Wednesday, May 3, 2023

Brain Cancer Celebration Month!

May is the internationally recognized month for Brain Cancer Awareness, which is funny because it was in May 2019 that I first became 'aware' that I had brain cancer. 
In fact, every major event in our journey has come in the month of May, so May has become our brain cancer anniversary celebration month! 
 
Here are all the Brain Cancer Anniversaries that we celebrate in May:
  • May 3 (2019) - The day we first discovered I had a brain tumor.
  • May 6 (2019) - The day I had my first open craniotomy surgery. (So much FUN!)
  • May 26 (2020) - The day I had my second open craniotomy surgery. (Even more FUN!)
  • May 12 (2022) - The day we found out all the Cancer was gone! 
So today (May 3) is the anniversary of when Candis and I found out that I had a brain tumor. I remember the day like it was yesterday. 
  • Candis had to go tell David and Graham the news and picked them both up from school to meet me at the hospital. On the way she had to call my parents and her parents to give them the news. 
  • They put me in an ambulance and took me to the hospital to see the brain surgeon.  
  • The whole day was kind of surreal.   
Life can change in the blink of an MRI!
 
When you're diagnosed with Cancer it changes your perspective on everything. Every memory now is placed on a new timeline. We have our own BC and AD eras. BC is Before Cancer and AD is After Diagnosis. As if that wasn't confusing enough there's also IBS, and AS2- In Between Surgeries, and After Second Surgery. You can see why we went with AS squared and not the actual abbreviation. Although the full acronym would have gone better with the more well known abbreviation for: IBS.
We don't use dates any more we just reference all the major milestones in the journey.
 
"When did we take that trip to Boston?" 
"That was 5 months AD "

"When did Ford release the new Bronco?"
"Oh, that was 3 months AS2."

Through it all, God has sustained us, just as He promises in His word. As always, God is good!

Wednesday, October 26, 2022

Health Update - October 2022 - Good News!!

 I have missed posting updates here, but I think that maybe a few people still come to Scoop Of Vanilla to see how I'm doing. So here's a quick update: 

I have some good news to share: In May this year (2022) we were back at MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston where the Doctor informed us that the residual tumor is gone and there is no active cancer in my brain!! 

A couple of scans since May have shown the same result! I'm cancer-free. Does this officially make me a survivor? 

Thank you all for your prayers and support!
As we’ve said all along. God Is Good!! All the time!  

Psalm 116:1–7

    I love the LORD, because he has heard
        my voice and my pleas for mercy.
    Because he inclined his ear to me,
        therefore I will call on him as long as I live.
    The snares of death encompassed me;
        the pangs of Sheol laid hold on me;
        I suffered distress and anguish.
    Then I called on the name of the LORD:
        “O LORD, I pray, deliver my soul!”
    
    
    Gracious is the LORD, and righteous;
        our God is merciful.
    The LORD preserves the simple;
        when I was brought low, he saved me.
    Return, O my soul, to your rest;
        for the LORD has dealt bountifully with you.

Saturday, April 17, 2021

Health Update

I had another battery of tests on Wednesday (4-14-2021). The good news is that the residual tumor appears to be smaller! This is the second consecutive MRI that has revealed some shrinkage. The ‘less good news’ is that my liver function is somewhat diminished. They have instructed me to stop taking the trial medication to see if that is what’s causing my liver issues. While I will definitely enjoy a break from taking the trial medicine, we are mildly apprehensive about what a break will mean for the recent improvements that we’ve seen. 
 
I'm sure it will be OK, your liver is replaceable, right? Does anyone have one they're not using? 

God is good!

Tuesday, March 2, 2021

How to Tell Others That You Have Cancer

I never know how to tell someone that I have cancer. A lot of times I'm not sure that it's really necessary that they know, but sometimes I think they should know. Because Gosh Darn-It, I want some sympathy!! For example, I have work colleagues who don't know I have brain cancer, and I feel like they'd want to know. But it's an awful lot to share with someone out of the blue. I don't want to overwhelm them and make them feel sorry for me, although I do like all the attention. I can't really envision how that information fits into normal conversation: 
"Hey Ian, great job on that report."
"Thanks, it's pretty good for someone with brain cancer, right?"
You see, that's not natural. But these are people who I care about and who probably care about me, at least to some degree. I mean, I'm a fairly easy guy to like, and I think that's because of how humble I am! (Seriously you guys, I am SOOOOO humble. I'm really, really good at it!!)

I mean, I could go with the traditional "Guess who has 2 thumbs and brain cancer?... THIS GUY" but it doesn't seem like that takes it seriously enough. 
Then again, I am rarely serious even when the situation calls for it so maybe a humorous approach to telling people is the key.

As I've been thinking about it I realized that a lot of other cancer patients probably deal with this same issue. So in an attempt to help others (I'm nothing if not helpful) I compiled the following list of suggestions for telling others that you have cancer:
  • "Guess who has 2 thumbs and brain cancer?... THIS GUY" (Point at self with thumbs)
  • "Hey, you know how some people have cancer? ... I'm 'some people'." 
  • "So... I'm doing chemotherapy, and not just for the fun of it." 
  • Casually mention that you have an oncologist in conversation. 
    • Example: "Hey, my oncologist just got a Labradoodle too!" 
  • "I have CANCER!!!!" (yelled really loud, when asked to do something you want to get out of) 
    • Example: "Hey Ian, would you mind helping John build out that Excel report?" - "I have CANCER!" 
  • Frame it as a prayer request. You can tell people anything when you frame it as a prayer request. 
  • Blame something on the cancer. 
    • Example: "Looks like you broke my snowblower when you borrowed it." - "Yeah, but I have cancer."
If none of those work for you then you could try this:
Direct them to a website where you share that you have cancer in a humorous, albeit severely lacking in decorum article and hope they have a sense of humor.

Also, real quick, let me welcome all the new people I shared this website with. Surprise! Sorry that I didn't have the stones to tell you in person, but in my defense... I have CANCER!  :(

Saturday, October 17, 2020

God's Got Me

Health Update & Some Other Thoughts

My last MRI was September 30th at the MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston. The results showed that the small amount of tumor that is left had not grown in size. Everything looks stable, which is the goal of the Clinical Trial that I'm participating in. I got this! Speaking of which...

When people find out that you have cancer they often want to be encouraging and one of the things that I've heard quite frequently is "You got this!" - That's awesome, I love it! It's the kind of inspiration that makes me want to fight. It's motivating... but the truth is that it's not me that's 'got this,' God's got this. And you know what? That's better! I don't got this unless God's got me. 
 
God's got this because He is sovereign over all things and if He wants to cure me He is absolutely capable of doing that. So why hasn't He done that yet? Maybe He's using this to sanctify me and mold me into the man He wants me to be? Maybe He's using it to reach others. It's not for me to know, at least not yet. 
 
I've been thinking a lot lately about Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego. When King Nebuchadnezzar threatened them because they wouldn't bow before the Golden Statue, their answer was essentially that they knew that their God could save them. They believed that He would. But even if He didn't, they would not serve other Gods and abandon Him. 
I like that: I know He can save me, I believe He will save me, but even if He doesn't I still trust in His Sovereign plan. God is good, all the time!
 
 

Tuesday, May 26, 2020

Not Alone

This morning I am headed in for brain surgery by myself, and yet I am not alone. I know that God is with me. And I know that you are all lifting me up in prayer. I am so very thankful for your prayers and support and for a God who does not leave his children alone. I still wish that Candis could be there with me, she is such a source of strength for me. To be completely honest, I am terrified. It’s bizarre to think that in a few hours my skull will be opened up and someone will poke around in there with a scalpel. The good news is he should have plenty of space to work! 

So as I walk over to the hospital for my tumor-ectomy (not the official medical term) I am comforted by these verses: 

Psalm 23: 4 “Even though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil, for you are with me; your rod and your staff, they comfort me.” 

Matt 28: 20b “... And behold, I am with you always, to the end of the age.

Please pray through Psalm 116 with me today. It has spoken to me deeply in so many different ways. 

Wednesday, May 20, 2020

Live Like you are Dying

Something fortunate has happened: I have brain cancer and you're here reading about it. (The 'something fortunate' was fortunate for you, not for me.)

Why is it fortunate for you that I have brain cancer? Because you can learn from my experience. God is teaching me to live like I'm dying, to live with the end in mind. That's easier to do when you have a terminal disease and you can see the end in sight, but it doesn't require that. Don't wait for it to be you, to start living like your death is inevitable, because your death is inevitable. Use my situation as a thought experiment and imagine what it might be like if it was you. The truth is we don’t know how much time we have left, and God could call our number at any moment. We all know somewhere in the back of our minds that we can die suddenly, but we tend not to dwell on it because it's uncomfortable. But it's a gift that we're given to realize that death is waiting right around the corner. It gives us a chance to really live.

"Every man dies, not every man really lives" - William Wallace

Contemplating my own shortened life span has helped me to see that I should live like my death is coming quickly, because according to some doctors, it is! You're not in the same boat (hopefully), but it doesn't mean that you can't learn from my situation and live like you're dying.

What does it look like to live like you’re dying? It means enjoying the good things that God has blessed us with. For me it has meant telling my family how much I love and appreciate them. It has meant I try to spend less time telling them I’m too busy and more time giving my attention when requested, because even if this is all the time I get I wouldn’t trade my family and my lot in life for anyone else’s. Many of you feel the same way about your own families, but have you told them that?

The sooner we recognize that our time here is limited, the sooner we can start living the way God wants us to. The sooner you realize that this life is but a vapor in comparison to what's coming next, the sooner you can begin to live with the next life in mind. The next life will be infinitely longer than this one, so worry less about storing up earthly treasures and store up treasures in heaven. ‭

They are to do good, to be rich in good works, to be generous and ready to share, thus storing up treasure for themselves as a good foundation for the future, so that they may take hold of that which is truly life.” - 1 Timothy‬ ‭6:18-19‬ ‭

I encourage you to spend a few uncomfortable moments thinking about how you would live if you were told you only had a short time to live. What can you do to invest in heavenly treasures? What are the things that you wish you would've said to your family and loved ones? Say them now. What are the things that you wish you would've done? Do them now. And make sure to enjoy the good things from God along the way.

Sunday, May 3, 2020

The Guy with Dope Scars in his Hair

Today (May 3rd) is exactly 1 year since I found out that I had a brain tumor. That was the day that "my life got flipped, turned upside down," to quote the Fresh Prince. Also, I have a lot of time on my hands in quarantine and I'm really bored. How bored? This bored:

Saturday, April 18, 2020

Gorilla Ice

With everyone all locked up in quarantine I thought I'd share this little confession (and video) in the hopes that it will brighten your day. About 11 years ago I ran a race where everyone dressed up as a gorilla to support some gorilla conservation/protection fund. Before the race began, I filmed myself dancing to Ice Ice Baby while wearing the gorilla costume. Please enjoy a laugh at my younger self's expense. 

Sorry the video is so long (almost 4 minutes!), but let's face it you'll watch anything at this point in quarantine. I dare say this isn't even the weirdest thing you've watched in quarantine. 



Monday, April 6, 2020

Expiration Date

Today, April 6th 2020 is my expiration date. Or so I'm told. How does one get an expiration date? More on that in a moment. First, some good news to share.
Background: Candis and I recently received a referral to MD Anderson (generally considered one of the best cancer centers in the country) and we've been waiting to hear back from them for several weeks. It felt like months.

Good News: Yesterday (on a Sunday evening, no less) one of the top neurosurgeons from MD Anderson called us and informed us that he was looking at all my MRIs and suggested that things may not be as bad as we'd previously been led to believe. He suggested that a second surgery may still be needed, but it's not urgent and should be postponed until after this whole COVID-19 stuff blows over. Then he asked us to take down his personal cell phone number and to call him if we needed anything! We were flabbergasted! Gobsmacked even! God is good. 

God has been teaching us to wait on the Lord, to wait on His good timing. It has been difficult. Recently I began praying much like the Psalmist:
"How long, O LORD? Will you forget me forever? 
How long will you hide your face from me? … 
Consider and answer me, O LORD my God; 
light up my eyes, lest I sleep the sleep of death," - Psalm 13: 1,3

And again in Psalm 69: 17 - 
"Hide not your face from your servant, for I am in distress; make haste to answer me."
Not from a spirit of impatience towards God's good timing, but in the spirit of complete dependence upon God and an overwhelming desire to hear His answer.
This good news is better than Candis and I dared to hope for and I am reminded of the Apostle Paul's words to the Ephesians: "Now to him who is able to do far more abundantly than all that we ask or think, according to the power at work within us, to him be glory in the church and in Christ Jesus throughout all generations, forever and ever. Amen." - Eph 3: 20-21
It's an incredible thought that our God is able to do more than we can ask or think, but He proves that to be the case in our lives.
 
Now, about that expiration date... 
After the surgery to remove my brain tumor last year on May 6th the surgeon informed Candis (while I was still under anesthesia) that my life expectancy was 11 months. By my calculation that makes today my 'best before' date. I think it's probably stamped on the bottom of my foot somewhere.

Several weeks later after the pathology report came back the doctors granted me an extended life expectancy, but we lived with that 11 month timeframe in the back of our minds for a while. Fortunately for me, my time isn't 'granted' by doctors, or determined by tumors, but by God. For that I am forever thankful.