Upon learning about my illness, a friend wrote to me: "I don't know why, but you were one I
thought would never have anything like this." I never thought I would have anything like
this either. I know where my friend is
coming from. If you have a friend who is
five feet eleven inches tall, 205 pounds, active, energetic, and thoroughly
enjoying life, you certainly don't think, uh-oh here comes cancer. Think about your friends and relatives. Can you look at any one of them and say,
"Hey, Walter looks like he's about to have cancer."? Cancer does not
have an early warning system. In my
case, once we suspected something was cancerously wrong, it was. My melanoma of two years ago was just a
little smooth lump. Even the surgeon had
his doubts and had the biopsy done twice.
Last November I had a slight discomfort when swallowing which I
attributed to a minor cold I had at the time. I enjoyed a great holiday
season--mountains of food and rivers of drink.
Three months later I'm getting radiation and chemotherapy. Perhaps I am taking issue with the current
medical position that too many tests like annual physical exams and PSA are unnecessary
and too costly. Undoubtedly some of them
are. But, based on my experience, when
there's a valid suspicion of cancer, do the test. If a CEO and a professional football player
are worth tens of millions of dollars, I guess I'm worth a PET scan.
1 comment:
Carry on, Bill! This is good, helpful stuff. I especially agree with your last sentence about being worth at least a Pet Scan! Bob goes in for a prostate biopsy next week. No picnic in the park but we are thankful that these tests exist and we are fortunate enough to have them.
Robin Bolan
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