
Tuesday comes around and I wake up in the spare room again as my partner and I fight off the family cold. My partner gets a doctors appointment for today. I get up and look over the blood results that have come in. It is good enough news. The most important thing is that my PSA has not risen, so early on in the first cycle the PSA has been held. I take this as a win! There has been a big jump in my white blood cells, I assume in response to being poisoned by the chemo. (Yew tree needle sludge). I have absolutely no idea if this is good or bad, I shall find out tomorrow.

So my bloods I take as an early win. I have a soup for breakfast to get warm and clear the kitchen. It’s all about the dentist now. At the appropriate time I walk down to the village shop and buy a paper before doubling back to the dentist. I explain to her my situation, we have been here before, and we agree that today is about having a check to make sure there is nothing obviously wrong in my mouth. The check goes well and we decide another check post chemo in July is the best option. We also discuss aids to my oral hygiene while I cannot use my electric toothbrush. My dentist suggests a water pick as an addition, which will help avoid a build up of plaque and will keep the interdental spaces clean. I agree to consider it. I leave making a new appointment and paying my bill.
Once home I settle down to do the crosswords but first I amalgamate the newly arrived first aid replenishment pack with our existing stocks of first aid stuff. In the end I decide to have to separate boxes, one for the usual first aid stuff and a second one purely for bandages. It is not often that a triangular bandage or any other big bandage is required so it makes sense to have them available but separate. So we now have first aid bag of bandages clearly with the word “bandages” Sharpied on all sides. In a third small first aid bag I put all the spare ointments, salves, potions and pain killers into it and again write the contents on the outside of the bag. We are now covered for all our first aid needs now for at least a year. All that remains is to put them all back into the cupboard where they live.
As luck would have it the weather turns decidedly moist as my partner is about to go to her doctors appointment. I end up running her down to the surgery in her car. My the brakes are fierce. I drop her off and return home. Before getting comfortable with my crosswords again I refill the bird and squirrel feeders and as I do so note how many bulbs are now showing in the flower beds. My crossword completion goes slowly as it seems that everyone is having deliveries today including me. The blue slate that I ordered to put the new mini green house on arrives and I have it dumped at the back gate ready for me to barrow it round to the garden in due course. No ones going to nick two bags of slate, I hope. I decide which poem I am going to present to the Saturday poetry stanza meeting and send it off before making myself lunch. Its been a busy morning.
By mid afternoon my partner has her new antibiotics and I my intention is to rest and to think about doing a bit more reading and writing. One task I have to do is prepare for tomorrows oncology review. Its a face to face one so I shall be Ubering to and from the hospital in town. I need to be clear about what I need to report and that I want to ask. Clearly they need to know the frequency, duration and intensity of my Haematuria . They also need to know I have had a crap cold along with how else I feel. I need to know the significance of the white blood cell rise and whether the PSA holding is as good a sign as I am taking it for. So I need to pull all of this together so I can be effective and efficient tomorrow. My sole aim is to ensure that I start cycle 2 on Friday as planned. Nothing more, nothing less.
The evening has a cup football match to watch and more of the Patience series. I also have to decide what to wear to see the oncologist. Whatever it is it needs to withstand the elements, deal with the sweltering heat of the out patients department and have enough pockets to satisfy my pocket needs. I am determined not to get into trainers and joggers. It seems that so many people end up wearing these as a kind of chemo uniform. I perhaps get this on the actual days of chemo as you need something comfortable and which allows access to your body for the nurses but when I am going to see the oncologist for review I need to feel I am presenting as someone with something about them who has a definite say on what happens to them and has a head on their shoulders and isn’t going to roll over. I’m think I might give the suit a run out with the Ben Sherman three quarter length over coat with matching Chelsea boots. After all its Uber there and back so might as well look reasonable.

















