Well it’s been a long time since I’ve been on the blog. I’ve
wanted to update everyone for a while now but I just haven’t felt well enough
to do it. There’s so much that’s happened in the last month or so that it seems
like it has been a year.
Well I had surgery on March 23. The surgery was to remove
all of my large intestine and some of my rectum. I was given a temporary
ileostomy which will be converted into a j pouch after my chemotherapy. (Yeah I
had to look those words up too to see what they were). The surgery went really
well and my recovery seemed to be going okay. My main problem that week of
recovery was that I wasn’t able to urinate on my own. So after a week at the
hospital they sent me home with a catheter. I hate catheters and have way too
much experience with them as you’ll see in a bit.
Being at home was nice but I was uncomfortable all the time
and missed by hospital that could adjust just the way I liked it. The more food
I ate the sicker I felt. Little did I know, my small intestine hadn’t woken up
and I was developing a rare case of pancreatitis.
Two days after being home from the hospital I started to get
really nauseous and eventually began throwing up many times during the day.
Since it was a Saturday, we weren’t able to get a hold of my surgeon so we got
the on call doctor. At first he just said to only drink liquids and that it
will pass. Well, it didn’t. After 4 attempts he had me sent to the emergency
room.
By this time I was in a lot of pain and constantly on the
verge of throwing up. I’m getting nauseous just talking about it. They did a CT
Scan and said I had a partial blockage in my small intestine and pancreatitis.
They sent me in an ambulance back to LDS hospital where I’d just come from two
days earlier. The ambulance ride cost $2,500!!!!!!! Just for drive up to Salt Lake! You'd thing we had a party or they gave me a lot of drugs on the way up but nothing, I just laid there watching Megan follow us. It was pretty much the stupidest ambulance ride ever.
The fun began at LDS hospital. They stuck an NG Tube up my
nose, down my throat and into my stomach. One of the most uncomfortable things
I have every experienced, and by this point, I’ve experienced a lot. The tub
gagged you constantly and I continued to throw up. The purpose of the tube was
to suck out every thing in my intestines since they were pushing the food down.
I wasn’t allowed to drink or eat anything. I just sat there
for three days getting my guts sucked out of me. My blood levels that indicated
pancreatitis kept increasing. Since I wasn’t getting better the surgeon decided
I couldn’t go much longer without food so they placed a PICC line in my arm.
That was a struggle and they had a hard time getting it to work but eventually
it did. The pick line is a glorified IV in your arm that goes directly to your
heart.
They used the PICC line to give me food through an IV. I
didn’t like my PICC. It kept bleeding when it wasn’t supposed so they’d have to
change the dressing on it and that hurt! But the PICC was nice too because they
could draw blood out of it.
For those of you who haven’t spent a night in the hospital,
the little night people (no offense Chad) come around in the middle of the
night and wake you up so they can poke your arm and draw your blood. It gets
old fast. So the PICC avoided the poke, but not the wake up.
After a few days of the PICC, they pulled out my NG Tube and
replaced it with a smaller tube that they fed into my intestine as a feeding
tube. Once the feeding tube was placed I was able to start sipping water.
IT WAS AWESOME!!! I loved sipping the cold water. It’s funny
how a lot of things I used to take for granted had been taken away from me and
wonderful it was to get one of them back.
I began recovering finally and eventually was allowed to
eat. As we got closer to getting discharged my urologist gave me two options: have
a full time catheter, or I can do what they call “straight cathing” where I
would put a catheter in myself to urinate several times a day. The thought of
doing that to myself terrified me. I decided I would try it out because it
would be nice not to have a full time catheter to carry around. My first time
burned like crazy!! I was convinced this was not for me and had the full
catheter brought to my room. But then I tried again. Still burned but it wasn’t
as bad.
So to this day I am still straight cathing about 4 times a
day, hoping that my bladder function returns to normal. It’s starting too I
think.
So I was discharged finally, with no tubes to hold me down.
I went home and started immediately feeling sick. WHAT THE HECK! If I was going
to get sick again why couldn’t it have happened at the hospital. I went on an
all liquid diet for a few days and the sickness went away.
That’s my go to treatment now. I’ve felt sick a few times
since I’ve been home and I always go to a liquid diet and it eventually goes
away.
By this point I had lost 40 lbs. And if you know me, I
didn’t look like I had 40 lbs. to lose.
But as of right now I’m feeling much better.
I started chemotherapy yesterday. My treatment is called
FOLFOX. One of the drugs I’m on is called 5-FU so I thought it fitting to name
this post FU cancer. It’s nice to be fighting this thing finally. We'll see how
the side effects go but it’s worth it.
Thanks for all of your support. I know from your end it may
seem like it goes unnoticed but from my end I feel all of your thoughts and
prayers strengthening me and it really does make a difference. God is there
with us even in the hardest of times. He is lifting my burdens and the burdens
of my family and part of that is thanks to you.
John 16:33 “These things I have spoken unto you, that in me
ye might have peace. In the world ye shall have tribulation: but be of good
cheer; I have overcome the world.”
This is a picture of my first day at chemo treatment. I was by far the youngest person there. Everyone looked at my like "what's he doing here?" I've got a port in my chest which the nurse can access and give me the drugs through it so the drugs go directly to my heart and then my heart blasts the chemo through my body and it kills the cancer. At least that's what it's doing in my mind.
Wes
ReplyDeleteWe love you so much! I cant imagine how impossibly hard this must be but you are SO strong and have so much faith that I know it will all work out in the end. This sounds a little crazy but remember this feeling of being carried because when its gone you will miss it. You are SO amazing and we are cheering for you!!!
Wes, it's such a relief to hear you are finally feeling better. I'm amazed to see you and Megan smiling in every picture you post, even when you guys probably didn't feel like it. Just know that you two are truly inspiring and we love yogunmen so much. Now it's on to the good part...pwning cancer. Let the games begin!!!
ReplyDeleteYogunmen??? Wtheck! I meant you both.
ReplyDeleteThanks for posting that. Now when people ask I can just refer them to your blog instead of try and explain all of this to them. You did a much better job of it than I ever could. Love you, sweetie. You are my super hero!
ReplyDeleteHey man, thanks for doing this blog. My father-in-law did one as well and it many of the posts are really special for us now. Just have to say, you were probably my favorite person to work with on my whole internship. Wish you the best man! Your family is definitely in our prayers.
ReplyDelete-Matt Jones