So to make things even stranger, I came home from housesitting and found my netflix movie on the table. It was the latest one with Ewan McGregor, "Men who stare at goats". How weird is that? I had totally forgotten that movie was on the waiting list, and really had no idea what it was about.
Just wanted to mention it. It's a funny movie, by the way. They talked about cancer in the movie though...........
Be Love
I go by #Servivorgirl. Celebrating almost 14 years since diagnosis of stage IIIC ovarian cancer, recently restaged to IVB. My blog is called Nobody Has Ovarian Cancer because I felt like a nobody upon the eventual correct diagnosis. Being told multiple times that I was too young to have ovarian cancer, I did not receive the proper testing. I am so grateful to Him for all those who allow me to share my love, to those who love me and those who treat my illness. I praise Him always.
Sunday, August 22, 2010
vivid dreams about Ewan McGregor
Don't ask me why, but I had a very very odd and intense dream last night about Ewan McGregor. He told me that he has cancer, stage IV. It was the weirdest thing and I pray to God that it is not true. I was part of a group of people who were playing a game. The game was like a play, a musical, but also like a sport. Sort of like being a dramatist, mime slash musician slash dancer competing to win "something" in a time similar to "waterworld". We were competing as a pair, and he started crying, held me and said he had cancer. He started shaking his head side to side in denial and it was awful. I wanted to comfort him and take his pain away. This went on and on in my head in loops of variations of the same message, over and over. Why Ewan McGregor and why cancer?
I got violently ill again Thursday evening, and today I still feel nausea and fatigue, but am grateful the episode is over. I have been housesitting, taking care of kitty, garden, mail etc. It's all I can do right now to get ready to go back home.
Maybe the dream is a result of the extra Lorazapam I had to take for my nausea.
The thing is I have always adored Ewan McGregor. He's a doll, and such a wonderful actor.
I have been having vivid dreams all week. Maybe I'll start putting them in my blog and see what happens. My family is pushing me to get my life together and "get a job" etc. Well, I am trying here.
Who is going to hire someone who may or may not be able to show up from day to day. I pray to God for a work from home purpose. I pray that it comes, and I will seek that form of income. I can't afford to live in Seattle on disability. It won't work..........things will be OK.
In the mean time, my dreams may be a way to sort out my frustrations and worries, so let's see what happens tonight.
Be Love.
I got violently ill again Thursday evening, and today I still feel nausea and fatigue, but am grateful the episode is over. I have been housesitting, taking care of kitty, garden, mail etc. It's all I can do right now to get ready to go back home.
Maybe the dream is a result of the extra Lorazapam I had to take for my nausea.
The thing is I have always adored Ewan McGregor. He's a doll, and such a wonderful actor.
I have been having vivid dreams all week. Maybe I'll start putting them in my blog and see what happens. My family is pushing me to get my life together and "get a job" etc. Well, I am trying here.
Who is going to hire someone who may or may not be able to show up from day to day. I pray to God for a work from home purpose. I pray that it comes, and I will seek that form of income. I can't afford to live in Seattle on disability. It won't work..........things will be OK.
In the mean time, my dreams may be a way to sort out my frustrations and worries, so let's see what happens tonight.
Be Love.
Friday, August 13, 2010
Missing an Ovarian Cancer Diagnosis Should Be Criminal
Missing an Ovarian Cancer Diagnosis Should Be Criminal
Trisha Torrey is a patient empowerment advocate. In this article, she quotes me! I am so thrilled to know that there are other women out there who really see the crime in allowing undiagnosed ovarian cancer to persist. Thank you Trisha for your powerful presence. Thank you for listening to me. Denise Archuleta
Trisha Torrey is a patient empowerment advocate. In this article, she quotes me! I am so thrilled to know that there are other women out there who really see the crime in allowing undiagnosed ovarian cancer to persist. Thank you Trisha for your powerful presence. Thank you for listening to me. Denise Archuleta
Saturday, August 07, 2010
sleeping in
I slept until 1pm today. Not sure why, I guess I needed the rest. I went to bed at 11pm, and fell asleep quite readily after reading some of the Bible. I have gotten behind on my reading, bogged down a bit with worries. I'm not supposed to worry as my life is truly in God's hands.
I received a letter from Dr. G saying she is comfortable with returning to work in October, pending progress with arthritis. That made me feel a little more at ease, as I'm really not ready, but getting there.
Every day I work on building up my strength and endurance, so that I can actually do meaningful work. I still don't know though what it will be. I didn't call the "Ticket to Work" organization yet, I need to do that next week. I am procrastinating. I feel totally stuck. I think it's because I really just want to be involved in advocacy or have my own little business. Lord help me figure this out.
Lord please also help my mom. She has nausea all the time. Our summers here in Seattle are short. She is missing the moment. I love her so. I love my family.
Tomorrow I get to enjoy the Blue Angels show with Mandy, Patrick, Laria and Addie. Hopefully mom will be able to go. It will be so so nice to laugh and smile, in spite of the rain.
Be Love,
Denise
I received a letter from Dr. G saying she is comfortable with returning to work in October, pending progress with arthritis. That made me feel a little more at ease, as I'm really not ready, but getting there.
Every day I work on building up my strength and endurance, so that I can actually do meaningful work. I still don't know though what it will be. I didn't call the "Ticket to Work" organization yet, I need to do that next week. I am procrastinating. I feel totally stuck. I think it's because I really just want to be involved in advocacy or have my own little business. Lord help me figure this out.
Lord please also help my mom. She has nausea all the time. Our summers here in Seattle are short. She is missing the moment. I love her so. I love my family.
Tomorrow I get to enjoy the Blue Angels show with Mandy, Patrick, Laria and Addie. Hopefully mom will be able to go. It will be so so nice to laugh and smile, in spite of the rain.
Be Love,
Denise
Thursday, July 29, 2010
My second Birthday
On this date at this time last year I was lying in a hospital room after major surgery to remove cancer. I had a total abdominal hysterectomy, appendectomy, removal of my omentum and lymphnodes, as well as some smaller tumors along the peritoneal cavity. I was "optimally debulked" according to those in the gyn-oc community. According to my mother and aunt, my surgeon was beaming with joy at the results. He said it couldn't have been any better. The next phase, chemotherapy in 4-6 weeks.
I had to move to Seattle for chemo, which I completed the end of February. My next CT scan is in about 3 weeks, along with another CA125 blood test. Now that there is no evidence of the cancer, I am on lifelong survielance, because the recurrance rate is about 70% for my type of cancer, Stage IIIC.
Today I have the luxury of being with my family, to be exact I am sitting in my sister and husband's beautiful home. I also got to enjoy a nice movie with mom earlier today. As far as "second" birthdays go, its been pretty good.
A year ago I couldn't even roll side to side, I had staples from my breastbone to all the way down "there". For several weeks I needed help in and out of bed, my aunt and sister had to stay with me because I couldn't take care of myself. I was in so much pain, so much pain. The narcotics made me constipated and it just gets worse from there. Recovering from the surgery was a real challenge, but I did it.
Once chemo started, I had a whole new set of problems. Unexpected visits to the emergency room, nausea beyond belief, severe abdominal pain still.................total loss of concentration and unbelievable fatigue. It was hard just to watch TV or check my email sometimes. Once chemo ended, the residual effects lingered on and on.
To this day I get nauseous every day, but just a little. ( I have to take methotrexate for rheumatoid arthritis, and nausea can be a side effect).
Now I can walk around the lake, which is a big WOW for me. It's not a power walk or anything, but it's a walk. I need to get stronger. Strange though, because I have no omentum, everything jiggles, and it "hurts" if I bounce too much, but I try. That will never go away, so I have to deal with it.
I can concentrate now, and don't have that severe abdominal pain any more. What I do have now though is an extreme fear of getting super nauseous and winding up in the ER. I had severe vomiting episodes after chemo ended, and the cause was never determined. I am very careful to take anti-emetics before I exercise.
I am still so lost though, and I need to resume some sort of work someday. I cannot imagine a full time job but I can imagine a part time job.
I apologize that this post has been more about my body than anything, but unfortunately that is where my focus has been. I went to church last Saturday for the first time since May (when I got severely nauseous). I met with the priest and it felt so good to confess my anger. I need to rebuild my spiritual self and find my place in this world. My place to provide good will, and I'm working on that.
My family and friends are the most important people in my life. They got me through this episode and dark period in time. They are supportive, but I know they don't want me lying around the house on disability doing "nothing" with my life. Neither do I.
Having a chronic disability (arthritis) and cancer history make job hunting a real challenge. To be honest, I love life and treat each day as a gift but I'd be lying if I said that the 70% recurrence rate didn't worry me. It does, it clouds me.
I want to get retrained with the "ticket to work" program, but for what. So I live my life check up to check up. It would be so MUCH easier if I already had a job to return to. The cancer center is offering a "cancer and careers" workshop in August, which I will attend. Truthfully, I wish I had my own little business. Just a little something I did at my own pace that made me just enough to pay bills.
As my physical self gets stronger and more able, my mental state improves because my confidence improves. Still need to get to Gilda's Club.
I am a thousand percent better today than I was this time last year. I thank God for surrounding me with a very very very loving family that reached out to support me and help me when I was unable to help myself. I thank Him for sending me good friends who really cared and took care of me during dark days. My mother, aunt and uncle, sister and her husband, and brother really really really bent over over backwards to get me the resources I needed. I would not have survived without them. I also thank God for my surgeon and oncologist, who saved my life, literally. I am blessed.
So tomorrow is a new day, another chance to make a difference, be a friend, and be Love.
Denise
I had to move to Seattle for chemo, which I completed the end of February. My next CT scan is in about 3 weeks, along with another CA125 blood test. Now that there is no evidence of the cancer, I am on lifelong survielance, because the recurrance rate is about 70% for my type of cancer, Stage IIIC.
Today I have the luxury of being with my family, to be exact I am sitting in my sister and husband's beautiful home. I also got to enjoy a nice movie with mom earlier today. As far as "second" birthdays go, its been pretty good.
A year ago I couldn't even roll side to side, I had staples from my breastbone to all the way down "there". For several weeks I needed help in and out of bed, my aunt and sister had to stay with me because I couldn't take care of myself. I was in so much pain, so much pain. The narcotics made me constipated and it just gets worse from there. Recovering from the surgery was a real challenge, but I did it.
Once chemo started, I had a whole new set of problems. Unexpected visits to the emergency room, nausea beyond belief, severe abdominal pain still.................total loss of concentration and unbelievable fatigue. It was hard just to watch TV or check my email sometimes. Once chemo ended, the residual effects lingered on and on.
To this day I get nauseous every day, but just a little. ( I have to take methotrexate for rheumatoid arthritis, and nausea can be a side effect).
Now I can walk around the lake, which is a big WOW for me. It's not a power walk or anything, but it's a walk. I need to get stronger. Strange though, because I have no omentum, everything jiggles, and it "hurts" if I bounce too much, but I try. That will never go away, so I have to deal with it.
I can concentrate now, and don't have that severe abdominal pain any more. What I do have now though is an extreme fear of getting super nauseous and winding up in the ER. I had severe vomiting episodes after chemo ended, and the cause was never determined. I am very careful to take anti-emetics before I exercise.
I am still so lost though, and I need to resume some sort of work someday. I cannot imagine a full time job but I can imagine a part time job.
I apologize that this post has been more about my body than anything, but unfortunately that is where my focus has been. I went to church last Saturday for the first time since May (when I got severely nauseous). I met with the priest and it felt so good to confess my anger. I need to rebuild my spiritual self and find my place in this world. My place to provide good will, and I'm working on that.
My family and friends are the most important people in my life. They got me through this episode and dark period in time. They are supportive, but I know they don't want me lying around the house on disability doing "nothing" with my life. Neither do I.
Having a chronic disability (arthritis) and cancer history make job hunting a real challenge. To be honest, I love life and treat each day as a gift but I'd be lying if I said that the 70% recurrence rate didn't worry me. It does, it clouds me.
I want to get retrained with the "ticket to work" program, but for what. So I live my life check up to check up. It would be so MUCH easier if I already had a job to return to. The cancer center is offering a "cancer and careers" workshop in August, which I will attend. Truthfully, I wish I had my own little business. Just a little something I did at my own pace that made me just enough to pay bills.
As my physical self gets stronger and more able, my mental state improves because my confidence improves. Still need to get to Gilda's Club.
I am a thousand percent better today than I was this time last year. I thank God for surrounding me with a very very very loving family that reached out to support me and help me when I was unable to help myself. I thank Him for sending me good friends who really cared and took care of me during dark days. My mother, aunt and uncle, sister and her husband, and brother really really really bent over over backwards to get me the resources I needed. I would not have survived without them. I also thank God for my surgeon and oncologist, who saved my life, literally. I am blessed.
So tomorrow is a new day, another chance to make a difference, be a friend, and be Love.
Denise
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