Tag Archives: surgery

15 days and Counting – Preparing for our Fight against Breast Cancer

“You know you are in Love when the other person’s individual happiness is more important than the desires you have for the two of you together.”

It is still over 2 weeks to go and we are still waiting for MRI results.  That’s a good thing I think.  We’ve gotten into a good routine and my wife has refocused her mental energy on work and the kids.  I am personally struggling with how to keep things together for the 2-3 weeks where I will have to carry 100% of the physical action while also maintaining a full load of work.  I don’t want my kids to feel like we are tossing them around to other people to drive them everywhere.  My 8-year old son is already getting a little clingy with his mother.  The kids have been excellent though understanding that mommy is going to need them to help out.  I’ve avoided telling them the exact day of the surgery as I don’t want to stress them out the morning that i take them to school.  We’ve basically explained this as another business trip for mom except that she is going to be exhausted for a couple weeks when she gets back.  These next two weeks they are practicing “staying out of mom’s hair” while mom gets work done on her projects.  They are growing up through this process fairly quickly, but after it is all over we are going to have to help them become silly kids again.

Yes, mental distractions are what we are continuing to strive for as we try to remain busy.  My wife told me a few things she is going to do in the next couple days that I would normally have said “No” to, but right now I just want her to keep happy.  The other day I finally awoke to a birthday and didn’t realize it was that day until I got a call that afternoon.  Suddenly if dawned on me that I was definitely distracted by my concern for my wife that normal everyday events which are important to me were no longer a priority.

My wife commented to me last night as we watched the closing ceremonies that having the Olympics on the last two weeks really helped to challenge her inner spirit.  It wasn’t just the stories of Michael Phelps and Usain Bolt, but the stories of age over youth (Jeannie Longo and Sara Torres), overcoming tragedy (Hugh mcCutcheon), unbearable pain (Zuzana Thomas), handicap (Natalie du Toit), and a year long struggle and grieving for the loss of a loved one (Matthias Steiner) that have inspired her that the mind can heal and drive you to greater things if you want them.

I told her she can have whatever she wants.  We just have to start thinking about what those things are.

More Waiting – A Loving Fight against Breast Cancer

“The mind is a powerful tool.  Let’s use it to distract and heal us during these trying times.”

As a distance runner, I often found that when the pain hit my legs and abdomen that I could often find something else to focus on to either motivate me or distract me from the pain my body was feeling.  My wife is still feeling the anxiety.  She has developed a cough but I noticed that it goes away when she is not sitting still.  We did a family outing yesterday to a baseball came and her cough magically disappeared.  The same thing happened when we went out that evening with friends.  But as we went to bed, the cough was there again along with her Ricola lozenges.

Still, she is worried.  As I mentioned before, her doctor ordered her a chest X-ray which revealed clear lungs just to make her feel better.  We also had more meetings.  She went in for an optional Genetic test to see if she is a carrier of a rare gene that studies have found is carried my patients with breast cancer showing a predisposition for ovarian cancer.  If your mother had breast and ovarian cancer, it is very likely (50%) that you might have it as well.  We are waiting on that test result.  My wife also had her MRI of her lymph nodes and other chest.  Usually this would have taken place before the meeting with the plastic surgeon, but the scheduling gods were not with us.  There was nothing that could be seen from the initial peek at it, but we will have to wait until tomorrow to hear the results from her doctor.  Hopefully it will be more good news and everything will continue to go as planned.

In the meantime, my wife and I have decided that she needs to get distracted and keep her mind off of things.  She has taken on a huge consulting job that she is going to throw herself into during the next couple of weeks.  I took the kids out today so that she could work on the project, get the kids away from her for a bit and immerse herself.  It gives her something different to talk about and to keep her mind working over the next 12-14 days.

As for me, those runs are distracting me too from the pain.  Only now I can only think of my wife as I go for my runs.  How much I love her,  how much I respect her, and how much I want her to pull out of this better than ever.  Tonight I ran double more normal run as I missed a turn as I was so distracted by my own thoughts.  My body felt good and strong.  I guess the mind really is the most powerful healing tool in the body.

Meeting the Plastic Surgeon – Alternative Breast Cancer Options

” I’m sorry for being selfish.  Cancer is affecting both of us more than I let on”

We had our first disagreement since my wife’s diagnosis with breast cancer and it ironically happened after meeting with the plastic surgeon.  Stepping back, my wife has been given the opportunity to have a surgery that is not offered everywhere to everyone.  In fact, it was not an option we were aware of until we met with our breast cancer surgeon.  4 years prior when my mother had breast cancer, the skin-sparing mastectomy was not readily offered.  When originally told my wife was eligible for a lumpectomy, we both felt relieved, yet my wife and I knew that this is something we wanted to be overwith since both of our mothers had chosen for mastectomies and were doing fine (hers ahad a double or bilateral and my mother only had a single).  We chose for a bilateral mastectomy given all the options and our doctor told us this was not unusual for people our age.

It had been about 10 days since my we met with the cancer surgeon and now we were meeting with our plastic surgeon.  The process was very complete and they had typed up our laundry list of questions (recovery time, how is it done, infections, time of surgery, pictures, etc.).  As a husband, you are wondering who is this guy?  What does he look like?  Is he some slick tanned golfer?  A pervert? Actually he was perfect.  A no-nonsense guy and very matter-of-fact.  Interestingly enough there were more people in our room for the plastic surgery consultation than in with the cancer surgery consultation.  This is where my diagreement with my wife occurred. 

I am in this strictly for my wife and mother of our children.  If she had decided against reconstruction that is her choice.  It is her boday and I’d be happy with it.  We’ve had many discussions on this topic in private and she knows I am with her every step of the way.  Before diagnosed with breast cancer my wife had been undergoing therapy for a bad back as caused by her size DD breasts.  Ironically a mastectomy would reduce that weight and hopefully help her.We had both come to the conclusion that if she wanted to have reconstruction that a smaller size would be great as long as it was good for her.  I told her that I was in agremement as long as it was up to her.

What many men don’t realize that this is a very serious topic and not the same as some starlet getting new breasts.  Check out this idiot’s article in Glamour that upset my wife today!  This is my wife and I am not some kid in a candy shop.  If you had asked me before I would have told you I’m a leg man.  BUT, my wife’s breasts are part of her identity whether she hates them or not.  Without them she’d probably be off balance emotionally as well as physically.  I think that the average large breasted women are more inclined to say that they want reconstruction (at a smaller size) after their surgery because they know what is is like.  I don’t know about smaller sized women who want bigger breasts (post-cancer surgery).

Anyway, my wife is the typical person who asks me questions all the time, but this is not the one time when I wanted her to do that.  The plastic surgeon and his team pointedly asked me questions several times and I deftly pitched them to my wife saying it is her decision.  I felt like the team was trying to make sure I wasn’t some “pig” husband trying to push his wife into getting a fake rack.  My wife kept coming back to me and saying.  Should I have a “C’ or a “D”? 

Look, “This isn’t like choosing shoes or trying on clothes”, I yelled at her afterwards. “These people are trying to make sure YOU want this and that I am not pushing you to do this.  I want YOU to show them this is your decision and not OURS!  The only thing I want is for you to be happy with whatever you get”.

To my wife’s credit, she wasn’t focused on my thoughts and predicament.  This was the normal way we made decisions everyday.  We have always been a 50/50 couple.  She didn’t realize she was putting me on the spot in front of the surgeon and his team.  She forgot about my feelings and the stress I was under as well.  I reminded her that because of costs, you can’t change your mind 50 million times when shopping like she does at Target.  I might not go to any follow up meetings with my wife and the plastic surgeon as I don’t want to be on the spot again and I don’t want to be scrutinized like that again.  Society does that to you.  I know there will be people in the future who will look at my wife and say, “Oh, she has a fake rack.  Her husband must be a pig for doing that”.  I even might have been one of those people.  Never again. 

Other than that the consultation did provide some eye-opening informations.  Overall it is only adding 45 minutes to the total surgery.  Each mastectomy takes about 2 hours.  His part takes 45 minutes.  Once the cancer surgeon is done with the first breast, and moves to the second breast, he can start.  Recovery should be two weeks and they say not to drive for 2 weeks because you likely can’t react for several weeks fast enough without hurting yourself.  Then (depending upon any radiation or chemo) you get pumped with saline in 4 weekly sessions.    After the sessions, you get the saline replaced with silicone in a separate procedure.  If there is radiation and or chemo involved, they wait until after the treatments to swap out the saline.  They say infections do occur within 20% of the patients and that is because of the radiation most likely.

The skin-sparing surgery my wife is having is the most interesting and newest part of the procedure.  it must be done at the same time as the cancer surgery.  It preserves the nipple and is done through a crescent shaped incision above the nipple.  In the past, this incision was done with the nipple removal.  This surgery thus does not require nipple reconstruction or tattooing.  Amazingly enough in looking at pictures provied by the pysician, he showed us some photos which were amazing.  in 2 of the 3 that he showed us, the woman had chosedn to get a lumpectomy and then later had to have mastectomies.  That sealed the deal.  It told us that my wife was making a very informed and yet not -so radical decision to have the bilateral mastectomy.

Next up: The MRI and genetic testing

24 days and building stamina – A Loving Fight

There is no i in “Team” or in “cancer”.

Today we took a rest after a 3 mile family hike and a nice swim.  It was nice to get out, breathe some fresh air again and hold hands as a family.  My wife and I talked about making sutre that the next 24 days are spent getting in some good exercise and staying healthy as the recovery period will sap her energy and afford her little time to keep in shape.  We’ve been reading from some people that there was little weight loss and have been told that resting in bed will give little time to stay in shape.

Reading inspirational stories from 40+ something athletes like Dara Torres who are in better shape now than in their 20s helps as a motivational story.  Lance Armstrong, Scott Hamilton, Sheryl Crow and other celebrities act as inspiration.  the more she realizes she is not alone and that thousands of people are surviving in their own way, my wife has started to focus on “how she is going to survive” and not “how she might die” or “how she is going to be losing a limb”. 

Even our children are getting more into the spirit.  Our 8 year old son has adopted a regimen of 10 pushups every morning.  Our 6 year old daughter with her little legs worked hard to keep up with us on the hike and nodded to me several times while pointing to her little “yellow” Live Strong bracelet.  Later when our son acted up by defying an order from my wife as well and when I shot him a look, he nodded, and apologized.  Our kids are learning  every day that this is going to be a team battle and a long journey.  My son asked me today if this will be happening soon.  I told him this will still be three weeks away and he smiled saying….”Seems like forever”.

This will be a battle of endurance and we are not even to the peak (no valleys here).

A Loving Fight – Day 4

“You are more beautiful outside and stronger inside than ever before”

It is so hard to tell that to your wife when she is fighting the anxiety of being diagnosed with breast cancer.  The bouts of crying and the number of well-wishes she is receiving is probably overwhelming her.  The fact of the matter is that she is stronger and more beautiful than ever.  Maybe my eyes are welling up with tears as and I’m seeing a glow that I haven’t seen in 20 years, but my wife has never looked better.

She had a great day today getting out and continuing to do what she loves and then spending time with her family.  My mother graciously took the kids and we went out for a movie, dinner and alone time.  It was a chick flick that I would have rather waited for on DVD, but we went and I let her have her movie.  It was all about girl power and it made her cry.  It was her first crying fit in a couple days.  She really need it.

Distraction is the name of the game and keeping her busy is the most improtant thing I can do to keep her distracted.  We accomplished quite a bit today and she was fine until that movie got her back to thinking about the cancer again.  This is a strong woman who is used to fighting physically but this is not something she can beat.  Fate has dealt her a blow and now we must wait for the oncologists to help her set her plan.

Tomorrow will be a better day I’m sure.