CPT Cancer

A journal about the intersection of military life, cancer, and being a single dad.

Treatment Part 4

Cut Down

When this whole thing kicked off I had these daydreams about how I was going to approach treatment and recovery methodically, with military discipline and the attitude of a winner. I wasn’t going to allow myself to get down or despair, but it didn’t fully register with me until this week that that mindset only works in specific circumstances and specific treatments. My type of cancer isn’t something you “fight” or “beat”: it’s something you survive. I am not fighting for my life. I’m not taking aggressive measures to defeat cancer like it were some sort of adversary: I am merely trying to endure and survive the experience. The fight comes after… if I manage to hold on long enough to be “in recovery” in the first place.

Immediately following my second round of chemo I felt ok. I mean, as ok as I could feel. No headache or caffeine withdrawal from last time meant that this time would be slightly easier, right? WRONG. Kyle, you stupid bitch, fucking wrong.

I was devastated. No energy, no stamina, extreme nausea, no appetite, no will to live. For the first three days after chemo I was maxing out at two cartons of formula per day, which is roughly 750 calories. I’d dropped 8 pounds in a week come time for my weekly visit with Dr. Panner. If this was a fight, I was purely on the defensive, I was merely surviving the onslaught.

The only bright spot in the entire week was the pair of sores that had developed by my molars had healed somehow, either from the pre-infusion steroids or from mouthwash maintenance, so I could speak somewhat normally. That was it. That was the bright spot.

My nausea finally manifested itself into vomiting during treatment week four. First with some puking into a puke bag in the car on the way to proton therapy, then once in the evening in between periods of a hockey game I had some emotional investment in, and then every evening when I brushed my teeth. Aside from brushing with a pasteless brush and swearing off of all mouth rinses, I’m at a total loss on how to fix this. I cannot not keep my mouth in good order: it’s medically necessary to preserve my teeth and my general health since the radiation is nuking my ability to keep a balanced environment. The one positive takeaway from not being able to swallow much, besides small sips of water, is that I’m not introducing a lot of foreign bacteria into my mouth.

This weekend I’d traded away my visitation with the kids to the ex in exchange for the previous weekend. I knew after chemo number one that having the kids the weekend after chemo was a non-starter, but didn’t know how right I would be. Now, this isn’t something I’m happy about having to do and I miss having them but it was a necessary sacrifice. I did manage to facetime with them which helped a little, despite my degraded physical and mental state, so I’ll take the small wins in lieu of having any big ones on that front for the foreseeable future.

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The Circle

When big ugly traumatic things happen to you, you find out who your people are. You find out who the people that actually show up for you are, the people that mean what they say and are sincere. During my divorce this became evident and after my cancer diagnosis it was almost overwhelming. I received a major outpouring of support in material goods, supplies, and money to help kick this journey off and it hasn’t fallen off.

I made a big deal about being able to mow my grass a couple entries ago. This benign chore was something I was proud to still be able to do because it meant I was functioning like a normal person. I knew under my new tube–fed reality that that portion of normalcy was being hung up for the time being. Fortunately I was able to call on Thomas to help me out.

Me and Thomas go way back to when we were both over-caffeinated E-4s in Hawaii and Iraq, addicted to blowing money on women, things that went fast, and booze… as a normal 20 year old soldier does pretty much everywhere in the U.S. Army since 1775. After we moved on we keep in touch through social media and eventually reconnected when I was reassigned to Washington, where he had gotten out of the Army and begun a career. Thomas has been one of the cornerstones of my post-divorce life. He was there for me during all the tough times and is still there for me now. There’s nothing I’ll be able to do to ever fully repay him for being one of the pillars in my support network during two massive crisis’ in my life.

Continental soldier and his stripper girlfriend in a Ford Mustang (circa 1777) – Craiyon AI

Another part of my circle came in to provide me some support this past weekend but from way out of town and way in my past, Ang. Me and Ang go back to freshman year of high school in rural west Michigan, where she was a sophomore cheerleader when I was on the freshman football team. We ran in some of the same friend circles because of these overlapping sports and usually had at least one class together- we even went to prom together one year before she graduated and I ran off to enlist in the Army. We’ve always stayed in touch and she always managed to send me a Christmas card of her and her daughter (who is now in college… Jesus… where did the time go?) 

For a little while those two had been talking about coming out to see Seattle and visit with me and right before I announced to people I had cancer she told me she’d booked a weekend trip up this way. Of course I had to tell her what was going to be going on right in the middle of the trip and how that part of it was moot, but decided we’d play it by ear. As the day got closer I knew traveling to meet anywhere was going to be a non-starter between my health and wanting to stay vigilant at avoiding public places.

Fortunately we were able to connect before her flight out Sunday. Given she’d been traveling and in very public places all weekend we went “full COVID protocol” and my mother masked her and sat her down in the opposite end of my living room from me. Despite my increased difficulties speaking we were able to have a fun reunion for a couple hours, and when I was too busy fighting off some sort of nausea spell my mom would pick up the conversational slack. I know it wasn’t my fault, but I did feel bad regardless for being in such a worthless state when she’s one of the few non-family people who have ever come to see me when I’ve been living elsewhere in the Army. Like I said, things like this help you find out who your people are.

Rena re-enters our story right about this time as well. Yesterday she came over to drop off flowers for my mom (who also got a bunch from Ang) and a get-well card from my hockey team. Of anyone in my circle, she is one of the few that have any idea what I’m enduring right now. She checks on me, and understands that I just don’t want to talk about it most of the time now in a way many people do not. Anyone going through this needs a Rena-esque figure to remind them that everything they are feeling is rational and that your aren’t going fucking crazy.

This is entering a phase that mirrors the low point in a deployment, psychologically. Every day is Groundhog’s Day where the pattern remains the same but there is no measurable progress. Everyone I know is moving right along with their lives while I mark time. I don’t leave the house other than to go to a medical appointment, I am rarely out of my bed, recliner, or passenger seat other than to move between them or perform some kind of hygiene-related activity. I have difficulty speaking so passing the time with conversations on the phone is a non-starter. I am truly just existing on this plain of reality until I, ostensibly, start recovery phase. After proton treatment this afternoon I have 13 more to go, and one chemo session, plus surviving the two weeks of residual effects of radiation and chemo, and then hopefully a scan or pathology report that says no cancer is detected. Then the long road to recovery begins, whatever that looks like.

There isn’t a lot of upside in my life right now, and I know that this won’t, hopefully, won’t be forever, but it’s hard to see the end when you’re in the middle of anything.

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The views and opinions presented herein are those of the author and do not necessarily represent the views of the Department of Defense or the U.S. Army.