The annual trip to the oncologist comes around once again, and oddly coincides with an onset of insomnia. I am suffering from very odd dreams that range from being stuck in a typhoon to showing up in class for a test with a pen without ink. I wake up in the darkness catching my breath. I am robbed of sleep, of peace, of self.
The oncologist’s visit will coincide with the annual mammogram too, a necessity for all women who have gone through a cancer bout. I am reminded repeatedly that I must do this for the next three years, because the cancer free five year threshold remains. I go alone this year, no cancer girlfriends, no husband. It gets exhausting asking.
The oncologist who I will call Dr. Jones is great, she’s a straight shooter and she’s the sort of person who appears to see the glass as half full rather than empty, her 100 watt smile has a calming effect. We talk, she checks me over, and she reminds me of the upcoming mammogram. I talk about the insomnia and also share that lately I’ve been a bit blue because I’ve known of at least four young women who have had a recurrence, not to mention numerous posts on my online Facebook groups about young women who lost the battle to the disease. A number of them were younger than me.
Then we chitchat about overall health and wellness. Yes, continue to take the vitamins, swim, exercise, drink a bit of red wine, laugh, it’s all good for the spirit and the soul. By the time I leave, I am smiling. Life was short and what would I do if this were my last day on earth? I certainly would not work.
This reminded me of a recent conversation with a young man who suffered from a much more severe case of cancer than I. We met at the young person’s cancer support group, and he told me about the Athletes 4 Cancer ski and surf camp for young people 18-39 years of age. He had attended the Hawaii surf camp and had a blast. The sunsets were absolutely gorgeous. I had been invited to attend last year but declined because of the mountain of work. Now I had a second chance to attend, but feared that it would eat into my studies. “I think you should go to Hawaii and surf, who knows you might even be eaten by a shark,” my new friend laughed. “I was eaten by a shark and I am alive.” I made my decision over our conversation and a beer that I would go. “Go to Hawaii and surf.” Check it off the bucket list.