Friday, March 28, 2008

The Fallacy of Mind Over Matter

Written 03-23-08

I first noticed an unfortunate indentation in the surgery area on February 22 while my mom and I were at the Jacksonville Hyatt Regency for the Young Survivors Coalition conference. I was disappointed that the side of my breast had sunken in almost five months after surgery, and I was less than pleased with the overall cosmetic appearance of it, but I figured it was better than having cancer and decided to just be done with it.

Over the course of the following couple of weeks I found myself critically assessing the long dimpled area in the mirror, wondering what any future Mr. Joey B's would think of my poor, scarred, misshapen ex-beauty queen breast. I decided that it really wasn't of any immediate importance because, in all honesty, I am not anticipating becoming involved in any such relationships any time in the foreseeable future. So, with apathetic flourish, I gave up on critical self assessments and dissatisfaction.

Meanwhile I had been scouring the internet for information regarding young women with breast cancer for a research project I am doing for my Social Constructions of Reality course. Through my searches I have stumbled upon many personal stories and memoirs of young women breast cancer survivors who found out that, in the end, they would not survive. One of these stories was from a woman living with metastatic disease, which, as I have mentioned before, is when the breast cancer travels to other organs, the bones, blood or soft tissues. In this woman's story, she found a lump in the area of her breast that the lumpectomy was preformed. Her doctor brushed it off as scar tissue and told her not to worry about it. Well, she worried about it anyway and found out later on that not only did she have a new tumor in the same area, but that the breast cancer had metastasized to her liver and bones.

Naturally these kinds of stories play on the mind of someone going through the same ordeal that these diseased, dying and dead women had, and one night while I lay in bed unable to sleep, as I have many nights as a side effect of chemotherapy premeds, I decided that rather than take Tylenol PM or count sheep, I ought to give myself a breast exam. My left breast, the whole, pristine, unscathed one, felt the same as it always has; no lumps, no scars, no tender areas. The other side, however, is different. As a lingering side effect of breast surgery and lymph node removal, I have had pain and tenderness in my right arm, underarm, side and breast due to nerve damage and irritation. I have been aware of an increase in this pain which I attributed partly to the Taxol, which has caused nerve damage in my arms, legs, hands and feet, leading me to believe that the increase in pain on my right side is not a big deal. But as my paranoid finger tips roved the altered landscape of my right breast, they stumbled upon a little hard spot.

"What is this?" my brain asked my fingertips.
"Feels like a pea," the fingertips responded.
"What is a pea doing in there?" the brain demanded.
"Don't know, but we can't move it," they told the brain.
"Perhaps it's just scar tissue," the brain rationalized.
"Perhaps," answered the fingertips, "but this consistency sure does feel familiar, and we've never felt scar tissue before."
"But we're still on chemotherapy," the brain retorted, "and couldn't possibly be growing any new cancer already. We haven't even read any stories about that kind of thing happening. You fingertips are too paranoid."
"Sure thing, boss," the fingertips conceded. But the fingertips couldn't stop touching the area, no matter how many times the rational brain insisted that it was nothing.

I mean, seriously, I was still on chemo!

But even so, it is the case that under circumstances such as cancer, the rational mind has been known to become irrational. For example, a recurring headache for a week is no longer a question of whats in the air, it is a question of whether or not the cancer has spread to the brain. And when blood starts coming out every every time you blow your nose, it goes from questioning what's up with your sinuses to wondering how long you have to live before the cancer takes over your brain and kills you.

Thus the rational mind becoming irrational and then trying to rationalize away it's paranoia has a tendency to work itself up into quite the tizzy. Knowing that this has been the case before, my mind decided to play it cool and not worry about the whole thing; my mind decided to be calm about it and wait until the next time I went to the chemo center to bring it up to anyone, and my mind felt validated when I mentioned it to the nurse who asked me the standard pre-chemo questions and she responded, "It's probably just scar tissue, but we'll have the doctor take a look at it." My mind was glad that it didn't get all silly and irrational and go calling the doctor first thing in the morning after I had found it.

That is, until the doctor took a look at it.

The doctor said that we needed to have it scanned right away, that she didn't like the way the skin was dimpling. She wanted an ultrasound done ASAP. She wanted to know when I found it and why I didn't call her immediately. Any new lumps, she said, needed to be brought to her attention right away.

And so on my last day of chemotherapy, on the day that I have been looking forward to since I woke up on October 5th, 2007 and was told that I would be needing chemotherapy because, yes, it was in my lymph nodes, I found myself feeling lost, empty, drained, disappointed and frightened. How would I do this all again? What would it mean? Would it mean that I can't beat it? Would it mean that it was stronger than the strongest drugs they have to combat this kind of thing? Was I going to die from cancer? How could I die from cancer?

I was in a strange mood for the rest of the day, and that night I applied for life insurance policies. I thought that at least I would be able to leave something for my family, help them, give them something; but the next morning an insurance agent called and informed me that I wouldn't be able to get a life insurance policy for three to five years after my last cancer treatment, and that if I got insurance between the third and fifth years that it would be very expensive.

I felt helpless, crushed and sad. I wondered how far I would be willing to go to get rid of it and what exactly "fighting till the bitter end" would entail. Would I be required to sacrifice quality of life to live an extra couple of days? Would I be able to do all of the things I wanted to do until I died? How would we deal with a blow like this? I'm already such a financial drain on my parents, and my money is almost all gone.

How would I tell my family? How could I possibly tell them?

These thoughts, along with thousands of other, similar thoughts swirled in torrents around my mind, through my night and day and in between.

We celebrated Carrie's 22nd birthday on Saturday on a Suncruz Casino boat. She did fantastically on the slot machines, and we all had a wonderful time. For those few hours I didn't think about it, didn't worry about it, didn't wonder and fret. I just laughed, played and had fun. But when we were home again and I was driving off in my car, it was all I could think about.

It is Easter Sunday now. I am scheduled for a PET/CT scan on Tuesday at 11am. Cancer patients are supposed to get one of those after they finish chemotherapy anyway to see if the cancer is all gone. I'm not sure when the doctor will call me with the results, but it feels like I can't know soon enough. I haven't told anyone about the lump or how concerned the doctor seemed because I don't want anyone else to go through this slow, mind controlling, obsessive torture. We have been through a lot, my family and I, and I know that watching me go through this has been nearly as difficult as going through it, so I thought I should spare them and do all of the extra worrying myself.

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