Back in 2019, this Texan caught myself a case of cancer. It wasn’t contagious like the flu or a Norovirus, but it was a bad case. My first doctor wanted to do the standard treatment, but my wife, a dedicated nurse, did some digging and found a new treatment available only at UT Southwestern in Dallas. We live in Granbury, and I grew up in Fort Worth, so going to Dallas was painful; it’s something we Fort Worth’ians didn’t do back in the 1950s. Fort Worth is where the West begins, and Dallas is where the East peters out; it’s an actual historical fact. So, I had to swallow my family legacy of pride and prejudice and go to Dallas to save my life.
Round two of my cancer diagnosis commenced on May 13th, 2019 at 3:45 pm. Going to UT Southwestern Oncology for treatment was a no-brainer: it’s the best. Their staff radiates positive vibes, so naturally, I feel better. It is battling this evil little demon that has invaded my beloved earthly form with its sights set on the destruction of my body that keeps me focused. This course of action is my main goal and will receive my full attention for the near future.
Today is the ” oh so” specialized 3RDT MRI. I’m amused at the Star Wars comparison to R2D2. At least R2 would show me a hologram of Princess Lea for my entertainment. As with any procedure, it is inserting the word “specialized” into the mix that assures the method will be expensive and painful. I was right.
My bright eyed and bushy tailed MRI nurse accompanies me to my changing room, where I change into a scratchy blue hospital gown accented by yellow non-skid socks. After my wardrobe makeover, he inserts an IV pic into my arm and leaves.
A young woman, maybe twenty-one or so, also wearing the blue gown sits down next to me. She has two IV pics in one arm and appears scared. At this age, my shyness with strangers is minimal, so I ask her, ” first MRI?”.
Without looking over, she says, ” no sir, this is my sixth one, and there’s more to come. It’s Cancer.”
She looks at me and asks, ” how about you.” At this point, I feel like this young girl needs a laugh, even at my expense.
In a deadpan voice, I say, ” complications from the Racoon Flu. My entire body is pulsing with it. Never saw a garbage can I didn’t love. She knows this is total BS and laughs. I crack myself up.
Ten minutes later I lay on the MRI table, IV in place, earplugs inserted, headphones on, and the nurse/tech leans over and tells me “this might be a little uncomfortable.” He smiles and snickers as he says it.
I ask, ” how big is this thing you are inserting into my earthly temple.”
He laughs and says, ” not too big, just enough to get close to the subject and light you up with some good old Radiation.”
I plead, ” let me see it, and I’ll be the judge of that. What kind of Radiation are we talking here?”
Rather proudly he exclaims, ” this is the good old American stuff, came straight from Los Alamos Labs. The same material used to build “the nuke back in 1945. It’s so pure that Dr. Oppenhimer personally endorses it. Its the bomb.”
From behind his back, he produces a probe that looks like a 1/24th scale model of the Hindenburg Blimp. Attached to the business end is an evil pigtail coil that is glowing green. This contraption is right out of the Spanish Inquisition playbook of torture, and it’s going inside of me? Fortunately, for my mental stability, the relaxation drugs I took an hour ago have kicked in, so I am defenseless to attempt escape. I accept fate and brace for the assault.
When the nurse, Mr. Smiley inserts the “little Hindenburg” into my backside, I was convinced I was either in the throes of childbirth or expelling an alien creature from my abdomen. I will never again doubt the painful stories of Alien abductees or women birthing children as “no big deal. ” I am squirming like a brain-hungry zombie, begging for mercy, offering money to end the agony, anything to stop the immobilizing pain. Then, in an instant, the suffering was gone, and I was human again. Listening to some awful hillbilly music, I drifted into La-La land.
I drift back into consciousness hearing George Jones sing ” He Stopped Loving Her Today,” possibly the saddest damn country song ever written. I choke back a tear, then realize where I am and why I’m here. Nurse Smiley congratulates me on a job well done, helps me to my feet and back to the dressing room.
Heading for the waiting room, I realize that scenarios like this will be my life for months to come. I think of a song from The Grateful Dead: I will get by, I will survive. Catchy little tune. Everyone needs a theme song.
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That’s a life changer.
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The U.S. Government has reverse engineered a lot of the technology from the alien spacecraft it has recovered. Apparently, the government has yet to reverse engineer the gentle alien probe. All’s well that’s Roswell, but hospital tech ain’t there yet.
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I had prostate cancer in 2019 also and was treated at UTSW too. Dr Neil DeSai was my incredible doc who treated me with radiation and CURED me. That is the greatest hospital, we are so lucky to have it in our world. Hope you are all well now.
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Thanks Terry. Yep, I’m cancer free. They used SBRT radiation on me. It’s the best hospital in the country. We are fortunate. Good to hear from you old friend.
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Praying for you, my friend.
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Thank you, Herb. As of now, I am cancer-free. Cured per medical jargon. Thanks, man, I appreciate your kind words.
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Praise the Lord for your wife, your doctors, and your recovery. The little Hindenberg you described is not anywhere near the size of an eight or nine pound baby. 🙂
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You’re so right,no way I could handle that .
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You’re in my prayers, Phil ..
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Thanks Mustang I’m cured.
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What you went through is much more challenging mentally than having a baby. Thankfully, Nurse Momo helped you with tough decision making. I hope you both had a wonderful Thanksgiving. 😁🦃🦃🦃
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Thank you, Nancy. We spent the day having Thanksgiving lunch with her brother who is in a nursing home, giving him family closeness and love. I made it through the tough part, thanks to Momo, my rock. Cancer is a bitch, but you don’t always have to die. Ha!
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Remember, no pain, no gain.
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Yep, Joe, I get it, and have adhered to that.
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Oh yeah, Joe, there was plenty or that.
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Celebrating Thanksgiving with your brother-in-law in a nursing home was a wonderful gesture of love and kindness. God bless you both. 🙏🙏🙏
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Celebrating Thanksgiving in the nursing home with your brother-in-law was a wonderful gesture of love and kindness. God bless you both. 🙏🙏🙏
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Thank God for your healing. Such a serious life account but conveyed creatively and thoughtfully, as always. I hope your blog posts make their way into an essays book or memoir someday.
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Thank you. I plan to do that soon, a book of my short stories and favorite post, likely will self publish unless Stephen Kings publisher drops him, then there might be an opening. I am healed and doing well. I always find something funny in sketchy situations.
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So many are self-publishing to avoid the extensive time wasted trying to secure an agent and/or major publishing house. But – you never know! Either way, I look forward to your first release!
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Thank you. Hope it will happen soon, maybe within six months. Momo is pushing me hard to do this before I croak.
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