CPT Cancer

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

Category: Remission

Life in recovery and remission.

  • Remission 3

    I’m only sort of talking about cancer when I say that– more on that in a minute though. 

    See, when you start to reach a point in your journey where you start to feel like you’re breaking through plateaus, that’s when life starts to feel somewhat normal again. You can do the old things you used to do, sure, but they’re… different. Lately, I’m starting to feel less different in a lot of ways, and it feels good.

    Now, that’s not to say I’m anywhere near an approximation of “old me” in many ways, but there are some notable changes:

    • The quality of volume of my saliva and mucus is starting to improve, and I don’t have to scrub the buildup off of my tongue daily. 
    • My taste is starting to claw back some flavors, or at least essences, even if it is easily the biggest lag of all my treatment side effects so far. 
    • My fatigue hasn’t improved much, but my ability to manage it has. I drink about double the caffeine that pre-cancer me used to, which is an increase of two cups of coffee per day to four or five, and about half the week I’m not waking up to pee three or four times per night. 
    • My short term memory recall is still ass, but I’m getting better about writing things in my Notes app or on a physical notebook.
    • I’ve gained a whopping two pounds. Only fifteen more to go.

    I’m averaging about one hockey game per week, and I am ruthlessly enforcing my limits out there. In beer league there can be a tendency for guys to stay “on shift” (out on the ice) too long, but I am the opposite. Rarely do I lose track of time; if I sense I’m close to two minutes into a shift I look for the first opportunity to climb back over the wall– less if I’ve had to defend a breakaway on that shift. I wish I could get back to being someone who could handle defending multiple rushes per shift, but it’s going to be a while before I’m that guy again.

    I haven’t prioritized going into the woods since the opening weekend of elk archery but tomorrow I’m skipping out on being responsible for a day to try and find a bear in a unit I haven’t visited in a couple years to try my luck in the pouring rain. My intentions are pure– take it easy, be deliberate in all that I do, and do not take anything even resembling a risky decision. The weather will be against me and the Olympic rainforest is absolutely unforgiving in the fall; this is not the time to press my luck. If God decides I’ve been patient enough these last five years maybe my next entry will be written cloaked in a bear skin– or maybe my next entry will be titled, “how to activate your Garmin InReach SOS.” My guess is it will be something in between, given my luck. (Author’s note: This did not happen, I woke up after four hours of sleep, saw it was storming outside, and decided I was going to take a rest day.)

    Speaking of taking risks, it’s time to expand more on the cliffhanger from last week: Sarah.

    ============

    Hoo boy. What a journey. As of this writing it’s been over one calendar month since I decided to pull the trigger on telling Sarah how I felt. Despite the loss of confidence, my body image issues, my emotional baggage, and my extreme desire to not fuck up a good friendship… I decided to go for it.

    The existential crisis that cancer presents you with is different than an acute one like a car accident, combat, or bad fall. Sure, you can walk away from those things with a new outlook on life, especially if they require a long recovery due to injury, or if there was some sort of psychological scarring– but cancer hit me differently than any of those things. I was a hostage in my own body to a very dangerous and unpredictable assailant, and just like is the case in many hostage rescues, the rescuers can do just as much damage as the hostiles.

    I say all of that because when I decided to go for it after two weeks of deliberating, including a couple conversations with my psychologist and cognitive therapist, my calculation of what I decided an acceptable risk was had changed significantly from “old me.” Now the fear of the “what if” and “things left unsaid/undone” is a massively weighted factor in my decision making cycle. I could have five months left, five years, or fifty years– I don’t know. It’s not unlikely that God has fixed the time and place of my death so living like I’m trying to compete against that feels pointless.

    As an Army officer we are conditioned to always plan off of the “most dangerous course of action” so that we are prepared to deal with the less severe “most likely course of action.” This trains your mind to only see the most devastating impacts of being wrong, and does not do much to reinforce a positive mindset that tells you what is at stake if you don’t take that big risk.

    I went from feeling 2025 was going to be the undisputed champion of, “shittiest year of my life” to “wow, life comes at you fast.” The last couple years of being close friends made the transition to “couple” almost effortless and just about completely deleted the courtship phase of the relationship. Now, I still do take her on a date every week, and we are planning out future overnight travels, but we were so comfortable together already that the trust and respect was already pre-positioned– all we had to do was explore the romantic/intimate side of our new situation.

    In a lot of ways, “new me” extends beyond what I physically bring to the table now. There’s also been a massive spiritual, emotional, and moral shift. I’m making big, bold, decisions that were somewhat uncharacteristic of old me. At work life, with my personal life, and with my romantic life. What I mean is, I’m trying to do this the “right way” for once.  She has the advantage of knowing a ton about me already through osmosis and general conversation when we were “just friends” but I committed to being vulnerable right off the bat with her and becoming completely transparent. The good, the bad, the ugly– I disclosed everything over the first week of our new relationship. Get it all out there now, fuck it, nobody can say later I was holding anything back and coming at this without the purest of intentions.

    The flip side to this is that instead of slowly releasing the codes to the bombs, I just dumped them all into her lap. She possesses every key now. But that’s what love is, right? Giving someone the means to destroy you and trusting them not to?

    This blog isn’t primarily focused on relationships, but that is part of the journey. This is part of the journey. She is part of the journey now. She’s expressed a deep regret over not “being there more for you” when I was sick, but she’s also not the first person to say that… and that’s ok. Everyone has their own lives, their own crisis to manage, their own priorities. There’s a very short list of people I’m disappointed in for not showing up for me more, and she’s not on it.

    ============

    There have been a slew of medical occurrences since I last posted an entry. Three times per week I’m receiving physical rehab (strength training and conditioning), once weekly I see a cognitive therapist, once every 3-4 weeks I see an outpatient psychologist, and most recently I did my check-in with the ENT.  ENT, per tradition, scoped me and gave me an ultrasound. Three times each, to be precise. Once was the resident, once the resident and the chief, and once just the chief. 

    You might remember LTC Sierra, chief of ENT at the Army hospital, from earlier in our tale. She’s still there, and as usual she was in to see me after the resident was done with his initial run. Long story short, she thinks I’m fine but wanted to possibly biopsy me again because she doesn’t like the look of the lymph node that was treated when the cancer metastasized. She told me she’d deliberate on it, consult some colleagues, and get back to me. Great. Grand. Wonderful. NO MORE CANCER ON THE BUS.

    That friday she ended up calling me back and told me that she ruled out a biopsy, but wanted to get in touch with Dr Panner (RadOnc) at the cancer center to see if they could order some sort of fancy new blood test to see if it was, you know, cancer again. I haven’t heard back on this in a couple weeks, but I have another PET in a couple weeks, so inshallah, I guess.

    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.

  • Remission 2 – Part 2: The Choice

    (Warning: This is another long entry. There’s a lot to unpack here, so bare with me. Some of it is related to cancer, but skippable if that’s solely what you’re here for.)

    I’m lost, but I know where I’m going.

    This is a continuation of the last entry because things happen in here that pre- and post- date the hunt, but did not fit with that narrative, at least not cohesively, and I thought it important to tell that story as a whole instead of jumbling the absolute mess this entry is going to be. This one is going to be heavy, and you have time to bail now if that’s not the space you’re in right now to be reading it. Sorry, but you’ve been warned.

    ============

    Fuck it, We Ball

    The day after I dropped the kids back off with their mom I went to a drop-in skate (a scrimmage, for those that aren’t wholly familiar with hockey) to see what I was made of on the ice against live competition. 

    I did this once in July and it was a train wreck. I was extremely winded, and didn’t even make it a whole hour before skating to the locker room, going home, and sleeping for ten hours. My goal was to make it at least an hour of the 1:15 session. When I showed up I ran into a bunch of old teammates and friendly faces that were happy to see me out there and giving it a shot. There were some less than stellar moments, but overall I managed to keep my feet under me against far more skilled players.

    I knew at some point I’d be able to play again, but I didn’t expect it to be this soon; I made it to the hour mark thanks to some deep benches and short shifts. I burned through my water at remarkable speed but I expected that. Shifts at drop ins tend to be longer because there are no set lines, just a rotation from the bench, so I could take short (45 second) shifts and rest without guilt knowing some gomer was going to take a four minute shift without a second thought.

    Fast forward two weeks.

    Originally I’d killed and buried the idea of playing in the league at all this season: the cost outweighed the benefits; I could never make enough games to make it worth it. Then the fuckers did it. They released the October league schedule and of course, right on cue, it was actually a makable schedule for me with weeknight and late Sunday games. It took very little encouragement for my old team to start cheerleading me into playing another season, so the night before the first game I could make I signed up.

    The primary rink my league plays games in is less than ten minutes from my house, so it’s not a major logistical movement to get there. I can leave 30 minutes before a game and still have time to get dressed and ready if I don’t waste any time. The locker rooms on one half of the building are comically small though and we were using that sheet of ice (there are two under one roof) so I decided to give myself some cushion and work my way into the room. Some of my old teammates, now on a different team, were playing and they waved at me as I walked down the corridor beside the glass to the rooms. It felt good to be back among friendly faces doing something I love to do.

    My team was composed mostly of new faces this season. Some of the “OGs” were there and were very happy to see me on this side of the dirt, and some of the new people had only heard of me as “the cancer guy.” Either way, I was ecstatic to be there, and a little apprehensive about what the night would bring.

    I’m a defenseman. If you’re not familiar with hockey, it’s basically what it sounds like. When my team is on the offense, I am supposed to prevent the opposition from breaking the puck out by camping on the blue line or being deeper than the deepest cherry-picking dickhead that is hanging out in the neutral zone looking for a cheap breakaway goal. This can involve a “footrace” of sorts where we find out who is faster and confident enough to stop once at terminal velocity, so as you might imagine I was a little worried about having too many footraces in the game from a stamina standpoint.

    Fortunately the team we were playing was roughly our skill level, and the match was tilted evenly enough where I didn’t find myself in a sprint often enough to put a significant dent into my overall fatigue level in-game, and only once did I rotate myself to the end of the bench for extra rest (in league games we have pre-determined lines, I was in the first line of defensive pairing, a “starter” if you will).

    I made a couple bonehead plays, and a couple of really good ones, but on the whole I was having a blast- even when I was doing really stupid shit on the ice like accidentally screening my goalie or leaving someone from the other team alone on the ‘back door’ (the back door is the side of the net that the goalie is not actively defending).

    We ended up winning 5-3 after holding onto our lead, and we bumped fists with everyone on the ice before retiring to the locker room. I was given “defensive player of the game” despite the fact that I think I was -2 or -3 but hey I’ll take a sympathy ballot over nothing, and now I have this Mjolnir hammer that’s colored like a Rainier Beer can in my hockey bag until next week.

    ============

    Let’s go back to Part 1 where I mentioned… her… because she plays a pretty big part in this entry. We’ll call her Sarah for the purposes of this blog out of the interest of her privacy (and mine). Me and Sarah have known each other for a while, and were always strictly platonic friends. We’d started speaking more toward the end of the summer about the trials and tribulations of life, relationships, my recovery, and anything else you can think of.

    I was in the process of trying to set her up with Thomas when, while trying to sell the idea to him over the course of the hunt, I’d realized that I had actually had strong feelings for her right in front of my face that I’d previously not acknowledged. I’d never thought of her that way before, but it was like the Titanic hitting an iceberg– slowly each compartment of my mind began to spill over with her likeness until I was drowning in turmoil over it.

    Those of you who have fallen hard for someone who was previously a close friend, but you’d never seen as anything but, know that it hits you like a sledgehammer: the stress of the weight of the decision to act… or not. It’s like a stone on your chest that gets heavier with every passing moment.

    For two weeks I’d wrestled with the consequences of telling her. I tried to talk myself out of it, I tried to convince myself that she’d never go for it. After all, I am largely still a broken person– medically speaking– and nobody my age wants to jump into the middle of this renovation project, right? Fatigue, brain fog, drymouth, dietary restrictions, random lightheadedness– I’m a mess! Oh, and if that wasn’t enough, the baby-mama drama is enough around these parts to push anyone away. Right…?

    Well. Maybe not… at least, not as far as God is concerned. Or my psychologist at behavioral health, or my cognitive therapist…

    ============

    Woo Woo Shit: Revisited

    So, for the first time publicly, I’m going to make a huge confession that is probably going to shock the people that have known me well for years: I am making an effort to get right with God. My recent posts have hinted at this a little bit, but I’d made a promise to myself before treatment that if I made it out from the other side of this thing that I was to “get correct with the lord” as it were.

    Over the Labor Day holiday I finally decided to call the only person I’d trusted at the time to help me dip my toes into this world: my uncle.  It was known to me he was getting more involved with the Catholic church recently and it seemed logical to bounce all this off of him and ask his thoughts on how I was to get started down this path.  Religion was largely foreign to me– my parents never raised me in it despite being raised in Catholicism themselves; I had no foundation to build on.

    After talking to him for about an hour, I was completely relieved: he did not try to recruit me, and even told me to make sure I approached this with care. He recommended a Bible podcast and answered all the questions he felt qualified to answer, and I was on my way.

    Shortly thereafter I made contact with the Army chaplain that blessed my throat as mentioned early in this story, and we sat down for lunch one day to discuss how I should move forward. Like my uncle, he agreed that it wasn’t prudent to just whole-ass jump right into it. It would take lots of study and even then, there were still some big milestones I might not ever choose to pursue (within the Catholic faith).

    Me and the chaplain discussed how to reconcile logic, reason, the scientific method, and faith– there was no way I’d be able to approach it any other way. I am a firm believer in science, always have been, always will be, but the gap between what science tries to explain and what is unknown is still too wide for me to just buy into the big bang. Why and how??? “Trust me bro” is basically what science says, which has at least equal footing with the idea that there is a divine spirit engineering this gong show.  

    Deciding to believe in God is how I’ve chosen to rationalize so much of this unknown. Without going too much into it in this entry, he has very much made himself known to me in very plain, very obvious ways lately. I struggle more and more with believing in coincidence, and the further I drift from that, the closer I drift toward the belief that maybe, just maybe, he has big plans for me. Or, at the very least, some sort of plan– to be determined, I’m sure my guardian angel will hold an IPR with the Saints sometime soon to iron out the next quarter of FY26.

    More to follow on this development in a future entry, but that’s where my head is at right now (my atheist/agnostic friends would probably argue my head is firmly up my ass right now, which, ok, fine, but new year new me– you’ll get over it; I’m still gonna send you unhinged shit on Instagram).

    Ironically, I have played hockey with a guy that looks just like this in goal.

    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.

  • Remission 2 – Part 1: The Hunt

    (Warning: This is a LONG entry. So much so that I’m breaking it into two and releasing them a bit apart. Their relation to cancer or recovery is a stretch in some spots, so if that’s what you’re here for you can probably skip most of it.)

    The Hunt

    The day started simply enough, work was slow, probably exacerbated by the fact that I was watching the clock… waiting. As soon as our office close out was complete I stuck around a little bit to talk with a coworker about my coparenting woes and then I was off post as quickly as I could be. I had shit to do. It was the day before the western Washington archery elk season opening day. 

    The night prior I’d gotten everything packed and staged by my front door, ready to be packed up in Thomas’ truck on short notice. We were going up to my favorite hunting spot together and spending Friday through Sunday night in a wilderness area that bordered a national park. 

    See, my theory about elk in Washington since I got here in 2021 is that they spend all year in the National Forest, and then the night prior to opening day they run into the national parks, where hunting is forbidden. I’ve set up accordingly, finding natural funnels near park boundaries where I hope to interdict one on its mission to flee the orange army (I’m using that term broadly, hunter orange is not required during archery seasons in areas that don’t overlap with a rifle season). 

    Thomas has lived in this area since he left the Army over ten years ago. He’s got a wide base of experience in many areas of Washington, but he’d never been up here before. We’ve scouted together several times before, but never actually hunted together. This was an exciting first, and incredibly helpful for me as he has a truck that could carry both of our bikes out to our starting point. It’s always comforting when you don’t have to camp alone, and are also able to share resources to lighten the load. 

    After loading up my gear, we hit the road. It was a little over an hour to the terminus of an abandoned forest service road where we would park the truck (they’ve constructed a berm to deter people from going in and running into the many washouts). Upon getting to the berm my heart sank a little because I saw something I didn’t see last year… trucks. The ad hoc parking area was full once we had parked. The many fires in the area no doubt have been pushing hunters out of their planned hunts and this was likely the case as this area is largely unmolested by humans most of the year. 

    I changed into my hunting clothes, got ready, and took off. Thomas was on a human-power mountain bike (I have a minibike, which is a 196cc motor on a moped frame and fat off-road tires; I’ve modified it to be a hunting rig with racks, saddlebags, and a milk crate bungied to it for cargo storage) so he would be far behind me but after I set up my tent we planned for me to come back down the trail and relieve him of his pack so he could make better time. 

    I knew with the bike being heavier than usual, despite my lighter pack, that this would be a challenging venture for me. The road has five significant washouts, and getting the bike up and down them without load is a little perilous at times. Add in my degraded state, the heavier load, and the fading daylight and I knew the game was on. 

    The first four washouts went about how I expected- a pain in the ass but nothing I hadn’t felt before in the past. The fifth, I had always known since the days of coming up here on foot, was going to be the real test and boy was it a doozy. To add to the already treacherous nature of the washout, part of the path that was crucial to navigating it had collapsed into the wash. 

    Fuck. 

    I knew right away there was no way on god’s green earth that I was going to make it around this new obstacle with any extra weight on the bike, including the rider. I unloaded all the gear, my bow, the crate, and took off the packs on my person. I made a few attempts at getting the bike up an embankment by gunning the gas while walking beside it but the hill was having none of it. At this point I was already pouring in sweat trying to will this bike up the hill when I decided that this was the last washout and I was, ostensibly, home free after I cleared it. I shut the bike off and grabbed a number of pieces of deadfall and stones and built up the soft soil I was trying to manhandle the bike up to get around the new caved in area. This feat of primitive engineering worked with some patience, horsepower, and repeatedly giving the minibike motivational speeches such as, “come on you fuckin’ bastard.” 

    Eventually I was to the other side of the washout and I walked back across to grab all the items I’d downloaded to make it possible. It was then I did… something… to my knee. It hurt a little, but my ability to bear weight was unaffected so I rode on. This later proved to be a sprained ACL (more on this in Part 2).

    After getting to the area I’d identified prior as our campsite I got to work. The light was fading fast and I needed to get at least my half of camp sorted before I could turn around and relieve Thomas. Once that was done I set some chem lights out as markers to our camp and started back down the hill. I found Thomas much further down than I’d expected, walking beside his bike. He greatly overestimated his and the bike’s ability to work together to get up the 3,000 foot elevation gain over the span of about five miles. I took his pack from him and jetted back to camp which was still two and a half miles away. Upon return I tore into his pack, getting him set up with the faint glow of light I had left plus my headlamp. I figured it would take him roughly an hour to get to the camp so I once again set out to meet him, this time on foot, carrying just my headlamp, pistol, and one of his water bottles. 

    Right as I exited the trail to our camp, a woman was walking down the road with her own headlamp. I found this… strange. (didn’t most of them pick the bear?) She had no pack, no obvious weapons (although it was dark by now), and was just walking down the road alone. I introduced myself and she said she was walking back to her truck after dropping off and helping her husband and his friend set up their camp. They’d come up on dirt bikes but didn’t want to leave their truck at the bottom because of an unfortunate experience with vandalism in the past. 

    She (Michelle) said her husband, during his last run, had mentioned stopping and talking to a guy pushing a mountain bike and I told her it was likely my friend and that I was on my way to meet him. We continued walking together until we ran into Thomas, and Michelle continued down the trail while I took the bike from Thomas and walked with him the last quarter mile into camp. He was a little earlier than I’d expected, seeing as it was now 2130ish, but we still didn’t have a ton of time to get settled and to sleep. We chatted a bit, prepared for the next day, and eventually went to sleep. 

    Night time in the forest is not as loud as some would believe, in fact in my experience the quiet can be almost complete silence. Friday night was virtually silent other than a couple guys, on what sounded like e-bikes, making a couple runs up and down the road. I say it sounded like because they weren’t gas-motorized and I decided to forgo my hearing aids for this trip. I figured they would just amplify the wrong things, like my own footsteps, or get lost/broken. 

    I think I drifted off to sleep a little before midnight and woke back up around 0350 when I heard either the world’s loudest cow elk or some dildo practicing his “mew” (that is roughly the phonetic sound a female elk makes) in a bugle tube. I dozed for about 30 minutes more after that before naturally waking up at 0445. My alarm was set for five so I decided to just get moving. Thomas started to stir a little before five, probably due to my noise and light. Once we both emerged from our tents, he threw on a small collapsible pot of coffee he’d packed in and served them in collapsible cups. We sipped on our coffee and I ate a Mountain House blueberry cereal I had left over from last year. I added enough water to eat it with ease, and the nutritionist I saw that Wednesday on my rehab team would be happy to know that I finally started adding a starch to my breakfast. 

    I brushed my teeth, packed my kit and bow onto the bike, wished my brother good luck, and took off two miles in the dark to my trailhead. 

    Morning is my favorite time of day. My teenage self would undoubtedly be in utter disbelief to hear me say that, but it’s true. It’s even more true in the wilderness. You really get to watch the world wake up unencumbered by the sounds of humanity aside from airliners passing high overhead. There are few experiences like this in life. 

    As I cable locked the bike to a tree and started up the trailhead the glow of the morning was very subtly appearing overhead. As I rounded the second switchback on the trail I had a perfect view of the river valley in the distance and the glow was just beginning to outline the surrounding ridges. As much as I wish I could have sat there and watched the entire sequence, the clock was ticking. Elk, like most animals, are most active in the morning and evening. I didn’t have to hurry, but time was against me. 

    As I reached the alpine lake near where I’d planned to sit, I started looking for signs of people. The ground along the banks was too dry to betray any recent footsteps or animal prints with any sort of recency. I say that I started looking for people because there were two tents at the trailhead and I didn’t see any signs of people, so that means they were ahead of me or opted not to investigate the minibike that parked across the dirt area from them. My money was on that they were ahead of me. Fuck. Nothing pains a hunter more than another hunter being in “your spot.” As I descended back into the dark timber where I was relying on a path I’d memorized to get to the meadow I’d planned to overwatch, I began to really focus. Focus on my steps, my surroundings, and begin looking for signs of animals. 

    I keep using “animals” and “elk” interchangeably here because archery elk season overlaps with archery deer, bear, cougar, and small game seasons. I wasn’t planning on being picky. My freezer was empty save a few cases of electrolyte popsicles left over from my earlier treatment days. I am ready to take a break from industrial agriculture for a while, and Bambi’s dad would make a fine burger …as would any of his forest friends. 

    I got to the meadow opening and nocked an arrow just in case. As I was slowly walking along the edge of the meadow, I hear a snap to my right and see a guy sitting square in “my spot.” 

    You. fuckin’. bitch. God dammit. 

    I pointed to my trial camera and quietly took it down from the tree it was on just about ten yards from him. I picked my gear back up, used a hand gesture to indicate that I was going up the draw, to which he gave his approval with a thumbs up. There’s no legal reason I had to seek his approval, it’s all public land after all, but the fact is he put in the work to get there first and I wasn’t going to be a dick and ruin his hunt because I was mad he got there first. 

    I relocated 150 yards south and about 40 feet up from him. If this were rifle season that would be wholly inadequate for safety and etiquette, but during archery that is close to three times the distance most bow hunters will comfortably shoot. I found a log to sit beside, dropped my gear, pulled the SD card from the camera and pulled my tablet out to see what’s transpired in the seven weeks since it was put up. 

    I was absolutely blown away. A bachelor herd of three bulls that were all 5×5 or better seem to be regular visitors in the evenings, with a small herd of blacktail visiting when the elk aren’t occupying the meadow. There was footage of the elk fighting with their antlers or otherwise horsing around (heh) with either, a black bear and her cub, and the same pair being chased by a cinnamon coat black bear later on. The most significant capture was one of the last videos the camera took before the SD card filled up: a large adult cougar moving through the grass. It was an absolute unit; something you hope never decides to pay you a visit unannounced. I knew they were up here, by sign and probability, but to actually get one on film was pretty astounding.

    Death stalks the land.

    I remained in overwatch for a couple hours before I started getting a little chilly and bored, so I slowly and deliberately hand-railed the meadow around the half opposite the other hunter and continued on, following game trails to more small glades and benches in the topography. Eventually my knee ache really started distracting me; I decided to return to the meadow and sit on the opposite end of it from where I was previously. I figured since the other hunter was going to take prime real estate in the meadow, I’d sit on a hill overlooking the two trails game would use to get to it, in order to intercept anything before it walked in. Checkmate motherfucker.

    Thomas made brief radio contact with me once he started walking around an elevated area nearish to me, but probably a couple miles away in straight line distance. He sounded frustrated and I started to feel bad for him. This area was my idea and so far the only thing we’d gotten out of it was kick-ass footage from my trail camera. You can’t turn that into burgers, though, unfortunately. Then, I noticed I’d conducted my annual ritual of losing a hat.

    One of my least favorite hunting traditions is the annual loss of a hat. Every hunting season I lose a hat. Without fail I get too warm, I clip it to my belt, go through some kind of brush where it gets silently ripped off, and I am now without a hat for the rest of the hunt. This time I’d lost yet another “good” hat sometime while traversing a gentle old growth knob off of the main game trail I was following. Every. Damn. Year.

    As the sun dipped below the ridge I decided to start making my way out. There was no sign of any kind of recent activity and I didn’t want to be walking back in the darkness with a bum knee in my already degraded state of general poor stamina. Thanks cisplatin, you really are the gift that keeps giving! 

    By the time I got back to the bike and down the hill the sun had fallen below the horizon. Thomas was already at the camp boiling water for his meal and I settled in so we could talk about our respective hunts.  I ate after him- some kind of dehydrated “Pad Thai” I picked up at the PX because it was calorie dense. I still couldn’t taste much of it, but it did enough to placate my hunger; 900 calories is 900 calories.

    We talked a bit longer about the day, other hunts, future hunts, the plan for tomorrow, and other topics as the darkness started to soak into the dark timber around us.

    Right as we both zipped into our tents we heard it: the rumble of thunder. This wasn’t, by itself, alarming because we’d listened to distant thunder most of the morning. The Garmin forecast gave us only a 30% chance of being hit by a thunderstorm, so we decided by the time we saw that our odds were such that we’d stay and hope it would miss us again like it had in the morning.

    Hope is my least favorite planning factor.

    Before long there was lightning all around, thunder rolling, and a nonstop downpour making it impossible to hear anything but the impact on the tent. Trees were cracking and groaning. More lightning. More thunder. More rain. It went without end. We were at 5,000 feet and mother nature was letting us have it for the audacity to spend another night in her majestic presence.  The only reason we were able to fall asleep at all was our extreme exhaustion.  That was probably around 2200– roughly an hour into the storm.

    At 0300 I woke up. Something was different. That something was silence. Just as quickly as it had come on, the storm blew eastward and the fog moved in to replace it. I peaked out of my tent and saw that Thomas’ tent was still intact; satisfied he was probably still alive I tried to go back to sleep. I dozed for a couple more hours before waking up and putting my clothes on. Thomas got to work almost immediately on the coffee. It was at least ten degrees colder and we were in various states of damp from condensation or the downpour.

    We made a few alterations to our plan and started discussing what the end of the hunt looked like. The realization that we were not likely to be successful started to sink in but… maybe… maybe. We had to try. Why go through all of this if we weren’t going to at least try?

    I went down a long abandoned road, overtaken by grass and fallen timber. I knew it well. Last summer I about shook hands with a cow elk down here. I knew there were deer and at least one bear in here. I had to try. It was dead silent. The rain had since stopped. I put my wet weather gear into my pack and continued. “Keep going until you have to turn around so you don’t bust time,” I told myself. I wasn’t going to give up without milking every last drop out of this hunt.

    Then the first time I remember her creeping into my thoughts, at least since the last time we’d communicated a couple innocuous text messages through my Garmin, happened. “She’d love this,” I said to myself as I stood peering down the trail that was shrouded in mist and lined on both sides by dark timber. I smiled. No one was there to ask why, but I knew, and that was enough.

    More on that in Part 2.

    I got to the point I could go no further before I’d start seriously bumping into the time I promised Thomas I’d meet him at an area about halfway down the main road that we’d nicknamed, “The Quarry” due to the way the rocks had collapsed into a depression at a fork in the trail. I made my way back to the minibike and went back to camp. Thomas had already packed up his camp and left the items we’d agreed would go back down with me. I collapsed the remainder of my camp and loaded up the bike, and away I went.

    Soon enough I caught up to Thomas at The Quarry right around the time two younger hunters on e-Bikes had as well. We all stopped and talked together for a while; they got their shit rocked by the storm too and we shared some laughs over what an abject failure of a weekend it was.

    We wished them luck and kept going down the road. It was time to go. Thomas spied a doe but wasn’t able to get a shot off. The game had left and whatever remained was likely blown out by the storm to lower elevations. There’s a point where you tell yourself you’ll try again later, but in the back of your mind you don’t know when, if ever, that try will come. It’s self-soothing. A coping mechanism, perhaps.

    With extraordinary difficulty despite our combined power, we got the bike up the troubled washout. We stayed mostly together, both coasting, through the rest of the trail. When we got to the flat part at the bottom that still resembled a road I hit the gas and took off. I needed to get some frustration out and it had been a long time since I’d gone fast on something with two wheels.

    With that, the truck was in view, the trip was over. We talked to some other hunters at the bottom, changed, packed up, and left. I navigated us to a coffee stand in the mountain town nearest my hunting area and we enjoyed this trapping of civilized life. We drove back to my house and discussed work, plans, women, and life. We were beat. My knee was stiff as hell, and I still needed to get my gear dried out.

    Knowing full well I had no interest in doing it later, I went ahead and turned the inside of my garage into a homeless encampment with lines hanging from the rafters, gear taken apart hanging on hooks, gear on the table, everything unpacked and carefully placed to dry out.

    It’s still like that. It’s more than two weeks later. Fuck it. I’ll get around to it.

    What does any of this have to do with cancer? Well, it doesn’t, at least not in a way that makes sense but anyone but me. This was a weekend I didn’t even think was going to be possible over much of the spring and summer. I know I’m capable of incredible things because I will simply will myself through it, but I know that all the willpower in the world wouldn’t keep my body in check for as long as it used to. Stamina, fatigue, my unique diet, my insatiable thirst– all barriers to going back as far as I’d wanted. I didn’t think I’d get to do this trip at all. But I did. That was the only big win I got, however.

    In hindsight, my spraining my ACL on this trip was probably a blessing: it saved me from outstripping my water supply by ranging further. It saved me from outstripping my energy levels and making a serious mistake. Divine intervention? Maybe. Being weaker overall because of my overall health situation? Probably. Either one isn’t being ruled out. Both might have saved me from doing something monumentally stupid in the woods so I could continue writing this blog entry that is probably going to fuck up my life a little bit by the end of Part 2.

    I don’t know where I am, but I know exactly where I am.

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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.

  • Remission 1

    (Author’s Note: This was written over the course of several days so there may be some inconsistencies with present tense)

    NED

    Hi sports fans, it’s been a little bit but I’ve been thinking about this entry daily since I pressed “publish” on the last one.

    I’m going to bury the lede here a little bit because we have a lot to go through, but if you’ve been on a ride at  Cancerworld you know this is an overall good update based on the title.

    It’s been almost a month since my last update. I was dealing with some big feelings and preparing for the next week and the ominous first post-treatment PET scan. Life has improved a bit since then on most fronts, so forgive me while most of this is going to be in the past tense covering the month of August to this point and then wrapping up with a look toward the future. These entries aren’t going to stop; I’ve made a commitment to see this through to its natural end: either being declared “cured” in five years or my untimely death from a recurrence. Ideally the former, but, god has seen fit to continue my character development side-quests with regularity so you never know. I feel like I owe to someone that will read this in the future that just got their diagnosis and needs perspective on the complete journey.

    I’m not going to belabor the PET scan’s finer points that I’ve covered in depth earlier in this tale, but at least this time I had the benefit of experience. The fasting wasn’t so bad this time around because I knew what to expect and game planned a little better, and my dad was on the ground to help me manage my energy levels by doing grandpa shit with my kids over the course of the first week of August which was a tremendous help. The first week of this month was probably the most consequential of my recovery phase in terms of discovering what my current condition actually was.

    While I was slightly bummed I had to retain my chest port, it really does make all these post-treatment medical happenings a breeze. Anytime a doctor, nurse, or medical treatment facility wants to sink a line in me I don’t have to worry about PFC Fuckknuckles or 2LT Lastinnursecollege hunting for a vein in my arm like they’re chucking spears at a mouse. Just by saying, “I’d like you to access my port,” I unlock the VIP nurse treatment. I’ll be somewhat sad when I have to get rid of it next year and have to rejoin the commoners at playing blood-draw roulette in the Army hospital lab department.

    I say all this because at the PET I had the radioactive serum injected right into my chest instead of the redwood gauge needle they used last time in my arm. I tell ya, the Army should look at just giving everyone a chest port while serving- it really does save time and heartache when it comes to draws, injections, and IVs.

    Within a couple days the results were read by radiology and relayed to me from a nurse at my MedOnc’s office: No Evidence of Active Disease (NED in cancer shorthand). I was officially in remission. Hell yeah brother, cheers from recovery. I still had to see my RadOnc at the cancer center the next day, and the ENT a few days after that, but I didn’t have any reason to believe they’d dispute those findings even though they’d still want to each scope me just to take a look for themselves (ostensibly to train the residents).

    That’s the extent of the latest formal medical news. There was no grand bell-ringing like there is after the final treatment. No congratulations, no handshakes: just a phone call from a nurse telling you the good news. My reaction was that I had no reaction. Imagine a person dryly saying, “neat,” with a straight face and no emotion and that’s basically the space where I was and largely still am. This will follow me around like a shadow for the rest of my life. I’ll get excited over getting small parts of the old me back, but overall it’s hard to get too worked up when my own body is a haunted mansion that I’m stuck inside for the next 35ish years.

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    There have been tiny victories, though, shades of my old self trying to break through the fog of recovery. My taste buds and saliva/mucus glands are lagging a little bit behind where they should be, which has negative effects on my mood and appetite, but they have their moments. I was finally prescribed something for drymouth but haven’t started it yet because I wanted to see how it would impact me once the kids go back to school vs. managing new and exciting side effects while still having to solo parent them. We’ll see next week, I guess. Maybe it’s a game changer that accelerates recovery or maybe it’s another ineffective medication in a long sad line of ineffective medications during this gong show. I’m not betting the farm in either direction.

    What’s even more exciting, to me, though, might seem wholly insignificant to most of the people reading this: my medical team and leadership kept their word and kept the Army out of my business. My new career manager called me this morning asking me my thoughts on a career move I was supposed to make last year but opted to push to the right so I could complete the first year of the journey where I am now. He was looking at my file and saw no flags, and no administrative or medical markers that indicated I couldn’t move or be moved. This is exciting for a couple reasons: One, if you spend too much time being flagged (marked as non-deployable or otherwise generally invalid) for medical reasons this will trigger what is called a medical separation board: where the Army brings together the best and brightest bureaucrats to determine if you are fit to continue serving. This is a perilous and stressful process if you absolutely do not want to get kicked out of the Army, which I don’t. No matter my misgivings with how things are and have been transpiring in the world since we lost Harambe, I still believe the republic is durable and the Army it’s most durable institution- one worth serving no matter how much I bitch to the contrary. I’d like to stay for the long haul, or at least until I secure a pension so I can live out my days being the yeoman farmer that Jefferson always wanted us to be. My doctors did me a solid by filing the paperwork into the medical records system, but making sure the administrative system wasn’t the wiser by not officially limiting my medical readiness (however they were, and remain, prepared to do this if my leadership ever showed a hint of interfering).

    The second reason, and perhaps more importantly, my leadership actually put the “people first” mantra into practice. I was told, “Do not come back until you are healed/ready” and contrary to the normal pessimistic view many in the Army have by saying “mission firster,” no one pressured me to return or even check whatever administrative block I’d become delinquent on during my absence. No one flagged me or demanded I submit to some sort of archaic accountability procedure by shoving me into a recovery unit. If you’re a leader, take note: Your people have four to 20ish years in the Army, but they need that body until they die- act accordingly. 

    My leadership elected to forgo a body in the shop and instead saw that sacrifice in an investment: “we can have a healthy person back who can contribute in some kind of way later, or we can get a broken and possibly disgruntled person now.” You’d be shocked at how many leaders get this dilemma wrong… mine didn’t. I’m grateful there are still these kinds of people leading other humans in the Army.

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    The real MVPs this month were my friends and family that stepped up to help me out. When I was on my own in the time between when my mom left and the kids got here, it was pretty easy to live on this plane of reality. Sure, I had appointments, body maintenance and tasks, but largely when you’re only responsible for yourself and your body just wants to sleep all the time it’s not difficult to survive. Boring, unfulfilling, but if your only task is to heal that’s pretty much life.

    Inject two small humans into the mix that depend on you to survive and that changes the calculus. My three year old son is Terminator: he cannot be bargained with, he cannot be reasoned with, and he will not stop… ever. I’m half-joking of course, but anyone with an active three year old boy knows it’s a struggle for one healthy adult to supervise him let alone adding his eight year old sister to the mix. They are the absolute light of my life, but they suck energy like a black hole. My parents, aunt and uncle, and friends deserve a lot of the credit and praise for my recovery up to this point. Without them I’d be even more of a shell of myself.

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    The Long Game

    So I’m in remission, what now? Welp, now we wait. There’s nothing I can “do” besides not do things that might exacerbate a recurrence or slow down recovery, like smoke (I haven’t smoked anything more than a cigar per year in years) or drink (I was sober-adjacent before cancer and even more so now). I still can’t “overdo it,” whatever the fuck that means anymore, but I’m supposed to be in some kind of semi-recovery state through May. If I’m not around 90% my old self by then apparently…something happens? I’m not sure, I’ve not broached the “what then?” with my medical team. After the first year my only (medical) objective is to survive without a recurrence for four additional years. Neat. That definitely won’t loom over me.

    My remission isn’t the only long game in my life however. My career, co-parenting, and financial goals are all in “long game” status. Very few things in my life shoot dopamine into my life. The instant gratification of some big non-cancer milestone just doesn’t exist right now. Now that I’m returning to work I’m going to take a crack at getting back on the ice weekly, but at a higher-level scrimmage where I’ll probably feel like an old giraffe on ice the first few skates. Hunting? Sure, but I’m pretty sure my last name is an old German word for, “can only find animals out of season.” So while there are tons of other benefits to those two loves of mine, neither is poised to give me a big “W” anytime soon. That’s ok, I guess, but the test on my patience and discipline is constant. At least I can drink coffee again. I’ll take a small W in lieu of a larger one for now.

    I have a lot more that I want to say, and have been thinking about, as I begin to start seeing my treatment and recovery phase more and more distantly, but I think I’ll push this update out and let those ideas marinate a little while longer.

    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.