My mom
had her second round of chemo last week.
It went a little rougher than the first round. Thank goodness many of you warned us, so we
were prepared. (BTW, my mother and father both read my blog now and have been
blown away by your messages of support for them)
The
actual chemo was tough, my mom got an allergic reaction half way through
(severe back pain apparently worse than labour, which my mom has done four
times with no drugs – ouch!), so they had to stop one of the meds, then
reinstate it slowly. Which means it took
the whole day to get through the chemo.
Then, as
it did last time, the side effects kicked in with a vengeance two days
later. This time my mom had such bad
joint and limb pain, she couldn’t lift her head to drink soup through a straw.
And that’s
the hard part.
We are a
VERY close family, sometimes too close. I
know that the closeness can seem overwhelming, especially to the poor buggers who
marry into this family, but the good part of this is if any of us is need, we
rally around immediately.
I am
fortunate in that I live closest to my parents. I am the eldest, but the biggest
baby in the family, by far. I tell people I live close
to my parents in case they
need me. The truth is, I need them.
So, I
live close by. I can help where ever I can. Shop (not cook, couldn't subject the poor old folks to that), tidy up, sit with
my mom while she has her chemo etc. My
poor siblings, sister Nina who lives in Seoul and brother Paul who lives in
London, have been ready to jump on that plane from the minute my mom got the
diagnosis, but there is only so much any of us can do.
Sister
Mel lives close enough, but even she can only do so much. My dad has been
absolutely amazing. Honestly, that man
is my hero. He looks after her like
gold. I keep phoning and saying “can I
help? Can I fold laundry? Wash dishes? Shop for you?” and he keeps telling me “don’t
worry, we’ve got it under control”.
But even
him, even all of us, can only help so far. There are some things she has to go
through alone, one of which is the chemo side effects. That is the part I find
hardest to bear. To see her in pain and
not be able to make it (physically) better for her. We all struggle with that.
My mom is the strong one in the family, the rock. To see her suffer is damn hard. But she is a trooper and very strong. She has
already turned the corner, and is feeling better each day. And the amazing
thing is, I went to visit her on Saturday, in the midst of her worst time and there
she was, greeting me at the door with lipstick on. My mother believes lipstick cures all
ills. She might be bald, she might be
suffering, but she has lipstick on and looks great. Go mom!
As I
said, it is hardest for Nina and Paul who are so far away, and who can’t be physically
here for my mom, but they do what they can from afar, to show their love and
support. And I know each little word,
each little gesture means the world to my mom.
I am so
blessed to have such an amazing family, I love you all!
My brother Paul from London, with a message to my mom. He shaved his head in support.