Thursday 29 December 2022

270. OK, sometimes I get it wrong

 Yes, hard to admit but my Christmas predictions didn’t all turn out right. So here are my reasons for liking Christmas:

1. A husband trying really really hard, so hard it was almost tangible, to be nice and (much as I hate the word) positive over Christmas. Better than any present, to see him genuinely smiling.

2. Christmas presents, from a tiny terrarium (“I thought you can’t kill this one”), a goody box with sweets from childhood as well as Haribo and chocolate sprouts to an antique ring I chose months ago. Every present a joy - so thank you to everyone.

3. The kindness of strangers (see previous blog). The flowers are still thriving, though I can only remember watering them once.

4. Christmas dinner. Ok, the usual Sunday roast with some pigs in blankets for me. It always makes me think of that year, late ‘70s, early ‘80s? when D said there was nothing he fancied for Christmas dinner so I took him literally and served him a plate of baked beans with a sprig of holly in the middle. His face was priceless. He was more precise after that. 

5. Christmas crackers. We normally don’t have these as I find it quite difficult pulling one on my own. However, a friend sent a box of six rather up-market crackers and, being on his best behaviour, D agreed to join in. Not only were they pretty explosive, they yielded keepworthy gifts. We took the remaining 4 when we visited friends on Boxing Day and our collection included a rather pretty heart necklace (sent on to my friend’s 9yo granddaughter), a butterfly key ring I instantly coveted, a solid metal die, some cuff links (ok, who wears them nowadays??), some nail clippers that actually work and a nifty double-ended screwdriver to attach to a key ring. Unsurprisingly, gold crowns were not worn. I do know when not to push my luck.

6. Cracker jokes. Yes, they were corny but they also were quite witty. They also included charades (I drew the line at that one) and dingbats which were rather challenging. Example, a blanks space with the word ‘just’ printed to one side.* Most important, they made D smile (and groan)!!

7. Christmas cards. I am still awaiting delivery of my order from Etsy so very few people received cards from us this year. Apologies. However I think fewer people sent them anyway because of the postal strikes so the ones we received are treasured. Particularly the one designed and sent by Anne’s 7yo granddaughter with a reindeer design. It took me back to the Anna Newby School of Dancing, which I attended weekly from the age of 8 to 10. At a Christmas show at Brooklands, the local ‘mental hospital’ as it was known then, I performed Rudolf the Red-nosed Reindeer, singing and tap-dancing. I wore my red tap shoes, a red taffeta tunic and had red lipstick on my nose. Unfortunately, the lipstick wouldn’t come off properly so I had to go to school with a pink nose for several days. Miss Newby of course performed The Dying Swan. I thought she was beautiful.

8. Christmas TV. It’s not the same now there are so many channels and so many providers, but it was still fun to go through the tv magazine and highlight what I wanted to watch (ok, record) and there were still surprises. I watched Christmas Carole. To be fair, I tend to partially-watch as I’m such a fidget, but I got a real shock when I saw Suranne Jones, modern-day Scrooge, meeting the ghosts of Christmas Past in the form of Morecombe and Wise. It took a few moments to realise it wasn’t brilliant CGI but two actors who, in my opinion, were superb. They had the voices, posture, mannerisms, everything off to a T. Only in close up could you tell they were completely different people. 

9. Ted Lasso. This was my Christmas discovery on Apple TV (special offer for 6 months with Sky so why not?). Slowly I began to see why this has earned so many nominations and awards (including 2 nominations for best supporting actor for Nick Mohammed, my book group friend Litsa’s son, aka Mr Swallow, on the right). It’s smart, subtle behind the in-your-face appearance and so funny. It even got me past the fact that it’s based in a football club. Brilliant (and so sad now I’ve binge-watched the two series). Loved it!

10. Christmas lights. There have been fewer official lights in Bramhope this year, presumably because of the energy crisis. We still have the WWI soldier with his gun, a silhouette that always makes me smirk as it looks like a giant phallus. It’s outside the Methodist Chapel of all places!!  But driving back from Carole’s, the lights so many houses still displayed were absolutely beautiful. They made up for the hairy journey with black ice and too many headlights and traffic lights causing sensory overload. Maybe night driving is no longer for my chemo-frazzled brain!

So, unexpectedly I had one of the nicest Christmases in several years. Thank you Dennis and I’m sorry it only lasted two days till I said something to spoil it - but it’s my reality, not something to be avoided!! This week I am having another week off chemo (currently experiencing withdrawal but the next few days should be lovely) because of logistics - I either had to drive to St James’s on Christmas Day to collect my prescription or delay taking them, not an option as it would mean no longer seeing Dr T OR take a week off. No brainer.

* Just right

Tuesday 20 December 2022

269. Sob sob…Specsavers!

I got a phone call this morning from the manager of my local Specsavers asking if I could pop in some time today. I assumed it was something to do with my prescription as I do need a referral for laser treatment. Anyway, when I arrived, I was greeted by the manager and she presented me with a beautiful bouquet of flowers on behalf of M, the optometrist who’d spotted my tumour and urged me to get a referral to Ophthalmology back in 2020, and the store “because of all you’ve been through this year”. I could have wept. I was so touched.


I’m guessing it’s because I wrote thanking M for virtually saving my life (you may remember my GP diagnosed dermatitis!). I had to pay a price though - a photo with the manager and M, for Head Office. Fortunately I imagine not many people read Specsavers Monthly (or whatever it’s called!). The funny thing was, I just removed my coat and scarf but M dashed to a mirror to check his sparse hair, straighten his tie etc. Then he asked to see the photo and requested a second attempt as his phone in his pocket looked untidy!! Men!

So, no. 1 on my list of Reasons Why I Enjoy Christmas will have to be

1. The kindness of strangers.

Sunday 18 December 2022

268. Reasons I dislike Christmas

Sigh. Observations, not a pity-party.

1. Christmas starting early November. Christmas not just being two and a half days but two solid weeks of desperately seeking to please everyone.

2. Thinking about presents, choosing the right thing for the right person, then not bothering to buy/make  them in plenty of time. This year two friends receive something I knitted pre-pandemic! I’d forgotten all about them (the gifts, not the friends). Unfortunately, there’s one unfinished and there’s no way my brain could follow such a complex challenge right now. Other presents haven’t been delivered. I’m stuck!

3. Ordering unusual Christmas cards from Etsy and not receiving them. Then not realising Royal Mail brought forward its ‘last post’ dates. No cards anyway so…sorry folks. One rude friend here.

4. Living with someone who genuinely can’t see the point of Christmas and is able to suck the joy out of it all with one shrug.

5. Living with someone whose response to the question “What would you like for Christmas?” replies “Nothing”. There are only so many variations on the theme of Nothing one can think of and, after 52 years, I’ve run out of ideas. This year, I had a brainwave. Then, in conversation, I was told he hadn’t bought it because it was a waste of money. Ok, drop that idea. Then (and this is because he’s too lazy to have his own email account) I see that the b****r has bought it!!!! For now, he thinks it’s a delayed delivery, thank you Royal Mail strikers; in fact, it’s secreted somewhere to be wrapped on Christmas Eve. Just one problem: I’ve forgotten where I hid it (:

6. Having to buy my own Christmas presents, thrust them at my husband and say “I hope you will wrap these this year”.

7. Seriously, realising that we have no one to share Christmas with. Everyone is tied up with children and grandchildren, relatives and friends. We have no children, grandchildren, relatives within reach or friends not committed to all those things. But even if we did, Mr Killjoy would find some way out of it.

8. Christmas adverts. Do I need to say more? At a time of austerity, they still paint that picture that the Christmas table must be laden with more food than anyone can consume, that everything must be perfect, everyone be joyous. My heart goes out to all those homemakers (mostly women) who are running round in circles and expected to come up with perfection on a limited budget.


9. At heart, as someone with no religious conviction, Christmas is about children. Without children, Christmas has lacked something essential and eventually become a time to be tolerated until it’s passed.

10. A gently nagging thought - will this be my last Christmas? It casts a pall over everything, even though the thought only pops into my mind briefly and occasionally. It saddens me that D will carry mostly colourless memories of me because he will add no colour, so low as he is.

11. Being a non-drinker. Not by choice or necessity; I don’t metabolise it well. The older I get, the more I wonder if my inability to enjoy myself more is linked as much to the absence of alcohol as to my phobias.

12. I HATE Christmas food. Turkey was not available in my childhood. With luck we might have a chicken. But all it took was “Look at those dead flies” whispered in my ear by my brother and… I have never eaten Christmas pudding, Christmas cake, mince pies… that leaves sprouts, which I do like but which taste very different thanks to chemo and require apple sauce as an accompaniment! So, chez le Brun, Christmas lunch will be exactly the same as what I had today - Sunday, meatless roast. I might get a pig in a blanket if Sainsbury’s haven’t sold out.



Will I be able to come up with Reasons I Love Christmas? I’m thinking….


Sunday 4 December 2022

267. Looking good

Not me, but the progression of this disease!

First, apologies if you’ve dropped by and found nothing. I’ve had a fairly bleak month but then I’ve never been great come Autumn. I try to see the glory of those falling leaves and all I think (oh, I have more in common with my husband than I thought) is it’s all dying! It reminds me of a poem we studied in the first form, by Thomas Hood:

No sun  no moon! 

No morn  no noon  
No dawn 
 no dusk  no proper time of day.
 
No warmth, no cheerfulness, no healthful ease, 
No comfortable feel in any member 
 
No shade, no shine, no butterflies, no bees, 
No fruits, no flowers, no leaves, no birds! 
 
November!

At the time, I thought what a miserable old git! But it’s always stuck with me. Only 2 poems ever have (apart from the WWI poetry) and the other is the sumptuous Ode to Autumn so maybe that’s telling me something - everything has two sides at least. 


Anyway, four weeks since my last consultation, thanks to that wonderful week off that felt like a holiday. We saw Dr U on Friday (only a 50 minute wait this time and I still missed Support Group). My CT scan shows I’m healthy from thorax to pelvis and my blood markers have dropped from 28 to 24 so they are heading back to 18, my baseline. There was no tumour marker owing to some kind of Phlebotomy error. It’s pretty obvious there’s a struggle going on but Cape and I are doing well against the cancer. My tumour is definitely trying to grow - it’s visible and also I can now feel its presence near my sinus. Up till now, I’ve only experienced an occasional twinge but now it’s a constant pressure. 

So, I continue with capecitabine. I confess I really expected to be told it was time to move on to the baldy treatments but Dr U believes cape and I are still winning the battle. I’ve always hated this battle analogy that is the public image of cancer but sometimes it IS unavoidable. There is a battle going on. I watched the remake of All Quiet on the Western Front yesterday and it just showed the futility of war (maybe, in this case, because I knew the outcome). The parallel with cancer is right (ouch, that hurts to admit). It’s a battle. And in my case, we know which side is going to win. But there’s no harm in making it a lot harder for the cancer to come out on top!! 

Unfortunately, my cough is no better. Dr U believes it’s a virus I can’t shake off. The week off chemo did no good, the antibiotics made no difference - so now, clutching at straws, I’m testing the gastro-intestinal approach. I’ve been taking my cape tablets with an extra creamy Activia (what an impact on my gut - only one bout of cramps and diarrhoea) and Dr U is happy for me to continue. Apparently though, it’s a source of contention. Some oncologists believe it interferes with chemo and some believe it can cause infection (I got lost at this point so don’t ask how) but he believes there is insufficient evidence so he’s fine with me continuing with the Activia. He’s moved me onto Omeprazole but that will take time to work, if it works at all. So I also brought home a litre (yes, a whole litre) of Gaviscon Advance. I already have problems swallowing but this takes the biscuit. It is VILE. I managed 2 doses yesterday but my instinct is to swill out my mouth to get rid of the viscous taste, which would obviate the whole point of the exercise. I usually like aniseed and I persuade myself this is not much different from neat Pernod but… it’s proving a challenge.

Then bloods. The queue when we arrived was LONG. By the time I had to queue, it was way better but it was 12.45 and lunchtime loomed. It took over an hour to deal with just 11 patients ahead of me. Then I turned to D and said “I won’t be a minute’. Famous last words. Three attempts to find blood in my inner arm failed abysmally. Not a spot came out and it hurt like hell as she fished around. So she decided to try my hand. Straight in, no pain and lots of blood. But she didn't use the obvious vein they use to cannulate me. She went into a vein between two knuckles. Like I said, painless and effective. Then as I walked away, PAIN. Plus a mother of a bruise that’s very decorative on the back of my hand. Over 10 minutes to fill two small vials!!

So I’m really pleased. I expected D to be but no such luck. His attitude is that the good news is only for this time. Maybe next time will be bad news. He definitely experiences the scanxiety I seem to have avoided so far.  I TRY to get him to see that it’s not helping me but he accuses me of using emotional blackmail - it isn’t, it’s simple fact - and the case is closed. However, right now he is preparing our Sunday roast so I’m not complaining (well, only a bit lol). 

Meantime, the house is falling apart. A computerised component of the boiler has broken (no heating one day and it was impossible to find anyone to come out - till I rang the number of the bloke who did the service 10 days earlier. Bless home, he came in his own time, on the way back from work and he’s overridden the system so we have to deal with the boiler manually for now. It’s either freezing cold or belting out heat. Last month’s energy consumption was nearly 500 quid. What will December’s be, at this rate???). Then our 4 ceiling lights in the bathroom have failed one by one so I walk into a pitch dark bathroom, pull the cord and have to wait till one solitary light flickers on. I thought I had an electrician coming this week but he’s not committed to a day or time so I’m guessing that chance is gone. Heigh ho.