December 21, 2015 - I am

It had robbed me of every ounce of energy I had and left me with very little left to give. The "it" was a combination of things (old house, new house, holidays, disease, shoulders, work, etc), but the outcome was cumulative. We are in the middle of selling our house and buying another house, and that alone can put your calendar into a tail spin. I've never encountered so much paper work, so many tasks, so much to pack and sort, so many discussions to discuss. Back and forth. Banter this. Banter that. Negotiate. Re-negotiate. Remind them that was not part of the deal. Be reminded it was part of the deal. IT WAS ENOUGH TO MAKE ANYONE SCREAM!....except. 

Except I was on autopilot. Getting it done. Marking it off the list. Heading from this appointment to that. Hold out this arm for this blood work. Grab this box for that glass bowl. Wrap this gift for that person. I was finding blessings in trials and motivation from another task complete. And that was all working out very well for me....until. 

Until I got the "good news" about my fibrosis diagnosis. And then it was as if the switch went from on to off and everything I had been holding inside suddenly spilled over the dam. That release of fear also led to a release of everything else I had stored up inside. I simply went from together to nothing left to give. It all came tumbling out, and I became acutely aware of how I was no longer holding it together. My emotions, all bundled up in a fabric ball, became an unraveled mess of messes. I now loathed every minute of my day. Every single aspect of life was grating every single fiber of my sanity. I'm not sleeping. I'm not navigating. I'm not socializing with any form of success. I'm not graceful. I'm not celebratory. I'm not eager. I'm not relieved. In one simple word...I'm not. 

I had reached the end of my end last week when at an event I was very much looking forward to took a sharp turn from my planned expectations to their unplanned reality. And then again, when someone asked me to do one more house thing after thinking it was all done. And then again when the tape wouldn't hold the paper to the gift despite 4 attempts of repositioning. And once again when for the umpteenth night in a row I found no sleep.  I'm a lover of Christmas who now can't find it's silent night. I can't even be sure how I got here, but I am suspicious that I conformed myself into "gotta get through this day" while sorting through my fibrosis. I'm guessing I numbed myself and pushed aside my fear so I could keep functioning through that while selling and buying a house during the holiday season. I simply had to stay focused to get it done. It resulted in an emotional shut down to maintain task driven.  I wrapped myself  up in a foil lined package and covered it with a red velvet bow...until last week....when the seams started to unseal, the bow untie, and the contents unpackage. I went from holding it all together and feeling very little to finding that every single moment in life was grinding at my every nerve. "I'm able" quickly revealed itself as "I'm not."

I know you've been there. You may even be there now. In fact, I know some of you are. Your circumstances may be different, but the outcome is similar or maybe even worse. (Rest assured, we will get through this together!) This time of year is the master of its production, not by fault of its own, but rather by fault of our inability to focus our hearts and minds on the restoration it can bring. I usually navigate this season with triumph and sanity not only maintained, but in excel, but this year the events at hand (juggling 2 houses, fear in an uncharted diagnosis, Ron's torn rotator cuff now needing surgery, Oliver's death then back to life, a lack of holiday events, etc) were too much for my weary mind to contain. They are admittedly first-world problems that still pack a punch. You go from all-worked-up over the task staring you in the face to all-dulled-out because you have nothing left to give. It's the most primal version of exhaustion that leaves you waking up each morning hoping today will be the day you turn the sanity corner. And then it's not.

The past 3 years have been an ongoing reminder of Matthew 11:28: Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest.

I'm learning that rest is not always immediate. It's a process of gradually unwrapping the weary and finding truth underneath. Truth never changes. It's always there underneath waiting to be focused on once again. We simply smother truth with circumstance, self-doubt, fear, and misdirection, but it's there just as it has always been.  I'm desperate for this coming week where I have true faith that refocus will be found. I'm physically removing myself from the causes with great anticipation of ridding myself of the effect. I'm purposely putting myself in a place where purposeful and intentional focus will mend and where family heals, tradition triumphs, and God replenishes.  It will be a moment when I will remember that "I'm not", when unwrapped and rediscovered, can transform you back into His "I am". 


"I am not what I ought to be. I am not what I want to be. I am not what I hope to be in another world; but still I am not what I once used to be, and by the grace of God I am what I am." (John Newton)



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December 15, 2015 - All in a day's work

“It’s the best news we could have gotten in the situation.”

 Mom summed it up pretty well. We’ve been waiting about 2 months, and more recently about a week, but it feels like a year! Time rolls by at a snail’s pace when the situation matters to you. You want to go on that trip to Jamaica…well the week leading up to it is like 5 instead. You find out you might have a progressive disease and a week feels like a year! I’m not the only instant gratifier out there. I know it to be true.

As a highlight overview (see previous the five posts for the minute to minute details):

·     For the past year- I’ve had new respiratory symptoms
o   It takes forever for me to clear a cold
o   After climbing only one flight of stairs, I’m gasping for air
o   I can walk 2 miles on a flat surface no problem and do that often, but put me on any set of incline and I get about 20 feet.
o   These symptoms were new, and they seem to be more persistent from day to day.
·        Late in October- my lung function tests showed a restrictive process (Asthma is an obstructive process. I had no obstruction.).
o   Restrictive processes are often a sign of pulmonary fibrosis; and rarely anything else.
o   There are basically 2 kinds of fibrosis – “immunologic” and or idiopathic which carries a very quick timeline with very dismal outcomes often requiring lung transplant; and “radiation induced” that happens years after radiation treatments to the chest. I had significant radiation as a teenager for my lymphoma and which also result in my need for a double mastectomy 3 years ago.
o   It seemed very probable I would have radiation induced with my history, but my grandfather died of fibrosis, and I have a strong immunologic history so we couldn’t rule those out.
·        Early November- I had a cardiac pulmonary test which showed normal cardiac function but showed oxygen desaturations during exercise.
·        A week ago (Monday)- I have my appointment with the most Delightful Fibrosis Guru (DFG) and she confirms I need a fibrosis workup to see what is going on.
·        Monday evening- I have a chest CT and some immunologic lab work.
·        Wednesday- I find out I do in fact have pulmonary fibrosis (mild on CT scan).
·        Thursday-  I find out 2 of my immunologic tests come back positive. 6 or 7 others are negative.
·        Thursday night and into Friday- there is a meeting of the fibrosis minds to review my case to try and rule in or out radiation induced or Immunologic
·        Monday (today)- DFG calls me to update me on ongoing discussions and where they landed

Delightful Fibrosis Guru is quite confident I have the radiation induced version of pulmonary fibrosis. She feels she can say this with confidence based on the following things: 
  •  I have had extensive amounts of radiation to my chest
  • While my grandfather died of fibrosis, my immunologic markers are all negative except 2, and those 2 can be positive for a plethora of reasons.
  • The pattern of my fibrosis on the scan is isolated to regions where I had radiation. Think of an apple. Immunologic and aggressive fibrosis occurs all around the outside portion of the apple just under the skin (the peripheral parts of the lung) and spreads in a short time from there. My fibrosis is in the stem portion of the apple (upper regions of the lung). My fibrosis is mild, and so far, isolated to that region.

We now feel confident we can call this radiation induced fibrosis (huge sigh of relief and cheer from the gallery!). What we don’t yet fully know and understand is:
  • Where in the process is my fibrosis. We have no reason thus far to think it is aggressive. It may have even been in play for many years. We will have to continue to do lung function tests over time to see if we can see if it has stabilized. We don’t anticipate significant changes over time long as I don’t ever develop the immunologic kind. I will do another lung function test within the next year (an then annually, or sooner if symptoms progress) If those were to show changes, then we do another CT scan.
  • We don’t understand why I am dropping my oxygen saturations during activity. This occurs in fibrosis, but usually only in moderate to severe cases. When fibrosis patients drop their oxygen on a consistent basis (for a majority of their day) to the upper 80s, they are considered lung transplant candidates. I hit 93 (during exercise; 99-100 at rest). This does not happen in “normal” lungs. We should continually maintain 99-100% despite our activity level. Since my CT results do not show moderate or severe fibrosis, why is this occurring? Is there a blood clot? Is there another lung process occurring? We are going to redo this test to see if it occurs consistently, and if it does we will now have to work that up. Our organs need oxygen, so we need to do better than 93%.
  • We have to figure out my asthma. Do I have asthma (we think I do) or was that misdiagnosed back in college and instead I had fibrosis then that wasn’t picked up? To be determined.
Put all of this together and it’s the best news I could have gotten given the fact that I now know I have fibrosis. It’s mild thus far, we have no reason to think it will play out as the immunologic form does, and maybe this is the most symptoms I will ever have. How is that not a score and a reason to celebrate (Ron and I plan to do just that)?! And as for the symptoms, she said I shouldn’t discredit the fact that my heart and lungs have taken significant hits from radiation. They will not “act normal” like most people. Little triggers can cause big effects. Case and point, 6 surgeries to the chest in the past 3 years. That is going to take a toll on radiated lungs. And don’t be offended if I now avoid you like the plague if I know you are sick with a respiratory illness. I used to avoid you for work reasons (as I work with Bone Marrow Transplant patients), now I will do that for self-protection reasons as rebounding from a cold can be prolonged with both asthma (or whatever is happening in my lungs) and fibrosis. Maybe this now explains why Ron sails through a cold or the flu at twice my speed of recovery. I will avoid you, don’t take it personally, and I ask you to return the stigma and avoid me as well. = )

Ok, so are you caught up now? We still have some stuff to sort out related to the oxygenation and my pulmonary symptoms, but I know I can “breathe easier” (pun intended) now knowing I am not in a race against the clock! I can’t tell you how heavily that weighs on a mind. My next appointment with Delightful Fibrosis Guru is in mid-February (that was her earliest appointment). We will check the oxygen saturations while running up and down stairs.  Sounds delightful doesn’t it! I told you she was delightful. I think I am going to make her run them with me.

I had gotten to a place of peace. You can see my post of yesterday (Sunday) of how God supernaturally grabbed hold of my mind and heart and gave me calm. While I was prepared for either outcome, where it actually landed with what we know at this time gives me a little happy dance in my chair. And maybe even more so for Ron. He was beaming from ear to ear when he got home to hear the news. (It’s not lost on me how all of this has impacted him). Diseases without cures can certainly stop you in your tracks. You can’t help but long for what might not be. But I’ve also found you can find calm and peace along the way. God is still revealing his plan to me in all of this, but I am grateful for the extra gift we got today all tidied up in a Merry Christmas bow. 

Thank you for your ongoing prayers as we continue to navigate.  I am celebrating in the extra blessing he has provided in giving me more physical hope, and also still aware blessings can come in trials. In the meantime, please don’t stop to make fun of me when you find me in a pulmonary heap at the top of only one flight of stairs. Simply help me up, tell me to hold my head proud, and remind me I don’t have the immunologic version. That will do the trick! All in a day’s work (ok, maybe it was 2 months).


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December 13, 2015 - Absent is the excuse to choose the timing

The lyric has captured my heart this morning.

All creatures of our God and King, Lift up your voice and with us sing, Oh, praise Him, Oh, praise Him, Alleluia.

Nowhere in the verses did it say if your circumstance allows. Nowhere in the verse did it say, if you get good news.

Thou burning sun with golden beam, Thou silver moon with softer gleam, Oh, praise Him, Oh, praise Him, Alleluia
I see not, if you have life go your way. I see not, if the blessings come at the quality and pace that we command.
Thou rushing wind that art so strong, Ye clouds that sail in heav'n along, Oh, praise Him, Oh, praise Him, Alleluia
I can’t find, when everything is happy go lucky. I can’t find, on the days when the plan unfolds exactly as planned.
Thou rising moon in praise rejoice, Ye lights of evening find a voice, Oh, praise Him, Oh, praise Him, Alleluia
Gone is the verse of, when you feel like it. Gone is the verse of, if the situation allows.
Let all things their creator bless, And worship Him in humbleness, Oh, praise Him, Oh, praise Him, Alleluia
Absent is the excuse to choose the timing. Absent is the excuse to insert self-pride.

Praise, praise the Father praise the Son, And praise the Spirit three in one, Oh, praise Him, Oh, praise Him, Alleluia, Alleluia, Alleluia!

Present is the delight in the promise of his plan!  Present is the sting that we live in a fallen world but delight in the restoration of Christ! How can we not sing his praises as we enter this Christmas season and see He came, he died, and he rose to provide restoration and purpose in any circumstance! What rejuvenation it brings when the sting of life finds your doorstep, that the sting is temporary, and that the sting refocuses life around you.  If you don’t know the song, “All creatures of our God and King”, you know not what you miss. Promise me you will listen to it once at the link below.  Let the lyrics and melody fill your soul with purpose in hardship. With thankfulness in calm. It can bring back focus as it did me today that He Rules the World with Truth and Grace! Dare me to break out another song that rings truth, I’m on fire! (You can blame church this morning.)
It suddenly just clicks as my emotions slip from the forefront to the back. There are certainly more dire trials to face. Ask the unwanted. Ask the unloved. Ask those who face each day simply in search of purpose other than to find their next meal. Ask those that society has forgotten. Ask those whom this life has abandoned. Those are the circumstances worth mourning. I’m surrounded by desire. I am surrounded by love. Purpose is in my clutch therefore making anything this fallen world can bring me, worthy as a reminder of His saving grace. Our circumstances don't change His truth.

I still know not my pulmonary fate. The doctors are still discussing. The tests still to be revealed. We have brought in my radiation oncologist to help delineate the fibrosis location in relation to lung fields. And still, I wait. BUT TODAY (and hopefully lasting longer than today), I wait without fear and dismay.  Oh, praise Him, Oh, praise Him
link (except when I hear it in my head it is the old hymnal version): David Crowder - All Creatures of our God and King



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December 11, 2015 - Humpty Dumpty

I've surprised myself with how raw all of this feels. I think part of it is that the information keeps trickling in over several days. I'm reactive at baseline. I get news, I react to it (not always well), I process it, I pull it together, I move on. However, this trickling in of details has me processing minute-by-minute and over and over again with each passing hour/day. You keep asking me how I am feeling. And I don't even know how to reply. Some moments, I am perfectly normal. And other moments, I'm teary eyed and full of doubt.  I think if I could just hear "Sally, you have lung fibrosis and it is the progressive kind", I would react to and then process that and then be back to my peaceful deal-with-it self. Or if I could hear "Sally, you have lung fibrosis, but at this very moment it's as bad as it will ever be" I would process that and dive back into every day packing-up-my-house kind-of-life. The waiting, the trickling, has me re-feeling every nuance with each new test result or conversation. Four more immunology labs came back negative. (If you are playing fantasy fibrosis that brings the score to 2 positives, 8 negatives, and a field goal of fibrosis.) I feel awful waiting to open a new result up. I feel fine after I do. With the new 4 negatives, Ron and I looked at each other and mentally gave each other a high five. It's as we had accomplished some Mount Everest Trek feat. I somehow produced a "negative" on a lab result. Wow, I am top notch!

The potential severity and implications of a bad form of fibrosis creates the raw fear. With a malignancy (caught early) you dive in with the therapy you need and hopes of response. Time may change the level of hope in either direction, but you have some level of hope when you start.  It's this lack of cure, or potential for lung transplant, that has my bumble all in a jumble. Tell me I've got radiation induced fibrosis that doesn't progress, I've got it. I can do that. No problem. We all have ailments. We all know there is toxicity to be expected from cancer treatments. I just simply don't want to hear the next words we are waiting for.... what kind and how will this progress.

I've given you the straight forward facts of all of this mumbo jumbo. I've laid out the medical jargon as I know it. One friend actually thanked me for the medical lecture. That made me chuckle. I haven't yet fully dived into the emotions of all of this, but I think it is important for those of you facing similar boats in your future. If there is anything I know from sharing bad news with others or receiving bad news myself, it's that it is crucial to maintain hope. Once hope is gone, you've basically lost the ballgame. Everyone wants options. We need to know there is something else to try, something left up the sleeve for later use. We need to know that even with 99% chance of death, that there is 1% chance you will survive. That 1% can set the pace for the rest of time. It's so strategically aligned with perspective. Debbie downers tend to fair far worse in medical studies. Optimistic Olivias can drastically change time lines. The mind is the most powerful medication or procedure in use. It can cure tumors. It can bring about disease. It is the master of it's own domain.  It truly can be a game changer. So when you get faced with a malignancy (or anything else detrimental), you want to hear you have options you can try and that you can choose, or not choose, to know you gave it your all. You simply want the option.With disease states with no cures and a progressive timeline, it can feel as though you've lost choice. You learn you have no say so and the hope for cure is no where to be found. It doesn't remove spiritual hope, but certainly changes the landscape of physical hope. The spiritual gets you through life, the physical is crucial for that individual moment. Too bad we don't carry around physical hope in a bottle to sprinkle on circumstance. And praise God that Christ brings the spiritual hope to get you though it. Even when you know death is coming (physical hope is gone), spiritual hope can restore peace.

The emotions being used here to describe my current situation are drastic. Meaning, I recognize I am starring at all kinds of physical hope because I am more likely to have the good kind than the bad kind of fibrosis (surely), I simply mention them for extrapolation into life's circumstances as all of us will face moving forward. We all are facing some giant. The most difficult journeys are most often the private ones not displayed on a computer screen. I am aware there are a whole set of new emotions I may feel if I get a poor diagnosis in upcoming weeks, but for the here and now, during this trickle-in-of-information time frame, I simply feel volatile. The fibrosis part doesn't even bother me anymore ( a full 4 days later; see that's volatile), but trust me, it did earlier this week. I was a basket case waiting for the diagnosis because it was an unknown. But I now know I have fibrosis. Now it is a known. I've got it. Done! Let's go decorate my Christmas tree!  But I still dread opening a new test result for fear of what "chip at hope" outcome it may bring. An unopened test is an unknown. Once I get over the opening part, it becomes a known. I just want to know...whatever there is to know. Then, we adjust and move forward in some manner and time frame. Twenty-two hours of my day, I am good to go. The other 2 fluctuate based on what I just learned or what I see waiting for me to learn in my inbox. In those 2 hours I am fearful, I am sad, I am anxious, I am doubting, I am less physically hopeful. But I praise God in every moment that I have spiritual hope to keep me afloat, despite circumstance. I imagine you can relate quite well if you reflect back to one of your own circumstances. You remember well the loneliness of a diagnosis when the rest of life is moving forward around you at break neck speed. And you recall the days when you feel like you are right in the middle of a heart-breaking Steel Magnolias moment. But you also know the hysterical moment of when M'Lynn slaps Ouiser (Weezie) is coming in the next frame. There is always something coming and there is always a Truvy Jones to get you through it.

We all spend some time as humpty dumpty sitting on that emotional wall, We wobble too and fro in the middle of the moment, we teeter and we totter with the passing wind, but in the end most of us refuse to fall down. We simply find a new way to balance and find a new center of gravity. This is me, waiting for my new center of gravity. Then we grab hold and face life with this new set point. I once walked in fear of mastectomy. Now I wouldn't change that experience for anything. Lymphoma grounded me, mastectomy grew me....and fibrosis, well, we just have to wait and see what it it brings.


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December 10, 2015 - Rosy Fog-filled Glasses

I can definitely say this is an evolving story. We still have results and opinions coming back and with each one your brain rapidly shifts in a new direction. I imagine that is my fear playing out. It definitely has my attention. To catch you up on events between now and last Monday, yesterday we had our house inspection on the house we are purchasing. As I reach for my phone in the middle of the inspection, I start to see test results coming back in. There sits the scan in my inbox waiting for me. I was torn between opening the results and getting great news and awareness of opening the results and 12/09/15 turning into a day of before and after. I let them sit there for over an hour unread, but plaguing my every thought. Enough was enough, I couldn’t concentrate anymore. I grabbed my phone and went to my car and opened the scan report.

We now know the following:
The CT results did show mild fibrosis in the upper portion of the lungs.
The CT also showed a small lung nodule (likely not even worth mentioning as nodules are known to appear and go away without any intervention. They are seen all the time on scans.)
The CT showed a few other things that likely have no relevance here (a small splenic splenule, some notes about the location of some of the great vessels, etc)
The CT showed I do in fact have breast implants. I can now prove that Lead Plastic surgeon did in fact what he said he did in the last 6 surgeries. It gave me a chuckle when I was climbing on the CT scan table to tell the tech “hey FYI, in case you need to know because I never know when people do need to know…I have had a mastectomy and have breast implants.” Well, she evidently didn’t need to know.

You will be happy to know I kept it together quite nicely. I guess I kind of deep down knew they would see fibrosis. It just made sense that they would with my symptoms and history. I was able to drive back to the inspection ( I had left to go pick up Ron's phone) and enter back into the house with smile in tow. It wasn't until later, when I told Ron, that I had tearful moments. And then again when I typed it out to my family and prayer warriors. I may be stoic some times, but i'm a sucker when relaying emotional news to my family.

We also now know (12 hours later):
As we were suspecting fibrosis as a possibility (and now proven by the CT scan) we had also sent off labs to check for an auto-immune process. In the last 24 hours, two of those labs came back positive.

Honestly, this new finding got under my skin. Albeit, the slugger is that this specific test can be positive in any autoimmune process/disease (lupus, sjogren’s, scleroderma). It can also be positive in idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis. The titer result was "low" and not severe, so I have that going for me. So while we want to trust that this fibrosis is radiation induced, we have a family history and now a positive immune marker that is muddying the waters. Earlier I was 100% sure in my mind this had to be radiation induced. I’ve had massive amounts of chest radiation. Radiation causes fibrosis. I have fibrosis.

I’ve reached out to Delightful Fibrosis Guru (DFG), I guess she now deserves to have her own name, and I get the impression she is a little baffled too. We both had hoped the CT would come back negative, and instead maybe I was dealing with an asthma process. Now that the CT came back positive, I am sure we were both hopeful the lab markers would be negative so we could more assuredly point to radiation induced fibrosis. She keeps saying my history is complicated and that she isn’t sure what to make of things yet. My grandfather having had fibrosis complicates the picture, and my suspected history (though biopsy negative) of sjogren’s syndrome complicates the picture further as it can also cause pulmonary fibrosis.   In efforts to cover all bases and perspectives, DFG has decided to take my case to the pulmonary rounds this week where the experts from pathology, radiology, and pulmonary disease come together to discuss complicated cases. She continues to be delightful, and I am grateful for her thorough approach.

I’m truly hopeful the lab marker is positive for some separate process and not an indicator of idiopathic/immunologic fibrosis which is a ballgame changer. And if it is radiation induced, like I truly want it to be, I still don’t have a full grasp on what that will mean in the long run. Has it just started and is still evolving? Has it been going on for years (as I have had asthma symptoms since college)? Is it going to progress? Has it already peaked?  Just a lot of unknowns right now. Are you completely confused yet?

So where does this leave me: we have a diagnosis (fibrosis); we now have a positive immune marker (do I have sjogren’s as some physicians have suspected? do I have something else? do I have nothing and it is inconsequential?) And what is causing the fibrosis (Radiation induced? Idiopathic?)? And where is this going and at what pace? The very last thing I want is for this blog to become "Trading in the Airbags". We just don't have time for such nonsense.

It also leaves me feeling a little out of sorts. It’s moving at a fast pace with labs coming back day by day, but also very slowly as a lot of the results alone aren’t leading us anywhere. You also know I am an instant gratifier so this waiting game is for the birds. I am beyond grateful to have DFG leading the way for me and pulling in the expert minds. I still want to be very confident this is radiation induced, and maybe the damage has peaked and I will be left with just these symptoms and nothing more. I won’t lie though, it’s hard to focus. I have on my rosy glasses but they have intermittent fogging. I do have peace in the overall journey (I know blessings are already here and still coming), yet I am also cognizant that there may be some other emotions coming to play. It’s also smack in the middle of our house sell and purchase. I have boxes up to my rosy fog filled glasses and lots of paper work crossing the screen. It’s busy, and we are tired, and all of this fibrosis stuff makes each day of balancing life, house, and work a little more cumbersome.

That’s all I’ve got for now. It’s a story being played out sentence by sentence. He is the master of my story, so I know it will be worth telling. Anxiously awaiting what Act 2 will bring.  And because I need to be reminded daily…… “The blessing of God is not the absence of trials, but rather the glory of God through them.” Let’s all say that 3 times together.

(P.S. I'm very grateful for all of your encouraging words through texts and emails and FB posts. Forgive me if I didn't get back to someone yet. It's incredible to have an army of warriors to do life with. This still may all turn out to be trivial, but the journey along the way feels very raw, and you make it less so.)



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December 8, 2015 - It's not the absence of trials

“The blessing of God is not the absence of trials, but rather the glory of God through them.”

Wow. I probably should stop right there and not type another word. Isn't that powerful? Isn't that focusing? Isn't that...hard to claim in the middle of the moment? I’ve eluded before that I often find myself in a state of entitlement expecting God to shower me with blessings, of my choosing, and blessings of my expected quantity, quality and value. It’s as if I am the only one who can define what meets criteria to be further labeled as “blessing” instead of trusting in his plan.

There is a piece of my story I have not yet shared publicly. A piece that in this very moment is still unfolding. It's new and frightening with one option being manageable, and the other option being shattering. “Blessing” is still yet to be grasped and claimed. I've been private about it because quite honestly I didn't want to utter the words for fear of what would come. I was sorting and juggling a rash of emotions that felt better left untyped. But more recently as I have been meditating on this quote, I quickly find myself shifting to the pursuit of discovering his blessing despite outcome as his glory is entirely more relevant than my longevity. My story, in reflection of and in spite of each individual sentence composing the narrative, is for him to define and for me to be blessed in and through. Facing trials with grace and peace becomes so much more attainable when I claim this revelation. But let me say, it took a very long month of November living in fear and doubt to come to this inner peace that is approaching my horizon. The story is still unfolding. This story is a reminder of life after malignancy. And this story is an example of how fear can grip you, when you don't even know the outcome yet. But I hope later this story will be a reflection of growth in my heart, no matter what the outcome.

Ron and I were standing in the check-in line at her office. Her office carried a very different atmosphere than the breast clinic. It told a different story. Wheel chairs more prevalent than not. Oxygen tanks flanking each side, instead of breast drains. The room felt less “hopeful” and more aware of current state, or so as I perceived. The line was moving slowly so Ron went to grab a pair of chairs in the now crowded space while I continued to wait. It only took 30 seconds after the young man went by with his equally young wife in the wheel chair for me to see the water pool in my vision. My heart was breaking for the occupants of this room, who did not have advocates of pink ribbons and benefit walks pushing them forward, and my heart was fearful for self and the “what ifs” that now plague my thoughts. I had spent the last month both craving this day (for knowledge and potential hopeful news) and dreading this day (for potential very bad news). I had spent nights in tears out of "what ifs" and I had spent days with all consuming thoughts. The potential had engulfed my being. I glanced up to see the sign above the check in desk: Heart and Lung Transplant Clinic. And now I was standing, after a month of turmoil, in this room, in this line, next to be checked in.

It was found during routine follow-up testing for my lymphoma of 25 years previous. You will recall I had scheduled dermatology (check!), colonoscopy (upcoming), cardiac (check!) and pulmonology testing (ongoing). Remember, we aren't simply survivors but rather in a continual process of surviving.  It was the pesky pulmonology that stumped my traversing toe.  Breathing tests suggested a restrictive process, suggestive of the development of fibrosis. As it turns out, after much reading, pulmonary fibrosis turns out to be a much bigger bird than I thought. Knowing my radiation history, it was plausible that I have developed radiation-induce pulmonary fibrosis, though there is another form, “immunologic” and/or “idiopathic”, that would have to be considered. Regardless of the cause, the physical changes are consistent: a scarring of the lung that reduces lung volume and inhibits oxygenation. While the physical changes are similar the progression and outcomes can be drastically different.

In the case of radiation induced, it is thought that the damage occurs but that the damage does not progress. Meaning, once found, you in theory could maintain that same level of damage throughout the rest of life.  Impact could be minimal or extensive, but likely not progressive as time goes on. There is no cure and it is not reversible, but can be stable. A very different picture is the idiopathic and immunologic forms, also incurable and not reversible, which can progress very aggressively to the need for a lung transplant. Survival rates are frightening and progression rapid. No one knows what causes it, why it happens, to whom it will happen to, and how quickly it will progress, but once it does it is a race against the clock to get the patient to lung transplant, assuming they are a candidate, find a match, and are chosen. Some studies report average life expectancy to be 5 years from time of diagnosis. It’s the predictability, the rapid progression, yet lack of cure or knowledge of cause that puts a crazy spin on this disease. In two words: It’s dismal.

My lung function tests were showing the restrictive process, which most often is caused by fibrosis, and which can often occur (like breast cancer) after extensive radiation to the chest. I knew this was not something to play around with so I scheduled an appointment with a fibrosis expert so we can figure out if in fact fibrosis is now in play, and if so, what was the cause (radiation induced or idiopathic as my grandfather died of fibrosis). And this is how I found myself finally standing in this check in line surrounded by lung transplant patients after a month long dance with fear. To say I have been afraid would be an understatement. The possibility of aggressive death or impending lung transplant had gripped my soul. I had spent the last 3 years in avoidance of breast cancer, only to find myself starring in the eyes of another, potentially more aggressive, beast. Very simply put, I wanted to grow old with Ron, and I wanted absolutely nothing to do with fibrosis. I wanted it off my dance card, and I wanted normalcy to return to my thoughts.

She, Delightful Lung Guru, was the most delightful person to meet. A compassionate heart, and thoughtful dialogue, an aggressive approach to help us figure out what was at stake. She agreed that the lung function tests in combination with my very complicated history would lead us down the fibrosis workup. She recognized that my radiation history makes the radiation induced form a strong contender, but the familial history with my grandfather and my historical dance with other immunologic processes places idiopathic/immunologic into play as well, and therefore we should do the work up for both.  The cause was a huge predictor in outcomes and progression. She scheduled the chest CT scan to prove or disprove the presence of fibrosis and ordered the appropriate immunologic studies to determine cause. And then she flashed me the most compassionate smile and said we will figure it out together. And that is what we are doing.

Best case scenario: The CT shows no fibrosis and we are good to go! The lesser ideal is the CT shows fibrosis and then we need to try and sort out the cause. Radiation induced should show scarring only in the areas of the lung that were radiated. If that is the case, maybe this is the extent of damage/symptoms I will face (I learned this option of “no progression” yesterday in our dialogue and it alleviated many of my fears now knowing radiation induced was a real option yet could offer some hope in its stable path). If the pattern is more varied, well, we follow this much more closely while waiting to see when it starts progressing. When it does as it almost always does, I guess we race the clock to see if I would be a candidate for a lung transplant. Cart before the horse, but boy does that cart weigh heavily in this waiting period. We expect the lab and scan results to come back sometime this week. This week, after some newly found knowledge in the appointment, feels a little more manageable and hopeful.  Now we wait.

“The blessing of God is not the absence of trials, but rather the glory of God through them.” It’s one thing for me to claim this truth in hindsight, when the saga has revealed itself and we’ve pulled ourselves up and over the hurdle and back to manageable life. It’s entirely different for me to utter this truth in foresight when the future looks undecipherable, the edges are blurry, a little less bright and a little more forlorn. I’m learning to master the former and find myself a far cry from the latter. I want to be a woman who faces trials as though they are blessings. Not after they prove themselves worthy, but before the outcome is even in view. I know there will still be sting as life sometimes brings disappointment, but I want there to be way more faith, and faith that lasts longer than a 12 hours. My disclosing is not an effort to exude sympathy, but rather encouragement through prayer to continue to run the race with head held high, heart in check, and faith as my driver. Hope is where the heart is.

In the midst of my fear, I want to transition to thanksgiving for his blessing as HE defines it. I think this would absolutely rock my world to find this perspective. And I’m working on it with each new trial....um, I mean blessing.


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November 30, 2015 - Gaining another monument

I’m almost afraid to tell this story. It’s a fear of not doing it justice in how everything came together in God-like fashion. I don’t want to disappoint him in my telling. You surely wouldn’t believe the chain of events had you been sitting co-pilot in real time beside Ron and I, so just take my word for it. It is an awesome story despite my unimpressive re-telling.

Ron found it Thanksgiving Day. The house of the “crazy people” who list their house for sale the week of thanksgiving (well in fact the day before thanksgiving) while traveling out of town. The people who evidently are as crazy as Ron and I. I now know this is a brilliant plan – listing while on vacation, because you clean the house before you leave and never again while you are gone! I now wouldn’t do it any other way. I was skeptical of this newly discovered house, listed the prior day. We had already secured an apartment (see last post) knowing we were in the last week of being able to find a house and close on it in time for our current house closing. January 5th is a month away. It's very difficult in current mortgage processes to close on a house in under 45 days, much less FIND a house and then close. We had already decided that an apartment and its high rental fees was inevitable. We had spent the weekend before apartment hunting and now had the apartment secured for move in later in December. So when Ron flipped the computer screen my way on thanksgiving day, I only halfheartedly committed to its viewing. I even said to Ron, this is likely a waste of time, and I feel bad for making the realtor go with us thanksgiving weekend to see it. I looked at the pictures, fulling knowing that living room was smaller than it appeared, that dining room would only hold a 2 person card table, and that master surely only boasted room for a twin. It said “two car garage”, “master bedroom downstairs”, “open floor plan”, and “spacious backyard”. I had fallen prey to those words before only to disappoint when the master was really the storage closet, the price was out of budget, and the location in another state. But these pictures, and most certainly the price tag, had “What in the world? This is awesome!” written all over it! But I knew something would disappoint. "Ron, are you SURE you want to go see it?" We would have to go back to Raleigh a day early so we could see it before the 48 hour sale off that is happening in this market.

We packed up our bags and headed back to town to meet our realtor at the house. Ron and I arrived a little early and pulled into the drive way. WHAT? This DOES look like the picture. The neighborhood was off our radar as it was in a zip code we had not yet considered, but it sat about 0.5 miles outside two zip codes I was trying to maintain. The realtor arrived and we went to the front door. My heart sort of dropped, as the last house I had on my master plan came to a booming halt as soon as the front door opened. She turned the key, opened the door, and my heart went from drop zone to delight! Not only did the house LOOK like the pictures, for the first time in our search, it actually exceeded the pictures! The living room was open and would hold my couch AND my coffee table. The dining room was a place you could actually dine with your 6 closest friends. The master bedroom was in fact downstairs and sporting a king sized bed. The garage not only holds two cars, but room for Ron’s tools! A walk in attic? Was someone playing a trick on me? For the first time, we were standing in a house that created an excitement, and without compromise. And do you recall I said under budget? I didn't know what God was going to lead me too, but I knew he would create excitement in me for whatever that would be once we found it. I had excitement.

“Ron, I think this is it.” “Sally, I think this is it.” We walked back out to the front of the house and met a second group of people coming in for a showing. My heart was sinking. Twelve people had already seen this house.

We drove to the realtor’s office and got out of the car. “I called the agent while you guys were coming over and they have an offer coming in tonight. Do you still want to make an offer?” Oh no, I knew it! Every house we had even CONSIDERED wanting to buy had multiple offers on it. I was well past loathing this real estate market. This house had everything we needed – this master down is crucial right now and very hard to find in the urban sprawl of houses being built “up” instead of “out” to save land. While a 2 car garage was a want and not a need, it was important to me for Ron to have this so he would have somewhere to store his tools and such. I didn’t want him to have to sacrifice that because of my need for a master down. Usually you get one or the other, but both was starting to be unheard of in our new budget. My heart was breaking that my need was to over-ride his want. So we knew this house was a gem for our current state and we might not have another option this good.

“Yes!”

We typed up an offer and sent it in. We heard back almost immediately that a second offer had come in, so they were giving each of us an opportunity to submit one last offer for them to choose from. I knew in my heart that this house was something God had placed in front of us. The timing was perfect (the last week before the timeline mandated we had to move into an apartment, and after I had giving up on anything listing in the holiday week), the location suitable for our commutes in opposite directions, the layout perfection for my health challenges, and all under budget thus making our drastic mortgage downsize dreams come true. God was doing his thing.

We typed up a second offer and included a letter of “our story” to the sellers of how God was taking us to something new, leaving behind the “perfect forever home”, and now looking for a new house that would work for my physical needs, our location demands for our commutes, and some of our wants as well.  It only took an hour or so before we got a reply from the sellers letting us know how our story had touched them. They wrote back of how this home would be perfect for us just as it had been for them when they needed a master down during her pregnancy. They felt delighted to give us the chance to make their house our home and were grateful we shared our journey with them.

If I didn’t serve this amazing God that I do I would think this story impossible. We have searched and searched for a home, only to find huge compromise and location woes. We would find a great house, but would have to leave it behind because the master was up. Or we would find a house that had the layout, but needed drastic work, thus pushing the final cost up and out of our budget. Then there were the houses that just felt-off and not what God was choosing for us. Now, the week we settle on an apartment out of necessity, we find this gem that not only hits all of our tick points (the first house to do so), but also adds in some lovely additions we didn’t think possible (a front porch, a backyard, a walk in attic, under budget!) And the big kicker….. closing date is Jan 5th! Yes, you are recalling correctly, that is the exact same date of our current house.

See, I told you! God did his thing once again. I tried to thwart the journey with worry and disappointment along the way See Sally go up, See Sally go down! But what you did not see is "See Sally run!"  We kept remembering that when God calls, he provides. We stepped out on faith and He in all his Glory did his thing! Not only did I find contentment in leaving my house, I found excitement in God’s provision. I lost some house upgrades, but was gaining another monument of what God can do when you follow, even when it doesn’t make sense. No tribute to me, but all to him and his faithfulness.

We are in the midst of packing our house, so we can't put up our Christmas tree and decor. Ya'll know I ADORE decorating for Christmas. Well, I know how to improvise in celebration. My last Christmas in this home will still carry Christmas cheer.

What a mighty God we serve!

(Side note prayers for the couple who didn't get the house. I know that feeling of disappoint, and back to the drawing table. My gift was their loss. No doubt, they are not feeling delight.)





November 24, 2015 - See Sally Go Up!

It turns out not only is my house delightful and sells in no time flat, evidently every house I want to buy is equally as delightful. Every time we think of making an offer, we find out it went under contract earlier that day or the night before. Case and point yesterday when the most delightful house (one of the few that hit all of our check points) went to a “johnny on the spot” bidder. Heaven forbid you take 4 hours to see if the commute is a problem. Or maybe you want to take 2 hours to run the numbers and see how it works out. Not in this market! Houses that need new roofs and complete siding replacement ($$$), not to mention interior efforts, have 3 offers in 24 hours. This is challenging me in new ways, my friend.

We’ve entered the time window where we can’t close on a new house in the time we need to be out of our current house (January 5th) so we went ahead and secured an apartment to have on hand to live in and store our stuff in, thus circumventing the whole storage unit process.)I do have some excitement in that step! I can already picture myself stirring the spaghetti sauce in that kitchen. I feel accomplished in this task, but not much else. God (Satan/me/every buyer competing with us?) has me on a see saw. See Sally go up (she found a great house)! See Sally go down (oops, they already have an offer)! See Sally loose her sanity (what an emotional roller coaster). Working hard to not See Sally Run (Duct taping myself to my current garage door)!

In many ways it has been less stressful than I imagined. I hear the inspection went swimmingly well, though I am waiting on the actual report before I put all of my eggs in the swimmingly well basket. Finding an apartment was successful in one day (though maybe a bit more expensive than I remember from 15 years ago!). We get to move in mid-december to give us 3 weeks to slowly turtle-like our boxes from one garage to another. That is a huge not overlooked benefit to not finding a house yet. Closing day will be laid back instead of frantically moving from one house to another in a 6 hours span. Ron and I remain civil and jovial with each other after having packed up our kitchen and parts of the bedroom. We have secured a ton of FREE boxes from 3 different people in surrounding neighborhoods thanks to “Nextdoor” posts, and we don’t have to buy a single box or packing supply. Oliver doesn’t seem the least bit mad at us for the pending relocation despite boxes covering our living area. Though he did just have a near-death event and maybe doesn’t realize what is up just yet. To be determined.

What is stressful is this emotional roller coaster like seesaw. Every night (and I mean every night) and every morning you plant yourself on the sofa to see what listed in the last 12 hours. Reminder, 12 hours matter in this market! You see something that hits >7 of your 10 check points, you get super excited picturing this very sofa you are planted on now situated up next to the their fireplace next to the staircase leading up to a second level of bliss. You touch base with the realtor… only to find it already has 4 offers. Alternately, you find the most delightful little cottage (ok it’s just a house, but terminology helps my excitement) and schedule a visit only to find out they must have been taking pictures of their neighbor’s house instead of the one you are standing in wondering how that kitchen came to be 3 x 2 and without a stove. Is a spot for a stove too much to ask for? See Sally go up! See Sally go down.

Finding this apartment has eased my soul a bit minus the mishap of the seemingly perfect house going to the johnny on the spot bidder yesterday. Congratulations, Johnny, I’m relying on the fact that you surely need that house more than I do. Yes, I know that just means it wasn’t the house for us, but God should have let me know in foresight instead of hindsight, right? Often we humans think God owes us something, don’t we? Maybe God had perfect timing in that plan of us still not having a house before we have to move out, though I find myself complaining about having to move boxes twice. I’m the first one to slip off the grateful ship, you know.  Still, I am relishing in knowing I have a place to live (and for 4 months mind you!) allows me to be less concerned about what is not yet on the market for me to move in to, in my budget, without either of us having to drive across 4 counties, with a master down and at least a spot for a stove. Campfire, anyone?

I still faithfully believe God brought us here and he will provide the house in his timing. He’s yet to let me down in life, even if things don’t unroll the way I would wish up front. Somehow that doesn’t negate the responsibility of doing our part to search and secure the “ark”. In in the process the see saw takes hold of me! So thankful for a husband who is right there with me in the process and that we are fully trusting that God will do what God does...in his timing.

Each morning, I wake up with a new address memorized. I wonder which one will end up sticking?


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November 20, 2015 - Who wants hard breasts?

The room was less than half full, though you could tell the clinic was super busy given that I was already 1 hour past my appointment due time, and still I sat reading my book. I had scheduled my appointment late in the day so I could work a full day then head over. The sky outside was starting to fade into dusk, and I was feeling the tiredness of my work day settle in. It had been a doozie and I was grateful to be in a quiet waiting room. Despite the abundance of available spots in the room, she gently sat down next to me on the love seat. I placed her age to be in her early to mid 80s. Not the usual patient I see in this waiting room. Despite her age and while still the usual coarse texture of grey, she had endearing 2 inch long rusted-blond curls of hair going in 20 different directions, yet gently swept over to the right in the front adding a controlled appearance. She kept pushing them over with her hand as she sat. She wore a grey wool sweater vest over a similarly colored striped turtle neck shirt and beige polyester pants.. She carried a small handbag which now sat balanced atop her crossed legs. Her fingers were aged with arthritis and age spots. Her frame was frail and petite, but she carried an air around her of being totally together and independent. I could see she felt either rushed or nervous as she kept glancing around the room. We likely looked very out of place sitting next to each other as we carried almost no similar traits. Or so I thought.

She started her dialogue with me almost immediately.

"I almost never found this place. They keep moving clinics around here. I hope I'm still on time." 
"Yes, m'am. It is a large campus for sure, but I think you are right on time as they seem to be running behind. Are you new to the breast clinic?"
"Sort of. I'm "Jocelyn Morreou" (changed of course). Everyone always mispronounces my name. Are you here to see Lead Plastic Surgeon, too?"

Nothing about her, other than the fact that she was sitting in a breast clinic, alerted me to a diagnosis. She had no tell-tale signs of bulging drains. Her hair was in tact. Her coloring spectacular with her carefully painted rosy cheeks and mauve lips. No caregivers  with her at the appointment. I would soon (in a less than 15 minute time span) learn from her that she was single or widowed and in her early eighties.

"Yes, Mam. I've been coming to this clinic for 3 years now. I am here for a followup after a surgery to replace my breast implants. "

Her eyes got wide and she looked up at me and and said (while simultaneously grabbing both breast and pushing them up) "Me too! These things have gotten so hard and they won't move at all!"
It took everything in my power not to bust out laughing, but I was a total champ at keeping my composure. "I had a mastectomy 12 years ago and have had no problems at all until now. These things have become all hard and they won't move around a bit. They just sit there hard as a brick and uncomfortable. (Reminder, she's still manually holding her boobs up and moving them around as she talks to me.)  She then exclaims with the passion of a 20 year old 'Who wants hard breasts?!?!' They have to be replaced, I am sure of it. But I hope this will be an easy surgery. I live alone now. I recently downsized my house and moved to this quaint little neighborhood."

Ok, so here I sat picking up on all of the newly discovered similarities between me and Ms. Jocelyn. I couldn't believe that God had plopped this very endearing lady  in her eighties down on my sofa in this waiting room. I told her about my current state of downsizing houses and having just recently undergone the exact same surgery for the exact same reason that she was about to be confronted with. I spent a lot of time detailing recovery and comforting her that she didn't have a thing to worry about. She would love the outcome. Recovery would be quick and her family could come help her out. I was in the middle of asking her to tell me more of her story (I got all of the great details. she had early breast cancer when they found it in her 70s and she had decided not to do chemotherapy, but rather go with mastectomy and hope for the best. She reminded me that "quality of life matters, you know! Always get a second opinion when they push you to chemo.") when we heard her name being called for her appointment. "See, they said it wrong. But she gave it a good try!" We squeezed each other's hand and off she went. I gave myself a chuckle when I thought about a lady in her mid 80s worrying about what her breasts looked like. That right there is a lady with some spunk! And a gentle reminder that no matter our age, we all are women and have opinions of ourselves.

There I was sitting alone again on the sofa thinking how much she may have unknowingly needed to have chosen the seat next to me as who else in that room other than me would have recently had scar tissue surgery and could provide perspective, but more importantly how much I had benefited from her seat selection. If only I could hear all the stories sitting in that room. What a better person I become by knowing each of them. With a smile on my face, I picked up my book and resumed waiting my turn.

"Ms. McCollum?"

As a reminder for you, Lead Plastic Surgeon had told me it would take a month or more for the breast to fall back into shape after surgery, so he had not yet seen the outcome of surgery since my last appointment had been only 2 weeks post op. I had checked out the goods the night before, for the first time since my last appointment, and was amazed at how I now had symmetrical imposters! It worked! And the scars had already begun their fading process. I could not have been more please with the results, well, considering this was surgery #6. So when I presented the canvas to the artist he didn't say a word. He simply lifted his hand in a high five (which I happily gave) and I responded with requesting a low five as well. He said "hold on, I want my nurse practitioner to see this." (What?!?! Community show and tell?). He said he never would have dreamed it turned out so well  after my complications since mastectomy and she wouldn't believe it. So we had a community show and tell, and I simply let it happen because I at least owed him that, right? As I was getting ready to leave and relishing in the fact I would have no more breast clinic appointments to schedule, I grabbed his arm.

"I met Ms. Jocelyn in the hallway. She started rejecting her implant with scar tissue 12 years out. Do I need to worry?" 
"Sally, let's take this day by day. Don't give it a second thought."
"Well, I won't really rest until April. That is the time point for when I had cellulitis after surgery."
"Yes, I know. Day by day, ok?"
"Ok, just know this that when I walk out this door, I don't plan on ever seeing you again, ok?"
"Then give me a hug and be gone. We've come a long way haven't we?! You were a surgical feat for me."

As I left the appointment and walked down the long hallway (it was after hours and the normally super busy corridor somehow felt deserted), I found this incredible smile on my face as I walked further way from the clinic. We had done it! Too bad Ron wasn't there with me in the hallway. I literally would have grabbed him and swung him around as the tears rolled down my cheek." Another Breast/boob/imposter surgical chapter triumphantly closed. How can I not be beaming? God is so good to me.


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November 16, 2015 - Off we go all the same

The tires had just hit the runway after a two leg flight, and I was eager to get upright and out of this winged contraption. We had been up since 4 that morning and were in need some cajun grub and maybe a nap to re-set ourselves. Four a.m and I don't mix very well and it was starting to show. I looked out the window to my right to see the visions of Louisiana fill the small oval glass. It was crazy to think it had been 10 years since all of this was flooded in Katrina's wrath. I could almost see the swells of water on the runway in my imagination. Those images that filled the television screen 10 years earlier never really leave your mind. They left me impacted, and now I was going to see the outcome of the city coming back full force. "Welcome to New Orleans where the local time is 10:17. The use of cell phones is now permitted. Thank you for choosing us for your travel needs." I reached down into my bag to turn on my phone to adjust the time and immediately noticed I had 3 missed calls. What in the world? I get 3 calls in a month! Two second later, while trying to decipher who was calling and when they came through, the phone rang again in my hand.

"Hello?" 

"Hey Sally, this is A calling from ____(the vet office). I've been trying to reach you. Did you get my voice messages?" 


It suddenly registered to me that the vet office is closed on Sundays and A had no reason to be in the office. Immediately, my stomach did the 180 roll inside my abdomen and I braced myself for what I was about to hear. I glanced over at Ron next to me and saw he was acutely tuned into to me next to him as salty water was accumulating on the rim of my lower eye lid.

"Oh no, A, it is Sunday and you are not supposed to be in the office today. Something is wrong isn't it?" 

"The tech came in the office this morning to feed Oliver and found him unresponsive. He was freezing cold, and not reacting to voice or touch. The tech called me, and I flew into the office to see what was going on. When I arrived, Oliver was in a coma-like state. His body temperature was 90 (should be 101), and it was obvious he had had seizures through the night as there was urine and feces all over his cage. I checked his blood sugar and it was so low that it wasn't detectable (<20). I am not sure he is going to survive. I have started warming up his body to see if I can get a response from him, but I worry he may have significant organ damage and brain damage from the seizures. He very easily could be blind as well. I am in the process of warming him and giving him dextrose to get his blood glucose up. I will call you back in a a little bit when I know more. We love Oliver and are doing our best here." (Only slightly paraphrased as I try to recall exact words from last week.)


There I was sitting in 20F on a now empty plane with the phone in my lap, tears streaming down my face, and a stewardess standing above us asking us if we needed help. All I could do was grab my bag from the overhead, grab Ron's hand and head out to the ramp leading from plane to terminal. What was going on? Our sweet, sweet, Oliver who seemed perfectly fine when we dropped him off the day before was now lying frigid cold and unresponsive in a steel boarding cage back in North Carolina. And suddenly the last place I wanted to be was where I was at that very moment. Ron and I just couldn't process what was happening. We were supposed to be starting our week-long annual vacation with Ron's family after a very stressful two weeks trying get the house on the market. There wasn't a thing we could do but put Oliver into God's hands and wait to see what turned out. Meanwhile, Ron and I were preparing ourselves to have to make that awful decision of letting him go, all while 3 states away.

Over the next 24 hours we learned that Oliver's diabetes had suddenly gone into remission and the daily insulin shots he had been receiving was sending his blood sugar to undetectable lows. His body responded with going into a protective frigid state, but it was too much for him and he had seizures and brain swelling in response to blood levels. Dr. A spent the first 12 hours warming Oliver's body up so she could see what permanent damaged had occurred to his organs. She also gave him IV fluids to get his blood sugar back up. And she watched and waited. A few hours in he started to lift his head and look at her, but not much else.

The phone rang again late that night: "Sally, I don't know what to say, We transferred Oliver to an emergency vet office where they had more support staff on the weekends. (I'm picturing our sweet Oliver getting his first "pet ambulance" ride and not even being able to enjoy it.) They gave him a dose of mannitol to reduce the swelling in his brain because he was having some twitching movements that we often see with brain swelling. You are not going to believe it. Immediately, he (the cat with 36 lives) started playing with a toy in his boarding cage. He got up started batting it around and then found his food bowl where he has been standing eating like a little piggy ever since. We are going to watch him closely for the next 48 hours in the ICU, but Oliver did what Oliver does and pulled through. It's a miracle really. We can't believe it!"

What?!?! Ron and I didn't even know what to say! We just sort of stared at each other with tears in our eyes for this cat we have pulled through urinary stones, lymphoma, multiple eye and ear infections, and now steroid induced diabetes after his lymphoma went into remission. We were speechless and exhausted and fell into bed with looks of "what just happened?" plastered on our faces.

This was turning out to be such an emotional roller coaster week. A miracle with Oliver using his 36th life, us paralyzed in another state not able to do a thing, and now I bring to you the emotional miracle of our house. Ok, so while Oliver was dying, reviving himself, and then thriving back to 100% normalcy (I don't know why this surprises me because it is like the 3rd time he has tried to die on us), our contractor was finishing up some final tasks on our house so we could get it on the market. We got a call from him on Tuesday evening (Oliver crashed on Sunday, revived on Monday, and now was thriving on Tuesday) that despite God sending a flooding rain the last 2 days, he had finished the painting job and the project was officially done and ready to be listed. He called our realtor and she went over to the house on Wednesday morning to put the sign in the yard for us. Within an hour, I had 3 requests for showings that same day. By the end of the day we had a verbal offer. Thursday morning we received the written offer. Our house had sold in 24 hours all while we were on vacation.

Now here is where God comes into play:
  • The house sold while we were on vacation 24 hours after listing. 
  • The house sold for the price I had mentally listed in my head. 
  • The house sold to a couple who is downsizing just like Ron and I. 
  • The house sold without me having to be there keeping the house clean for showings. We virtually would have never known the house went on the market except for a sign being in the yard! 
  • The couple requested a Christmas week closing. They allowed us to push back to January 5th so we could enjoy Christmas week.
Now here is where I need God to get on board. We have no where to live. January 5th is like 45 days away. I may or may not be a little stressed about this minor detail. But I want to buy a house in faith and not a house out of fear. So I am trusting God to come through with a little house gem chosen perfectly for Ron and I and in his timing (which I hope to be aligned with our closing date. I will boldly ask for that). He has totally stepped up to the plate in the selling of our house, so I can only imagine he will follow through in providing the perfect purchase for us with His goals in mind. This story has God written all over it. And I am trying to keep Sally-induced-turmoil out of the picture. I'm the very first person to mess up a good God story, so I am keeping my arms duct taped to my side and my mouth taped as well so He can do his thing. You all know I am working hard to be a story collector and I have good faith this one will be collection worthy when all is said and done. Prayers for it as we go as the thoughts of packing up a house with nowhere to go as of yet can be a little mind boggling. I haven't packed a single box and I guess I'd be smart to start that process. But off we go all the same. A little less house, a little more home!

On a mastectomy related note: I have my 3 month follow-up appointment (boob show and tell) this week with Lead Plastic Surgeon. I was in New Orleans last week. I told Ron it would only be fitting for me to practice show and tell for some Mardi Gras beads. He wasn't amused. No worries, it didn't happen, but how can I not at least banter with Ron about it while in New Orleans? I did at least see him crack a smile. Or maybe he was just thinking about Oliver and him surviving his 36th life and the house selling the next day.


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November 3, 2015 - Black blob on the screen

Last time, it was while in the dreaded stirrups (stirrup saga posted here). This time while getting a cardiac echo. This week, I am smack in the middle of all the testing I need to complete as followup to my lymphoma treatment from 24 yr previous. I might be slightly behind schedule, but I get points for doing it all the same. Last week, my pulmonary tests showed I was developing some radiation-induced fibrosis (think of scars forming in the lungs which leads to lung volume loss), so now it was time to look at the heart to see if there was any collateral damage. The sweetest technician ever (I keep running into great people on this journey!) was applying the gel to the probe and running it up the length of my sternum. Then under the breast. Then back again. About 3 or 4 minutes in, "Um, Ms. McCollum, I don't want to be overly personal, but is there any chance you have breast implants?" Me, letting out a chuckle, "Yeah, let me guess, you are having trouble seeing the heart." She pulls the monitor over to me where I can see the black blob on the screen instead of the heart valves which were our intended subject. Never a dull moment I tell ya. So we regrouped. Injected an agent to make visibility better and started again. Who knew I was to divulge my implants for a heart appointment? I think I will just put it out there front and center at my colonoscopy. "Mam, just in case you need to know while looking at my colon...I have breast implants".  Ladies, you just never know.

I had written this summer how it's not about being a survivor of malignancy, it's more about surviving malignancy. I'm 24 years out from my lymphoma and it never really is a thing of the past. I'm in the middle of pulmonary testing, same with cardiac testing, just completed dermatology, post mastectomy surgical followup this month, and will start gastrointestinal stuff in January. It can mentally weight you down, these initial appointments back to back, but then they are behind you and what is unknown will be known and you move forward with information in tow. Surviving. That's what we do and will do from here on out.  Simply put, all of these workups happening simultaneously makes life feel a little busy.

Which leads me to the the pending house sale. Oh mercy lou! While I still feel peaceful and know this is the path we are to take, it certainly doesn't help the to-do list. We got delayed a week when the contractor doing one repair needed to come a week later than we anticipated. So instead of listing this week, we will list the house next week. And you ask yourself "do you have somewhere to live"? Plain and simple - No. I will not stress out about that. I will not stress out about that. I will not stress out about that! (Ok, so maybe one or two nights this week I woke up at 0 dark thirty in a tad of a panic, but the daylight hours are perfectly fine. So no need to worry!) When God calls, he provides. We know we will live somewhere close to where we live now and that it will present itself when the time is right. I am a little more comforted after looking this week (distressing when looking last week) at some houses online that fall within our budget. There most certainly will be some compromise ( I will miss my ranch floor plan with my master on the main level, but alas...first world problems), but no doubt there will come some delight. I've always found my current kitchen cabinets, while beautiful, not to my taste. See, I'm vain.  It's always the unknown that brings about turmoil huh? Well, the known is always do-able when it finally comes about. So far every thing we have visited, we have ruled out. But no worries. There is plenty of time (right?). My mother may or may not have told me I could not move in with her. I'm fairly sure she may have been joking?!?! Maybe.

What a testament this will be when all is said and done....if I can keep myself from derailing the whole thing. Not a testament to myself, but a statement of what God can do when you walk by faith. Ok, or maybe a testament to myself in how humans can be so stupid with worry. I may hyperventilate along the way here and there, but I can't wait to look back and see how Ron and I grew in this moment. We've never walked blindly into something before. It's certainly not where we are gifted - us Type A Planners who even plan out how we will make a plan. And I am sure we will be collecting some "lessons learned" along the way. Like this week when God took away the very house we were quite sure would be The One".  Or how waiting for joint peace between us before making this decision brought us better selling perks than we would have had last spring when peace had not yet set in.

The story is still unfolding. You guys remember that my well-being heavily relies on planned instant gratification, right? He sure knows how to overcome a weakness.


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November 1, 2015 - Difficulty learning to un-collect

I'm completely fine looking forward. I'm completely fine looking back. It is when I do them simultaneously in a moment of comparison that the Lord reveals the condition of my heart. I'm not sure whether I measure this current moment as success or failure. They seem so intertwined on most days. Success in that we are taking that leap of faith without knowing the path forward. Failure is measured in my greed of what I leave behind.

It started almost 6 month ago. This prompting, prodding, nudging of leaving this house for something different. Call it downsizing. Call is re-programming. Call it crazy! Call it long over due. Call it against the normal american flow. Call it DAUNTING. Many terms could be applied and each would carry its merit. Right now I am in the middle of the undulating chaos that ripples as an outcome of our most recent decision. We've done it. We've chosen a path with an unpublished ending. Our house is going on the market this very week. And now we are in the run around like crazy mode of getting everything done. I feel like these last seven days have been 2 months. I would bet I have crammed 800 hours of tasks into 72 hours. I've scrubbed and buffed and tweaked and evaluated and measured, and now... I'm tired physically. I'm tired emotionally. And this coming week will be more crazy than last. I'm told our house is going to sell rather quickly...and there unearthed in that revelation is the condition of my heart.            

It's so easy to find a house when you are upgrading. More square footage. More amenities. More "American dream".  More collecting. There is much less superficial delight when you are downsizing. Less amenities. Less "American dream". My joy comes in hearing his voice and following, but then I walk into the prospective house and find less of my worldly treasures. I've grown so accustomed to gathering "more" in this life. And now I am in the midst of hitting the "reset" button. Just when I think I have made a progressive step forward, I find myself staring at my granite in remorse for leaving it behind. I'm having difficulty learning to un-collect.

We've set a budget and we will get what we get. And right now that is the unknown. This whole process is such a mixed bag of emotions. Joy in recognizing that we did it. We followed God's prompt even when on paper it sounds a little crazy. Terror in not knowing where you are going. Fear in leaving behind what you perfectly love and adore. Anxiety in the "what ifs". Security in financial decision making. Warmth in deciding in tandem to jump in full force with your spouse. God is tweaking me in this moment as I listen to his goals for my life and better align my own in tow. Now, the goal is for me not to derail him with my own greed and desires. I know he is not calling all of us in this same way as he leads each of us in paths chosen directly for us, but for whatever reason, he is calling Ron and I to step out of this house and into something...well into something I don't have clarity about just yet.

We were originally going to embark on this journey alone, but then remembered journeys are to be shared and prayed over. Doing this alone just didn't make sense anymore. Our house is going on the market this week. Pretty soon Ron and I will have no place to live. I think you now know your prayer task. And while we are at it, my mindset fluctuates. Sometimes I soar! Sometimes I derail. You can pray for that as well.

(I'm reminded of God's provision from last spring when all of this prompting started. I walked outside and looked up to see this reminder of his faithfulness. God, breathe your breath into my life. Do your thing!)


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