I’ve been thinking about this entry ever since the previous one. The thing about this blog is it’s semi-anonymous, meaning, those who know me know it exists. There are sure to be some strangers who stumble onto this as they barrel through the internet, but they are probably the minority. When it comes to speaking about cancer-related subjects, my self-censorship is low but never zero, but personal subjects get a more sanitized treatment.
Why? Three reasons:
- When you’re a single dad, you have to have a healthy amount of paranoia about what parts of your life are public. What about my digital life can be weaponized against my visitation rights, me, or my wallet in a dispute with the ex? In many places, women are still the default residential parent and aren’t conditioned to have to look over their shoulders like many men are. But hey, that must be some more of that “privilege” I’ve heard so much about.
- As I opened this blog with several months ago, I’m an active duty Army officer (and Public Affairs Officer to boot). There are no shortage of people out there that wish to do my career, or me, harm because of what I do for a living or because of opinions I express that don’t align with theirs. A couple years ago I made the choice to no longer participate in many online discussion forums for this reason, and have muted my online presence to a decently high degree to prevent such a witch-hunt.
- You want to get something off your chest, but don’t want to discuss it further with anyone, so you avoid saying certain things to avoid that hassle of reliving these thoughts over text/phone/in-person.

Why do I bring this up?
It stunts me from treating this as a true unfiltered journal, and while there are a wealth of subjects I have a lot of nuanced thoughts on, at the end of the day most of them would only serve to harm me in some form or fashion- so we’re going to try and stick to the script here and keep this about the things on the title page of this blog.
Obviously this is the first time I’ve written anything in a while. Not for lack of interest- I have thoughts all the time that I think, “Oh, I should add that to the blog.” However, they get lost in the fog of fatigue and life as it happens around me, and they rarely make it in. A lot has happened, most of it positive in some way, but I am far from normal and my body isn’t shy of reminding me of that fact.
After an extended Father’s Day weekend with the kids they were back to their mother’s for the first half of summer break. I’m fortunate that I have the second half of summer with them this year specifically, given everything that’s transpired, but it doesn’t make it easier not having them around for so long. Now my contact is relegated to whenever their mother feels like answering the phone and acting like an adult that’s capable of communicating respectfully when she can’t, which has been challenging already.
I actually went to take them back to the exchange point after this last visit, despite only being able to drive part of the distance before my eyes started to act up from either the strain or some kind of mystery allergy. I’ve heard that chemo wipes out your allergies, but I am starting to think it’s just reddit bullshit from people who, like me, were shut in during allergy season and spared their normal seasonal allergies. Sneezing is just about the most painful thing in the world for someone like me, and I’ve had to try and hold in many to avoid the pain it causes in my throat.
A couple days after dropping the kids off my mom departed. I had gained enough medical clearance, and physical independence to do basic things for myself like nutrition, driving to appointments, and walking without any assistance. With the kids not needing to be picked up anymore until later in the summer, it was finally time for her to leave and return to her life in Florida where she and her husband are semi-retired. I was getting antsy to be back on my own prior to this, but I’m glad she hung on as long as she did; at times I’ve needed more help than I’m willing to admit.
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With my newfound independence I knew I had to redevelop routines long lost to the annals of time. I came up with a feeding routine that needed to accommodate my still very irritable throat with my caloric needs, and I mostly have. It started with just calorie shakes, oily and fluffy scrambled eggs, and ramen noodles but I’ve expanded the aperture of my diet slightly since starting that dietary regimen. Now I’m able to introduce finely shredded meats (think canned meats like tuna/salmon/chicken) as well as canned fruits like pear halves and peaches. All fruit products that have a lot of juice content, like canned fruits and apple sauce, still sting after a while because of the acidic nature of it, but it’s the only real way for me to get fiber and the vitamins that they offer in a way that doesn’t hammer my throat. I tried clam chowder for a while, but the potatoes just became too much. I’ve found I can make and eat runny instant mashed potatoes with generous amounts of gravy, but solid potatoes are very much a bridge too far.
I’ve gained five pounds for all this trouble and have seemed to hit a plateau. The nutritionist at the cancer center said one way over the hump would be to introduce exercise, but all I’m really cleared to do is go on walks for as long as I can tolerate. So I walk. I walk every morning, usually to the University of Puget Sound, a small college a little over a mile and a half from my house. I wake up, check my messages, and I walk. This route usually takes me about an hour. When I get home, I eat my eggs, do the dishes, and sit down to watch the morning news. Shortly after I try and do some sort of task or chore, if I don’t, it won’t get done until I’m done dozing off between breakfast and lunch. Speaking of, lunch is typically a pack or two of ramen and a can of fruit, and sometimes a boost calorie shake. Then back to vegging out, as now it’s the heat of the day here in the Pacific Northwest and going outside is hazardous to the skin on my neck without taking a bunch of precautions I just don’t feel like taking unless it’s necessary. That and it will increase my water intake, which is already over four liters per day due to my dry mouth and activity.
And let me tell you about fuckin water. There was a huge problem at the end of my treatment with not getting enough hydration, which is essential for the body to heal things like radiation burns inside your throat. I was doing my daily hydration appointments to get even a quarter of what I really needed, in fact, that was probably just keeping me alive at that point. It wasn’t until the feeding tube episode that I really began to turn my hydration around. Now that I’m drinking obscene amounts of water I am constantly on the other end of the equation, peeing multiple times an hour. Not little piddly streams either, these are grown man pees, and they happen all night long too. I wake up no fewer than three times per night to pee. I’m getting a taste of elderly life I think, and now I can understand why some of them are so goddamn angry all the time.
I also can’t go anywhere without water. It’s a literal showstopper to the point where I keep a case in my trunk not just for life/death emergencies like any other supply, but for when I rush out of the house without the only water bottle I have that fits in the cupholder of my car. I’ve become dependent on access to water like some people get chemically addicted to controlled substances. I can take morphine for days on end and have no withdrawals or cravings for it, but if I got more than 10 minutes without a sip of water it feels like I’m back in Iraq and the convoy just went black on water. (Note for civilians: “going black” means you’ve run out of some class of supply)

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So aside from being constantly tired, unable to gain any meaningful weight, always having to pee, being lightheaded when I stand up, and not being able to hear shit, I’m doing ok. My doctors are content-to-pleased with my progress and are keeping an eye on me regularly. I get my hearing aids next month, and I’m told they have bluetooth, which is exciting. Now when the kids are watching a movie on the tablet in the backseat I’ll have something other than road noise to keep me company. I’m sort of burying the lede on this whole update though: I got the feeding tube out.
After meeting with my oncologist in the middle of last week, I made a compelling case to finally get the tube out. It was absolutely priority number one for me going into that appointment, and I was keen on delivering that to myself. He put in the referral and later that day interventional radiation called me to schedule a removal for the next afternoon! I had no idea what it would entail or how I would feel during and immediately after, but I figured however it felt would be worth the cost of not having it in my body anymore. Nothing destroys your confidence like having a PEG tube hanging out of your abdomen. The weird bulge in the shirt, the discharge, the maintenance, all of it had to go. All and all it was a very smooth deal. The IR nurse had it out before I even knew what was going on! They said it would partially heal in 24-72 hours with a full heal taking about two weeks. So now I have a gunshot looking wound in my abdomen, but now I can roll around freely in my sleep and have a little more self-confidence. It’s not like it’s advisable for me to get laid right now, but I like having the possibility on the table. Tell your lady friends I’m back on the market. The clearance rack, but, still… the market.
However, the bad comes with the good, and I was told that the port had to stay until next year, after my one year PET scan. It wouldn’t limit me from doing anything that I want to get back to doing, but there is maintenance involved and wearing some backpacks can be uncomfortable if the straps are positioned wrong. It will be something I have to navigate or figure out workarounds for, but probably not a showstopper for when I start to resume the hobbies that bring me joy like hiking, hunting, and hockey.
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Nobody talks about the mental battle involved in all of this, at least, it’s not well-discussed. Granted, the physical impacts of every single step of this journey are known to a degree and shouldn’t be downplayed, but the mental part would be absolutely devastating if I hadn’t been through micro-doses of hell leading up to this whole scenario.
I’ve always been a bit of an independent spirit, content in my aloneness. Ever since I was young I was fine, or even preferred, playing alone at times and as I matured into an awkward teenager with poor social skills I didn’t accumulate a penchant for being in groups of peers all the time. Today this is called a “social battery” but mostly I just needed space to think. My psychologist said I’m a ‘thinker’ and I think he’s onto something. Now, I can adapt and survive to and with almost any social setting, but ever since I moved into my own place in late 2023 I have fiercely guarded my peace and independence within the limits of my ability to do so. Here’s where the dichotomy comes in: having cancer is a fundamentally lonely experience.
Yes, I was supported by my amazing mom throughout treatment and the early part of my recovery, and I had dozens of friends and family send care packages and check in on me in person and telephonically. My coworkers visited me during hospital appointments at the Army hospital, and a hodge podge of each member of a community I’m part of showed up at my bell ringing during my last radiation session. But, at the end of the day you go through this alone. Only other patients and survivors actually know what you’re going through. There’s no other way to experience this other than going through it. You can have empathy, understanding, and be supportive of someone going through this, but you can’t know the psychological toll it takes on them. (Note: I swear the next person that tries to relate to me with their story of losing their taste buds during COVID is going to get me arrested)
Now amplify this with two children under ten, a co-parent that does not always act logically or rationally, being a commissioned Army officer in the current domestic and geopolitical climate, relationship woes, and any other stressor you can imagine… and remember that while all this is going on you are a hostage in your own body and have harsh limitations on what is safe or prudent to do. My cortisol levels have probably been off the charts since December.
Why do I bring this up? If I act recklessly, I could return to my old self almost immediately, at least within the limits of my ability to do so. It would almost certainly result in a complication or setback, or possibly even a potentially fatal accident as I’d be effectively burning the candle at both ends. If I act on the guidance of my doctors and medical team, sure I’ll likely survive through the end of the first part of recovery, but the amount of joy I experience daily is cut down 95%. Let me expand below.
I played video games a lot as a kid and young man, but I started to grow out of it in my mid-20s and had fully grown out of it by the time I turned 30. Not counting deployments, I’d have spurts here and there where I’d go down the rabbit hole on a game, but by and large my dopamine rushes came from being present with my kids and spending time outdoors. I have played a lot of video games during this experience and in the last 3-4 weeks I can barely be bothered to look at the TV. When I made hockey a part of my life right as my marriage was beginning to end, it really took over my life in the best way. It’s sunny and nice out now, this is the time of year when I should be scouting every weekend and playing summer league hockey and getting circles skated around me at drop-ins. Instead, aside from taking my morning walks, I sit inside making up chores to do in between naps and meals. I’m so burned out on video games, the news cycle, and the same uninteresting movies/shows on streaming apps. I can’t take any more screen-based stimulation.
This whole mental state is undoubtedly exacerbated by the fact that I don’t have kids right now and haven’t since father’s day. I am not allowed to have pets, so a dog would’ve been a great solution, but this place I rent is too good for me to throw it away rashly for what I plan on being a temporary condition. Being a single father is not only all-consuming during visitation, but they are frequently on my mind on days and evenings I don’t have them. To add to this, their mother has been less cooperative with facilitating our video calls lately and it’s been wearing me out emotionally.
I have a great tribe of people here I’ve developed over the last couple years since my marriage ended. My ex was never comfortable around “my people” and often made excuses to not go out, not wanting to have someone watch the kids, or would generally just insist I go alone. This made building a community challenging as the dynamic was such that staying home was better than going to spend time with peers, because what would be happening on the other side of my phone ended up not being worth the stress.
That tribe, however, has moved on like the rest of the world while I’ve been treading water. I’m a bit of a social burden: nobody knows what I can eat, what I can do, and what I’m capable of. I don’t blame that mindset whatsoever, because in large part yes- I cannot do big sexy hiking trips, or enjoy a barbeque banquet, or spend a huge amount of time in the sun (without getting extraordinarily tired and having to pee every 15 minutes). I probably feel like this because the first person that wasn’t my mom or Thomas came by to see me this afternoon: Rena. She told me about her recent scan (if you’ll recall from earlier posts, she had cancer in her 20s and has to get semiannual PETs), the logistical headaches of managing the ladies hockey league, local politics, and some of the characters we both know. It was nice to just have an uninterrupted conversation with a fresh face. When she left I took a nap and then ate dinner, watched the news, and began to finish this entry that has taken me four different sit-downs to finish and weeks of thinking to put together.
This isn’t the end of this journey, and I will have a lot more to say over the next two months. This is, however, the end of this entry because I could keep at this all night at the rate at which my mind is moving.
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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.

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