Part IV: When Cancer Comes to Call–An Action Plan

On the 7th of October we celebrated my 70th birthday in style with ten of our dearest friends in Baja. It was a magical evening of fun, food, and friends.

 

Little did we know while blowing out that candle, that we would be plummeting into the darkest time of our lives eight days later.

On the 15th of October we learned Greg had a 4cm. tumor on his tonsil and needed medical intervention of some kind. True to his personality, he wouldn’t leave for the states right away. “I have too many things to do first.” What a stubborn man. I managed to get him on a plane to Seattle four days later on Wednesday October 19, 2016. At least this way we had a few days to make a plan of action for this important trip. What is the first thing you do in a case like this? Google “tumor on the tonsil,” of course. Pretty scary business; the information did nothing to assuage our fears.

Here is a guy who is so healthy he doesn’t take any medication. Not even vitamins. He’s never had troubles with any of the usual medical issues, like excess weight, high cholesterol or high blood pressure. His health couldn’t be better. Except for this tumor on his tonsil. This made going up to Washington to see a doctor a bit tricky, because Greg didn’t have a doctor up there.

I had been a patient with The Everett Clinic, and satisfied with their organization and care. I told him he should go to the walk-in clinic in Everett and explain to whomever he saw what was going on. He was worried that they would put him off and he’d have to be there for a long time trying to get help. But based on the fact that I had looked in and seen the tumor for myself, I told him not to worry. I assured him they would get right to it once he opened his mouth and said, “Ahhhh.” He continued to voice his concerns, but I was confident enough for both of us. “Just go,” I told him.

I made his plane reservations and arrangements for him to rent a car. Peggy, our dear friend in Seattle, opened her home to him for as long as he would need it. Our pup, Isabela, and I took him to the airport. I gave him reassurance, huge hugs, and many kisses. Now my job would be to practice the art of patience and wait to hear what he would learn. The anxiety I felt gave way to tears. I cried for the first part of my trip driving home. My churning stomach and the heavy feeling of dread–thinking of the worst case scenarios, filled me the rest of the way. Once home, I paced from room to room. I had to remind myself to breathe.

Greg followed our care plan for the next day. Peggy tried to get him to eat breakfast and sent him off with coffee, a lunch, hugs, and good wishes. His drive from Seattle on the early morning of the 20th got him to the Everett Clinic, The Gunderson Building, when the walk-in clinic opened. Checking-in was a breeze. The first doctor to examine him took action immediately. She went to the ear, nose, and throat specialist’s office across the hall and convinced the receptionist to have Dr. Adams see him straightaway. This heightened Greg’s fears, but it also gave him a calming sense of confidence. By noon he had been examined thoroughly, given a chest x-ray, a CT scan, and was waiting in a ferry line to get to Whidbey Island in order to spend time with our friends, Mike and Janine and their daughter Jordan. While he waited to board the ferry, Dr. Adams’s office called him with a time for a biopsy scheduled for the next day. The speed with which they worked demonstrated an urgency I wished to deny.

It was 2:00PM my time (an hour later than his time) when he finally called me with all this news. I was coming out of my skin with worry, and I was angry that he’d waited so long to call me. All day I’d been overwhelmed with panic–a mental numbness–not having an inkling of what was happening to my husband of 38 years.

Hearing his satisfaction with the treatment he was receiving calmed me a little, but he said it didn’t look good. I think he told me the tumor was too big for a straightforward surgery. It would not be an option. I kept asking questions, babbling, and I’m sure I was doing a fair amount of stammering.

I remember thinking, he seems almost happy talking about how he’s going to spend the night with Mike and Janine on the island where we had lived for 32 years. But when he says, “They are doing a biopsy in the morning,” I find I can’t breathe.

I don’t remember ending the phone call. I have no recollection of how I spent the rest of the day and night. At the time all I could think was, “Cancer. It’s probably cancer.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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