Part Two – Jordan’s Journey - Entering the tunnel of darkness
It lands on your door stop
like a meteorite - here it is a
letter from the cancer centre
for my 18 year old son. At first the awkwardness, then the pain and then summoning up the strength to face
this journey is beyond immense and that's for just me.
What must it really be like
for those who tread this splintered path?
The truth is until we do, we will never know because those who do are
the most courageous, humble and caring people and they are the ones who
actually end up carrying you.
I ashamedly could not go to
the first appointment with Jordan to the cancer centre. I stayed at home on
Valium, petrified, in tears, with a fear that if I should go, I would break
down like some wreck while my child got battered by the news he was to receive.
That day he had a series of
questions and tests then a pat on the back and a cancer sentence given to
him. No formal diagnoses just we know
you have cancer just not sure which type yet.
I remember Jordan coming home
shutting himself into a dark bedroom and going to bed. I stood outside his door feeling sick and not
even knowing what to say or how to give him hope - any hope.
Nothing from this moment on
made sense. Bombarded with information, but nothing to offer him but the
standard cancer treatment. No choice, no
real explanations just information and leaflets which may as well have been in Japanese. Your brain can simply not take in any
information - your child has cancer. How on earth do you function? Well let me
tell you - YOU DON'T. You forget how
good it feels to be alive, you put one foot in front of the other but it's not
you walking.
Jordan’s now admitted to
hospital as his pain in no longer controllable at home. A very pleasant member of the pain team comes
to visit Jordan but just dosed him up on morphine. Ahh the worlds a shiny, happy place. Chemo
starts in a couple of days.
My baby boy gets hooked up to his
poison - he instantly goes yellow, transparent and ill. His
taste changes, he feels sick. His eyes can't bear light so much so he has to
wear glasses. His bones and muscles ache and sleep becomes his only escape. How
can this be happening - not my boy - none of this makes sense and why should
it. The chemo flows through his veins,
this poison that is so strong the nurses are protected from head to toe. If it
touched your skin it would burn a hole so imagine what it does to your insides.
Like a fire destroying
everything in its path apart from the cancer. Jordan is desperately ill after
his first round of chemo. Absolutely nothing helps subside his sickness, he in
such a bad way. After still feeling like this after 5 days they decide that
this is not a normal sickness but possibly a blockage. The tumour had bled, haemorrhaged
causing the tumour to block his bowel. Jordan now needed life-saving surgery.
So here's the best bit. The
oncologist tells me he has a great chance of not making the operation and he
now has very few white blood cells otherwise known as neutropenic and that he
would have no defences to fight an infection.
In other words the surgeon is telling me without the operation the
obstruction will kill him.
Jordan wanted the operation
so we were booked in with Dr Shanker who is a sarcoma specialist and apparently
eats sarcomas for breakfast. At last, a
glimpse of some hope in this crazy world we were all living in.
Four hours of walking up and
down Tottenham Court Road in a daze with a girlfriend of mine and then I am
called by one of the consultants. Jordan was in recovery, the tumour had been
removed and there was no spread of the disease to other organs and as far as
the human eye could see no more cancer.
We had reached the shore. My amazing, lovely boy was on the road to
recovery to be a fit healthy 18 year old and if anyone can beat this Jordan
could.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.