Tag Archives: mouth cancer

Time flies

This time, three years ago, I was alone in a hospital room, watching the night slip away and the transformational, slow-creeping dawn of a new day.  

I was not scared that day. I lived in the moment knowing this would pass. I understood I needed to let go; to trust in the skills of others; to rely on the love that surrounded me; to be free of any pre-conceived thinking.  It was a unique time, a special and privileged space to walk into and hold. Eyes wide open, this day was the beginning of the most profound, personal change and learning programme which I’m lucky enough to continue.

On this anniversary, I’m sharing some of these learnings. Some of these are deep and meaningful. Others are not.

1. We are the product of our thoughts. What we think will be. But as our thoughts constantly change, we have the opportunity to change what will be.

Nothing is set in stone. Changing our thinking, changes our outcomes.

2.Our feelings are attached to our thoughts and our thoughts are attached to our feelings.

If I think my recovery will be painful then guess what? My recovery is going to be painful. However, if I think my recovery will be bearable, then I stand a better chance of dealing with all the little niggles and set-backs that occur (like them taking my morphine button away a day early). Conversely this can work the other way too. For example,  ripping out my feeding tube “accidentally” in the shower (I hated that feeding tube and they kept saying, “One more day”). It hurt beyond blazes, I still remember the searing agony. But I told myself before I did it, it was going to be painless. I was wrong.

3.People love to help. Help them by asking for specific help.

For example, “I can’t drive for a few weeks and Craig needs to go away for work, can you come and be my driver on these dates”? My lovely friend Karen, did not hesitate, despite living a busy life 200 miles away. It took mouth cancer surgery to not comment on her driving my car; if I’d had a tongue to bite, it would have been an even bigger mess than my new, surgically created, tongue.

4.After big, life-changing, surgery, emotions are heightened.

This is normal and it continues for many weeks; maybe months and sometimes years. The ability to ‘feel more’ intensifies; the air you breathe is sweeter, more rarefied, more precious. I cry far more easily now; my friends know I love and cherish them because I tell them; I won’t waste time doing meaningless, unproductive work for organisations with no purpose and no soul; I choose carefully the people I want to spend time with. The consequence of this hubris is that I am blessed with some incredibly strong friendships while being much less financially robust. However, I now live with ethics, principles and morals and luckily a husband who still works.

5.Your scars will not be as bad as you think they will be.

Three years on, mine are visible but are now an essential part of who I am and frankly I don’t give an XXX what others may think. Three years ago, I never would have believed that I would be so comfortable in my own skin.  My wise girlfriend Haydee, shared ” scars are tattoos with better stories”.  These days I am an avid storyteller.

6.It’s tougher on your support team than it is on you.

You have to get on with the business of living, surviving or dying. You’re the lucky one, it’s happening to you and you alone choose how you deal with your diagnosis. The loved ones around you are plunged into seas of uncertainty, fear, stress and worry. They can only look on knowing that community and society judges their reactions and behaviours to your diagnosis. Be kind to them. Worst case scenario, they could choose not to see you.  In my experience, they only get away with this, if they live far away and their local community has no idea that they have not seen you since prior to your diagnosis. The ones who live close by, are the ones who will be judged. Be nice.

7.It’s BS when they say children are resilient.

Roscoe has had his moments of resilience just as he’s had his moments of sheer fright and panic. They are humans, they process emotions slightly differently to adults but they still feel. And never lie to a child about your diagnosis. I thought I was protecting him when I lied that people get better from this cancer and it was nothing to worry about. 15 months later I had to tell him that Charlie had died, leaving his mate, Tyler, without a Mummy. I will always remember his reaction and his face on hearing this news. Now he’s a teenager, I know I disappoint him on a more regular basis but unlike other parents, I know when disappointing my child began.

8. It takes two years minimum for you to come back into yourself.

I went back to work, way, way, too early with a brain like a jellied eel and a memory bank of mush. I turned up to a meeting with my new Exec Director and found myself stuck in one of Dr Who’s time loops, repeating what I’d just said over and over again. I kept waiting for my synapses to fire up but they were away on extended holiday. This was neither good for my confidence, nor my soul. Give yourself time to heal; mentally, physically and emotionally. Otherwise you could end up back in another operating theatre 6 months later, like I did.

9.You will be skinny but it doesn’t last.

I walked out of hospital, the same weight I was in my twenties. Apart from the arm cast, the scars and the hollowed cheeks, I thought I looked great – I could fit into all those skirts and trousers I had held onto in the vain hope I’d be a size 6/8 again. But the joy of being able to eat roars loud and unfortunately I’m now heavier than I was prior to my diagnosis. Determined to not be ‘fat with scars’, I’m pushing myself through a fitness regime with menopausal zeal. I look back on those early days of recovery with a fondness beyond the obvious gratitude that I’m robust and well enough to attend my fitness classes today.

10.The desire to be a cancer missionary, raise money and awareness will burn bright.

I’ve given speeches, talks, opening addresses at conferences, appeared on TV and radio, been interviewed and started this blog. I wanted people to be aware, to know it could happen to them, even if, like me, they never lived with any of the so-called causal factors. “It could be you” became a mantra. I don’t know if any of this has made a difference to others but it’s made a massive difference to me. To be able to make people listen, to have them laugh and cry and feel and most importantly check their mouths, is an immense privilege. I have honed my speaking ability, my presentation skills, my writing platform and my ability to laugh at myself.

 

11.Why stop at 10?

That would be predictable and you know in your very soul that life can change on a dime. So embrace the learning, the ongoing curiosity about what’s happening to your heart, mind and body; stand up on the surfboard of change and love your life.

12.Attend all of your check up appointments. Don’t miss one.

Listen if I can get on a plane, fly 8 hours and drive 100 miles for a 10 minute check up appointment every 2 months, then you can make sure you show up too. Turning up to my first checkup without Craig was tough;  we had seen Mr Bater together for every appointment; we were the practised double act, always trying to raise a smile or a reaction from this taciturn cancer consultant. On my own was a much scarier, lonelier proposition, particularly the time when I had developed potentially serious symptoms many hundreds of miles away. The sense of distance and vulnerability created by leaving my support network in the UK has diminished over time, after all, I know what it takes to get back to Mr B if I need to.

13.Frame yourself as a cancer adventurer.

It takes five years to gain an ‘all clear’ diagnosis, in the meantime I’m not fighting cancer or surviving cancer, I’m on a life adventure with regular cancer-free checkups. And long may this continue. When I outsourced my cancer removal to Mr B and his medical colleagues, I kept my cancer recovery responsibilities. I’m not a victim of cancer, I’m not battling it. I’m getting on with stomping, stumbling and exhibition-dancing my way through life.

Our time here is fleeting; I’m a tiny atom of matter in multiple universes of atoms and matter. I’m connected and separate and time-bound and slowly disintegrating and dying (hopefully of old age).

After all, we’re all destined to not make it one day.

So let’s make this day, and each day, count.

Discomfort

As humans we communicate using a myriad of tools and techniques. While we in the business talk about verbal or oral communications as well as non verbal, auditory and kinesthetic communications, in practical terms humans connect via reading and writing, body gestures, facial expressions, eye contact, touch, posture, sign language and actions and behaviors, including how close we stand next to one another. (Think about how you feel when someone stands closer than you would prefer, how much you feel uncomfortable and how you react).

This week I’ve had to rely a lot on my non verbal communications. Unlike my mouth cancer where I was able to produce a few guttural words after the operation; a profusion of ugly mouth ulcers on my lower gum, alongside the remainder of my tongue and down my throat have rendered me speechless.  And scared.

Its been over 2 years since my mouth cancer diagnosis and operation. I’ve frequent follow-up appointments with the maxfax consultant and all remains good. But the daily tussle with the mind continues. Any cancer remission patient will tell you that life becomes infinitely sweeter in the immediate recovery weeks after the end of their treatment.  It’s a warning and a blessing to still be here and to be able to hug, hold and communicate with friends and loved ones.  Over the passage of time, memories smooth out some of the trauma and daily gratitude often slips from the conscious to the subconscious, only popping to the fore when reminders snake up.  This is how it should be, it’s how the system helps repair the self.

However some of us carry a residual sense of deep impermanence. Where we know life is short and can end at any time. This cannot be described as fear but I’ve yet to make peace with this knowledge. I can get very short-tempered with the time wasting and downright laziness that is inherent here in Barbados. Where others think their time is more valuable that yours so yes they will just take this phone call and gossip with a friend while they stop serving you or they will download their mound of groceries on the cashiers belt in front of you and then saunter off for another 15 minutes to complete their shopping. The countless times I stand waiting for someone to finish chatting with their co-workers, or wait in for workmen to appear 5 hours late with no apology or watch traffic come to a halt so the bus drivers can have a chinwag. While others might put this down to Caribbean time, I want to yell “but not on my time, I don’t know how much I’ve got left and what I’ve got is precious”.  To be fair I don’t think my time is any more important than any one else’s, I just want the opportunity to spend it as I choose.

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This has really come to the fore these past few days. Rendered mute and in pain, I read as much as I can on dealing with ulcers or canker sores and how to help them heal.  Of course it doesn’t matter how many times I gargle with salt water and bicarbonate of soda or drink camomile and honey tea, or eat my body weight in ice cream to numb my mouth, it is only time that will heal.  I cannot push recovery to be faster, I cannot star jump or deep breathe my way to a better mouth, I just need to sleep lots, stay calm and let it go.

And this is the mind challenge, for try as I might, this week has brought back into technicolour focus what we all went through as a result of my cancer diagnosis.  I give myself a mental beating for some of my recent lifestyle choices and giving into my natural hedonistic tendencies ; unfortunately I’m not blessed with a deep desire to get up with the dawn chorus, chant “OM”, eat berries and contort my body into positions better suited to pre-pubescent gymnasts.  I know I should but when there is a great cocktail bar and a live band performing, guess where you’ll find me?

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Refocusing my mind away from what I see as fun versus what I think will make me dull and boring,  towards the goal of long-term health and strength  is something I need to work on.  Part of me thinks I haven’t survived my cancer to live my life as a scholastic monk but there are consequences as a result of my recent choices.  It’s time that I accept responsibility and make some necessary changes such as getting to the gym regularly, eating more organic fruit and vegetables and learning to stop stressing about the incompetent driving and bad manners that seem to be prevalent  on this island. And probably, (written reluctantly),  managing my desire for the evening G&T under the guise of it helps me de-stress! Changing life patterns may cause a bit of discomfort but the benefit of a healthy life  and the corresponding ability to fully communicate as well as spend time with friends and loved ones are the most compelling of incentives.

 

 

 

 

 

Stuff and things

When I don’t write out my thoughts and ideas,  they live in my head and sometimes grow to scarily gargantuan bubbles of nonsense which pop! when I eventually sit at the keyboard.

The concept of ideas coming to me, like invisible atoms, all joining up for a transient, coalescent moment is both comforting and frustrating.  My subconscious is telling me to make time.  I need to pay more attention.

I’ve been lost in the land of doing for the past 3 months. In just over a week, we board a plane to start our 4 year Caribbean adventure and I’ve been head buried; organising, sorting and packing up our UK life and preparing everyone for the sunshine and showers of the next chapter.  Time, which seemed so plentiful when we first heard this news, is now travelling at warp speed.  People I wanted to see, places I wanted to go, things I wanted to do, well it just won’t happen, not for now anyway.

On the bright side, I’m not gone too long as I need to return to the UK on a regular basis to see the Maxillofacial consultant.  My two-year cancer anniversary looms in December and statistically, if you chose to believe such numbers, the chance of a recurrence drops dramatically after this point.  I’m quietly, mentally counting down to my visit on December 6 and trying to manage my cortisol levels as I singularly manage our move.

Everything in our home requires a decision.  It goes to Barbados.  It goes into store. It goes out.  I have removed a decision point by the packers being in so many items have already gone.  I’m struck at how much stuff and how still attached to stuff I am.  This move is teaching me to really begin to practice letting go. I’m hoping in 4 years time I’ll  be kicking myself for still hoarding all the bits and pieces that have already gone into store and to enjoy the process of throwing most of it away.


The far-too-early snuffed life force of Charlie Rees gives me daily perspective when all of my plans, preparations and activities seem out of control.   I’m grateful to be here each day, to be stressing about the nonsense of items which provide rich memories of people and places, of life and love.  I’m blessed to enjoy paintings and music, to warble-sing to good-time tunes, to walk uninterrupted across miles of verdant countryside with the dog pulling at my company, to uproariously laugh with my increasingly smart and funny Roscoe, to spend time with my fabulous girlfriends.  I don’t take any of this for granted.  Not any more.

Charlie gave me this gift and I remember and thank her daily for it.

The gift of knowing the difference between the stuff of life and a life of stuff.

The Poster ‘child’ and Poo

It is almost a year since my cancer surgery and knowing it is mouth cancer awareness month, I am chatting to my consultant surgeon at my 6 weekly consultation,  about what he does to raise awareness.  He shares some of his experiences with running free clinics and receiving ‘dogs abuse’ from Doctors who think he is scaremongering, and of the difficulties he faces getting the support required to set these up.  As part of this conversation I casually offer to support him in any of his efforts.

Less than a week later, he leaves a message on my answer phone.  BBC South are interested on doing a piece on mouth cancer and want a patients perspective.  Will I do it?  After a couple of conversations with the communications department of the Basingstoke Health Trust and a BBC producer,  I find myself in front of a TV camera.

blue-lips-mouth-cancer-awareness-1144x762Up to this point, I have been fairly quiet about my cancer.  I haven’t been deliberately hiding it, I know I need to take the time to get physically better, learn from and work through the changes that it brings and to embrace my new sense of self and identity.  I also know that I need to find a new job in the New Year  and that finding a new role is likely to be more problematic  with a recent cancer diagnosis and recovery story tagging along behind me.

So, I take time, writing this blog, going to all the various treatment and support groups, having fun, hanging out and welcoming support from my tribe of great friends while focusing on getting better.

tah-dah-1In one morning, I blow the control and management of my personal experiences right out the water.   I run starkers, out of the closet with a primal Tah Dah!!

It’s a positive and a negative being a communications expert in situations like these.  What is the message and the hook that will have people stop making tea and look at the screen? How will this message be memorable in 30 seconds?  What will make people do something different  from what they did before (i.e) stop ignoring persistent mouth and neck problems.  It is with a dawning sense of  dread, that I realise I need to show my “new” tongue and my scars to the good folks of the South of England, to wake them up to hopefully take preventative action.  And  not even my lovely Craig gets to see my tongue in private.

I am clear about my message – “It could be you” is the hook.  I want the audience to know that I don’t qualify in any of the so-called factors they say generates mouth cancer.  As cases are on the increase and more research needs to be done on the causal factors – don’t be lulled into thinking “it won’t be me”.

They edit it, of course, so the message is not so direct and I get quite cross when they find a loquacious but officious dentist in Birmingham to come on after my segment and talk about all the old traditional factors surrounding mouth cancer.  Grrr.

radio-imageBut as I have also agreed to do a live interview on Radio Berkshire the following morning, I know I have another opportunity.  Radio as a medium is very different to TV.  A verbal rather than visual hook is required to get people to stop and think.  My story becomes real when I talk about telling Roscoe, my then 11 year old son, that I have cancer.  Parents are likely to shudder at the thought of having to do this. And everyone can imagine what it would feel like, having to tell loved ones such horrible news.  Hopefully this has people booking regular visits to their dentist.

I then go  ‘live’ on Facebook  to drum up more awareness.  Not only am I now naked and out the closet, I am swinging from the door!

I shut my laptop, pack my bag and get ready to support a girlfriend with a values in action workshop.  In my handbag is a letter, the contents of which I have not shared with anyone.

It states that my recent breast mammogram results require me to have another mammogram and consultation with a doctor in 48 hours at the Royal Country Hospital in Winchester.

Shit happens doesn’t it?

star-jumpsSurely after the mouth cancer and the removal of half my thyroid, I am done for the year.  Surely it is my turn to be well after all the healthy living, breathing techniques, positive mind work, the alternative therapies, vitamins and new knowledge.  I convince myself it is nothing, they are being extra careful with me because of my recent cancer adventure.

So I waltz into the Hospital, smiling and positive, up until my left boob is being “squashed and squeezed” and the response to a casual question to the lovely radiographer, is ringing in my ears.  She is not able to tell me what is wrong, I need to see the Doctor.

I don’t think I have ever felt fear like this before.  Like a menopausal heat wave it works its way from the top of my head to the soles of my feet in a millisecond. And I can’t move as my boob is stuck in a vice!  Yup, out of the closet, Tah Dah! now really quite naked and very exposed.

radiography-image

Sent to the waiting room for 20 minutes, I decide to pop to the bathroom to do some deep breathing techniques and star jumps (quite tricky in a small space and in reality more like a hop with two wildly failing arms).  A bit puffed, I turn to face the door and see a poster all about poo.  It seems quite apt, in this moment, to be looking at various shapes of poo and what they mean.  So in the interests of sharing my new knowledge I take a picture.

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Knowledge and a bit of levity are often the paddles you need when the shit creek appears.  And the ridiculousness of the situation, trying to do star jumps in a tiny toilet with a poo poster on the door, makes me laugh out loud.

Shortly afterwards, the Doctor shows me, on the small screen, my breast lump which thankfully turns out to be a cyst.  With the help of a sonogram and a ‘Dot-Dot’ large ‘Dot-Dot’ needle, it is aspirated and gone.  More mammograms confirm all is good and I step out on the street.

It’s been quite a 48 hours.

I head home for hugs with my boys.

Saying ‘Aaagh’

Today I went for my first ever Breast mammogram.  I am constantly amazed by how fortunate we are to have our National Health Service and for this breast screening to be free.  However, it turns out that many women do not turn up to the screening service, particularly the younger age group (the NHS is now offering screening services for a randomised group of women aged between  46 and 50).

pink breast cancer awareness ribbon
pink breast cancer awareness ribbon
This 6 minute test is undertaken by highly trained, caring and compassionate women, normally in a location where it’s easy to park. It’s so efficient I was in and out of the car-park within 30 minutes.  Breast cancer awareness is everywhere.  From Hollywood superstars, to business leaders, friends, Mums, daughters – the proliferation of pink cancer ribbons and fund-raising is huge. As is, unfortunately, the number of people we know and care about being affected by it.  Why take the risk and skip your Mammogram?  It’s 6 minutes of ‘uncomfortableness’, yet potentially  months and years of peace of mind.

So if people don’t turn up for mammograms for a cancer that is so widely known and prevalent, just consider the Herculean task of waking people up to the potential of mouth cancer.

In the UK, November is designated mouth cancer awareness month.

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Mouth cancer is on the increase;  by 39% in the UK in the last decade and by 92% since the 1970’s.  In my small friendship circle alone,  I know 3 other women who’ve experienced it and one lovely, gentle man, who has died of it. More people die from mouth cancer than cervical cancer and testicular cancer combined. Last week my dentist told me she’s just referred a 19 year old teenage boy showing all the signs of mouth cancer.

sam_0493This is not a cancer to be taken lightly.  Its effects are more visible and potentially more debilitating than many others.  Removing oral cancer, if it’s caught in time, can leave long-lasting affects on the speech and swallow function, on the function of the jaw and voice box, on neck and shoulder movement and additionally – in my case at least – a significant psychological impact created by  extensive scarring  to the mouth, neck, arm and stomach and having to learn to speak differently. img_6937 In many cases, mouth cancer survivors have to cope with developing a new self-identity.

Many of the populace – if they happen to be aware about mouth cancer at all –  figure it’s not going to happen to them.  Particularly if they don’t smoke, drink only occasionally, eat a balanced, healthy diet, have never had the HPV virus, are female, are fit and healthy and are under 50.

I was one of those people.

These factors were the reason that my dentist discounted mouth cancer for 4 months – and she is a great dentist.  Today,  as I type, a 47-year-old, fit, healthy and gorgeous woman is undergoing a 10+ hour operation because  4 different dentists misdiagnosed her mouth ulcer as being caused by a wisdom tooth.

mouth-cancer-check-2016-a4-downloadWe need to take responsibility for our own mouths.  Pay attention to ulcers which have not healed within three weeks, red and white patches in the mouth or any unusual lumps or swellings in the mouth, head and neck area.  Anything unusual in your mouth, anything that changes and stays changed for more than 3 weeks – go and see your dentist.  Specifically tell them you want to discount mouth cancer.  Put that thought in their head before they examine you so it’s in their conscious brain.

Here is what to do to check your mouth – it will take you less than a minute.  Do this in good light and pay attention to any changes

8-step-oral-cancer-screening

This picture is my mouth cancer, the day before my operation.img_6703 It doesn’t look serious does it?  But it was already a stage 2/3 cancer (I didn’t know this at the time) as it had spread into a lymph node.

As part of my monthly check up I discuss this lack of awareness with my Maxillofacial consultant surgeon.  He does all he can to raise awareness and catch people early.  He doesn’t want to sit in his consulting room, face a frightened patient and say “you’ve got cancer”.  He’d like to watch his young son play his football matches and read him bedtime stories, instead of standing in an operating room for over 12 hours conducting microscopic, intricate surgery to remove cancers that could have been treated differently if caught earlier.  His dedication is inspiring, admirable and his frustration palpable. I always know  when he pushes back his chair and runs his fingers over his head,  he’s stressed.  I’ve seen him do this enough times in the past year to know this pattern.

mouth cancer risk factors
mouth cancer risk factors
So many people have asked me, what causes mouth cancer.  The official line is smoking increases your chances as does heavy drinking.  If you’re overweight, eat rubbish, don’t exercise, have the HPV virus, are over 50 and male, you’re much more likely to be in the target zone.

But given none of this applies to me, I’m left with seeking different answers.  So here is my theory, based on my extensive reading and research over the last year.  In addition to the list above, pay attention if you are:

  • Stressed, and have been stressed for a long period of time;
  • Heading towards burnout (including feeling irritable, unpredictable, isolated, frustrated, confrontational, irrational, incoherent, always tired, eating or drinking more);
  • Hold, or have held, a mobile phone to your face and ear for over 20 minutes for long periods of time;
  • Grow up in a household with parents who are heavy smokers;
  • Spend, or spent time in, smoky atmospheres even though you have never smoked yourself.

Make a date with your mouth each week. Consider this to be an essential part of your personal insurance policy for the years ahead. 

May  you, and your loved ones, live long, happy, healthy, productive, cancer-free lives.

And may Mike get to spend more time with Henry.

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