Jennifer Goodman Linn You Fearless

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My Own Worst Enemy

Tomorrow marks 4 weeks since my surgery.  In some ways it feels like it was yesterday and in other ways it feels like a long time ago.  I am slowly but surely getting better.  Recovery has been a lot tougher this time around.  The good news is that I got off my painkillers and am now only taking Tylenol for the incision pain.  I find that my surgical pain is very manageable now (a “2” or “3” on a scale of 1-10).

The much bigger issue is my digestive pain.  I am still eating a very limited diet and my body doesn’t seem interested in anything that is not white and bland.  I have been having a lot of cramps and pains which is natural yet very debilitating.

I have found that I am my own worst enemy because I want to be “back to normal” immediately.  When I have been discussing my surgery with my physical therapist, nutritionist etc, they all tell me that this will be at least a 3 month process.  This makes sense to me because the surgery was much more invasive.  The fact that it has been close to 4 weeks since the surgery and I still have no desire to enter a gym tells me something!  However, my impatience is not helping in this situation.  I just want the whole incident to be behind me!

Although I am not yet physically recovered, the doctors wanted me to start my new chemotherapy regimen. So, last night I began taking a new drug called sirolimus.  I will take 4 pills daily and the doctors assure me that I shouldn’t have many side effects.  The drug is often used on kidney transplant patients to avoid rejecting their new kidney. I am not sure how this relates to my situation but I have long since put 100% trust in my Doctors.

As you can see from the above pictures, the tumor is definitely gone!  The one benefit of stomach surgery is that you get very skinny! I am enjoying this status although I know that I will need to gain some weight in the coming weeks.  I don’t think I have weighed this little since middle school!

Jen 5: Cancer O – It’s Official!

 

Dave and I received the pathology report back from my surgery last week and the great news is that I am technically free of disease.  What this means is that there are no measurable traces of cancer in my body.  When the Dr’s scraped around my tumor they didn’t find any microscopic cells.  


This is amazing news and frankly, I was shocked.  Given the size and the rapid growth of the tumor, I assumed that even if the surgeon was able to remove the mass, he would report back that there is evidence that there are microscopic cells that he couldn’t see/get to (this is what happened 5.5 years ago after my first surgery).


Although I am cancer-free, I will be starting a new form of oral chemo as soon as I recover from my surgery.  There are two medical approaches when you are told you are free of disease: 

  • To discontinue any treatment and just monitor the vulnerable area very closely (e.g. CT scans every 2-3 months)
  • To continue with treatment as a preventative measure (to buy more time and keep the cancer away longer if one thinks it might return)
Given my track record and the fact that this oral chemo has a very low toxicity, we have opted to continue with preventative chemo. The promising news is that there is no “life time max” for this chemo so I can stay on it for a long time if I need to until the medical community finds more treatment options (not fun for me, but important since I plan on sticking around for a long time!)  The low toxicity also means that there are very few side effects so hopefully I will continue to build back strength and stay energetic and healthy.
 
Not surprisingly, the pathology report revealed that the tumor was very much alive (only about 20% of it had been killed off by the chemotherapy). So it’s a good thing that we took that sucker out when we did!  

We also got confirmation that this tumor was BIG. It measured 26cm x 23cm x 10cm. When we heard the size of it, I couldn’t be angry with the Doctor for the size of my scar.  He and I always had a deal that he would keep the incision as small as possible. He apologized but said that given the scope of the tumor, he thinks he did a pretty good job!  I got my staples removed this past week and although the scar has a lot more healing to do, it is looking pretty good.   I am slowly getting used to it. Hopefully, over time, my scar will accentuate my stomach muscles and I will look like I have a six-pack!

 
So, you ask, how do I feel about all of this? For one, I am EXTREMELY grateful that we are in this position. To be cancer-free again is a great place to be. Hopefully I will keep this label for the rest of my life but, if not, at least we are at a good starting point.  So, despite the soreness that continues from the incisional pain and the challenges of getting my digestive system on track again, I am feeling great.  I would take those symptoms any day over the fear and anxiety of having a tumor growing inside of me.
 
Over the past five years, Dave and I have tried very hard to change our orientation to truly live in the present. So, we are very happy that there is no more disease. However, the reality is that we are far from planning a party and hanging up our cancer hats just yet.  


This is the 5th time I have been deemed cancer-free.  When I can get to 5 years of being free of disease (with no assistance from chemotherapy treatment or surgery), then we will throw a big bash. So please understand that we are grateful and we still feel that there is a long road ahead (Hey, I’m going back on chemo so this is no walk in the park!). 


This is a test to see how thoroughly you read my blog, for all of the posts that send ecstatic congratulatory notes and cheers, you really don’t get it.  I am not alone when I say that cancer patients don’t feel like celebrating at first.  Only when it seems like the news or condition is more permanent do we allow ourselves to relax a bit.  This is often the time that I feel most “distant” from friends and family.  They want to celebrate that “we are done” and while hopeful, I am not in that camp.
 
If you gave me truth serum, I would also tell you that I am a little freaked out by the events of the past month.  When I had my first tumor removed on 12/30/04, the tumor was 18cm. My surgeon at the time told me that the mass was very large and had been very aggressive.  That all made sense to me because it took us a good 6-8 weeks to figure out what was wrong with me.  I experienced my first symptoms around Halloween and I wasn’t officially diagnosed until a good 2 months later. So, it made sense that by the time we understand what was wrong and addressed it, the tumor had grown to such a size.


What’s truly unnerving to me is that 5 years later I am well aware of my cancer.  I know my body really well and I am working with the best sarcoma surgeon and oncologist at the best cancer center in the country. And even aggressively addressing this tumor with chemotherapy and constant scans, it got to be 26cm.   Thank goodness we were on top of it. I can’t help but think that if the tumor had been growing this quickly 5.5 years ago when we weren’t as savvy as today, I might not be here…
 
If you attended Cycle for Survival this past year, you heard me announce that next year I will be proudly be wearing my Jen :5, Cancer: 0 shirt.  I am thrilled to say that I can make good on that promise!

 

Coach K – A Stand-Up Guy


I have a really wonderful amazing story about my hero, and now friend, Coach K.  Anyone who knows me knows I bleed Duke blue.  I am a very passionate and involved alumni of Duke University and I am quite outspoken about my love of the university and of the basketball team.   And if you’ve been a loyal reader of my blog you know that the week before I had my surgery, Dave and I flew out to Indianapolis to see Duke win the 2010 NCAA Championship.  It was awesome! Perhaps embarrassing for Dave to see me screaming all of the cheers at the top of my lungs but very exciting for me. 

So many of my favorite college memories revolve around watching the basketball games and celebrating the team’s wins and losses (mostly wins when I was there).  Just like many people remember exactly where they were when JFK was assassinated or when the planes flew into the World Trade Center on September 11th, I remember exactly where I was when Christian Laettner scored the game-winning last-second jump shot on March 28, 1992 to claim a 104-103 victory over Kentucky in the East regional final of the 1992 NCAA Tournament. 

It’s impossible to love Duke basketball without admiring and respecting the “wizard” behind Duke’s successes, Coach K.  Coach K has been the coach of Duke’s basketball team since 1980.  He has won 4 NCAA championships, has coached the medal-winning US Olympics team and is considered by most to be one of the all-time best college basketball coaches. His accolades and achievements are too numerous to mention.  He is also supposed to be a great guy spending numerous hours coaching and mentoring his players, students and business people, as well as donating his time and money to various charitable organizations.  I have heard from many who know him that he is a great guy but now I can say with pride that I KNOW he is a great guy.

My father-in-law reached out to him when I went in for my 5th surgery asking if Coach K might be able to send a signed hat or t-shirt to cheer up his “Cameron Crazie” Duke daughter-in-law.  Please remember that my surgery took place less than 2 weeks after Duke had won the NCAA championship…the guy is probably a bit busy!

Regardless, Coach K’s assistant responded immediately asking my father-in-law for my contact information.  While I was in the hospital, Dave brought me a hand-written letter sent by Coach K wishing me luck and strength. I couldn’t believe it! It was so thoughtful and must have been written the day he received my father-in-law’s call.  I hung the letter proudly on my hospital wall and it gave me strength as I battled the 8 painful days in the hospital.

I returned home from the hospital to notice that there were a few missed calls on my iphone from the 919 area code.  Turns out Coach K had tried to call me numerous times and reached out to my father-in-law to make sure everything was OK.  Last Saturday afternoon I was alone at home and picked up the phone to find Coach K on the other end of the line checking in on me!  We spent 15 minutes on the phone and he was delightful.  I was sweating like a teenager I was so excited. He was inquisitive about my surgery, passionate about my cause and inspired by my attitude.  It was a lovely conversation.

In Hebrew there a word “Dayenu” which means approximately, “it would have been enough.”  I couldn’t help recalling that expression when I received a big package from the Duke Athletics department a few days after our conversation.  Inside the package was another hand-written note from Coach K and a few t-shirts and hats to thank me for being such a big supporter of the Duke Team.

Coach K is busy man who must have a “to do” list 10 feet long. However, he made time to reach out to me and provide words of hope and inspiration.  I so admire that he chooses to spend a portion of his time connecting with people and sending his positive message to them. 

Thank you Coach K…you are a true role model.

And if you didn’t think I was a big enough Duke fan already…now, just wait and see!

An Uplifting, Great Article

Hello! I am doing well. Still in a fair amount of pain but every day I am getting a bit better. Finally the weather is nice so I can walk.  I am proud to stay that I walked about 2 miles today. And now, I am zonked! 


 I really enjoyed this article that was in the NY Times the other day. It resonated with me on multiple levels.  First off 50% of sarcoma patients don’t make it 5 years past diagnosis and here I am thriving at 5.5 years.  Also, I love the themes of wanting to live an ordinary life but tirelessly making the most of every day and seizing the moment.  Lastly, the fact that “no one knows what will happen” and you need to set your own path is exactly how I try to live my life…for the most part I have gotten fairly good at it.  

17 Years Later, Stage 4 Survivor Is Savoring a Life Well Lived

Each year on a day in January — the 15th, to be precise — I go to aWeb site and post a message to hundreds of women I’ve never met, saying, essentially, “I’m still here.”
Within days, a thunderous chorus comes back, 200 voices, 300. A few of them ask, “How can this be?” Sometimes they begin, “I’m crying.” Many answer in kind: “I’m here, too. It’s now three years.” “Five years.” “Three months.” “Seven.”
What we’re doing, in a way, is checking for lights in the darkness.
Now there probably aren’t a lot of Web sites where the announcement that you’re around and breathing would cause anyone to take notice, let alone respond. But this is a site for people with Stage 4 breast cancer, something I’ve had for 17 years. The average life expectancy with the diagnosis is 30 months, so this is a little like saying I’m 172 years old: seemingly impossible. But it’s not. I first found I had the illness in 1988, and it was rediagnosed as Stage 4 in 1993. That’s 22 years all together, which is the reason I post each year on the anniversary of the day I learned mycancer was back: to let women know that it happens, that people do live with this for years.
I tell them that when the cancer returned, it came on so fast, spread so quickly, that I was given a year or two to live. Within months, the disease turned vicious. It started breaking bones from within, and was coming close to severing my spinal cord.
Nothing was working, till a doctor tried a hormone treatment no one used much anymore, and the cancer turned and retreated, snarling. It remains sluggish but active. Every so often, it rears its head; when it does, we switch treatments and it slides back down. In that way, I stay alive.
I tell them: you just don’t know.
Two and a half years after the Stage 4 diagnosis, I confessed to my mother that the doctors had said I had two years to live, tops. I’d kept this information to myself because if you say it, it’s true. I told her this laughing, as if we were trading preposterous stories. “Well, I guess you’re going to have to hold your breath if you’re going to make that deadline,” she replied, in her slow Southern drawl when I gave my previously stated expiration date.
I spent the next five years holding my breath, then did the same for another five. I enacted every New Year’s resolution, past and future, all at once. Quit work that had grown stale and became a writer. Wrote a book. Went to India on assignment, fell in love with the language that was swirling around me, went back to live for a year and learn Hindi. Didn’t realize the reason I’d come to dislike that hyperbolically overachieving Lance Armstrong was that his behavior was too familiar. Take a nap, Lance! I’d think to myself, though in truth I couldn’t either.
But if I was verging on radical levels of life consumption, I had a reason: No one had told me I wasn’t going to die soon. About 12 years out, my doctor finally did.
There’s a small subcategory of people with Stage 4 breast cancer, it turned out, who live for years and years. “Twenty. Thirty,” said my doctor, George Raptis. This group constitutes about 2 percent of all cases. Doctors can’t predict who will fall into this category. They can’t say you’re in it till you’re in it — till you’ve racked up the necessary miles.
The reason they can’t is that for all the pink-ribbon hoopla, despite the hundreds of millions that have been poured into breast cancer research, hardly anyone has looked into the why of long-distance survival; not one doctor has specialized in this field.
Here’s pretty much the sum of collective knowledge: People in this group tend to have disease that has spread to the bone (as opposed to lung or liver, say) and feeds onestrogen. They tend to do well on hormone treatments. End of commonly known story.
But as Dr. Gabriel N. Hortobagyi at M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston told me, you can also find women whose breast cancer spread to organs other than bone, for whom hormone therapy did exactly nothing, who had their lesions surgically excised and who have been free of cancer for 30 years. None of these women could have expected to live.
You just don’t know, and neither, unfortunately, does the medical field.
One reason, as the breast surgeon Dr. Susan Love told me, is that “many clinical trials are funded by the drug companies to run for five years,” obviously not enough if you’re investigating long-term survivors. But through her institute, the Dr. Susan Love Research Foundation, she has begun to conduct research.
Dr. Love said she was inspired by a colleague who told her that in World War II, aviation experts focused on planes that went down until someone said, “Why aren’t we studying the planes that stay up in the air?” By no means a reflexive optimist, she thinks there’s hope we’ll find a cure.
On the Web site, I tell the women how deeply I believe there’s no such thing as false hope: all hope is valid, even for people like us, even when hope would no longer appear to be sensible.
Life itself isn’t sensible, I say. No one can say with ultimate authority what will happen — with cancer, with a job that appears shaky, with all reversed fortunes — so you may as well seize all glimmers that appear.
I write to them (to myself) that of course this is tough: the waiting to see if the shadows are multiplying, the physical pain, the bouts with terrible blackness.
“But there can be joy in this life, too,” I say, “and that’s so important to remember. This disease does not invalidate us. This past year, I’ve had the joy of falling in love with my sister’s kids, who live states away and whom I hadn’t had the chance to know. I’ve had a second book come out, one I worked on for eight years, about going to live in India with Stage 4 cancer. I’ve had so many moments of joy this year, but when I’m in blackness, I forget about those.” Then I ask them to write and tell me about theirs, and lights begin to flash.
“Had a pajama party with my oldest friend, laughing through the night in matching pajamas about old times.”
“Came in second in a bridge tournament.”
“I went on a wonderful camping trip with my family.”
“Seeing my older daughter grow taller than me. She’s now 5-9.”
One thing I don’t ever think to say: When I was told I had a year or two, I didn’t want anything one might expect: no blow-out trip to the Galápagos, no perfect meal at Alain Ducasse, no defiant red Maserati. All I wanted was ordinary life back, for ordinary life, it became utterly clear, is more valuable than anything else.
I don’t think to say it, and I never will. The women on the site already know that.

Katherine Russell Rich is the author of “Dreaming in Hindi: Coming Awake in Another Language” and “The Red Devil: To Hell With Cancer — and Back.

Daniella Szule – A Dear Friend and Survivor

My surgery was two weeks ago today and I made my first official trek outside of the neighborhood.  Unfortunately it was to attend the memorial service of a very special woman I was proud to call a friend.

Dani’s website says it best….”Who doesn’t love the Dani? I don’t know anyone“.  This proved true today when hundreds of people gathered to wish Dani goodbye after a long and tough 3 year battle with sarcoma.

Dani and I shared the same oncologist at MSKCC.  I remember one day he said to me, “I know you always say you’d like to meet and mentor other patients like you but I’ve never found anyone with your upbeat personality and outlook on life. Jen, I finally found someone for you to meet…her name is Dani and she embraces the life just the way you do.”

We hit it off from day one.  Sharing annoying stories about hair loss, chemotherapy regimens and about annoying side effects.  Often the only good thing about going to the chemo clinic or to our oncologist’s office was seeing Dani there.  She battled a very tough type of sarcoma situated in a very delicate place in her body but she never gave up and never wanted to be treated like a victim or pitied.  She was a beautiful role model in how people can handle the disease with grace.


I remember telling her about Cycle for Survival in the early days and she immediately and passionately said, “I’m in!” No less than two weeks later she had raised over $40K and motivated her large network of friends and family to show up in force to ride and support “Team Dani”

I was supposed to be her mentor yet she was the one teaching me how to live and thrive in the face of adversity.

Dani shared with me a few months ago that our Doctors had no other options for her.  She knew that death was imminent but she handled this horrible news with great resolve and a determination to make the most of her final days.


I remember when I asked her the question, “Dani, really, what can I do for you?”  Her answer was quite simple yet quite powerful. “Jen, please keep on doing what you have started with Cycle for Survival.  It may not help me but it can help so many that follow after me.  I am so thankful that you started this charity.  It has given me a purpose these past few years and has really kept me going. Please don’t stop continuing your efforts.”

While it was totally appropriate and understandable for Dani to be thinking about herself during the past few months, she always was thinking of others.  When she heard about my recent battle a few months ago, she emailed me and said:

Keep fighting the good fight, and I know that bastard tumor will lose against you, just like the others have.There is no other way to say it other than this  sucks, and I am pissed for you. And damn it may you fight this tumor quickly and have it be the last!After all, how about Cycle in Miami, Boston, LA, Texas, next year? I say we at least try someplace warm!

Dani and I were both in the hospital about a month ago. I was told by her family that her health was quickly deteriorating and that I should consider this my goodbye.  I spent long moments talking with her and laughing with her. No matter what, she was always the joker.  She was released to hospice care and yet she survived another 5 weeks…long enough to make sure her mother’s health wasn’t in jeopardy after a recent mastectomy.  That’s my Dani, selfless until the end.

Dani emailed me about 3 days before she passed while I was still in the hospital recovering from my surgery. She apologized profusely for not visiting me in the hospital…she wasn’t feeling very well.  I feel like she knew this might be our last email exchange. She wrote,

Jen, I hope this is it. Let’s get that sucker out of you. Just keep kicking butt like you always have and you will come out on top. I know it! Sending you strength and positive thoughts. You are, as always, a truly amazing person. I am lucky to be able to call you my friend and I know our friendship will last throughout our  lives.

I miss Dani dearly but I will carry her lessons and her wish in my heart as I continue to help make Cycle for Survival an even stronger force in the fight against cancer.  Please honor Dani’s wishes and continue to participate, donate and spread the word. 

Dani, you have made a big difference in my life and I will never forget you.

Surgery Rundown

I am getting a bit better day by day.  I have never been very good at relaxing and these days have been a bit frustrating for me. A typical day consists of a 20 minute “stroll” on my hallway with my Ipod, about 13-14 hours of sleep, a few hours of watching Law & Order/reading, and perhaps a visitor. When the weather is nice, Dave and I go outside for a short walk with Dave acting as my bodyguard, protecting the sore stomach. It is amazing how focused you have to be to not collide with someone on the streets of New York!

All in all, I am getting better every day. The doctors are pleased with my progress and have encouraged me to take it easy for another few weeks and take a lot of painkillers. You gotta love it!

Many people have asked me to explain what the process is for having a surgery like mine so I will quickly explain how it works (with lots of fun pictures to make it more interesting and less painful).

The day before surgery, the doctors make you perform a bowel prep.  For those of you who are not familiar with this process, I will delicately say that you are forced to ingest a ton of disgusting fluids that “flush your insides out.”  My tumor was really not happy with the process this time and I went to the hospital a day earlier to be put on some pain medications and relax.  Here I am trying to stay calm, gearing up for my surgery.

The surgeon comes to see you right before surgery, reviews the procedure he/she is about to perform, and makes you sign an official consent form.  You are then walked into the operating room by the surgical fellow or the anesthesiologist. You are placed on a warm, narrow bed, they put some oxygen over your mouth and the next thing you know you are…

In a lot of pain in the recovery room. They keep you there until your pain is under control (apparently I kept saying, “I need more pain medication! and “No, I am not ready to see my husband”) and after a few hours, they bring you to your room.  For those of you who say that I always smile, I guess you are correct! I have no recollection of Dave taking this picture and it is shocking to see such a happy face knowing just how much pain I was in!

The first night you are so high on pain medication that you are awake the entire time.  The minutes go by really slowly because you are so wired.  This gets a bit better over time but, in general, you rarely sleep the first few days.

Starting the day after surgery (yes, less than 24 hours after being filleted like a fish), they make you get out of bed and walk. Luckily, you have a “pain pump” that gives you immediate relief up to 6 times an hour if you hit the button (my best friend during my stay, for sure!).  Apparently, in my first few days, I hit the pump over 80 times an hour versus 6…hmm, I guess I was in a lot of pain! Unfortunately, there’s a max on the painkillers you are allowed to receive but my negotiation skills are good and the surgeon agreed to giving me a bit more pain medication.  You also have a spirometer which ensures that you are getting air into your lungs and breathing.  You are supposed to blow into the device about 10 times an hour and try to attain a certain level (similar to the “strong man” game at a Carnival).  I was never very good at it but that didn’t stop me from trying!

The nurses are great at MSKCC and they make a very painful process a bit easier.  Monique was my walking partner the first day and helped me get around the floor (14 laps is a mile…I was probably averaging a 40 minute mile!)

On day 2, I was happy to have my “NG” tube removed (the funny thing sticking to my nose that stands for nasal gastro tube). The tube is inserted through your nose and descends into your stomach to make sure your stomach doesn’t build fluid.  It is extremely itchy and uncomfortable and it is amazing to see just how long this tube is when they remove it (reminded me of the clown car in the circus…how can they fit that many feet of tubing through my nose?!?)

My Siamese twin during the 8 days I was in the hospital was my “pole” which is connected to me through my medical port and is responsible for making sure I receive all my fluids (painkillers, saline solution, nutrition etc).  24 hours a day, 7 days a week you are attached to this thing and it is beyond annoying! 

To make the time go by more quickly, we decorated my wall with wonderful pictures of friends and family. And I loved having all of my relatives and my friend’s children donate art projects to the wall. A personal favorite was my nephew Ben’s excellent portrayal of the Duke Blue Devils winning the 2010 NCAA Championship!  I also had a pretty good view so I couldn’t complain.

On day 3 I got to attend the “Look Good, Feel Better” program which is a service that provides women with makeovers and cosmetics while they are in the hospital.  It’s kind of funny to feel so horrible but look so good! Check out the picture of me with my mom and dad right after my make-over. Looks like I am ready for the Cancer Ball!

My hemoglobin was low (amount of oxygen being transported through your blood) so I needed a blood transfusion on Day 4. Not a big deal and I felt a lot better afterwards. How appropriate that my blood type is B+ (get it, be positive!)

I also was so fortunate in that as I started to feel better around days 5 and 6, I had some wonderful visitors. If your picture is not posted up here it is more likely because it didn’t come out that well and you would have been angry with me if I posted it 🙂  On day 6, I was told that my stomach was probably awake from the anesthesia and it was time to try eating ice chips.  Luckily I kept them down and was able to move on to water towards the end of day 6.  This is when the surgical team decided to release me from my pole (hurray!) and see how I could do on oral pain killers (note to self: oral pain killers not nearly as good as painkillers through IV).

Chicago Mom came into town and wrapped up my tour of duty for days 7 and 8.  She saw me eat my first meal of egg whites and got to meet Sheryl Crow.  I left the hospital via a wheel chair with a long list of “release instructions”.  There were lots of medications and lots of follow-up appointments to make but we were released!  When I walked out of the hospital I was so happy to breathe fresh air. We got into a cab and gave the driver big $ to drive very slowly (every pothole felt like my incision was being ripped open).  I arrived home, took my first shower in 8 days, ripped off my hospital bracelet and made a wish that I would never have to go through this process again.

Stay tuned as I have a wonderful story to share about a “hero” of mine who reached out to me to check in on my status. Later in the week I can also share the pathology report and our “next steps” on this long and winding road!

I’m BACK – A Bit Worse for the Wear

 

Hi Everyone,
I will keep this very short and sweet because it is still extremely hard to find a comfortable sitting position in which to type. Hopefully as the days go on, I will be able to write more and more as I have a lot to share.
First off, a HUGE THANK YOU!  Words can’t express how much your blog posts, emails and phone calls helped me get through the last 10 days.  Surgery is often a very solitary experience…you are so single-mindedly focused on the task at hand that the days become a blur (“today I need to walk”, “today I need to drink”). It’s very easy to feel that you are “alone” in the process.  Your words gave me great strength.
 
Lots to share but in the interest of my comfort, I will quickly answer the trivia questions:
1) What did Jen do today for the first time in 8 days?  Eat Solid Food!  I went 7 days with nothing more than ice chips. Thanks to everyone for being delicate with the “bathroom talk” but yes, there were a lot of milestones in that category that the doctors celebrated as well.
 
2.  Which 9-time Grammy-award winner did Jen chat with today? Sheryl Crow!  That’s right…she came to visit the patient lounge and talk to us about her cancer experience. She was very eloquent however, I would have been more inspired if she just played a few tunes! Regardless, she was beyond friendly and supportive and was wearing the most awesome 6″ stilletto heels I have ever seen.  It will take me months to even get up the nerve to try to wear heels like that!


Extra credit:  what happened in Jen’s room in the middle of the night last night (hint: apparently Dave has some competition).  An old, sweet man named Andre snuck into my room and insisted on being my roommate!  Around 8:30 at night, another patient mistook my room for his and was halfway across the room before a nurse convinced him that he was trying to climb into the wrong bed.  About 3AM the same thing happened! He was on a “middle of the night stroll” and came into my room and tried to climb into the other bed in my room (luckily, no one was in it).  However, Andre couldn’t seem to get into the bed so he paged the nurses to help him.   They came to get him and explained again that he was in the wrong room.  Jury’s out on whether he was senile or whether he was a very smart man who was looking to hook up with a woman 50 years his junior 🙂
 
And with regards to my wonderful “vanilla” husband, I will plagiarize what my good friend (and NY Times best-selling author), Bruce said, “Vanilla is loyal, steadfast, heart and real, and a necessary foil to chocolate chips.  Glitz and glamour are nothing without without bedrock vanilla to make them shine. So here’s to a great partnership of vanilla AND chocolate chips! We should all be so lucky.” I couldn’t have said it better myself!
 
I promise to write in the next day or so. And please keep the good thoughts coming my way. This surgery is the most invasive of all 5 I have had (details will follow in upcoming entries) and the recovery will be long and hard. As you all know, I hate to be pent up so the recuperation process can be rather depressing.  Thanks for continuing to cheer me up!

 

Signing Off

Jen came home from the hospital yesterday!  Overall, she’s doing great, but as you can imagine, she’s in some pain and not real comfortable so it might be a little while before she’s back on phone, email, etc.  But I think sometime this week or this weekend, you’ll get rid of plain vanilla me and Jen will be back here with her thoughts and the answers to the trivia questions.

Thanks for your loyal support during the past 5 years and any challenges ahead. 
All our love, David (and Jen)

Chocolate Chips

Hi!  Apparently my days are numbered as the guest writer here — our real author told me today that my entries are too vanilla, and she wants to add some chocolate chips!

So I guess that should tell you that Jen is continuing to get a little better each day.  But I’ll try to take her feedback to heart and spice this entry up with 2 trivia questions:

1.  What did Jen do today for the first time in 8 days?
2.  Which 9-time Grammy-award winner did Jen chat with today?

and for extra credit, what happened in Jen’s room in the middle of the night last night (hint: apparently I have some competition).

I’ll try to post the answers tomorrow.

Also, to give you more of a health update, Jen called me today to tell me that she’s a free woman.  No, that doesn’t relate to the extra credit question as she actually meant that they detached her from her IV pole.  That’s another good sign of progress, and if all goes well tonight/tomorrow, I think she might come home either late in the day tomorrow or sometime on Wed.  I’ll keep you posted.  – Dave

Weekend Update with Jennifer Linn

Hi everyone.  Jen is making slow and steady progress.  She started on liquids yesterday and hopefully will be coming home in the next couple days.

Those of you that talked to her on Thurs to Sat might have noticed that she wasn’t completely herself.  She was struggling a bit with fatigue, mild dizziness, etc because her hemoglobin (transports oxygen to the body) was very low.  Although you might not have even noticed because she’s a superstar even with a hemoglobin level that the rest of us would have really struggled with!

The doctors said the low hemoglobin is normal post-surgery, and they gave her a blood transfusion on Friday.  This sounds like a big deal, but it wasn’t…it was basically just getting a pint of blood via an IV line.  By the next day, her hemoglobin had already improved a bit and should hopefully continue to climb.  Yesterday, I noticed that she was definitely feeling better and had a bit more energy.

It made us very thankful that the hospital has a good supply of blood.  And it’s a great reminder that we should all take a few minutes to donate blood and platelets whenever we can.  I believe you can give blood at any hospital, but if you’d like to give it at Memorial Sloan-Kettering, the location and hours are here (just make a general blood donation, not one specific to Jen) – www.mskcc.org/mskcc/html/11698.cfm

We’re psyched that my Mom is coming to town to visit Jen!  I’ll be with them, but I’ll try to post an update tomorrow when I get a chance.  Good night and have a pleasant tomorrow.   – DL