This Is Happening.

Summer                                                      Healing Moon

Coming back from the pre-op/post-op consultation things felt different. As Kate said, “We’ve moved from thinking to doing.” Since April 14th, it’s been tests, visits to various doctors, reading, talking with friends and family, taking in information,  then decision making. That time period ended with our visit to Eigner on June 11th. We decided on a prostatectomy on July 8th.

The intervening period was a sort of suspension between deciding and acting, knowing the diagnosis and treatment, but having to wait for the surgery. With yesterday’s visit matters have moved to consent forms, instructions for surgery prep, yet more systems checks to see if this body can stand the procedure. It can.

On the way out from talking with Anna, we saw Dr. Eigner. He shook my hand and we had a brief chat. “That looks like a Santa Fe shirt.” “No, Montevideo.” “Ah, that’s Uruguay.” “See you on the 8th.”

It has been an odd experience, this prostate cancer. On April 13th I considered myself a pretty healthy guy. On April 14th I first heard the word malignancy related to me. After the biopsy result I was terminally ill. I went from healthy to definitely not in a matter of weeks, yet I felt no symptoms. There were only clinical findings (digital exam), an elevated PSA, then the biopsy results. All abstract and outside my view. I can’t see my prostate. I can’t feel the cancer. I really don’t feel any different physically than I did on April 13th.

A penumbra of shortened mortality rose over me, shading the future sun. Under its cooler light I felt fine, but wasn’t. In 1992 I went to the Plaza de Toros in Mexico City, the largest bullfighting ring in the world. Tickets were sold sombre y sol. Shade or sun. I bought tickets sombre. Now I would like to move back into the sun.

Definitely feeling a bit more jittery. Imagining the 4:30 am drive to the Sky Ridge Hospital for a 5:30 arrival. Preps. Talking with anesthesiologists and Dr. Eigner. Nurses. Needles. Then quiet for 3 and a half hours. Real. This is coming.

 

Yet Another Appointment

Summer                                                                   Healing Moon

Today is my pre-op/post-op consultation with Dr. Eigner’s physician’s assistant, Ann. She’ll go over what I need to do for surgery prep, what we can expect during the surgery and immediately after, then give us post-op instructions. My level of comfort with all this is substantially higher with Kate involved, both because she’ll be there to hear what I miss and because her own skills make her over-qualified to help me before and after surgery.

I continue to sleep well, have no symptoms (none expected, but still good). Since we are now 10 days out, I’ve stopped my aspirin. My feelings have become more labile as the surgery approaches, which makes sense to me.

The surgery itself has a paradoxical quality, as I imagine many such surgeries do. The paradox is this. It offers me real hope, an opportunity to continue my third phase cancer free. And, that, of course, is the reason for the surgery. On the other hand it has attendant pain and discomfort, improbable but possible complications.

It also might reveal that the cancer is worse than we imagine.  My staging included the seemingly innocent, NxMx. The N refers to the status of the lymph nodes near the prostate and the M refers to possible metastasis, or the spread of the cancer to the rest of the body. The x means unknown.

This is where the paradox becomes strong, intense. The surgery might (probably will) move me past this whole episode. In that case, hallelujah. Or, it might dash that hope and begin another series of tests and treatments. In that case, uh-oh.

The good news is that if Eigner had suspected lymph node or metastatic involvement he would have ordered imaging studies prior to surgery. He didn’t. That’s a positive sign, but only that. We won’t know until the surgery is over, perhaps not even then. We may have to wait on the pathology report, or even the first few p.s.a readings in the year + after surgery.

My emotions ride along the trajectory of which outcome dominates my mood. Most of the time I imagine negative margins on the removed prostate. That means no cancer cells in the tissue surrounding the removed organ. Not definite relative to NxMx, but very positive. Occasionally my rational side will bring me up short while I’m feeling good about this most likely outcome. Wait, it says. You might be right, but what if you’re wrong. Then, you’re feelings will fall from the height of hope to the canyon of uncertainty. Oh. Right.

When rationality moves me to consider all the possible outcomes, then I can slip into fear. One problem with an active imagination (7 novels and one underway) is that I have no difficulty following the path of more tests, more treatment all the way to death. The first feeling that comes in the wake of that thought is fear.

I’ve worked out over the last 50 or so years, a philosophical position that calms me before the fear dominates and shakes my foundations. Usually. Nothing’s 100 percent. I’ve expressed it elsewhere. The short version is: something, some time. It’s buttressed too by my belief that life is the mystery, death is ordinary. And those rocks around Turkey Creek and Deer Creek Canyon roads. The ones that have been here so much longer than I’ve been alive and will be here so much longer after I die.

 

Singularity Already Here?

Summer                                                                  Healing Moon

On the way to a new breakfast place in Evergreen this morning our Garmin, Ophelia, lost the plot. We were hunting for the Lakeshore Cafe on Upper Bear Creek Drive. Ophelia took us over 5 miles on Upper Bear Creek Drive, which winds past some of the most expensive homes I’ve seen out here. Lots of stone and timbers and glass, a rushing Bear creek, wide expanses of stupid lawn and horses. Ophelia took us past Winter Gulch road, up a dead end road, then directed us up Yankee Drive, which was a dirt road winding uphill. Finally, at the end of Yankee Drive we came to a gate and that was that. We had to turn around, reverse field.

Turns out the Lakeshore Cafe, which we did find no thanks to Ophelia, was less than a thousand feet off Highway 74 on Upper Bear Creek Drive. In  hindsight I guess we should have suspected something when Evergreen Lake was far behind us, since a lakeshore cafe would probably have a lake view. But we trusted in Ophelia. Doesn’t bode well for the human versus machine wars predicted by the Singularity folks.

 

 

Possibilities Opening Up

Summer                                                             Healing Moon

Bookcases 300Spent part of yesterday morning moving books, unloading the old IKEA shelves so that Jon can install my new birch shelves. The loft finally feels poised to move from stacks of books, boxes of art, rows of bankers boxes to a finished space. It won’t happen this week, probably, but very soon.

Having my library in boxes or in stacks on the floor has made me feel claustrophobic. I can’t stretch out, find the books I need, the knowledge I need. It’s difficult to express, but I’ve developed a working environment that fits my peculiar needs; and, it’s been unavailable as a whole since we decided to move late April of 2014. That’s a long time.

There’s a building excitement for me as I can see it together again. Sure, family is critical. Friendships are essential. Travel, the arts, going out is fun, even necessary. But also core is work. Not work in the get ahead, I want to be successful and rich sense, but work as an expression and fulfillment of your unique Self. In work that ability to draw, to do math, to invent new machines, to sing, to dance, to heal, to create quilts, to write, to learn flows out into the world as a new creation, a gift the universe needs, a giving back to the source of our life.

I need to work, now as much as ever, and I’ve felt blocked for months with the move, selling the Andover house, settling in and the emergence of medical problems that have to be dealt with. In this last instance the tomorrow wall has blocked me, too.

I’ll say again that the tomorrow wall, which stops my imagination at around July 8th, has forced me to stay in the here and now of doctor visits, decisions, settling in matters. A good thing. But, it will need to come down. It has become a Berlin wall between me and my work. With the changes underway in the loft I can feel it begin to crumble.

History is a River.

Summer                                                           Healing Moon

Wow. Housing discrimination. Still illegal. Same-sex marriage. OK. A weak but necessary version of national health care. Here to stay. The killing of 9 souls at Emanuel A.M.E. in Charleston. Historic wildfires in Alaska. The apparent demise of a too long standing symbol of the noble cause, the confederate flag. This is a big country with so much diversity.

Enough news to fill a month, even a year. All the in the last two weeks. And today: Woman takes down Confederate flag in front of South Carolina statehouse.

In my lifetime I have seen a moon landing, a photograph of our home planet from space. I’ve seen the computer grow as a versatile tool for so many things I could never have imagined. An international space station orbits the planet. Cell phones (hand held computers) are common. I have participated in protests of the Vietnam War and in many political movements from the local to the international.

Never would I have imagined that same-sex marriage would be the law of the land. Never would I have imagined that there would be even the most basic of national health care policies. I could have imagined the continuing bang, bang, bang, bang of racist shooters, bringing lynching up to date with the time of the gun. Never could I have imagined southern political leaders, conservative ones, too, arguing for the elimination of the stars and bars as a public image of certain southerner’s pride. Never. Never though could I have imagined the picture posted here, of a young black woman’s pre-dawn decision to just take the damned thing down in South Carolina.

History is a river, a flooded river that washes over us all, at every moment, carrying us and those we love to the great ocean of memory. This was a week of historical flash flooding. Glad to be part of it.

 

Dazzle

Summer                                                           Healing Moon

Looking forward to seeing Tom and Roxann Crane tonight at Dazzlejazz. They’re in town for a few days, then Tom has some work here. We’ll see the Ken Walker sextet at this Colorado jazz institution. Good food, too.

Here’s a thought for all you eco-minded folks, Arcadia Power. The High Country News, a journal of liberal/progressive thought about the West published in Paonia, Colorado recommended them and I’ve taken some time to research their business model. They take the bill from your utility company, then buy renewable energy certificates to completely offset your usage. It raises your bill about 1.5 cents a kilowatt, but it means your energy use comes from sustainable energy products. Or, supports an equivalent amount of sustainable energy, either way you want to look at it.

 

Aurora

Summer                                                                       Healing Moon

Dawn comes slowly here, starting far off in the plains of eastern Colorado, rising to Denver, then over the foothills and finally vaulting the mountains to come to us here on Shadow Mountain. Since we’re still in the days immediately following the Summer Solstice, it comes early and stays late, light coming around 5:30 and dwindling around 9 p.m.

Today Jon is coming to get started on the built-in bookshelves. I’ve moved plastic bins and table bottoms to consolidate their footprint. Then, I’ll begin moving books off the temporary Ikea shelving, collect them by topic area and collect them on the floor until the new shelving is ready for them.

Kate’s started mowing the grass for fire mitigation. We don’t have a yard but there are clumps of native grasses that need to be kept short. Sometime this summer I’ll begin on the forest thinning to create those ten foot canopy spaces. I’m looking forward to that.

Conifer Plumbing pulled out of our generator install so I have to find a new plumber. Weird. All part of getting into a new place however. We had plumbers and repair people in Andover, but it took time to find them and come to trust them. The same process applies here.

Wildfire

Summer                                                                      Healing Moon

ECFD LOGOExternal fire sprinklers are back on. Jacob Ware, deputy fire chief for the Elk Creek Fire District, came out in his red fire department pick up to talk fire mitigation. He was an interesting guy and a neighbor. He lives near Upper Maxwell Falls trailhead.

Jacob, a former hotshot who fought fires in Idaho and the Pacific Northwest, says external fire sprinklers work. He described an Idaho fire where his crew took portable sprinklers out, built a fireline a half mile long, attached them to a water source, a portable generator and left them running. The fire stopped at the fireline. He’s also seen them work on individual houses. A cheap, do it yourself kit is what he recommends. He’s sending me particulars.

The thirty foot defensive zone around the house is most critical. Not only do you have to get rid of ladder fuels like high grass and shrubs, you also have to break up fuel continuity so an ember can’t spark a fire and be led to the house through mulch or dry, tall grass. After that, create a ten foot span at the crown between and among trees. That means cutting down weaker, stressed trees. This I can do. Aspens are good, they’re fire resistant, but the conifers are mostly pitch and burn like candles. We have mostly lodgepole pine in our yard.

Black Mountain Drive in front of our house will act as a fire break in case of a fire coming from the south and west. It also provides excellent access for fire departments. Combined with our long driveway, top rated roofing and, surprisingly to me, our siding, he said we were already in pretty good shape. Good to hear.

Fear Leaves

Summer                                                         Healing Moon

Denver had some serious weather yesterday: a tornado not far from Jon and Jen’s home, beating rain that took out Jon’s cucumbers, urban flooding that set off alarms in the building where Bernie Sander’s spoke last week. We have rain in the forecast for the next week or so.

The fear subsided over night. Not sure why, but it’s replaced this morning with the calm about the process that I’ve felt most of the time. The trigger yesterday was, obviously, my pre-op physical. It pushed the surgery and its low, but real, uncertainty right in my face. Calmness can be a trap, too. If I’m not calm, am I doing this wrong? Am I not centered? Not grounded? Not spiritual enough?

We all cycle through various perspectives on important issues. That’s a normal and healthy way of seeing different sides. Some of those perspectives can be frightening, e.g. the instance in which the surgery goes well, but some cancer has escaped into my body, metastasized. It was that possibility that creeped into my awareness yesterday and it took hold, stayed present for much of the day. Oddly, even though I found Dr. Gidday very reassuring and I believed her confident appraisal of my prognosis, at the same time, the fear tickled my heart and fingers.

There are, too, family matters to deal with and I had to work out how to deal with them. These things don’t come naturally to me so I have to consider them, plan. Decided on a frank and open conversation which, I admit, could have come to me first, but didn’t.

So this is what I’m doing with my one wild and crazy life. Right now.