postprandial conversation
Feb. 13th, 2009 08:09 pmSometimes, I want to write about something big and important, but I'm not sure what I want to say, or how to say it or maybe even how I feel about it, and in the meantime it's Big and Important and I feel a little weird not mentioning it because a lot of my time is taken up with it and it seems as though I ought to mention it, especially in a place like this which is all about my preoccupations. And I feel equally weird talking about other more trivial or self-indulgent things with the Big and Important thing hanging over me.
But I guess the time has come to talk about this latest Big, Important thing, because I have a question for you. The thing is this: after several years of increasingly nerve-wracking scares and biopsies and precancer growths, the doctors are warning my mother that breast cancer is more a matter of time than a possibility, and she's decided to get a prophylactic mastectomy to reduce her risk. She's scheduled the surgery for April 1, which is kind of a tasteless cosmic joke, but we're finding it a little funny because we're tasteless that way.
Mom is okay, I think. When the surgery was first recommended a couple of years ago, she was upset and resistant, but the intervening time's changed her perspective, and she seems to be getting ready now without too much trauma, though obviously that could change as the time draws nearer. My dad's being great too. Not so much with the providing a sounding board or a shoulder to cry on, but he is rock-solid, going to every doctor appointment, setting up services and caregivers now so that when the time comes Mom won't have to worry about anything getting done while she's in recovery.
And the rest of us are chipping in where we can, where they'll let us. Which is where the question comes in, because my sister-in-law and I are coordinating to try and get supplies together that she might need, pillows and baby monitors and loose lounge clothes and stuff, and the question is this: if you know anyone who's had a mastectomy, do you have any recommendations about things to buy to make things easier?
But I guess the time has come to talk about this latest Big, Important thing, because I have a question for you. The thing is this: after several years of increasingly nerve-wracking scares and biopsies and precancer growths, the doctors are warning my mother that breast cancer is more a matter of time than a possibility, and she's decided to get a prophylactic mastectomy to reduce her risk. She's scheduled the surgery for April 1, which is kind of a tasteless cosmic joke, but we're finding it a little funny because we're tasteless that way.
Mom is okay, I think. When the surgery was first recommended a couple of years ago, she was upset and resistant, but the intervening time's changed her perspective, and she seems to be getting ready now without too much trauma, though obviously that could change as the time draws nearer. My dad's being great too. Not so much with the providing a sounding board or a shoulder to cry on, but he is rock-solid, going to every doctor appointment, setting up services and caregivers now so that when the time comes Mom won't have to worry about anything getting done while she's in recovery.
And the rest of us are chipping in where we can, where they'll let us. Which is where the question comes in, because my sister-in-law and I are coordinating to try and get supplies together that she might need, pillows and baby monitors and loose lounge clothes and stuff, and the question is this: if you know anyone who's had a mastectomy, do you have any recommendations about things to buy to make things easier?
no subject
Date: 2009-02-17 06:26 am (UTC)I don't have any experience with this particular medical procedure, but my sister and father have both been in and out of the hospital quite a bit. My father had a crazy Van Gogh poster in his room--and he was on some incredible drugs--and so he enjoyed tripping out to it, and recommends art highly. My sister really appreciated unusual items of food (artichokes, gourmet chocolate with lavender or chili or whatever in it)--anything that's the opposite of the mandated hospital diet. And they both devoured TV series on DVD.
Oh! And maybe DVDs of movies that your mom would have watched and enjoyed as a kid? Comforting--my dad always turns to screwball comedies and the like.
Best of luck!
no subject
Date: 2009-02-18 12:03 am (UTC)