Starting Radiation Again Soon

Sadly, you’re not looking at a baby belly… this is a tumor-filled belly 😩 The last couple of months have been incredibly challenging. Just as I was starting to feel a little stronger a few weeks after surgery in August, other symptoms began to show up or worsen, and have only gotten more difficult to cope with since then. 

I had scans in early October which showed continued progression. I haven’t been able to do much for integrative treatments in several months now because my body screams a hard NO!! whenever I try. I do push, because I want this stuff to work, I want to heal, but there has been no clear payoff with anything lately. 

I have literally begged and pleaded with surgeons and other doctors to help me: specifically with a very large liver mass. Every single consult and plea has been met with a closed door, and sadly, little to no compassion. I had begged the surgeon in August to do everything he possibly could while he had me opened up, but he said he would only take the largest mass, and then we would discuss further interventions after I’d had some time to recover. However, when that time came, I received a hard No to any further care from him. I’ve consulted with multiple specialities and surgeons across different health care systems. None will help me. They see me as too high risk and a lost cause without much time left. 

The only conventional provider I can find who is willing to try anything on the large liver mass is my radiation oncologist. I am set to start proton beam radiation this coming week, and the treatment course is expected to take about a month. I have no idea what to expect, but because of the large size and location, as well as involvement of the inferior vena cava, the rad onc is worried about how sick I could get. Idk how much I’ll be able to eat, keep down, detox, or digest… I already have terrible abdominal pain and pressure, and because of the restricted blood flow in the IVC, I get extremely short of breath, weak, with heavy, painful, shaky legs any time I bend at the waist or take even 2 stairs. Lymph and blood flow are restricted below the liver, so I have a lot of fluid retention, lymphedema, and more nerve pain now. Many mornings are spent on the couch writhing in pain for hours as I try to deal with the severe radiating pain down my leg, in my low back, and through my whole abdomen. Sadly, nothing really works to alleviate the pain. 

What’s probably one of the hardest things to deal with is knowing I have a bunch of integrative tools at my disposal, but my body simply won’t tolerate them anymore. When I push, I’m met with horrible reactions that last days and only result in further tumor swelling/growth. 

Needless to say, I have been very lost and simply incapable of doing much more than trying my damnedest to survive each day. Life barely feels real anymore. 

I have SO many negative emotions toward certain providers and their lies, misinformation, inflammatory statements, and omission of extremely critical information over the last 6 years. I am working to process all of this, because I know it isn’t doing me any good. As both a patient and provider though, it makes me completely disgusted with the way conventional oncology is run in our country. There have been some angels in this hell, but unfortunately it isn’t the norm. 

Six years in, and there are very few stones I’ve left unturned. Yet here I am, fighting for my life harder than I ever have, with seemingly few options remaining. I still believe, somehow, someway, there IS a path to true healing for me. I don’t know what it is. My senses don’t perceive it. But my heart and soul believe. 

I don’t know what the next month will bring with treatment, or if I’ll have the capacity to keep everyone updated. Honestly, right now, I can Barely take care of my Very basic needs each day. Thank you in advance for your understanding, prayers, and support. 

Another Major Surgery Coming Up

I’ll be having Major surgery this coming Monday to deal with a number of tumors that have been causing severe, long-standing problems. I’m still healing from the scalp surgery and skin graft, but am in dire need of more surgery… Three different surgeons will be operating on me, in 4 different areas, but I will still be closed up with numerous masses remaining that they unfortunately won’t remove. 

I have an extremely large mass on the left lobe of my liver that has been restricting my ability to eat for months, as it’s pressing directly against my stomach. My ribs are flaring and separating, muscles and nerves stretching and pulling apart, spine/ribs/back/muscles being strained, and I cannot get or stay comfortable in really any position. 

An orthopedic surgeon is planning to remove a large and bothersome mass from my glute, and another from the back of my shoulder. A gyn-onc will be removing a very sensitive mass on my vulva. 

There are numerous other masses in the abdomen and pelvis that the hepatobiliary surgeon does not feel are appropriate to remove right now due to increased risk of complications. Despite the fact they are all causing pain and symptoms, and they will be cutting my entire abdomen open, this surgery is viewed as simply palliative by modern medicine. 

We are struggling immensely with the weight, stress, grief, anxiety, frustration, helplessness, and anger of all of this. I have been working SO UNBELIEVABLY HARD for SO LONG to heal. From February to June I was doing daily IV infusions between home and my integrative physician’s clinic. Doing so many therapies it would make your heads spin.. many of them helping me feel better and giving us hope that we were finally moving in the right direction. But somehow it all became too much and rather than helping me heal and feel better, tumor site pain suddenly picked up significantly, and the more I did, the more the pain and tumor swelling progressed. So I unfortunately had to pull back on almost everything in June, and have the scalp masses removed because I could barely sleep from severe pain anymore. I still haven’t been able to resume most of the therapies due to worsening of already severe tumor site pain each time I try again. 

So now I’m in this place where the surgery will alleviate some suffering, but possibly not enough that will allow me to resume any of the treatments that were previously helping me. 

No one in conventional medicine sees an answer for me. I’m struggling to get requested consults or considerations for newer or less invasive/less toxic treatments that could help me, but they’ll happily offer me chemo that has terrible odds of working and fantastic odds of killing me. The conventional oncology system is broken in our country. They seem to have zero interest in trying to uncover the true root causes, and instead spend billions trying to find new ways to treat the symptoms (tumors) rather than solving the underlying causes and how to reverse them while healing the patient as a whole. I shouldn’t have to spend nearly every waking hour of my life doing my own research, paying thousands upon thousands of dollars out of pocket for every integrative consult and therapy, and experimenting on myself to try to survive. I am not blaming any one institution here; it is Everywhere in our country (and many other countries as well). This isn’t to say I’m ungrateful for the treatments I have needed, but if true root causes were researched the way pharmaceuticals are, recurrences and stage IV terminal diagnoses would be nothing like what they are today. 

It seems to me now that many people see me as a lost cause. As a story character whose fate was sealed with the original diagnosis. But I don’t, nor have I ever, seen myself that way. What I do see and hear and feel (deeply) is the fear and preconceived notions that people (typically providers) have about me. I am extremely sensitive to people talking to me and making treatment decisions as if my ending has already been written. I have plenty enough fear and grief already. I know the odds are stacked against me. But that doesn’t mean I don’t still believe in myself or in miracles. 

We are struggling immensely with all of this. Despite all we’ve been through, it unfortunately just seems to continue to get harder. I have extremely limited physical capacity right now, mental capacity is beyond its maximum between the severe pain and stress, and I need to do an insane amount of preparation for surgery and my hospital stay. My body wants to rest but cannot find a way to get comfortable to do so, and my heart just wants to be with Brandon and the kids, but my mind pulls me in a million directions while the pain and debilitating fatigue are screaming at me no matter what I do. Brandon continues to work full-time and try to carry me, the kids, the house, and everything else.

We appreciate your kind words, prayers, and support, but please understand we are drowning and oftentimes trying to respond to even a quick message is just too much for us right now. Please understand it is Not personal, and your kindness is noted, taken to heart, and very much appreciated. 

As always, I will do my best to share a post-op update when I am able. 

Thank you ā¤ļøā€šŸ©¹

Surgery Tomorrow, 7/3

I know it’s been a very long time since I’ve had the capacity to provide an update, but I would greatly appreciate your kind prayers. I will be having surgery tomorrow to remove a couple scalp masses, one of which has gotten very large and has been causing excruciating pain (along with many other difficult symptoms) for over 2 months. 

I have been struggling immensely with pain in various tumor sites for months now. I have been hitting the integrative therapies incredibly hard, and I believe the pain is, ironically, a good sign, but it is extremely difficult to manage. 

I don’t know how long I’ll be in the hospital post-surgery, but given my current condition and typical responses to anesthesia, I doubt I will be able to provide any updates in a timely fashion. I very much appreciate your prayers, well wishes, positive energy, and support as I head into another frightening procedure. 

Much love šŸ©·šŸ’œ

Hanging in There, Focusing on Healing

Thank you to everyone who has checked in, sent cards, gifts, or food, and for your prayers and love. I’ve been approaching survival a little differently these past couple months, reprioritizing things other than social media (in today’s world, can you blame me?), and continuing to dive even deeper into solving my own healing. 

I had scans in early January. A few things measured larger, there were a couple areas of unknown, and a few tiny previous unknowns were no longer there šŸ™. 

I had a consult with the surgeon who did my 2nd abdominal surgery (in 2021). He said he could do surgery for the liver, but wasn’t exactly sure it would be ā€œworth it.ā€ It would be another major surgery (which brings its own concerns and risks, including more scar tissue and knocking me down further), and the recovery process could potentially spur other areas to grow more. They continue to offer me chemo, but I’m still not in a place where I feel that it is the right choice for me. 

Since that is all Mayo has to offer me, I have continued to dedicate every single day to my quest for healing. I’m researching and doing things I never previously imagined. I’m fully experimenting and it is scary every step of the way, but it still feels safer and wiser than the alternatives to me right now. I have a really wonderful team of providers and staff walking alongside me, making this extremely unique journey feel a little less lonely. This ā€œteamā€ is of my own making: multidisciplinary, from all corners of the metro, even across the country, and none of it is covered by insurance. 

I continue to learn things that I’ll never be able to unlearn, which are shaping and even drastically changing my worldview. While I am trying to let go of the resentment that conventional cancer care exists as it does today, I am motivated to find a better way for myself. 

Brandon continues to be the amazing, God-given hand for me to hold through all of this. He helps me research, helps me find hope when I’m down to my last shred, supports me in a million practical and emotional ways… he is absolutely the best person to walk with (or sometimes carry) me through this journey. 

My presence will likely continue to be intermittent moving forward. I already have 1-3 appointments most days, and there’s a chance this will be increasing in the relative future. Amongst all the additional chaos of adulting and parenting, I am trying to find ways to be present with the kids and Brandon while not spending Too much time researching (which is incredibly tough, because it never feels like I can learn enough). We joke that I’ve learned more than enough these past few years to earn myself another doctorate, and there’s no doubt it has completely changed me. 

I want to truly thank you all for the continued love and support, even if I’m not able to respond in a timely fashion, or at all. I am always doing my best, and still looking forward to the day I can post the amazing news for which I’ve been working and praying so hard every single day. 

Important Updates

We’re still trying to process things and figure out the best path forward, but I was notified on Wednesday morning by Interventional Radiology that they will no longer do the hepatic artery embolization for me. The MRI I had last Friday provided more detail that apparently made them think the procedure wouldn’t be successful or wise to move forward with. 

So at this time, no one in conventional oncology has treatment to offer me unless I decide to do chemo. And the pressure to do it is Intense, despite crappy statistics and terrible risks. If I chose to do it, it could take weeks before it worked, and by ā€œworked,ā€ I mean slowing growth, Possibly stopping it. But not making it go away: not the metastases, and definitely not the cancer itself. It would weaken my immune system and entire body, which, I kind of need… and then I would need to continue on that chemo until it stopped working or I couldn’t tolerate it anymore. Then I’d be back in the same boat I’m in now. But even weaker. 

Conventional oncology has never had a cure for me. All they hope to do is kick the can down the road a little farther. Well, that isn’t good enough for me. It’s completely unacceptable. Which is why I have been exploring and trying countless alternative treatments for the last few years, and why I continue to do so. I’m working hard to strengthen and heal my body, mind, and spirit despite the enormous financial burden. I won’t get into the asinine world of insurance coverage for chemo but not modalities that Help people Heal or feel Better… 

As I said, there’s a lot to process and figure out now. While I’m working and praying for healing, I’m also praying I don’t end up in an emergency situation. It’s a very lonely and scary road to be on, but I refuse to give up or give in to pressures for something I do not think is right for me. 

This Thanksgiving, and every day, I am extremely grateful for my husband and his undying support, our wonderful children, families, and friends, the providers and professionals who support and believe in me, God, my angels and ancestors for guiding me, and for each day I get to continue to be here with my family. 

I’m on my own path, and while I have no idea where it’s going to take me, I’d rather have this journey than simply jump off a cliff. When I find my way, I’ll come back for others ā¤ļø

7 Weeks Since Surgery

It’s a little hard to believe, but it’s been 7 weeks since surgery. Recovery is going ok, but I’m still trying to come back from radiation and the cardiac event in April, so the overall progress has seemed very slow. 

Following the traumatic events of this spring/summer, I found myself in a near-constant state of panic. I was experiencing panic attacks daily, crying multiple times per day, and constantly stuck in an unending doom spiral. The coping mechanisms on which I’d learned to rely over the last few years were no longer seeming to help, and every single stressor became just another insurmountable trigger. I managed 4.5 years of cancer to not need daily medication to manage my mental health; I have had detrimental side effects in the past with all of the meds I’ve taken, so I was very hesitant to even consider trying them again. However, I finally reached a point where I realized I could no longer responsibly try to manage things on my own and had to fight to get prescriptions for new meds that weren’t going to carry the high risks of those I’ve tried in the past. So far, I am thankful to report that the medications are helping, though we are still experimenting and working to find the best current regimen for me. 

Medication alone has never been sufficient for me when it comes to my mental health. In addition to self-care/lifestyle factors, I have seen several therapists over the past few years. Unfortunately, I discovered this year that even long-term ones were no longer serving me in the ways I currently need. I finally found a therapist I am comfortable with again, and I have been seeing them 1-2 times/week now. 

Since surgery, I have had several other important scans and appointments. Thankfully, the large ovarian cyst and accompanying symptoms have resolved. An MRI of my right (non-operative) shoulder reveals a complete tendon tear in my rotator cuff, and I will likely just be continuing to try to heal that through physical therapy at this point. 

I had a cardiac MRI last month to get a more accurate measurement of my heart function following the events back in April. Sadly, the MRI shows my left ventricular ejection fraction was at 44%, which places me in the ā€œmildā€ heart failure category now. Before chemo in 2019, it was 55-60%, and before this last round of radiation, it was 50-55%. The cardiologist has started me on 2 heart failure medications at this time, but, because I’m also struggling with POTS symptoms and low blood pressure, it’s an extremely tricky balance (all of the possible medications for this type of heart failure lower blood pressure, and one of them is also a diuretic, when I’m already struggling to keep my fluid levels higher due to POTS). 

I’ve also been meeting and scheduling consults with additional providers to further expand my integrative approach to health and healing. I am learning a lot, trying my best to not get Too overwhelmed, and working hard to remain flexible and hopeful amongst all the unknowns. 

Over the last several weeks I have been doing my best to prioritize my mental health, peace, and quality time with Brandon and the kids. I have been limiting my time and influences on social media, making space for intentional solitude, and trying to do things on my own timeline without judging or shaming myself for doing so. I’m learning to allow rest without guilt and just generally try to free myself of unrealistic expectations (typically self-imposed). While I have been working on it for years, I am focusing hard on prioritizing positivity, practicing affirmations, and minimizing and better managing negative energy – from both my own mind and external sources. 

Needless to say, it’s been a busy 7 weeks since surgery. As I’m feeling up to it, I will maybe share some photos of recent events since surgery. We had a nice little (delayed) 11th wedding anniversary celebration, Sloane is back in soccer, and we’ve been trying to do some of our little family traditions again. I’d love to say I’m feeling so much better, but scans are already coming up again in a couple of weeks (how??!!), so I’m having to work extra hard at avoiding the doom spirals right now. 

As always, thank you all for your care and continued prayers šŸ’œ