Sugar Sugar…

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I’m wrapped up like a tootsie roll in a warm blanket. A fresh-faced Australasian doctor injects glucose into my veins. The sugar, or rather the reactive glucose makes its way down to my disease. I sleep, for an hour…Like a tasty treat my cancer is consuming my energy, and the one thing that has entered my body this morning.

 

I open my eyes to the doctor’s voice, I rise in my hospital gown. Everything is slow moving as we walk, down the long hall…A thirty-something Middle Eastern man in his gown, enters a patient room ahead and I think, oh no, not him too…

 

The PET (positron emission tomography) room is large and bare. I lay down on the long table with my head close to the O of the machine. I am sliding through the zero, back and forth and back, for an hour. It is painless and I imagine I am in a Sci-Fi film where a machine instantly rebuilds every single cell in my body.

A girl can dream, yes?

 

Instead, I am now radioactive and temporarily a danger to others, well, only to pregnant women and children.

 

Me, a danger?

 

I laugh.

 

I step out of the room, a lady worn by time walks past and her gown falls off her left shoulder, she mutters something in Chinese. My steps match hers. Slow. Drawn out. Every thought, every feeling elongated, stretched by time. Two souls on a journey so many have unwillingly taken before. All ages, sizes, races. All someone’s child, someone’s friend, someone’s lover, brother, sister, father, mother.

 

The nurse hands my bag of clothes along with a white cheese sandwich and apple juice. A satisfying feast, after fasting and waiting.

 

Now, I wait again…hoping no other cancerous mass is lurking in another hard to reach place. So I keep marching forward, or rather crawl a slow crawl. Left, right, left, right, left, right to my next destination.

 

My surgeon’s table. Seven days and counting…

 

Love, Kerry Doyle xx

Photo Credit: Me

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The Race.

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Being diagnosed with cancer is like the gun going off at the start of a 100-meter-sprint. Except you don’t quite know which way to run…

My surgery needs to happen within two weeks and I don’t even have a surgeon yet. I could take the option to delay and put in a stint short term to open up the blockage, but it will run the risk of my cancer spreading…

It’s my last day in LA. So I see my doctor first thing in the morning to have my bloods taken from my bruised veins for genetic testing, CEA and CA-19. I drive to Melrose Ave to grab my CT scans. Then rush to the pathology lab on Beverly Blvd to pick up the slides of my tumor. It’s so weird to say out loud, “I have a tumor”. A scientist greets me in his white coat and walks me through the bright lab were other young scientists are studying biopsies. I feel like I’m on the set of NCIS and “Abby” will rush around the corner with her pony-tails and spiked neck choker. The head scientist picks up the envelope with my slides and hands it to me. He pauses for a moment and I notice a gentle empathy in his eyes as he wishes me well and says goodbye…

As my plane lifts off the tarmac I think of the life I have built in LA. I realise I have to surrender and let it go, at least for a while.

The city lights fall away from me. I tell myself I have a new dream, a dream to stay alive and win the race…

Love, Kerry Doyle xx

Photo Credit: @majawyh

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June 20th 2017.

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Monday morning I met my doctor, she ordered a CT scan of my abdomen. I had to have another not-so-nice drink, but at least I didn’t encounter the same onset affect of the pre-op laxative.

I lay down on the table with an O shaped scanning machine at my feet. The IV contrast dye burned as it entered my veins, I could taste metal in my mouth as it rushed to my head and then down to my feet. Lucky I’m good at multitasking because it made me feel like peeing my pants while having to hold my breath and I tried hard not to sneeze simultaneously.

My Doctor called later in the afternoon with the results. The good news is the mass appears to be contained in the colon but the bad news is, the operation will cost more than my savings for an apartment.

The next morning my Doctor calls again. “I have organized for genetic testing.” Why genetic testing I wondered?

A few minutes later a call from my gastroenterologist reveals why…

“It’s Cancer.”

I burst into tears.

“Do you want to come in after my last patient?”

“Yes,” I just managed to say.

I hung up. I sat on my bedroom floor. Time stopped. Maybe only the words “you have cancer” can stop time quite like that.

I felt calm and peaceful, the deepest peace I had ever felt.

I called my dad and cried as I told him…

“It’s cancer.”

With each person I called I cried again.

Then they cried.

We all cried together.

Love, Kerry Doyle xx

Photo Credit: Brian Bowen Smith

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