Saturday, March 14, 2009

Shave to Save


One of Mr. Sasster's coworkers, Vanessa Vaughn-West, is participating in this year's Shave to Save event. Shave to Save is an event where men and women volunteer to shave their heads in honor or memory of someone that has been touched by cancer. Established in 2001, Shave to Save has raised over $750,000 for American Cancer Society’s Hope Lodge of Kansas City. Hope Lodge understands that undergoing treatment for cancer can be both financially and emotionally overwhelming. In an effort to ease the burden of cancer, the American Cancer Society provides free housing to cancer patients traveling to Kansas City for treatment.

Vanessa's fundraising page says, "I'm excited and hopeful. I'm nervous. I'm scared. But, isn't that mix of emotions what cancer patients deal with all the time?"
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It takes a lot of courage to do what Vanessa's doing. We're really amazed by her commitment and downright SASS for this cause, and we hope you will be too. If you're interested in helping her reach her goal, you may visit her page to make a donation. She's almost halfway to her goal of raising $2,500 and we're confident she'll make it.
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In solidarity (counting on you!),
Center & Super Sasster

Thursday, March 12, 2009

Woo Hoo! Good News!

Today was Treatment Day again (weren't we just here two days ago?). Thank you, Kylia and Ivan, for keeping me inside my skin from 10:30 to 1:30, waiting for the test results from Tuesday. The results are in and they are GOOD! The CT scan, bone scan and liver function tests show one tumor got the tiniest increment bigger and the others stayed the same or got smaller, so we can continue the present treatment! Whew! None of that pesky chemotherapy cancelling our trip to Hawaii this month. Get to keep my hair at least 9 more weeks! I take back all my whining over Treatment Day if the results continue like this for a long time.

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Ask Jan

Q: My first CT scan with oral contrast is coming up soon and my friends offer conflicting advice on which prep beverage I should choose. do you recommend the Creamy Vanilla Smoothie or the Koolaid Gone Wild Party Punch? Rookie Patient
A: You may more fully appreciate the charming nomenclature of prep beverage choices, R.P., when you scan the following resume highlights of the marketing whiz who named both of these pharmaceutical marvels. Perhaps his best known achievement was during his stint in suburban real estate development when he crafted the new identity, "Feather Flower Estates" to replace the more technically accurate, "Toxic Nuclear Waste Dump." His foray into the country music industry created numerous linguistic dazzlers; most notably, "I'm Red, White and Blue, But I'll Never Be Over You," recently adopted by the Republican party in tribute to Rush Limbaugh. The popular accomplishments of this versatile genius are all the more impressive considering the entirety of his career has been conducted from a locked psychiatric ward, with no exposure whatever to reality of any kind.
I have tried both of the imaginatively named beverages you mention and an alternative CT cocktail at the Mayo Clinic. Since my Mother always said, "If you can't say anything nice, don't say anything at all," thank you for your question and good luck to you! Center Sasster

Tuesday, March 3, 2009

On not 'beating' cancer

Every now and then, we read something that connects with a thought or feeling we've once had and perhaps haven't articulated. I know my Mom and I have discussed the idea of "beating" or "succumbing" to cancer, and how unfair that dichotomy is - the idea of winning or losing. I think, especially for people with metastatic cancer, Brian Doyle's sense of "enduring" is much more appropriate. It also enables us all to have conversations about life, death, and the experience of disease that include more of the inbetweens, the unknowns, and the real stuff of life. So, please read what he has to say. I hope it provokes some ideas of your own, and I hope it brings us all to the conclusion that our true power now is in Doyle's idea of wielding - oceans of humor and patience and creativity, against cancer.

On not 'beating' cancer
by Brian Doyle, Guest opinion

Martial words reflect illusory mind-set against illness


Finally, this morning, enough -- I read one too many journalistic references to someone's "beating" cancer, as if cancer was an opponent to be defeated, an enemy to be conquered, a battle in which courage often wins the day.


It is a lie. Cancer is to be endured, that's all. The best you can hope for is to fend it off, like a savage dog, but cancer isn't defeated, it only retreats, is held at bay, retires, bides its time, changes form, regroups. It may well be that the boy who survives an early cancer lives a long and lovely life, without ever enduring that species of illness again, but the snarl of it never leaves his heart, and you'll never hear that boy say he defeated the dark force in his bones.


Use real words. Real words matter. False words are lies. Lies sooner or later are crimes against the body or the soul. I know men, women and children who have cancer, had cancer, died from cancer, lived after their cancer retreated, and not one of them ever used military or sporting metaphors that I remember.


All of them spoke of endurance, survival, the mad insistence of hope, the irrepressibility of grace, the love and affection and laughter and holy hands of their families and friends and churches and clans and tribes. All of them were utterly lacking in any sort of cockiness or arrogance; all of them developed a worn, ashen look born of pain and patience; and all of them spoke not of winning but of waiting.


A great and awful lesson is contained there, it seems to me, something that speaks powerfully of human character and possibility. For all that we speak, as a culture and a people, of victory and defeat, of good and evil, of hero and coward, none of it is quite true. The truth is that the greatest victory is to endure with grace and humor, to stay in the game, to achieve humility.


I know a young man with brain cancer. He's 16 years old. He isn't battling his cancer. He is enduring it with the most energy and creativity and patience he can muster. He says the first year he had cancer was awful because of the fear and vomiting and surgery and radiation and chemotherapy and utter exhaustion. But he says that first year was also wonderful because he learned to savor every moment of his days. He met amazing people he would never have met, and his family and friends rallied behind him with ferocious, relentless humor. He learned he was a deeper and stronger and more inventive and more patient soul than he had ever imagined.


He also learned about fear, he says, because he was terrified, and remains so, but he learned that he can sometimes channel his fear and turn it into the energy he needs to raise money for cancer research. Since being diagnosed with cancer, he has helped raise nearly $100,000, which is remarkable.


I met a tiny, frail nun once, in Australia, while walking along a harbor, and we got to talking. She said no one defeats cancer; cancer is a dance partner you don't want and don't like, but you have to dance, and either you die or the cancer fades back into the darkness at the other end of the ballroom. I never forgot what she said, and think she is right, and the words we use about cancers and wars matter more than we know.


Maybe if we celebrate grace under duress rather than the illusion of total victory we will be less surprised and more prepared when illness and evil lurch into our lives, as they always will; and maybe we will be a braver and better people if we know we cannot obliterate such things, but only wield oceans of humor and patience and creativity against them.


We have an untold supply of those extraordinary weapons, don't you think?