what it was — see A Further Look at Airport Screening Issues), I’ll tell you now.

Yawn, stretch. What? I am still rather tired from all of our travels. It isn’t every day I fly across the Atlantic and then turnaround and fly to another country two days later with my family. For those of you well-seasoned travellers who do this all the time, oh you jet setters you.

So here’s the rundown.

Having set off the metal detector at Heathrow, I tried to keep one step ahead of the game at Logan Airport. As we approached the TSA agent checking passports prior to queuing for security (that’s waiting in line for you Americans, hacer cola for you Spaniards), I considered my options. The agent was a young woman in her twenties. All business but didn’t seem mean. So I decided to plunge right in with my story. “Er,” I said, “just to let you know, I have prosthetic devices that sometimes set off the metal detector. Any advice?” She told me that because I have two young’uns traveling with me, I would normally be sent through the metal detector rather than the body scanner (these scanners were rolled out in 2010 and Logan was the first airport to receive them). I haven’t researched this but maybe this is to avoid exposing children to unnecessary radiation although the scanner emits such low levels of radiation that it is supposed to be equivalent to what you’d be exposed to flying in a plane for two minutes — big deal. “Tell them that you want to go through the scanner, not the metal detector, but don’t say why.”

Okay, I thought. So when my turn came around I told the dude I wanted the scanner while Bill and the kids went through the metal detector. “Hip or knee?” The man asked cheerfully. Um, no, sir, TITS. Really? I guess it just wasn’t on his radar that I hadn’t chosen my very very very short haircut on purpose. Which I suppose is a good thing because it means that he just thought I was a regular gal, rather than a gal who just killed the fuck out of cancer by getting sliced, diced, nuked and blasted. Just a regular ordinary gal with a chic buzz cut asking for a body scan because of that ole war injury. Being frank and as I have told you, not easily embarrassed, I looked right at him and said “breasts.” I’m pretty sure he regretted having asked me, and I almost felt sorry for him. But it serves you right if you are going to speculate.

I stepped into position, arms over head à la Cops except there was no police cruiser. I held my position and wondered what my expanders would look like to the TSA agents reviewing the images. Would they know? Would they really have received the training that was supposed to have been rolled out last year?

Well you know what? They let me right through with my metal tatas, no questions asked. So I guess they did get their training after all. Score one for the US of A.

Next flight was from London City Airport to Barcelona. It was our first time at London City and I have to say it is a very pleasant little airport. I was really feeling it. Would definitely choose to fly from there again.

Having had success on my previous flight with the up front and frank “I gots a metal rack” approach, I decided to try that tack again. I informed the agent. He reassured me that all would be fine and let me show him the ID cards for my expanders. This time I bypassed the metal detector altogether and went straight to pat down by a female agent. And then we were on our way.

And this brings me to the final experience in Barcelona airport. I was particularly curious to see how this one would shake down because it was the first time that another language would be involved. I came prepared, having asked my excellent multilingual college friend Mark to give me the best translation he could come up with for prosthetic breasts. I speak Spanish but man am I rusty and I didn’t want to make a slight error and tell them I had prosthetic chickens or a bionic ass or something that might rouse suspicion.

We inched forward in line. A young man checked our passports. I dove right in. “Tengo protésises mamárias,” I told him. I continued in Spanish, “sometimes they set off the metal detector.” I smiled pleasantly and awaited his reaction. He told me not to worry and said that if I preferred I could step aside and remove them. I couldn’t tell if he was kidding or just didn’t get it. Maybe he though I just had a stuffed bra or something. I neglected to tell him that removing them would involve an operating room and a plastic surgeon. In the meantime he sent me through to speak to a very pleasant woman in her forties or fifties. I repeated my story but this time added that it was due to breast cancer. She “got” it. Informed the agents and sent me on through. And this time I did not set off the metal detector.

But my husband did because he had all sorts of loose change in his pockets that he forgot to take out. It was rather nice to watch someone else get the full pat down for a change while I just waited patiently with the girls (and by girls I mean my children, not my boobs, in case you thought I was being cheeky).

So there you have it. A different experience at every airport. None terrible; some rather pleasant. I won’t get my permanent, no metal involved, silicone tetas for at least another five-six months, so there will be even more opportunities to fly the friendly skies with the twins. Perhaps they should get their own passports so that I won’t have to say anything to anyone. Speaking of which, my passport is nearing ten years old and you know what that means: time to renew. My photo is going to look a might bit different from the last one, but at least I have some hair for the event. By the time I take the picture I’ll be killing it with a sweet little pixie cut à la Mia Farrow in Rosemary’s Baby. But I will not be carrying Satan’s child, thank goodness.

 

A Further Look at Airport Screening Issues

Howdy. You may have read my posts about encountering airport security at Heathrow. If not click on Things I Am Prepared to Say to Airport Security (before) and End of Shit (after).

Well, it turns out that a host of ladies sporting bionic buzzies have had troubles with so-called insensitive TSA employees. My friend Dee just sent me a link to an article about the very topic. Check out http://globaltravelerusa.com/web/view/tsa-apologizes-to-breast-cancer-patient-for-embarrassing-screening-at-jfk#.UCTliYaeypY.email. The gist of it is that last fall, a lady who had recently undergone bilateral mastectomies with reconstruction and had those expanders with the metal ports in them set off the screening gizmo at JFK airport and was not exactly treated with kid gloves.

Now look, I am the first to speak out in favour of heightened airport security in this crazy world we live in. Anyone could produce a document from a “doctor” indicating that they have some prosthesis that might set off the screening thingie.

Nonetheless, I agree that a modicum of civility is warranted. Even if the TSA folks are not satisfied by a card or a doctor’s letter proclaiming the presence of a prosthetic medical device (and I ain’t saying they should be), should not the bearer of such be offered a private screening if so desired? You can cop a feel or have a look, but only in the champagne room, please.

Luckily for me, I am not easily embarrassed and did not mind being patted down in public at Heathrow airport. I don’t think I would like having to go into a private room and take off my top, but if asked I would do so. Safety first, after all. I really don’t give a shit.

But not every person embraces the honey badger way. I read about one poor lady who had to remove her bra for the authorities and about another whose prosthesis was manipulated from side to side by a TSA employee. Not really a turn on.

At the end of the day, most people don’t know a damn thing about breast cancer or prosthetic devices. The TSA is not going to concern itself with whether you have had a hard time being treated for x, y or z over the past months and whether their exam of you gives rise to emotional trauma. They just want to process you and make sure you aren’t going to blow up at 35,000 feet. And after the shoe bomber and other pathetic sacks of excrement like him, you can hardly blame them.

I have to fly three times in the next ten days so I’ll have plenty of opportunities to get mistreated and will let you know how it all goes. If I get invited into the champagne room I can tell you right now that I plan to charge for it.

 

My Hero

So the other day I was at a cookout in Bass River with my two kids and about a zillion other kids aged from two to maybe sixteen. I haven’t been wearing a scarf or anything else on my head stateside because now that I am sporting a crew cut I figure what the hell.

You see where this is headed (so to speak), don’t you?

So I am sitting on a lawn chair minding my own business and nursing a small glass of some sort of citrusy gin and elderflower liqueur situation when I overhear a young boy, maybe about four or five, say “hey you see that bald lady over there? She looks like a boy.” Of course I start laughing, because you have to love how honest children are. And a much older girl (at least twelve maybe older) looks contrite and apologizes to me. “Oh it’s fine,” I say.

Well it was fine with me but my younger daughter, Charlotte, hears the whole thing and marches over to me and says “you have some hair. I’m going to tell that boy.” Then she launches into a jaunty rendition of Mama Odie’s “Dig A Little Deeper” (“it don’t matter what you look like; don’t matter what you wear…”) from The Princess and the Frog, which is a quality animated film with decent music if you haven’t seen it. Really. ‘Bout time they had Disney flick set in New Orleans with a Cajun firefly.

After at least an hour or maybe even longer, in the midst of dinner, Charlotte decides to find that boy and tell him that in fact her mother has some hair. “What did he say?” I ask. “He said strike one, strike two, strike three.” Which makes no sense. Whatever. Lends no credence to the little blighter’s assertion that I resemble the opposite sex. Just wait until he sees me after my upcoming boob inflation on August 16. Ha. How do you like me NOW?

Anyhow the point of my story, as you may have guessed, is that my kid stuck up for me. How cool is that? My five-year-old child witnessed an event that made her feel uneasy and that she knew could have hurt my feelings and not only did she leap to my defence but she also performed a little musical number to make me feel better. Thus restoring balance to the universe.

Charlotte has a deeply developed sense of empathy. And this is not a new thing. When she was two and a half on her first day of nursery school, she watched one father leave after settling his son in. Immediately upon the father’s departure, the son started to cry. Charlotte turned to me and said “I don’t like that dad’s behaviour.”

Empathy = killer. Most of us could use a little extra, hmm?

 

Roasted Armpit with a Side of Impatience

So my vacay is going pretty well and I feel great. Except for one thing.

My armpit really hurts.

My skin is healing up all nicely from the radiation but for some reason (maybe because it is an ARMPIT), there is a spot in my axilla that got rubbed raw. And it really hurts. Reminds me of one of those hot spots that our dog used to get on her bum after chewing her fur a little too vigorously to address a persistent itch. Yes, I know. Gross. I’ll refrain from photographic evidence since you all are still reeling from the super attractive thumb pics.

The rest of the area that got blasted just looks like a healing sunburn.  Sort of dry and brownish/pink. But not too awful.

Now, I realise that in the grand scheme of things this is not that big of a deal. But it is kind of pissing me off because I’ve had enough and it is cramping my style. That and the fact that my stupid thumbnail still refuses fall off. I am keen to get it off so that I can race to the nearest CVS (that’s an American pharmacy for you non-US readers) and buy me some ultra classy Lee press-on nails. Maybe with an American flag on them so that I can be patriotic and shit while I am on this side of the pond. Oh and so that I can do dishes again (not).

But enough kvetching about my leftover symptoms. Let’s talk about the good news. The good news is that my hair is growing back industrial strength. And my little head is so fuzzy that people have been rubbing it (yes, even people I don’t know that well) because it is apparently so irresistible.

It’s sort of like when you are pregnant and people feel entitled to come up and touch your tummy. I hope that in some months time when I have the final iteration of my newbs, people aren’t going to come up and cop a feel (unless of course they’ve been invited).

My eyebrows grew back so fast that I don’t even need pencil anymore. Here let me attach a photo so you can see for yourself. I will also reattach that lovely one that I took on July 13 so that you can see what a difference a few weeks makes. Both photos are with no make-up.

BEFORE (I look rather like a raw chicken, no?):

 

AFTER (five minutes ago):

I even have eyelashes although they are still shorties. I bought some duty-free crap on the plane over here that is supposed to make your lashes grow longer, stronger, darker and curlier. It is probably just snake oil but I had so much fun buying it I don’t care. Plus it is French. Ooh la la. If it works I am planning to put it on my upper lip as well so that I can have a nice long curly black moustache for my post-treatment new look. Just kidding.

There are some places where hair just isn’t welcome. No hair zones. Too bad you can’t pick and choose where you want it to grow back. It’s a cruel joke that after months of having smooth and kissable bare legs I will need to shave soon. Ah well.