Many of you who know me personally are aware that my mother has been battling terminal breast cancer. Nearly three years ago, they gave her a year or less to live. Her response has been "screw you, I'm not giving up." I remember last year when one of the vertebrae in her back collapsed from cancer eating away at her bones, no one thought she'd make it, much less walk again. She was up and at 'em within a month. Many times we’ve thought the end was near, and she miraculously has bounced back to fight on another day.
Over the last few months, my mother has been on a very strong chemo that has had a great deal more side effects than her previous regimen. She’s been unable to truly live much of what little life she has left during this time. I call almost every day to check on her, and most of the time she’s too tired to talk or already asleep. When I come over to see her, she’s barely able to just sit up in her bed and have a brief conversation. Of course she’s been depressed and stir crazy. She told me a few weeks ago she was watching this show about mysterious deaths and autopsies on Discovery Health. This guy was found dead in parking lot of a hotel in a pool of blood. Everyone thought he’d been shot, but there was no bullet wound. The autopsy revealed a cancerous tumor had invaded a major artery and he just bled out. I told her not to watch that stuff. “I’m afraid, Dana. I don’t want to go like that, I can’t die that way…” What could I say to her? My step dad bought her a new car a few weeks ago and she hasn’t been able to drive it. I hated to ask why he bought it for her when it has been obvious she won’t be using it. I guess he thought she’d bounce back again, as always.
Now it seems she is losing her absolutely inspiring battle. She was admitted to the hospital yesterday, and had to move to the Intensive Care Unit today. Her tumor has invaded her lung, her lungs are filled with fluid, and she is unable to breathe without assistance from a respirator. If she’s strong enough, they will drain the fluid from her lungs tomorrow and hopefully send her home soon. Once there, her doctor has recommended she discontinue her chemotherapy treatments and just accept hospice care to keep her comfortable until the end. My mom has been taking chemotherapy almost continuously for over a year, hoping to stick around awhile longer. It seems that there is no longer a point to continuing treatment. I’ve been questioning how much more she should take for a long time.
She may not make it through the night. If she does, she will probably not make it to my birthday in a few weeks. Today I went to visit her in the ICU, and it hit me hard that Mom is going to die. I’ve been aware that my time with her is limited for many years now. I thought I had accepted the fact, but it doesn’t make it any easier when it actually comes to fruition. I guess I imagined she would just fade away, possibly dying peacefully in her sleep one night. I never thought that the gory stories of how cancer actually kills you would happen to her. I never imagined seeing her in a hospital bed, quiet, still, unable to recognize I’m there with her, and looking so small. It’s like it’s not the Mom I know in that bed. I looked at old pictures of her some time ago, and it struck me how much she aged in just a year after her first battle with cancer 10 years ago. People used to think we were sisters, even with a 26 year age difference. In a way, now she looks as if she’s already gone. This strong willed woman is now dependant on a machine to keep her alive. Today, she was still fighting, yanking the tube out and telling the nurses she could do it herself. Too bad she can’t…