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Her Words My Thoughts

My daughter was a journalism major in college and spent a lot of her free time writing.  Before she died she wanted to write a book about her experience with colon cancer but her health kept deteriorating to point where she couldn’t.
If she were here today she would want other young people to know that  no one is immune from colon cancer and there are warning signs that should not be ignored.  During her life she tried to make that message clear to others.
Over the next few blog entries I am going to share some of her actual writings – I like to call them “her words”.  In this first entry she talks about what led up to her first diagnosis, and the events that ensued.  I don’t think she would mind if I sprinkle in some of “my thoughts”.
Queah:
My story begins with a misdiagnosis. I think that’s huge because most of us (young survivors that I know) were misdiagnosed. I was working at Nordstrom Department Store and had just moved to Houston. I had only been here about a year and half, maybe less.  I went to the doctor because I had bloating and couldn’t get rid of it. I even tried colon cleansing teas. The doctor gave me a physical exam and I told her my symptoms. I was eating like a little bird and I couldn’t understand why I was feeling so full. She said you might be experiencing stomach irritation, and she mentioned IBS (irritable bowel syndrome).  She checked my rectum for blood and asked if I had seen any dark stools or blood and I said no. She decided to give me medication, so I picked up the prescription but it didn’t work – and I didn’t want to believe it was anything worse.
Donna:
At this point she was talking about her symptom often and I began to worry.  I remember having a fear it could be cancer.  That scared me.  As a mom I’ve always been over protective with Queah .  Because of my profession  in television news, I hear first hand about some of the horrible things that can happen to people – so I was always quick to go overboard with my fears.  I often drove my daughter crazy with that.  So this time I thought rather than be the crazy mom again I won’t say the “C” word but boy did I nag her about seeing another doctor. I often wonder if things would have turned out differently had a stuck to being that “crazy mom”.
Queah:
I had gone seven months and it had gotten so bad.  For maybe two months I was always getting sick. I had started working at a new job and for those two months I was going back and forth to my general practitioner trying to figure out what was wrong.  She was giving me scripts for this that and the other, but nothing worked.
Donna:
It’s funny because life was getting in the way of everything. It was a happy time. She had a new job, met a new guy and had fallen in love. She didn’t talk a lot with me about her stomach issues.  Maybe occasionally she’d say it was bothering her.  I honestly thought the “C” word was put to rest.  It was much later that I found out she was missing a lot of work because she was sick often.
Queah:
Finally I was doubled over in pain and I had to call in sick to work again. I thought it would be okay if I could just lie down for a while, but I eventually drove myself to the emergency room and I could barely walk. I told them I needed to be admitted because the pain was so bad, and the nurse could tell so she rushed me on to a stretcher. The doctor hadn’t seen me yet but the pain was so bad that the nurse gave me morphine. I was so freaked out.  I realized it was bad because of the type of drugs they were giving me. My boyfriend showed up and I saw the doctor about an hour later, but I waited seven hours while they were prepping me for surgery. Initially they told me they didn’t know what was wrong, but they would go in laparoscopically and clean out whatever was making me sick.

Queah on vacation in Belize


Donna:      Out of nowhere I get a call from Queah’s boyfriend telling me my daughter was in the hospital and about to have emergency, exploratory surgery.  WHAT! Are you kidding me?  Surgery?  It was the middle of the work week.  I dropped everything, bought a last minute ticket and hopped on a plane. I was in the air – my daughter was in the operating room.

Queah:
My mom rushed in and when I woke up in the hospital, the surgeon who saw me told me that when he went in he saw that my appendix was about to rupture. There was a six-inch tumor on the side of my appendix that caused the near rupture.  He explained how he took out my appendix, the tumor and some of my colon.
Donna:
He said he bagged up the ruptured appendix,  along with the huge tumor and portions of the large and small intestines.  At this point I’m sitting on the edge of Queah’s hospital bed as the surgeon was explaining things and I asked point blank-  is it cancer?  Yes, I went there with the “C” word this time.  Until that point I had never said the word cancer in front of her but it was now all I could think about.  I feared she must have been devastated to hear her mom ask that question but I didn’t care, I had to ask.  His response.  “I doubt it – she’s too young”.
Queah:
He said, “Don’t worry, you haven’t been diagnosed with cancer or anything like that, but this is what we do for cancer patients to make sure we get everything (the stuff that shouldn’t be in there) out.”
Donna:
Turns out the surgeon was right.  That large tumor was not cancer. We found that out a couple days later. Queah and I were in her hospital room.  She was recovering well and so was I after this whirlwind ordeal.  There’s nothing like the fear of knowing your daughter, your only child is having emergency surgery and you’re miles away.  Finally we were both at peace knowing we had figured out the stomach problems and this journey was almost behind us.  On this particular morning, we were laughing, talking about what she could and could not eat while her body healed and how I needed to get back home.    That morning her doctor walked into the room and asked if he could speak with me alone. It was puzzling.  Why would he want to speak with me and not her?   She and I stared at each other as I followed him out of the room.  Little did we know that day would be the start of a nearly seven year journey because he was about to deliver news that would change our lives forever.
Queah:
I found out I had cancer two days after I had surgery, and I just remember thinking this can’t be happening, it was surreal – you mean this is happening to me? Can this be happening? He took out a good part of colon, I think six inches, and when they did a biopsy on the large tumor, it was not cancerous. But when they went in to biopsy the colon they found a tiny two centimeter tumor that was cancer. It was stage III and had gone through several layers of the colon wall, which was scary because he told me that if he hadn’t taken out that part of my colon – pretty much on a whim – I could still be walking around with cancer.
Donna:
The doctor broke the news to me before telling her which is why he wanted to speak to me alone.  I was absolutely stunned. Nope, the large tumor was not cancer but the pathologist found that small  tumor she speaks about in a portion of the large colon that was removed inadvertently during the surgery.   The doctor told me he was having a hard time believing they found cancer because of  Queah’s age.  As he explained everything to me it was almost like he was talking about someone else’s child- not mine.  But it became very real when he asked “do you want to tell her or should I?”  First I irrationally thought why do we have to tell her and as much as I wanted him to do it – it was my job.  She needed to hear the news from me.
For the rest of my life I will remember the look on her face as I told her she had cancer.  Expressionless. No emotion.  She said nothing, only starring downward at the bed as she laid there.   As I held her it was all I could do to keep it together, but I needed to be strong.  At the right moment I left her room, walked down the hall as far as I could possibly go, fell to the floor and cried.
Queah:
When I eventually found out what type of cancer it was, everyone was asking me about my family history, but nobody has ever had colon cancer in my family. I felt like it was a fluke that I ended up with it because I couldn’t trace it back anywhere. I believed in eating what you want in moderation so I would have a pork chop here, ice cream there, but I really ate healthy. I just couldn’t figure out why it was happening to me.
When they told me chemo would be mandatory because of it being stage III, I was all for it. I didn’t really know what chemotherapy was all about because I never knew anyone who was doing it.  My grandmother had breast cancer but she only had radiation after her surgery.  At that point I just wanted to survive, I just wanted to live.  I started on the first Tuesday in March and I remember when I walked into the Houston Cancer Clinic I wanted to walk right back out.   A few days prior to that, I met with the on-site Registered Nurse  who is the main person who gives all the chemo education. I remember sitting across from her hearing about the chemo I was going to get and the side effects.  The drug I was going to be on was so new that some of the side effects they didn’t know about yet.  As she explained in detail going through this little booklet about surviving chemotherapy, I was in shock. I didn’t know how to digest all of the information. It took me a few days because I wasn’t prepared to hear what I was being told. I was blindsided and it was worse than I ever thought.  So when I went in for my first round I was scared to death.
Donna:
I flew back to Houston to be with my daughter  through this ordeal.  Not only was it scary for us but the unknowns were hard to swallow.  They say knowledge is power but my goodness at this point I didn’t want to hear any of this.  But I sat there as my daughter stayed mostly silent and tried to ask questions for her.   There was little I could say to lighten the blow but as a mom I felt my job was to try  to find that silver lining.  Looking back now, that silver lining was crystal clear all along.  My daughter was alive.
Queah:
The first two weeks of chemo I was okay, I thought that if I had to go through ten more rounds like that, I would be okay. But I wasn’t okay because every round of chemo made me sicker and more depressed.

To be continued…

Her Words My Thoughts – Part 2

If you haven’t read the first part of this story, my suggestion is you start there.  You can click on the link “Her Words My Thoughts”.  Thank you for taking the time to read my blog.

Queah:
I had been going to cancer counseling and around the time of my second round of chemo I got married.
Donna:
Buckle your seat belt it’s about to get bumpy.
Queah:
My cancer counselor told me a story about another woman she was counseling who was in a marriage and as soon as she was diagnosed her husband left her. I was thinking that I was so lucky because here I was going through chemo and my boyfriend wanted to marry me. I thought I was so lucky.
Donna:
All I’m going to say is this… I told her she should wait to get married.
Queah:
While we were dating the relationship was really good, but a month after we got married he turned into a person I didn’t recognize. He was abusive and it was very stressful. He wasn’t actually abusive while we were dating, but after we got married he was making demands.  I felt he was very selfish.
Donna:
Actually, I thought he was abusive in the very beginning.  Not physically but very much emotionally and sometimes his actions toward her were displayed right in front of me.  I tried to warn her but she would not listen to me.
Queah:
I’m divorced now.  It was a bad situation,  and at the time I had to deal with him and go through ten more rounds of chemo.

Queah

Donna:
Yeah, and that was tough for me to observe.  Not to mention one night while I was at work my phone was ringing off the hook and I couldn’t answer.  A co-worker picked it up and on the other end was my daughter screaming at the top of her lungs for help.  Apparently there was a big blow up between the two of them and police were called.  I was so afraid for her and here I am miles away.  Then there was the time he locked her out of their apartment with all of her belonging and most importantly, medications inside.  The locks had been changed and the apartment complex wouldn’t give her a key.  It was a big mess.  I went down there, got a locksmith to get us inside when he was gone, hired a moving company, loaded up her stuff and got her out of there.  I think the mental abuse was his way of controlling her – but it didn’t work.   Trust me, she’s a tough girl – I could never control her either.
The marriage lasted six months but I’ll let her tell the rest.
Queah:
I kept a diary throughout the majority of my chemo, while I was going to counseling and while my husband and I were arguing. He and I started going to counseling together, and that helped a little bit because I was able to express what I was feeling. The counseling was a good thing, and I think that not enough people believe in counseling but it’s a really healthy thing to do. It helped me put some things back together, and it helped me realize I’m not by myself. There are other people who have the same experiences, emotions and fears. It was tough but I survived it all.  I look back now and I don’t know how – I was just so focused.  I wanted to live so that I could leave him – I wanted to live so that I could have a family – I wanted to live and go back to my great job.  I just wanted to live to have a future and be happy and have all those dreams I had when I was a child.
Donna:
I too wanted that for her.
Queah:
I felt if I gave up I would never get to that point. I didn’t think I ended up with cancer so that I could die at that point in my life. There’s so much more that I needed to do, that I had to do, and cancer was just one of those things that happen to people.  But boy was this hard.  I was on so many different medications and was having so many side effects from all of them.  Sometimes I believed the drugs, not the cancer, would kill me.  It didn’t matter what they gave me because every single drug would have all of the brutal side effects.   I was okay until round nine of chemo.
Donna:
Is your seat belt still on? This is where she wanted to just give up.  I had been trying to make trips to Houston for just about every round of chemo.  They were all about two weeks apart.  Her chemo drips would last all day.  Then they’d send her home with a portable pump that pushed chemotherapy through her veins for another 48 hours. She was thin, weak, her skin was dark and ashen.  She never felt good.  Well maybe she felt okay right after her drip because they gave her steroids that gave her a boost of energy and an appetite and boy did we take advantage of that.   But on one trip to Houston – I got there ready to take her to treatment and she said she was not going.  She emphatically said no more cancer drugs – she was done.  All I could think was if she didn’t finish the 12 rounds of chemotherapy the cancer would kill her.  I spent at least a couple of hours  trying to convince her to just hang in there a little longer.
Queah:
Once I hit my 9th round I wanted to give up;  I wanted to stop it because I was so sick. I couldn’t move.  I would get up and throw up, go back to bed, go to the kitchen and get a little bit to eat and then throw it up. If I could get up and lie down on the couch I would fall asleep 30 minutes later.  I don’t know if the doctors thought I was making it up or not, but they were telling me that they didn’t understand why I was so sick. That made me so depressed. I developed neuropathy from one of the cancer drugs.  It got so bad that my hands hurt and were numb at the same time. I couldn’t wear gloves and I couldn’t grip anything – the numbness would also work its way up from my feet to my knees, and I was miserable. I just kept thinking there’s got to be something wrong with me because other people can do this. On top of that I was having reactions to the nausea medicine they put me on. I was having violent muscle spasms and I had to go to the emergency room. While I was in the hospital the nurse gave me an extra dose of Ativan and told me to relax when in fact I was really having an allergic reaction, but we didn’t know it.
One night I was home and I couldn’t control my neck, head, or arms – imagine having body parts you can’t control! My husband tried to massage me and he gave me doses of Ativan. I wanted to go to the hospital, but he said, “No, just take a hot bath.” I said, “If you don’t take me to the hospital I’ll take myself,” so he finally got up and took me.  When I arrived at the emergency room, a nurse at the counter was trying to get me to fill out the paperwork, but another nurse in the back heard me and saw how I looked physically. She said, “You might be having an allergic reaction. What medication are you on? What are you taking?” I listed the drugs and somehow remembered the nausea medication, and she said that she thought that was it.  She immediately took me to the back and gave me two high doses of Benadryl and within 10 minutes the symptoms stopped.  She said the only reason she knew to do that is because she had the same reaction to that drug.  I got lucky this time because this nurse knew from experience. That’s just an example of the issues that I was dealing with. It seemed like everything that was happening –  the things, the drug reactions that only happen to a small percentage of people  –  happened to me.   It sucked but I did get through it.
Donna:
We discovered she could no longer take anti-nausea drugs Reglan and Phernergan after that experience because one of them caused the reaction and at that point we weren’t about to try to narrow it down.  Queah went through so much during this first bought with cancer.  One would think that would have been enough.
Queah:
The beginning of my last round of chemo was August 15, 2005. I had a PET scan shortly after that and it was clean and I had another one in May and it was still clean – so I’m officially in remission!
Donna:
It’s about time – finally some good news.
Queah:
I’m still at the doctor every single week, seriously, but I don’t mind. I go every Friday to the cancer clinic and they do blood work to make sure that my blood counts are good. The cancer center has this distinctive smell, and I associate it with cancer; I still get weak to my stomach when I go in for the blood work. On Fridays my oncologist is there and even though I don’t have an appointment I get to see him and consult with him if I’m having any issues.   I still get some of the same injections I had while on chemo for energy.  My blood counts are still really low and I still have to take the nausea medicine. It’s the weirdest thing, the doctor says the chemo is over so I shouldn’t be so nauseous.  I don’t know why I still am.
Donna:
Yeah, and she still has that neuropathy as a result of the cancer drug Oxaliplatin.  I know, small price to pay for a drug that has the ability to save your life.  Combined with all the other cancer drugs her body is not the same anymore but she’s gaining weight and beginning to look like herself again.  And thank goodness she’s no longer in that crazy marriage.  We are looking toward the future – searching for our happy ending.
Queah:
There are a lot of good things that came out of my whole cancer experience, but one good thing is that you can write off your medication on your taxes! That’s like $1000!
Donna:
I can’t believe after all that – this is how my daughter sums up her story.  A tax write off.  Really Queah?  Please tell me you didn’t spend that money on shoes.

Things I Must Do…

Sometimes it seems so unreal that my mind tells me it’s just a horrible dream and when I awaken life will be back to normal – the way it’s suppose to be, the way it use to be.  We’ll pick up right where we left off and everything will be fine.

My guess is, we’ll start with me planning another trip to Houston.   I’ll call her and tell her when I’m coming.  When I arrive she’ll pick me up at the airport and I’ll be so happy to see her again.   It seems every time I see her after it’s been a while she looks so very young, so very pretty.   I’m always amazed that I had something to do with creating this person – this well educated, well traveled, dynamic and vibrant young woman.  I find myself amused at how she’s figured out how to navigate this big city with a nice home, a great career and a bright future.  During this visit she will have planned so many things for us to do.  At the top of the list, restaurants, shopping and movies… or maybe this time she’ll surprise me with something special like a day at the spa or she’ll cook one of her fabulous meals.   Maybe for this trip she’ll take me to see some live entertainment – she always liked that sort of thing.   We’ll have so much to talk about  – so many things to say to catch up.  It’s always like that.  Even though we talk a lot on the phone, it’s not the same as when we’re together.   At some point her friends will  call and she’ll tell them “mommy’s here” and then without missing a beat she’ll say, “say hi to my mom” and quickly hand me the phone before I can say “I don’t want talk to them”.   If by chance they want to visit or go out somewhere she’ll agree to it as long as they know it has to be something mommy wants to do.

As always, my little girl will want to go shopping.  There’s something about “mommy therapy” and “retail therapy” that go hand and hand.  It doesn’t matter if I say this is not one of those “money spending visits”.  She’ll just say okay  – and the next thing you know we’ll be at the Houston Galleria buying stuff.  That’s just how it goes.

At the makeup counter in Neimans. Houston Galleria

We both have a passion for movies! My visit to Houston will center around what’s playing at the theater and then we’ll go to a Red Box and pick up several new releases because she doesn’t have cable.  Her excuse is that all of those cable channels take her away from doing important things.  My thought is, how can you live without cable?  We’ll go back and forth on that for a while before deciding on which movies to watch.

It’s a familiar story but sadly reality sets in and I realize that the horrible dream is not at all a dream.  And even though I try to remember the good times – they are only memories and do little to fill the empty space.

I am writing this story on Mother’s Day and yes, I’m especially emotional today.  Brandi called a few minutes ago.  She and Queah go way back to when they were little girls.  They reconnected a few years ago thanks to Facebook and Brandi is one of the people Queah would talk to on the phone  in the middle of night when the pain from cancer and all the medication kept her awake.   They would talk about the past, the present and hopes for the future.  Brandi thinks of me often and calls to check on me and didn’t want this day to pass without calling.  There are times I wish I could just say “thanks for calling, I’m so glad you thought of me”.   However, many times I find myself in a puddle of tears by the end of the conversation and a little embarrassed that I cried so much.   During this call, for a brief moment I believed if Brandi and I tried hard enough we could wish Queah back to life.  Yes, it’s been over a year and as much as I try not to give in, my mind still takes me back to that place – a place where I believe she’s coming back.   They call that “place” denial.   Through my tears I did tell Brandi there must have been something that went incredibly wrong with the Universe that would allow something so unthinkable to happen.   Over the last year I’ve said over and over to anyone who’d listen “how could something so horrible happen?”.   Even though they try no one seems to have a satisfactory answer to that question.   I hope the Universe knows it took away  the one person who really mattered to me.

Through all of this, I’ve come to believe the reason Queah is gone –  instead of me – is there’s something left here on this earth that I must do.   It is something unfinished, something undone and it must be pretty darn important.  If only I knew what it was.  I do have many things that I want to do – many things that I need to do –  and some things I must do so I better get busy.  Creating this blog is one of them and I’m so glad you took the time to read it.  So perhaps somewhere in completing some of these things that I want, need and must do – I will accomplish the important thing that I am left here to do.








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Donna Terrell On the FOX16 News set Donna Terrell is a News Anchor in Little Rock, Arkansas. She currently anchors the weekday 5:30PM, 9PM newscasts for Fox16. Read Donna's Bio Here

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