Laura’s been doing about the same over the last couple days. Maybe a little more pain. But mostly she’s frustrated about her fatigue and irreversible troubles like her double vision. Her fatigue continues to be severe — as I mentioned last time; she struggles to keep her eyes open most of the day. And so she’s frustrated because she has too much to do, she says: mementos to sort through, letters to write to the girls as they grow older. She makes lists and more lists and recompiles old lists — partly because of memory loss, but mostly because she just wants to get things done. Lots of mundane things that I want her to forget about. (Buy an extra plunger or new blinds for the bedroom.) Other things are gifts and related. (Maybe that used book store will have a specific book for so and so.) Laura is thinking a lot about what she wants to leave people and frustrated that she can’t get it all done.
Yesterday she asked me to pick out a box each evening to give to her to sort through. She wants to sort things into throw-away, precious, and characteristic. But she’s been too tired. Ten days ago the steroids had her wired and she was bouncing from one topic to another with intensity, but she doesn’t have that energy anymore. Yesterday evening I found her crying in bed because she heard the girls and I laughing and playing games outside in the yard, and she was overcome with grief that she would miss so many happy days in our lives. She said she cried because she was so tired that she couldn’t bring herself to come outside — robbing herself of joyful times even while she is alive.
Her doctors aren’t offering anything to improve the situation. On the contrary, they’ve been somber and comforting, but said that her sleepiness is most likely due to advancing disease. It could also be partly due to radiation and so it’s possible that the situation will improve when she finishes her radiation treatment at the end of this week. When I tell the doctors that it makes me anxious — that I’m frightened that she might not wake up — neither her oncologist or radiation oncologist contradict me. They say sleepiness is symptomatic of progression and they seemed to specifically avoid giving me false assurances. During this conversation with her radiation oncologist today I also mentioned how I wished Laura could rid herself of the burden of her long task list, and Laura replied that she didn’t want to because she worried that if she gave up on her lists, then her body would give up, too.
Also today, Laura asked her doctor if there was anything that could be done about her double vision — or for that matter any of her other handicaps. To which she was told that there probably wasn’t — save the remote possibility that her current radiation treatment could improve her symptoms. The thought that you are permanently disabled is a hard pill to swallow. Besides the awful sadness about it, Laura feels a sense of guilt that she should be “doing more,” whatever that might mean, to fight her disease. That maybe others expect her to not give up. When the home nurse visits began again this week she wanted the “palliative team” not hospice because hospice has all the associations with death and the end of curative treatment that she doesn’t want, yet.
Her feelings of not letting go are probably coming from the same place as my foray into the “what ifs” that I wrote about last time. It’s awful to worry that somehow maybe Laura is misdiagnosed or being mistreated, but it seems unavoidable to obsess over it. And her oncologist is very kind about it, telling me that it’s important for me to feel comfortable knowing that other possibilities were reasonably rejected. She willingly indulged me and had Laura checked for hypoglycemia and we talk about the links between some of her drugs, diabetes, and stroke. With a little imagination and some google searches by this time last night I had worked myself up to almost a level of fear of malpractice. But I’ve settled down again. For example, my obsession with stroke recently is pretty much immaterial; it’s remotely possible that she had a stroke, but there are many good reasons why she probably didn’t, and even if she did then her treatment wouldn’t differ. I need to let it go.
All this somber writing of late probably makes many of you as anxious or more so than me because you’re not here to see Laura walking and talking, visiting friends, traipsing through stores, shuffling around the garden. If you were here I think you’d probably find our heightened anxieties this week to be premature. One of the visiting nurses said to me this morning, “if it makes you feel any better, Laura’s vital signs are just fine and she sure isn’t showing any signs of imminent demise.”
If you’re in Virginia this weekend, you can see for yourself. Laura decided that she wanted to see her family again before school starts. And when school does begin, Laura told me she’s looking forward to the weekdays when the girls will be out of the house for hours and she’ll have more time to get things done!
P.S. I’ll close with a quick follow-up to a comment I made in the previous cancer post when I was trying to illuminate how Laura seemed to me to not be accepting the reality of the situation (as though that is necessary!). In that context I talked about what we say to the girls and I said, “But we had decided that it was premature for Laura to tell the girls that she might not ever get better.”
This touched a nerve in several of you and I received advice essentially along the lines that there is no reason that Lily and Naomi need to live the coming days in constant fear that their mother will die. I totally agree.
Writing about kids is tough. I often don’t have very coherent thoughts about it and it’s a very emotional and contentious topic. I hate being in this situation as a father and I hate the fact that I could be doing so much more for my children in so many ways that I’m not. But I’ll tackle this one anyway.
Many kids (and probably ours, included) worry and imagine scenarios that are unlikely to pass. And so we think it’s important that they don’t suffer unnecessary anxiety over the unknown and that means that we need to be open with them about what is happening. For us this means making sure that they feel free to ask questions and they get honest, simple answers that they can understand. Now in our case our kids don’t like to ask the really scary questions for the same anxious reason. They’re OK with “why are you wearing an eye patch?” but you won’t hear them ask, “are you going to die?” Even though I’m sure it’s there, we have no intention of answering this question without prompting. Nevertheless, we also think that it’s important that we don’t sugar coat a dire situation so that the reality catches them totally by surprise.
I don’t mean to suggest that we would force on them some hard truths and crush their spirits. I only mean that we don’t say things like, “Mommy is in the hospital so they can make her well” and when we talk about treatment we might say something like “some people with cancer get better when they take this kind of pill and others don’t.”
Laura and I have spent a lot of time talking with experts in child grief and behavior and it seems that the most important points are to be empathetic, to encourage them to articulate feelings, to answer questions truthfully, to not deceive them, and to ensure that they are not left out if they want to be involved in whatever is going on. We’re led to believe that acting in these ways tends to result in children who can better cope with traumatic events. I hope that’s the case.
10 responses so far ↓
1 Julia // Aug 21, 2008 at 10:24 am
I posted this quote back in February, but I find that in times of saddness and wondering “WHY?!?!!!” it is somehow conforting to me. So here it goes again..
From “The Testing-Tree” by Stanley Kunitz .
“The heart breaks and breaks
and lives by breaking.
It is necessary to go through dark
and deeper dark
and not to turn”
2 Eddie // Aug 21, 2008 at 10:36 am
I’ll be in town this weekend – playing up in Silver Spring, MD at night on Saturday, but if you guys are going to be in during the day on Saturday, I’d love to come by.
3 Karuna // Aug 21, 2008 at 11:08 am
What a journey you all are on. David, with your openness, honesty and loving ways you are traveling this often rocky road. Laura, you are such the giver and with such an open and loving heart, even in the most trying times. You both are amazing, and I want you to know that even through this incredible time your Love and Grace and simple (and not so simple) embracing of what life is right now is a solid foundation for your girls in their lives, and a shining example for the rest of us. It isn’t at all easy to live each day now, with so much changing – physically and emotionally. Wants, needs, hopes and very real dreams are being presented, met and sometimes destroyed all in a glimpse of a moment. I (and so many others) hold you in Love and Peace for this seemingly final leg of this part of your journey.
Blessings, and Blessings, and Love,
Karuna
4 Angela // Aug 21, 2008 at 2:05 pm
I’ll be in and around Charlottesville this weekend, and would love to see you all in NoVA if you have time on Sunday. If so, let me know the best way to get in touch with you then.
5 Tom Duesterhaus // Aug 21, 2008 at 3:42 pm
As always, thank you for the updates, David – your inishgts and openness are pretty amazing.
I’ve been thinking about and praying for you guys a lot lately – and I look forward to seeing you at some point while you’re in northern Virginia.
6 Mark Taggart // Aug 21, 2008 at 10:58 pm
The “what to tell the kids” issue strikes a nerve with me too, albeit a slightly different one. In my memory, experience, and observation, lying to children is one of the worst things that can be done to them. Death is painful to children (like it is to adults), and I understand that to a parent, seeing their child in pain is unbearable (the “don’t tell unless asked” plan is solid). But to shield them from the reality of what is happening, with the knowledge that they WILL experience the truth in much harsher ways in the future… that would be far worse. I greatly admire the parents I know who meet all their children’s questions & needs with honesty, and you & Laura are absolutely among them.
It sounds terribly frustrating to have to deal with the eyesight trouble, especially with all the things Laura still wants to communicate to her friends & family. Perhaps voice recording would help, either with the computer or oneathem portable digital recorders. It might be easier to do than letter writing, and she could fill a whole hard drive full of messages for the whippersnappers (and everyone else, too).
I want to cry when I read about Laura feeling too sad to enjoy time with you & the kids. As you stated on this blog at some point in the past, depression is one of the worst aspects of serious illness. If she didn’t feel great sadness at the prospect of leaving you guys, she wouldn’t be human, and she certainly wouldn’t be Laura. But the suffering is something that defies reason, and I’m sure we all wish we could help her shoulder it…
Finally, as I wrote this & thought about your post, this phrase kept popping into my head: “you do what you can.” From one angle, it sounds trite, or even dismissive. But to me it means: Laura labors under great pain and fear, but she does what she can to manage it and live her life fully. The kids know something is not right, and they do what they can to help make her feel better. You (Dave) must coordinate a multi-faceted treatment of a very slippery disease, all the while keeping life on course for your family– and believe me, you ARE doing all you can. When I visited Team Kulp this summer, I was struck by the degree to which you were all doing what you could to live with Laura’s illness. I didn’t see laziness, or self-deception, or despair, or loss of hope… I saw the opposites of those. In fact, I wished that if I ever found myself in your shoes, I would be able to do as much as you were doing, in the manner you were doing it, with the sincerity and love that was visible in so many aspects of your family life.
I say again: f**k cancer. It is an unfair, painful beast of a disease, and that’s not going to change. But the time you are living with it is not a waste, or a ruin, or a curse, because from where I sit, I see you all doing what you can, and what you are doing is extraordinary.
7 Anita Culosi // Aug 22, 2008 at 12:45 pm
You all are carrying a very heavy cross… and each time I read your so very honest posts… I am touched and in awe… at the way in which you have leaned into it. You have done…and are continuing to do…all that you can. Everything is in God’s hands.
I pray for your family each day…and I hope you take some comfort in knowing…that there are so many of us…supporting you through our faith…and belief in a merciful God.
Don’t be hard on yourself, David…just continue to take one day at a time. ..following your gut and your instincts.
God’s blessings on each of you.
8 Shannon Coleman // Aug 24, 2008 at 8:00 pm
Hope you guys are enjoying your visit. As always, praying for each of you.
Shannon and Madison Coleman
9 Rocky // Aug 25, 2008 at 5:52 pm
Please always know that I pray for ALL of you and love you very much. Rocky
10 Eddie // Aug 27, 2008 at 11:59 am
I loved seeing you and the family this weekend. I still continue to pray and hope that there will be tons more visits in the future.