
The late great comedian George Carlin used to have a routine where he played a sportscaster doing the nightly sports report after having had one too many [you can fill in the blank]. About halfway through this routine, the loopy sportscaster would announce, “And here is a partial score from Yankee Stadium: New York 3.”
Huh? I chuckle when I think about that line because I believe that it so describes living with multiple myeloma.
Partial everything is how we …
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So, you have multiple myeloma.
Okay, let’s read that again. You and I have multiple myeloma. Cancer. Or, as I have heard it described, "The Big C". ("The Big C" in my childhood referred to the logo on a Cleveland Indians baseball cap; my, times have changed.)
Wow. Who would have thought or imagined?
Looking back over the first few years of a “having-cancer” life, I had to first accept reality to move beyond that initial shock / surprise / desire to not …
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I have made it five years since my initial diagnosis, or at least I am hoping to make it to five years, because you should be reading this column right around my five-year mark (January 15, 2015).
Wow. I have lived with multiple myeloma for five years, or almost 8 percent of my time spent here on Earth. Looking at it from the perspective of 8 percent of my life with multiple myeloma feels so different than looking at it from …
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Though it has been almost five years since my initial diagnosis, I still am somewhat uncertain about what it means to live with multiple myeloma. Where does enjoying your life, LIVING your life (having fun, laughing, enjoyment, etc.) fit in with the very real and serious circumstance of multiple myeloma?
When first diagnosed, I was sad, disappointed, uncertain, and scared. It was easy to be this way because I associated having multiple myeloma with constant and extreme pain, lots of suffering, …
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So, here is my reality: I do not like eating beets. And I do not like having multiple myeloma.
However, there is a huuuuuge difference between the two “do not likes.”
With the beet issue, I can choose to not buy beets at the grocery store. Problem solved. Beets can be avoided.
Not so with multiple myeloma. I cannot choose, or at least I did not have a choice in getting, multiple myeloma.
No beets is easy. No multiple myeloma? Not …
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Looking down at the green grass is a good sign. So is the fact that I am writing this article. Both of these little “things.” and so many more, add up to my current status of living with cancer, as opposed to not living.
I am a male, 63 years old, who was diagnosed with multiple myeloma about 4.5 years ago. Prior to my diagnosis, I was having tremendous back aches and finally went to an orthopedist who suggested an …
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