Tuesday, April 08, 2014

No man is an island, entire of itself; every man is a piece of the continent, a part of the main. If a clod be washed away by the sea, Europe is the less, as well as if a promontory were, as well as if a manor of thy friend's or of thine own were: any man's death diminishes me, because I am involved in mankind, and therefore never send to know for whom the bells tolls; it tolls for thee.

I am not sure how many people died of Adenoid Cystic Carcinoma in 2013 - I know of 13, but I am sure there were more. I have ACC, but I had a quiet year in 2013 - scans in April and then again in October showed no evidence of progressive disease, but I have no idea what 2014 will hold.  This cancer is unpredictable, described in the medical literature as relatively indolent but relentless. Very few people are diagnosed with ACC - only about 1200 a year.  It is on the list of the NIH Office of Rare Disease Research, which makes it an orphan disease. Most people have never heard of the ORDR.  I know I had not.

Over lunch we traded stories, compared treatment options and choices, evaluated doctors and hospitals, talked about how we coped with a cancer that is so uncommon most doctors have never heard of it, that is so unpredictable that statistics are meaningless. One couple recounted how they had found a research lab that sold them forty mice on which to grow the husband's particular tumor.  Since no chemotherapy agent has been found that works for more than 30% of ACC patients who take i,t patients have their own tumors mapped to try to find which gene mutations they possess.  While Matt was in the OR having his metastatic lung tumors biopsied, the unfortunate mice were readied at the lab.  A friend carried the tissue samples across New York City to the lab in an insulated lunch box so the mice could be infected while the tissue was fresh.  It's a great story so far.  We all wish it would have a happy ending but we know it's not a fairy tale.


The meeting broke up around 3.  Most people there were planning to attend a fundraising gala that evening to support research for a cure.  We attended last year when the adolescent band hired to entertain the crowd sang "Only the Good Die Young."  I'm sure they had no idea what they were saying.  We had to get home that evening so we skipped the party this year. On the way home I attempted to parse my feelings about the day.  Although the gathering showcased the thing that keeps me awake at night, it also left me feeling comforted and warmed.  I felt less alone with my secret than I often do.  I felt compassion for others who face the same threat I do, most of them cheerfully and bravely.  I was reminded that my own private struggle is not as solitary as I imagine it to be, that I am not an island but part of a continent.  


Sunday, April 06, 2014

I had dinner the other night with my brother and his wife and two other couples, close friends for many years. We were celebrating a day I once thought would never come.  My sister-in-law made reference to the reason for the celebration once or twice during the evening  - not to the day we were commemorating,  but the years in between that day and this.  I toasted the occasion heartily, but didn't really want to speak about April 5, 2000.

The occasion for dinner was the ending of my brother's parole.  Fourteen years ago he was convicted of a crime and taken from the courtroom in handcuffs.  The trial had lasted only two days; the jury deliberated less than two hours. His wife and I sat together in stunned silence and horror, warned by the bailiff not to make any outbursts.  We met briefly with my brother's lawyer in a conference room near the entrance to the courtroom, across the hall from another  room where we could see friends hugging each other, tables laden with food and drinks as if prepared for a party.  No one consoled us or offered to bring snacks and drinks. But then we could not have eaten anything anyway. I heard the lawyer talking through the noise in  my head, but I did not comprehend most of what he said. The things I did remember about the likelihood of a short sentence turned out not to be true.

We waited till most people had left and then went out to the parking lot to find the battery dead in our car.  I wondered if anyone would even give us a jump - no one had made eye contact with us since the verdict was read.  A gentle-faced woman took pity on us, and we drove away in silence.  I remember stopping at the house where my brother and his family used to live - now for sale since they were no longer welcome in their community or church.  My sister in law needed to pick up something. The house which had always been so full of laughter and children's voices was as silent as we were. Then we began the two hour drive to the town where I lived and where his family had been staying while they waited for the outcome of his trial. Three of us had driven down that morning, but only two of us returned.  I don't remember much of our conversation - I don't think we said much.  I do remember my sister agonizing over how to tell her children the news.  At the time they were 14, 12, 9, 6 and 3 years old.  I also remember the terrible unspoken thoughts about what was happening to my brother.  Since I've heard his account of that time I think it was better we did not know.

We returned to the house where the children had spent the day playing and Eileen and I sat in the living room.  I remember her visibly shaking.  She brought the children in one at a time to tell them that Daddy would be away for a long time.  As she spoke I mentally calculated the age each child might be when their father returned.  Even with the false hope of a 3-5 year sentence, it seemed like an eternity he would be gone, an eternity in which his children would grow and change and become unrecognizable.

As things turned out, he spent 8 years behind bars and the last 6 on parole.  He was finally cut loose last Wednesday, free to come and go as he pleases.  He is no longer a family doctor but a laborer for a remodeling contractor.  Four of his five children no longer live at home.  We are all older, tireder, sadder and perhaps a bit wiser than we were fourteen years ago.  The chapter that began so dramatically ended almost without a notice - a letter in the mail instead of a gasp in the courtroom.  I may finally write about that time which had the power to alter so many lives so profoundly.  I may be able to say things I have never yet said.  But right now I am just glad to put it behind me.