Support and Coping with Cancer
/
Creative Inspiration
/
OncoLink Reading Room
/
Poetry
Breast Cancer: My Story
Meredith K. Biegel
Copyright © 2000, Meredith K. Biege
Last Modified: November 1, 2001
- I was forty in September of 1997.
- When my husband Steve found a lump.
- And let me tell you, it wasn't a little bump!
- I went to the breast surgeon
- looking and feeling my best
- I told the surgeon: "I'm not sick, I feel fine.
- Just let me roller blade, play with my kids.
- I'm telling you: this 'lump' is just a cyst."
- "Lets do a mammogram and then we will see."
- As they squeezed my little breast, I thought to myself:
- "My gynecologist gave me a breast exam last January.
- breast cancer? It just can't be!"
- I sit alone, feeling cold in my gown.
- My surgeon comes in wearing a frown.
- "Meredith, I do not like what I see,
- Let me do a biopsy."
- I went home to wait for the lab's results,
- Refusing to believe the worst,
- praying that the mammogram was at fault.
- The call came in early Monday morning.
- "Meredith, come in, bring your husband, bring a friend."
- My husband and I sat quietly, holding hands.
- My doctor came in and told us the plan.
- "You have breast cancer. It looks bad. It's all over your breast!"
- I started to cry, then yelled: "Quick Doc. Schedule the operating
- room, cut off my breast, get rid of this pest, I will tell my family,
- you do the rest!"
- So we drove home to our quiet, comforting house.
- How do I tell my children? My parents?
- (I can't do it)
- I'm a chicken, I'm a mouse.
- Called my folks, found that I couldn't tell them the truth.
- Told them that I had a lump. I would know in a few days
- if it was only just a bump.
- My parents were shaken, right down to their core.
- This isn't supposed to happen to their first-born child who they adore.
- A few days later I told them all, my children, my parents, my friends.
- I asked them to help me and not to let me fall.
- Over the next few days my breast started changing in color and shape
- like an orange peel.
- I thought to myself: "this just all can't be real."
- I ran back to my surgeon. Who gave my breast a look?
- She then canceled my surgery and opened her book.
- She picked up the phone and called her friend Jane.
- Please see my patient Meredith, please help to keep her sane.
- So off I went to the oncology floor.
- I meet my oncologist who began to tell me more.
- "This might be inflammatory breast cancer, and if this is so, it's
- aggressive it moves quickly, we have to declare war!"
- She explained to me the treatment plan.
- It started off with the baddest mama of chemo:
- BRIGHT RED ADRIAMYCIN!
- Always the picture of health....
- How could this happen to me?
- Wreck my immune system?
- Destroy my white blood cells!
- I was scared shit of this chemotherapy!
- But off I went, scared that if I didn't, I would die.
- As the nurse pumped the red liquid into my vein...
- I closed my eyes, and pictured soaring high in the sky.
- Look at me: I can fly!
- Yet this was the lowest moment in my life and that was no lie!
- I went home to stand in my shower and to cry.
- As clumps of hair fall from my head.
- I thought: Oh G-D.please stand by me...
- I am too young to die.
- Bald, feeling sick, feeling ugly and alone,
- I moan, and my two boys wrap themselves around me and say:
- "Mommy, we are here, we'll protect you, like a dog with it's bone."
- The chemo made me sick. Really sick beyond description: mouth sores,
- weakness, fevers of one hundred and five.
-
- My doctor recommended that I be hospitalized.
- In and out of the hospital was becoming routine for me...
- They shot me up with drugs...
- To boost my white blood cell activity.
- In between chemo rounds...
- I met some special people who kept my mind sound.
- Massage, meditation, just let yourself breathe.
- My therapist assured me that I'd beat this disease.
- I had support groups: my family, Robert and Holly.
- My greatest friends: Cheryl, Lisa and of course Eve.
- They all said: "We'll help you to get through this,
- It'll be a breeze."
- On January 11,1998
- I can assure you
- I wasn't feeling great.
- The surgeon cut my breast off, took 16 nodes to see if the cancer had spread.
- I went home two days later, all bandaged and tubed...
- They do these operations and then release you, like a car going thru Jiffy Lube.
- Oh my G-D! What's wrong with my arm? I can't lift it! It doesn't work!
- You have to walk your fingers up the wall Meredith.
- Come on it won't hurt!
- Slowly, so slowly, I gained back the use of my arm...
- Looking at myself in the mirror
- Was the hardest thing of all.
- My sexuality, my persona, my little child within, were all involved.
- One day, I woke up, took a look at my arm...
- Where are my veins...I don't see them.
- Where have they gone?
- I ran to Cheryl, my angel, massage therapist, my friend.
- She said. "I am so sorry. It's lymphadema; you'll have it till the end.
- I went to a special doctor who confirmed what Cheryl said.
- "LYMPHADEMA? What's that, a new dance? A new song?
- "PLEASE!" I begged the Doctor. "Tell me you're wrong!"
- But no....again... my life changed forever and ever
- Now every day of my life I wear compression sleeves, gloves and bandages.
- Hidden by sarongs and long sleeved sweaters.
- Now, you'd think after all this, my treatments would end.
- But no. I am sitting in my oncologist's office again.
- "Now you'll be getting three chemo drugs," she said.
- "Only this time, they're combined, and their color is not red".
- So for six months more I endured the chemo scene,
- Found that "VISUALIZING" the chemo as "MAGIC MEDICINE"
- Helped to keep me serene.
- "Am I done?" "Am I finished?"
- "Not quite yet." My Doctor said:
- "Now you are ready for five weeks of radiation.
- Get ready for your skin to become burnt and red.
- So I went to get tattooed and measured.
- This is one memory I surely don't treasure.
- Although the technicians were two of the finest people I've ever met.
- Having to lie exposed... arm in the air. head turned.
- Was the most embarrassing yet.
- One note on the positive side... Although my chest area was burned beyond belief, I roller bladed every day which gave me some relief.
- Back to Dr. Jane. I asked her what was next.
- She said: "Tamoxifen and clinical trials will help you to do your best.
- So off I flew once a month times nine
- To the University Hospital, for a phase-one trial.
- 3000 miles there, 3000 miles back...
- We are going to teach your immune system if it sees a cancer cell...
- GO AND GET IT THEN ATTACK!
- I am hormone positive. In my mind, I am alive today
- Because the Tamoxifen, took my period away.
- At 42. I'm a menopausal broad...
- Dealing with hot flashes.
- And thanking the good Lord.
- Last, but not least, I'd like to thank my husband Steve...
- Who loves me and hugs me and makes me feel sexy.
- Before I got cancer, after I got cancer, I was always into the natural answers....
- Religiously took my vitamins, ate my veggies, read books,
- Throughout chemo and radiation, I remained faithful, steady, and strong.
- Still I ask:" Why I did I get this? Was it the red wine? What did I do?
- that was so wrong?"
- Now I look to the future and beg my body to hold on.
- I know that a cure is out
- there: the different vaccines are all looking strong!
- I pray that there will be a day.
- When all my fears of cancer returning. will all go away!
- p.s. I would like to thank my mom for helping me to edit this.
- My mom wanted me to end the story like this:
- Quoting Martin Luther King:
- "I am free at last!"
- I only wish that I felt like this.