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He’s in agreement with Dr. Feldman (or, I should say, Dr. Feldman is in agreement with him): the best course of action for me, for the foreseeable future, is to continue to “watch and wait.” He asks his office staff to set up a follow-up CT scan for me in the first week of November, and an appointment for me to meet with him again in early December. He’ll let me know by phone about the CT scan results, once they come in.
I’ve been out of remission, now, for the better part of a year (since March, 2007, when the first sign of new, swollen lymph nodes showed up on a scan). In the intervening months, I’ve had all sorts of tests, all sorts of consultations. I’ve set the wheels in motion for a possible stem-cell transplant, at some undetermined future date (a procedure that may or may not ever happen, if other treatments emerge as preferable). Yet, despite all this activity, I’m still no nearer to getting myself back into remission than I was in March. “Watch and wait” has been my only treatment. It will continue to be so.
On the one hand, that’s good news. Those cancerous cells aren’t threatening my life right now – not even close. Mine is a particularly slothful cancer – and who’s afraid of a big, bad sloth?
On the other hand, it’s still cancer. A dread disease.
“Watch” and “wait” are two words associated with the liturgical season of Advent, that begins in about a month and a half. I’ve preached whole sermons on these words: on the spiritual discipline of watching for the coming of the Lord, of being vigilant; and, of the companion discipline of waiting, of remaining patient.
I feel like I’m living that tension, and have been for some considerable time. I don’t exactly know which is more important, the watching or the waiting. Should I take up position in the hard-backed chair, or in the armchair? Or, do I move back and forth between them?
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When I was in remission, I likewise knew what to do. It was back to business as usual, as my cancer slowly became a memory (except for the occasional, rude reminders of follow-up scans and monthly port flushes).
Now, the cancer’s returned, but in slow motion. (Or, more accurately, it never really left; it just became so small, it became invisible for a while.) How do I live my life, under such conditions? What sort of plans can I make? Dare I even dream?
I suppose I’m going to have to find a way to dream, anyway - to seek the dawn. I just can’t let cancer rob me of my future.
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Yet, I’ve also got the inescapable knowledge that there’s a deadly disease inside me – one that’s slow and slothful, to be sure, one that causes no symptoms right now, but one that could very possibly get me in the end.