Tuesday, February 25, 2014

Update February 25th

Dear Family and Friends,,

Looking out the City of Hope window this morning I thought of the drivers stuck in heavy traffic and I actually missed the opportunity of being one of them ....driving bumper to bumper...just to DRIVE, move, stop at a local Trader Joe's....how many times I took it all for granted!  The little ordinary things of life never seemed so precious.  Soon, Dr. Stein came in my room (he's the doctor in charge of the clinical trial I'm doing) and told me they will be checking my bone marrow and spinal fluid on Friday and I'll be released on Saturday morning! The thought of the freeway is actually exciting to me now...  It will be a month since I done anything outside this hospital.

The time here has been a minefield of thoughts, feelings, reflections, being in a body that has been deeply affected, in ways known and unknown (at least right now) by so many medications.

I've been reading about this clinical trial -- BiTe (is the shortened version) -- and it is truly a blessing I got in.  Not only does it get people back in remission quickly, but it brings the cancer (or it can bring it) to a Minimal Residual Disease (or MRD) state, which makes the bone marrow transplant even more effective.   I'll have been here a month this coming Monday.  Two weeks at home and then a month back at City of Hope, unless I'm already in remission.  Then I'll possibly go directly into the transplant procedure...which is pretty grueling...more so than the BiTe trial because of GVHD.  If they still find Leukemia, will have another month at City of Hope and get retested till I come out clear.

So this year is definitely going to be marked by lots of hospital stays and skilled nurses and doctors.

Have been using my time doing lots of art and thinking of spending time in nature during the brief time I'm out of the hospital.  Speaking of art, was inspired to begin painting a baby elephant. They are adorable.   Every time I watch this video, it makes me laugh....

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZvVpUGQdJWo&feature=youtu.be

Being confined to my room (because of low blood count) hasn't been easy.  Thank you to those who were able to come by and bring good cheer!   I'm heading toward my 4th year since my diagnosis!

Love to all!  

Heidi

Wednesday, February 19, 2014

Dear family and friends,
What an adventure!  I thought the first round of chemo I got in 2010 was challenging! T
he BiTe clinical trial is much more trying.  A "trying" trial!  Sounds like a poem is brewing....

A trying trial
A cancerous ordeal
filled with lessons and tests
and unpleasant sensations 
to feel
Some days I smile
and others,
 not
Today, for example,
 is a
 chocolate bar day
Fiendishly fraught
Oh how I wish I could get one 
and not get caught!

But can't go to the gift shop 
where they lie on the shelf
Without passing the nurses' station 
like a mischievous elf
nor can I go to my car
Or leave my room 
for the dark chocolate bar
So it's chocolate-less gloom

My one task, the one thing to do
Is allow this drug to work 
Not a candy bar bought  
But a pottential cure
 is prayerfully sought
Through the bag that drips
a medicine with
long letters indeed
Blinatumomab, are you what I need?

If I step into the hallway 
The nurses the nurses become taut
They are strict about
microbial creatures
being caught

So I stare out the window
with about 8 more days to go
and fill my mind with visions
of days not long ago
How I took them for granted
the gentle carefree past
when cells were just normal
and health seemed to last
I dream of my friends
and delicious sugary treats 
(a thing of  the past)
No concerns about cancer
But bodily health
that would last and last ....'

Cancer ain't no BLAST
I'm telling you like it is!
Even those baby white cells,
known as BLASTS

When I heard their name
I was aghast!  ....they multiply so FAST!
Shoving all other cells
out of the way (as if they have no say!)
Though a powerful healing light
seems to keep them at bay

I could go on and on
but for now, this is all I'll say 
My only task, the only thing to "do" is 
to meditate and pray!

So my dear friends,
please join me in prayer
that all those strong powerful
good cells
weed out the bad
sending them somewhere
so I can be glad
and resume my playful life
of  laughter and good cheer
May 2014 be the year!!!!!

AMEN


Saturday, February 15, 2014

Saturday, at the OK Corral

Hello dear friends and family,

Peter just went to the Bistro at City of Hope, giving me time to update my blog.  It's been a bit of a wild journey in ways I didn't expect.  Being away from all my friends and visitors has given me a lot of time alone....more time alone than I've had since the Leukemia started in 2010. It's been good,  though difficult in ways I didn't expect.  Soul time.  Reminds me of that saying I heard years and years ago, "We come alone, we live alone, we leave alone with God alone."   Yes, we have our loved ones and I've come to deeply appreciate that we are social creatures.  At least for me, living in a cave doesn't have appeal as it might for some.  I learn so much from others about life, and about myself.  What better, true-to-life mirror can one have than the reflection we see beaming back to us through another's eyes?  And what a gift.  We could walk through life blind to our true colors -- our edges and curves lost in the midst of our self-deceptions and assumptions.  But those reflections in another's eyes cannot be denied.  Are we open to seeing them?   Do we want to see where they started and where they lead?

Illness is a mirror too.  It somehow brings those soft, vulnerable places to the surface.  Did I say soft?  Sometimes they are hard and crusted over from lack of acknowledgement.  Some are not pleasant

I'm 1/4 the way through the clinical trial.  It's been hard to keep time here.  Is it Saturday? This coming Monday I'll move over to the village bungalow and my friend Gail will be staying with me for next weeks.  Side effects are manageable, so far.  Peter is bellowing out the words "Proof of Heaven" in his goofy, lovable way ....and to let off a little "steam" in this crazy little cooped up room in a small city named Duarte, on planet Earth.  There's a little window I can look out of reminding me of what a tiny speck I am in the infinite scheme of things. So tiny and yet so Infinite.  What an interesting contemplation!  

Pedro and I are going to watch a new TV show HBO...True Detective.   
                                                  Heidi


Tuesday, February 4, 2014

Early morning Update from City of Hope

Hi Everyone,


Up at 2:30 a.m. and can't sleep, so thought I'd send out a little update. All is going well.  Dr. Stein who is the head of the clinical trial as a pre-transplant procedure says I'm breezing through the protocol.  This early morning (as I write this) is my first side effect -- a large red "sunburn" type rash on the back of my right leg, but it's manageable. 

 
New piece I'm working on; sorry I can't rectify it's position.  It's about 95% further done than you see it here.



Last night I ventured down to the lobby.  They have an "electric" piano there playing beautiful music, and a world-known harpist is coming this evening for a free concert.   He is going to play music from various countries listed, but not remembered as I write this  - South American, European, etc..   I can feel the pulse of LA's creative juices at City of Hope.  It reminds me of the many years I lived here.  For some reason, San Diego just doesn't have the same vibe.  Though I miss parts of LA,  wouldn't want to live here again and deal with the traffic and smog!
I am meeting people who have Leukemia; everyone's story is just a bit different, and very interesting. For example, a man and wife last night, probably around my age, were happy to share with me how he found about his AML.  He was getting a "routine" hip replacement but the surgery didn't "take."  When they went back in they did a test of his marrow and found the Leukemia. (What a lucky guy as a few weeks later the Leukemia would have been too far to treat, most likely, in order for him to get into remission!)  Chemo worked now he's waiting for a transplant.  He has Kaiser, like me, and we both have Dr. Sahebi of Kaiser treating us.  He just learned of his Leukemia and both he and his wife are still "deer in the headlights." 

They had been sitting in the lobby all day waiting for a bed!  Dr. Stein was right to check me in Monday night saying, "You better go in tonight otherwise there may not be a bed for you tomorrow morning."   I am one of the fortunate ones, a nurse told me.  The beds get filled up fast and then your treatment has to wait.

Earlier in the week I met a young 20-something woman in one of the rooms down the hall.  She got her ALL in High School and her whole life turned upside down for the last 5 years.  Friends she thought were her "BFF's" slipped out of her life.  New ones came in.  She found a boyfriend who got Lupus shortly thereafter.  I was reminded how individual our path is in life.


Well, it's getting close to 3:30 a.m. The machine that delivers the Blinatumomab trial drug is chirping, chortling, beeping out little cranky noises (why it does this at night and not so much during the day I'll never know!), so I decided to chortling right along with it and hopefully it will get rid of its "air bubbles" and allow me to sleep soon.  Apparently,  there's nothing I do or not do that can help except call the nurse each time.  Sounds subsiding now and time to catch some "ZZZZZZZ's" if I can.

Love to you all,

Heidi


P.S. Am going to treat myself to a croissant in the morning at their nice Bistro downstairs, have a seat with a decaf and look out on the beautiful Sierra mountains (?) behind Monrovia and Sierra Madre.  





Saturday, February 1, 2014

(From Kevin:) Posting on behalf of my AMAZING sister! :) Hugs!

At City of Hope now and have had two days of Blinatumomab.  Feeling "lighter", better.  So grateful to be on this new antibody.  Read this inspiring story about it if you wish.  
Here's an excerpt about a woman on Blinatumomab they did a movie on:  "While Nat in theory still has a leukemia, at this point the chances of her absolute recovery are very high. Her next step is to have a second bone marrow transplant, which, if all goes well, should finally cure her. But if it doesn’t she still has Blinatumomab. The drug is still in clinical trials; its full potential hasn’t yet been explored. It is very probable that it could be used to control leukemia through intravenous injections – just as insulin is used to control diabetes."
And here's the full article.  Very encouraging!

http://au.news.yahoo.com/sunday-night/blogs/article/-/8978665/nat-andy-a-love-story/

Starting to settle in.  My dear 89 year old aunt and her daughter in law may visit me today.  Looking forward to some company.  It's been a bit of a rocky road getting started and am hoping for some smooth sailing ahead.

Love to you all in the coming weeks/months.  A change in plans and transplant being postponed is a real blessing in design I feel.  I'm a lucky lady.
Heidi