After you have had melanoma you get put into the wait and
watch mode of health care. Depending on
how "bad" your melanoma was, it can either be every 6 months or every
3 months. I was in the 6 month category.
The routine is as follows: Go into the
little room, take everything but your undergarments off and put on your
fashionable blue hospital smock, with full ventilation out the back end. My derm keeps the room at a very warm
temperature, which is a thoughtful touch. He's a little bespectacled man from Ireland,
with striped shirts and bowties. His appearance made me like him instantly,
even though his manner is abrupt and he doesn't talk anymore than he has to. I
felt confident in his opinion.
He did a more thorough check of my skin than any other derm
I have had before. He inspected my spots
with his magnifying glass and special light. Wrote on a little human shaped
diagram the location and size of some of my more dysplastic moles. I have a lot of them! He ran his hand along
the scar on my back, looking for lumps under the skin. It can return, hidden in the scar tissue, he
told me. Every visit he queries whether I am wearing my wide brimmed hats and
sunscreen. Are you taking Vitamin D? Is
there any moles you are concerned about?
Yes, there is, there is one.
I had noticed a new mole on my arm.
It was med sized, round, light brown and raised. It didn't look very harmful, but I thought I
should point it out, since that is what I am supposed to do. I felt kinda silly showing him such a benign
looking little thing, but I did. The derm's
quick dismissal confirmed my feeling of foolishness. In my head I knew that raised moles were
nothing to worry about. His confident rejection confirmed my thoughts.
6 months later, it had grown some more, started gaining a
few new colors. So at my next melanoma
screening I pointed it out yet again. He
took a look with his special light and magnifier, measured it with his handy
dandy circle measuring thingy and declared that it hadn't grown and was still
only 5 mm wide. "Oh it has
definitely grown!" I said. It just
hasn't grown side to side is all. Again, his firm rejection comforted me. As I left, I asked, "if I wanted it off
anyway, what would I do?" "Ask
your family Doctor to do it, just make sure it gets biopsied." Ok. I
was just disliking this little growth on my arm. Not the prettiest thing you ever saw. I might
just do that!
I thought about getting it off. But you know how life gets
away from you. And six months goes by
entirely faster than you think it will. The
little brown bump has now grown to a size that my husband has started calling
it my third nipple. ( hope that doesn't
offend anyone!) I was determined that
this time, whether the derm said so or not, I was getting this hideous growth
off my body. But his interest in my
growing lump had grown as well. He spent
quite a long time looking at it with his magnifier and light. Mumbling about
not liking the color of parts of it. He
got the other Doctor to take a look as well.
Finally! It has been declared for removal!!! I have never
been so joyful walking into a doctors office to get a piece of my skin
removed. Not a bit of anxiety this
time. I was chatty and happy. There were two student Doctors there to
watch. The derm explained to them facts
about melanoma and how much further ahead they are in Australia.
As I listened to him, I was actually enjoying myself, and feeling even more
assured of the vast knowledge my derm had in the area of melanoma. I smiled as I walked out the door, with 5
stitches in my arm. I almost
glowed.
After that I didn't really give it much thought. Until a couple of weeks later. That's when I got a call from the derm
himself. It is amazing how many thoughts
can cross thru your brain in a short 1 minute conversation. First of all, you instinctively know it isn't
good news when the derm himself is on the phone, instead of the secretary. So you know its cancer. But quickly followed by that realization,
comes the sureness that we must have caught it early. Especially since I have been under the close
care of an excellent derm. I remember being quite proud of myself for even
thinking to ask what stage it was. Was
it "in situ", or maybe stage 1?
But then he said something I wasn't prepared for. He said, "we won't know till we've
tested your lymph glands."
Woah! The word "lymph"
echoed around inside my head. I don't
quite remember how the conversation ended. My mind went a little foggy after
that.
After my first diagnosis with melanoma I had done a quick
internet scan, to see what was out there.
I did run across the whole radioactive dye lymph thing somewhere, but I
brushed that off as something that happens to other people. People who didn't know about melanoma, and
what to look for. Because surely I would
catch any melanoma loooooonnnng before it got that far. Especially since I was
seeing a good derm every 6 months!!!!! But my faith in my knowledge was
seriously flawed. I had never heard of
nodular melanoma. The kind that grew
fast, down, and was often round and raised. My research didn't take me that
far. There was a gap. A gap that I fell into. A gap that apparently even my
derm fell into.
The next two months were dreadful. It was in those 2 months that I lost 3
friends to cancer. It was in those 2 months that I got to play the waiting game. Mike described it as the feeling you have
just as you are about to crest the top of that first hill on a roller
coaster, you hold your breath, just as
it crests...........accept that you are just stuck there,
...................waiting............... and waiting.............. waiting to
know if this ride is going to get worse or better from here on in. It's a ride
that too many of my melanomates are familiar with.
Back to visit my friendly neighborhood plastic surgeon, Dr.
D. If I thought his words scared me last
time, this time they made me nauseous. There was a longer conversation about
the possibility of needing a skin graft. Then there was the discussion about my
odds. This is where I got the most
honesty from a Doctor. He didn't try to
placate me with a statistic. He said he
could tell me I have an 80% chance of surviving 5 years. But that isn't always
true. Sometimes he tells people they
will be fine and they aren't. Sometimes
he tells them to arrange their affairs, but they continue to live. There are no guarantees with this beast. It
is unpredictable. He told me that the Doctors
still don't understand melanoma very well.
Thank you for your honesty Dr. D, for telling me like it is,
instead of saying it will all be ok.
Thank you for making me realize the uncertainty that I face, so that I
Can face it. Instead of maybe being walloped with it later and being less
prepared. Thank you for letting me be proactive, to change things I can, and do
it now, so that if things go the wrong way round, I will go down knowing I did
my best from here on in. The alarm bell has sounded.
The last day of school I had my surgery. As the kids had fun
day and games, I wallowed in anxiety.
Thankfully my surgery was later in the day, I'm not good at mornings.
Still, I arrived at 9:30 to get all
the testing done before the surgery.
The volunteer lady explained all the places I should visit and the best
order to visit them in. A chest xray, a
blood sample, a visit to the nuclear radiology department. NUCLEAR radiology? Yep.
This is where they inject radioactive dye into your arm around the site
where the mole used to be, and then watch to see where it goes. Thing is, I thought they did this while you
were under, not fully awake! I think
every doctor I saw figured the other doctor had explained this or that, when in
fact no one really explained much of anything.
Nuclear radiology, doesn't sound like the most popular
place. It sounds downright daunting. But I went in with hopes that this would
be quick and easy. Otherwise the Doctors would have warned me right? The nurse put a patch on my arm to numb the
area where they would inject the purple colored radioactive dye. Then its into
the room with the big scarey machine. They have a warm, I mean, a really cold
metal table for you to lay on. And its a
lumpy narrow table at that. I think when
they designed it, they must have forgotten there was going to be a human
inside. Then the nice Doctor says he is going to inject the dye. It will
hurt. Ok, brace for it..... Yowzas!! Hurt
is a bit of an understatement. I just about jerked off the table. I don't think
the little patch thing worked so good nurse lady. Ok , step 1 done, on to step
2.
The machine tech lady moves the "comfy" table
closer to the machine. I look up at the
large square above me. This should be
ok. Then she says it will take about an
hour for the machine to track the dye as it works its way to my lymph glands.
Ok, still ok. But then, she tells me she
is going to move the machine down closer.
As it moves closer and closer and closer, the words "an hour"
becomes extremely long in my head, I start to panic. If the tech lady saw the flash of terror in
my eyes, she chose to ignore it. What to do, how do you not panic for an hour
stuck in a metal machine? Music!! Sing a
song in my head! La la la la la. Yeah,
that's not gonna work, I can't think of the lyrics of songs when I'm Not
sandwiched in a radioactive tracking metal contraption. What else, what else, before I totally lose
it.... come on..... think.....think.....got it!
My dream house. I can feel the
anxiety start to lift just thinking those words. I can continue my dream plan.
I took structural drafting in college and in my mind I have
been building my dream house for years, my Paradise
home. Now where did I leave off, .....
aw, yes, the stairs. If I put in one of
those hidden "servant" staircases that makes a shortcut stairway to
the kitchen, then the stairs would have to be on the other side of the hallway,
hmmm....... I take a peek at the machine as she lowers it even closer. Holy Frog King! its like an inch and a half
from my face!!!! ........ stairs, stairs, ok stairs, if the stairs were on the
other side then the playroom off the kitchen would be slightly different, and how
would I get the window seat in the stair landing?.............and this is how I
made it through the hour in my metal coffin ride.
All in all the surgery went well. The Doctors were both nice
and comforting. It took the anaesthesia
guy three attempts at the IV though. I
guess I have wiggly veins that collapse. Hurray for me! And after taking a
second look and pinching my arm skin, Dr. D declared that he shouldn't have to
do a skin graft. Its the only time I was
glad I didn't have skinny arms. He drew strange crooked lines on my arm with a
purple marker. Not sure how that's gonna
pan out, but your the plastic surgeon! And I've seen the amazing results of
what they can do on peoples faces. I do trust both these guys. The lymph
surgeon and the plastic surgeon are both young enough, hip enough, and competitive
enough, to want to do their best. About 5 hours later, pale, weak and slightly nauseous
they sent me to the car in a wheel chair. Done Step 3. Now for the waiting.
It takes about 3 weeks for the lymph test to come back. That's
practically a month with your life in the balance. If its positive in more than
3 nodes, I am stage 3. That means more surgery, chemo, and my odds of survival wavering.
If its negative, I am stage 2, 80% survival in 5 years. So the outcome is
important. And waiting is hard. You try
to pretend its not bothering you, not consuming you, carrying on the best you
can, (with one arm,) doing everyday things. But life is just not everyday. And the scar
that was left behind is quite knee weakening at first sight.
Me and Mike made the mistake of changing the bandage for the
first time, just before a meeting. The look on Mike's face was enough to know
it wasn't good. He turned a shade of
green. When I looked in the mirror, my first thought was, "THIS is plastic
surgery?!" It looked like a butcher had been at it. And the shape was so
odd, like Zorro had left his mark on me. I couldn't believe how terrible it looked. But
I sucked it up. We redressed it and went
to the meeting anyway. Where else would I want to be? At home isolating myself,
left alone with my thoughts? No. Distraction
is just what I needed. To be with those
that care about me.
Again, in sadness, I found beauty. The beauty of an understanding look and a
squeeze of the hand. Shared tears without words. Such comfort. One sister came up, a sister I
knew was having troubles of her own. I
told her about the "mistake" of looking at my arm. She just took my
hand and said "Its gonna be ok, its gonna be ok" and cried next to me
for a moment. Then she left. But in that
moment it gave me release from that feeling, allowed me to carry on, and go
forward. Beauty in sadness. Its always
there when you put yourself in the right place.
Three weeks finally came.
The moment of truth. In a few
moments from now are we going to be sighing a huge relief or holding our
breathe yet again? The nurse must have
been used to these kinds of situations.
She poked her head in the room, while we waited for the doctor and
said. "It was all clear! The lymph nodes were clear!" How lightening those words were. Such weight gone. I don't know what the
weather was like outside, but it felt like a clear summer day in that office
with no windows. I could hear birds
singing in my head. Such relief. Round 2
is over. Finally over.
Sorry! but I have to post this.
This is melanoma,
this is what it does.
Is it "just" skin cancer?
This was about a week after surgery.
It actually looks a lot better here than the first time we saw it.
And I need to give credit to my plastic surgeon. What to the layman looks awful, to the trained eye was amazing work. I have had many Doctors and medical professionals say what a great job he did. And he himself was pleased with the results. When I eventually found out what he physically did to cover the area removed, it really is creative. It's called a " flap rotation procedure" if you have any interest in looking it up. And I am grateful for the work he did on my arm, and my other many surgeries with him.