Connie (Mrs. WebSlave)

Don't ask her. The point is to let her see you doing stuff for her. You know her better than we do, use your imagination. Instead of ice cream, try frozen grapes, or blueberries with cream. It's not the actual thing that is of benefit, it is seeing you create little bright happy spots in her day.

I know it sounds like an excellent theory, but that just does not fly with Connie.

We have been married for 44 years now. Probably one of the main reasons for that is that I have learned to give her the space she needs and not try to second guess what I think she wants. Especially when it comes to food items. I don't think even she knows from one minute to the next what she feels like eating. Just because she couldn't get enough of something yesterday doesn't mean that next week she will feel the same about it. Ant this chemo stuff just made it that much harder, as it obviously screws with her taste buds.

More than anything else, Connie needs to feel needed. The worst thing I could ever do is to make her feel like she was being a burden. In some ways it is probably very fortunate that I did have that heart attack.
 
Sometimes, what people want is someone to listen, to acknowledge their feelings, to have someone listen to their distress. Not necessarily to solve issues or do something, but to understand.

:iagree: and :exactly:!

How is she doing? Can you ask the doctor, for the side effects of her various treatments?
 
:iagree: and :exactly:!

How is she doing? Can you ask the doctor, for the side effects of her various treatments?

We have all that information. Quite honestly, reading the side effects of just about any drug can scare the crap out of you. There must be some sort of law that requires the drug companies to list EVERY possible site effect, no matter how remote.

My favorite for that Zarxio injection Connie has had twice is that it can cause the spleen to rupture. And, of course, I believe nearly all cancer chemo components will list "death" as a possible side effect.

Heck, for that matter, water has a side effect of "death" if you drink too much too quickly. I guess no one promised us a safe planet to live on. Come to think of it, it seems this planet is constantly trying to kill us one way or another.

Connie still has a little bit of a cough, but otherwise seems to be doing OK. Her cardiologist recently prescribed some medication to bring down her heart rate and blood pressure. I think the stress of all this is taking it's toll on her. I asked her to not have a heart attack, because I learned that it is really no fun. I think many people just pass out during one, and just never come out of it. So you really won't even know what hit you.
 
There must be some sort of law that requires the drug companies to list EVERY possible site effect, no matter how remote.

Pretty much anything that occurs during the course of clinical trials regardless of whether or not it can be attributed to the drug, so your guess was accurate.
 
We have all that information. Quite honestly, reading the side effects of just about any drug can scare the crap out of you. There must be some sort of law that requires the drug companies to list EVERY possible site effect, no matter how remote.
You have a point. :yesnod: :D

My favorite for that Zarxio injection Connie has had twice is that it can cause the spleen to rupture. And, of course, I believe nearly all cancer chemo components will list "death" as a possible side effect.
That is all true.

Heck, for that matter, water has a side effect of "death" if you drink too much too quickly. I guess no one promised us a safe planet to live on. Come to think of it, it seems this planet is constantly trying to kill us one way or another.
I absolutely and positively agree with you!!

Connie still has a little bit of a cough, but otherwise seems to be doing OK. Her cardiologist recently prescribed some medication to bring down her heart rate and blood pressure. I think the stress of all this is taking it's toll on her. I asked her to not have a heart attack, because I learned that it is really no fun. I think many people just pass out during one, and just never come out of it. So you really won't even know what hit you.
I am very glad Connie seems to be okay, other then a little cough. You are correct about the heart attach part, too.
 
Well, Connie didn't have her chemo treatment again this week. Not sure why.

Maybe she will get a treatment next week, but heck, not sure of that the way things are going. She SHOULD be due for all three chems next week.

She has a CT scan scheduled in a couple of weeks. Not sure what that means.

Seems like I am not sure of much lately. :shrug01:

On the plus side, the infusion nurse was pleased that Connie still retained as much of her hair as she still has. He said if it weren't for the dignicap thing she would be completely bald right now. So I guess it works at least somewhat.
 
Well, with Connie having off from chemo for two weeks, she does seem to be feeling somewhat better. But she still has an intermittent cough, and has been saying she is feeling really tired during the day. I don't think she is sleeping well at night, but she does seem to have reduced energy than is normal for her.

She has been drinking a lot of fluids and her appetite is still pretty good. Losing a good bit of hair now, so I'm not sure how much of that will be falling out over time. I think it will impact her pretty hard if she goes full bald.

She has taken over the kitchen again doing the cooking and washing the dishes. She says she needs to do the normal stuff she usually does so she will FEEL normal. She tries to go over to the building to ride her stationary bike every day, but I think I need to get her outside to walk around a bit in the fresh air. Yellow flies are pretty much gone, but I don't think she should be out in the direct sunlight all that much. She is afraid for both of us getting any injuries with us both being on blood thinners. I bruise too easily now, but oddly enough, she doesn't, even though she used to have a really big problem with easy bruising years ago. I did work outside cutting some brush for a little while, and although I did get some scratches, there wasn't any unusual bleeding from it. But I don't over do it, since I know Connie is scared to death of me keeling over dead from another heart attack. I guess that would ruin my day for me too.

I thought possibly Connie's intermittent cough was being caused by dust in the house, since this house does seem to pick up a lot of dust. And honestly we have fallen far behind trying to keep up with the dust. So I ordered four air purifiers to help try to keep the air scrubbed of as much dust as possible. I picked four Oransi units, that had good reviews, and the air movement they advertised seemed really good. However, when they came in, there were some labels on the boxes that showed that instead of the 878 square feet room each one was supposed to handle, the labels showed they were recommended for rooms only 363 square feet. Come to find out they use their own rating measurement but are required to put that official rating on the boxes. So I checked around, and every other air purifier manufacturer I looking at also use that official (AHAM) rating for their units. So I was pretty livid about that. Basically they were lying on their website about their ratings. So I didn't even take them out of the boxes, just left them underneath the car port outside and told them to send FedEx back here to pick them up and take them back to them. Really pissed me off because it will delay my getting some new air purifiers set up for Connie. I do have one in the house, but we've had it for a while, and those things don't last forever. I think I have a new filter for it somewhere, so I may change that out, at the very least. Oh yeah, the rep for Oransi warned me to not allow the boxes to get damaged from the rain or it would void my return for refund. Yeah, screw you. I am NOT dragging those four large boxes all around to put them inside. They aren't exactly heavy, but neither Connie nor I should be hauling crap around unnecessarily. If they hadn't lied about the ratings of those machines, this wouldn't be happening like this. Of course, Monday is a holiday, so they won't be picked up till Tuesday. Hopefully the cardboard boxes won't get too soggy in the humidity.

So I have other units on order from a different manufacturer who does advertise that standard method for rating air flow. Hopefully they will get here pretty soon.

You know, it is really easy for me to be feeling that the world has turned against Connie and I. And honestly, it is times like this that I don't know what I fear worse: That there IS a God, or there is not.
 
The oncologist ordered a full body CT (CAT?) scan for Connie, next week, I think. I think it is after my appointment with my cardiologist, but heck everything is just a blur lately. I had to look twice at the calendar to realize it is July already. I'll be 72 years old in just over 2 weeks. Anyway, going off the beam here... Connie called them and asked if she could get an MRI done instead, but was told that the MRI wouldn't show them what they are looking for. I guess Connie should have asked what they were looking for, but in her shoes I guess I would have been afraid to ask too. But she knows what they mean, and I certainly did too when she told me about that CT scan. They will be looking for bad news, undoubtedly. Or maybe REAL good news if they can't find any other tumors, so there is THAT hope to cling to. Heart arteries are crossed....

Meanwhile, Connie says she is cleaning up stuff while she feels well enough to do it. Throwing away stacks of magazines she has held onto over the years because they have recipes she felt she might like to make sometime. She feels now that she will never make them, so why bother hanging onto them. She just wants to get rid of all the clutter we have accumulated over the decades. Can't say I blame here. Little sense in having something you have been saving when there isn't the slightest chance you would be able to find it when you needed it. I have found so many things that I have completely forgotten what they are for and why I am hanging onto it. Into a trash bag with it all. Lots of stuff would likely be a gold mind to people selling junk on Ebay, but that just isn't mine nor Connie's cup of tea.

Cleaned up the roll top desk in the den yesterday. Dust was a good quarter inch thick on every horizontal surface. Mostly done the desk, anyway. Had camera boxes sitting there from cameras I had purchased in the past. I guess I felt that someday I would figure out what I did with those old cameras, put them in the boxes, and maybe sell them off or give them away some day. Now, who cares? Just stuff to take to Goodwill and be rid of it. Lots of stuff I have in the den that can just be thrown out. Heck, I have stacks and stacks of old photographs I have taken of snakes I have had in the past. Mostly corns, of course, but I also had other stuff in my younger days. Why bother keeping them? Hate to throw them in the trash, but they aren't worth anything to me any longer. I will likely never look at them again.

I don't know, but it feels like both Connie and I are cleaning up something we expect to leave real soon. Or in my case, something I am not going to be needing. Making the house presentable for someone else, is what it feels like.

Connie seems to be getting her cough under control, but has been feeling very tired the last several days. Tired, but unable to sleep because her mind races when she closes her eyes. Heck, I know that feeling.

Anyway, we have an appointment tomorrow to get her blood work done, then to see Dr. Ellison (the oncologist). And they have a chemo treatment scheduled aferwards, but I guess that will depend on the results of the blood work tests. She SHOULD be due for the two chemicals she gets every three weeks, but she has missed the weekly chem twice in a row now. So we don't know how tomorrow is going to go. She might wind up getting anything between NONE and all three chems tomorrow.

One thing I would REALLY like to get done real soon is to take pics of each of the books in my herp library and sell off all those books. I am dead certain I will never need them any longer and they are taking up a lot of book shelf space that would be good for, well, now that I think of it, good for nothing at all. But it will be easier to dust those shelves that way. Honestly, though, the thought of shipping all those books out just makes my mind crumple a bit.

Darn I am going to really hate cleaning out the work rooms in the old reptile building. There is so much stuff over there that I will probably never use again. Am I really ever going to reload ammunition ever again? Probably not. For that matter, am I ever going to shoot off all that ammunition I have accumulated over the decades? Again, probably not. But I don't have a clue about how to sell ammo and components and ship them to a buyer. Probably a lot more red tape than I would want to have to put up with.

I guess slimming down our lives right now just makes sense. We don't know what tomorrow is going to bring, nor exactly how quickly an unwelcome tomorrow is going to show up at our door. So regardless of the future, probably just a good thing to be doing to occupy our hands and our minds.
 
I am so sorry both of you are going through this. I think the uncertainty just makes the stress levels worse. I guess since everyone reacts differently to chemo, the doctors have to tailor treatments week to week based on how well Connie is tolerating them.

Most people when they get to a certain age or point in their life look around and realize that the burden of keeping stuff around isn't worth the pleasure derived from having it. There's a certain catharsis in purging/downsizing.

Older print photos can be scanned/digitized, and the equipment to do it isn't that expensive. We have some higher-end equipment for the photography side of the business. Or, you can pick out your favorites and have it done, there are services that handle it for you (or I can).

Ammunition, reloading components, reloading equipment, firearms, etc... sell locally for cash. Both FedEx and UPS have gotten stupid in the last year about shipping a lot of that stuff unless you have an FFL. Components are hazmat so they are expensive to ship unless in bulk, reloading equipment is heavy, etc.

A local 501c3 reptile rescue may appreciate getting the books, especially if the information is still good, as they can be sold.
 
Rich, you and Connie are in my thoughts and prayers.
I am near your age and have spend some past years downsizing. There are some things of course, like baby pictures, that I will keep no matter what, but there was tons of stuff I had that I kept 'just in case I needed it'. Of course, because this is the way the universe works, a couple of weeks later after doing a purge I would actually need one of those items, but on the whole, having less stuff to worry about has made me happier and has also made housecleaning easier which is good because I have less energy than I used to have.
 
So Wednesday we drove up to Florida Cancer Specialists early. Connie had blood drawn and then we had a meeting with her oncologist. We weren't sure if she was going to get a chemo treatment or not. Apparently her blood work looked good enough to proceed with the chemo, but Dr. Ellison said she was taking her off of the Abraxane (sp?) because Connie was apparently having a reaction to it. Seems this drug is just as potent as the Taxol (again sp?) that Connie had a pretty severe reaction to during the first chemo session, but it is administered in three doses over three weeks instead of the single dose every three weeks that is used for the Taxol. I guess I should write down the other chemo drugs she is getting, but I have no idea where that paperwork is right now. But in any event, she only got the two drugs instead of the three. That was going to take 3 to 4 hours, so Connie sent me home. Oh, one thing of note from the meeting with Dr. Ellison was that she said the tumor marker being monitored had dropped even further. That was as of 06-29-2022, since they apparently don't run that test every blood work event. It was originally over 9,000, then dropped down to 900 something, and then on 06-29 it was at 579. Of course, the normal healthy range is between 0.00 and 38.0, so Connie has a long way to go, it seems. But at least it was encouraging.

So I went home and started working on cleaning up the den some more. Still working on the roll top desk, cleaning out some drawers when I can to one that held a bunch of cards Connie has sent or given me over the years. Apparently I was away for a spell, likely the time I was either in Los Angeles or up in Massachusetts for school. So of course I was reading through them, but I couldn't take that, and had to stop. Not very manly of me, I guess. :eek:

I ran back to FCS around quarter after 3 to pick Connie up, but she wasn't done quite yet. So I asked to speak to the office manager there. I wanted to know why our request to change oncologist hadn't happened. Honestly, Dr. Ellison does seem to be a lot better in our meetings with her, so it's not like I am as strongly inclined to change right now, but I did want to know what happened. The office manager seemed surprised when I told her about this. She said as far as she knew, she had arranged the change, and set up the next meeting to be with the new oncologist. So she didn't know. But she said that by the time I see her again, she will find out. So it is just curious...

Anyway, Connie seemed a bit hoarse, but not feeling bad from the chemo. She still has a good appetite, but is now on the regimen of many small meals and nothing too large. She takes anti-nausea pills, but doesn't want to press her luck. She spend much of the rest of the day in the recliner, but she did make dinner for me. She insists she wants to do her normal things whenever she is able to. But I try to keep it easy by saying I just want a sandwich for dinner. Just pull a crabcake out of the freezer, slap it on a bun, and I am good. Throw is on a paper plate, and no dishes to do afterwards.

Today (Thursday) we both felt this was basically a free day. Nothing scheduled, no appointments, and she seemed to feel well enough that we weren't expecting to have to run to the ER for any reason. So I decided I was going to clean up that stainless steel dish drainer she has been asking me to do for a while now. She just wanted to buy a new one, but me, like a dummy, said I could be able to clean it up like new. So I took it outside, and it was pretty darn hot, and that spray she said would remove the calcium deposits easily, really didn't. So I had to use a hard plastic bristle brush on the thing, and honestly it about wore me out. Which reminds me, didn't I do some strenuous stuff the day before I had my heart attack? :ack2: Hopefully I don't have a repeat of that!

While I was working on some of the drainer inside the old reptile building, where it was much cooler, Connie came over and rode her stationary bike for a while to get some exercise. After she was finished, I was still working on that darn drainer (the part that holds the dishes upright was REALLY a killer!) so she went over to the house. A couple of minutes later she bursts in the door all breathless saying she got a call from FCS that she had an appointment for a shot (the shot to help build up her white blood cell count) at 1:45. It was 2:45 right then, they closed at 4:00 and it is a 45 minute drive to get up there. So she said she was going to drive herself. I told her all I needed to do was to change my shirt (I was soaking wet from sweat from working outside) but she HAD TO GO.

I hated for her to have to drive up there by herself. Apparently she got a different drug this time, and not the Zarxio that she had gotten before. But she can't remember the name of this new drug. It is supposed to be stronger than the Zarxio. I hope she doesn't get the bone pain they tell her she might get from it. She didn't have that with the Zarxio, and since her blood count seemed OK, I can't figure out why they are administering it. Perhaps precautionary? But she seemed OK so far. Hoping between the chemo and this new drug that it doesn't knock her on her butt over the next few days. So far she has been handling this all pretty well. And that cough finally seems to have gone away, too.

As an aside, I seem to be mentally more stable about this the last day or two. And all for a completely illogical and totally off the wall reason. I know this is going to have you all thinking I need to have the net thrown over me and hauled away to the booby hatch, but I had an odd thing happen a couple of days ago. Must have been Tuesday. I was walking around outside for some reason, and I was thinking about God. I was thinking it just wasn't fair that a shining gem like Connie would have this happen to her and that she might be snatched from this life. I was about under the carport when clear as a bell I heard a voice in my head say in a voice I have never heard before "Trust me, Rich." I stopped dead in my tracks. Yeah, I know, I could have just imagined it, and possibly I did. But the voice was like a blade cutting through a fog. So am I just losing it? It certainly did calm me down. Not exactly serene or anything, and I am certainly not the religious type to go off the deep edge and start bible studies now. But maybe my subconscious is just trying to help me cope.

Oh, I forgot to mention a detail. Before this event happened, Connie and I were standing in the bathroom, and she got a look on her face. She was feeling above the top of her right breast and thought she felt a lump there. She asked me to feel, and yeah, it did feel like a lump to me. I am sure I had the same look on my face. She said that if the cancer is spreading that will be the end of it as far as she is concerned. What could I say? So yeah, that was on my mind as I was walking around outside mentioned above.

So when I went back into the house, something made me ask her to feel for that lump again. And you know what? It wasn't there. Maybe it was something else. A muscle, perhaps? But she felt and could not find it neither.

So OK, I am going all spacey now. Hearing voices, and taking something that could have just been a coincidence and thinking it was a sign. And I guess the fact that I question why Connie is going through this in the first place shows I am having trouble with any "trusting" or belief. I still have to ask "why?" Of course, back when Connie was first diagnosed with cancer, I did ask of God to take whatever he wanted from me to give to her to make her well. And I DID get a heart attack REAL soon after my request. So maybe my wish had been granted. I do remember while in the back of the ambulance thinking "God, you sure didn't wait long, now did you?"

I guess, for real, sooner or later I will know one way or another.

Sheesh, I will be REAL surprised if I don't delete most of above. Makes me sound like some sort of whacko. But heck, maybe I am. I think some of you would excuse me for losing my damned mind over all this.
 
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For anyone interested in knowing such details, the new shot she got on 07-07 to increase her white blood cell count is called "Ziextenzo". I believe it is generic for "Neulasta". She was getting a shot of something called "Zarxio (sp?)" but this new one is supposed to be stronger. Not sure why the "upgrade" as her white blood cell count didn't look bad in her last blood work results. Might be a good thing though, because Connie is absolutely scared to death of getting any sort of infection now. I have been washing my hands so much and using disinfectant whenever I come into the house that my hands are beginning to feel kind of weird. And I have purchased a couple of air purifiers for the house to try to scrub the air as much as possible. Matter of fact, I have four more sitting out on the porch in boxes I need to set up. Probably overkill, but oh well...

The chemo drugs she is being administered are "Bevacizumab" and "Carboplatin". She was getting "Abraxane" but the oncologist took her off of it for the last treatment on 07-06.

She is feeling very tired today. She is not sleeping well at night, so I tell her to just take cat naps whenever she feels like it. Earlier her cheeks were flushed, but it doesn't seem to be getting worse. Matter of fact, it comes and goes over the past couple of days. One of the nurses on Thursday told her the shot would give her just sort of an overall "crappy" feeling of just not feeling all that well. And I think that is hitting Connie somewhat. But she still has a good appetite, and thankfully hasn't gotten any sort of nausea problems. Probably due to the pills she is taking to combat sort of side effect. I am thankful of that, as I have heard from some people that this was the worst of the effects they got from having chemo treatments. At least in their opinion. So I hope Connie will be spared that.

She is back in her recliner now, reading a book, but I expect she will doze off frequently. I may go over to the other building so I don't disturb her. But I have to admit that I have become more dependent on my cell phone as a means of her getting in touch with me if she needs me.
 
I am so very thankful that you and Connie are progressing well. It's fantastic that her tumor marker tested so much lower! I'm not familiar with specific chemotherapy meds but I'm familiar with serious, debilitating, ongoing nausea. I've always thought that Dante should have included serious nausea in his descriptions of Hell, and not just in an outer circle. I have been specifically praying that Connie would be spared that as she goes through this process. I'm thankful that she has been, and will continue to pray that she continues to be spared. And that you both are strengthened and healed. [emoji3590]

Sent from my SM-A716U1 using Tapatalk
 
Connie got word yesterday that the tumor markers they are monitoring dropped from 578(?) on 06-29 to 333 from the blood test she had this past Wednesday (07-20). So that is heading in the right direction.

She seems to be feeling pretty good. Scheduled for her next chemo treatment this upcoming Wednesday (07-27).
 
Well, let's see. I guess this is an update.

The latest blood work Connie had (08-03) was showing some really high numbers for some things related to her white blood cell counts, so the oncologist is taking her off of that "Ziextenzo" she was being given the day after the chemo. Not sure what that is all about, but hope there hasn't been anything long term damaging involved. I believe she had two sessions of that particular drug. Honestly, all these exotic chemicals going into her body makes me really nervous. Especially if you read about the possible side effects. That is enough to make the hair on the back of your neck stand straight up.

Connie has been feeling relatively OK, just some minor issues likely related to the chemo treatments (and possibly that above mentioned shot she was getting) and her immunity being on a low ebb. But she seems to still have a good appetite and is trying to keep on eating so she doesn't lose a lot of weight. She has been hovering around 105 lbs lately and it is a struggle for her to eat enough to keep it there. She is only taking small meals, as she is afraid to eat too much and maybe trigger some nausea as a result. Plus she is drinking a lot of water each day to help flush out those chemo chemicals, as is recommended in the literature she was given. So it is difficult for her to get a solid night's sleep when she has to pee about every 2 or 3 hours.

Not sure if I mentioned it before, but her sister (Karen) is a cancer survivor that Connie has been using as a mentor for her own journey and also as an example of someone who had a pretty severe case of cancer, yet pulled through. Karen basically had stage 4 cancer with tumors all through her body. We thought she was a goner for certain. But Karen read up on alternative treatments concerning using baking soda and honey, along with her chemo, and that is what she did. Not sure if that is what saved her, but heck, it was pretty miraculous that she pulled through like she did. So what the heck, Connie is trying that too.

Anyway, a couple of weeks ago, Karen was certain that her cancer had come back. She was having pains that she said felt just like the pain she experienced from her cancer tumors. Of course this had Connie pretty much feeling shattered, as she felt she was looking at her future too. But long story short, turned out that Karen had two broken ribs, and some fluid around the breaks that was causing the pain. No signs of cancer whatsoever from all the tests she went through. We were all breathing a big sigh of relief! I really don't know how Connie would have taken hearing that Karen was back in really big trouble again. I think she would have been on real thin ice mentally.

Yeah, Connie is bummed out by the minor side effects she is experiencing, but as I have been telling her, it could be a LOT worse. I am actually surprised, because I was really fearing the worse. She is going in for another blood work session on 08-10, so hopefully they will be checking that tumor marker thing again and the number will be even lower than before. Hopefully even a LOT lower. And I am curious about those white blood cell numbers too. Then her next chemo treatment is scheduled for 08-17.

She is trying to stay active, but not much she can do outside with the mosquitoes from all the rain we have been having lately. But she is trying to do the best she can. I REALLY don't want her to be bitten by mosquitoes with her immune system being on the blink. No telling what sort of bad things could result from that.
 
Well, this is worth noting here.....

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7272521/

Abstract

Relevance

Ivermectin, as an old anti-parasite drug, can suppress almost completely the growth of various human cancers, including ovarian cancer (OC). However, its anticancer mechanism remained to be further studied at the molecular levels. Ivermectin-related molecule-panel changes will serve a useful tool for its personalized drug therapy and prognostic assessment in OCs.
 
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