It’s Saturday morning, and I’m still in Houston—same hotel, same view of MD Anderson, and somehow, I ended up in the exact same room I was in when this whole thing started. Only a month has passed, and already, it’s been one hell of a ride.
Back then, I remember staring out this window wondering if these folks were going to be able to save my life. That question still lingers—and probably will until this story finds its end, whenever that may be—but right now, in the short term at least, things are looking good.
I just got my latest blood test results, specifically for something called Carcinoembryonic Antigen (CEA). It’s a protein found on the surface of some cancer cells and is used as a tumor marker to monitor treatment progress. When I started this journey, my CEA numbers were pretty high. Now, they’re back in the normal range. It’s just one data point out of many, but it’s a damn good sign that things are working. So today, even though chemo has left me tired, messed with my taste buds, and made my fingers a little tingly with neuropathy, it’s a good morning. A really good morning.
I wanted to start this post with the good stuff, then shift into the absurd, and hopefully finish with a solid gut punch to the feels. So here goes…
Yesterday, at the start of my chemo treatment, they went through the usual pre-procedure checklist. Standard questions—most of them boring and repetitive. Naturally, my brain looks for ways to answer them in novel, stupid ways. Most of my responses get ignored, but when they asked how my cancer fight was going, I said, “Just waiting for my background check to go through so I can end this fight quickly.”
Turns out, that raises some eyebrows.
Apparently, that kind of joke gets you visits from a therapist and the hospital chaplain.
I spent a decent part of the afternoon explaining that I was kidding, I don’t have a gun, I’m not getting one, and I have absolutely no intention of harming myself. One person even asked if I actually thought a gun would help in my fight. It took most of my willpower not to say, “Sure, if I shoot myself in the ass—because that’s where the tumor is, and I really don’t see any other way that could possibly work.”
But I bit my tongue and answered as politely as I could: it was just a joke.
I guess there’s a line I’m not supposed to cross with dark humor… but let’s be honest: I’ll probably forget all about that by the next visit.
And when the conversation inevitably comes up again, maybe I’ll skip the joke and just say the real reason I’m not quitting any of this: I’m my momma’s boy.
And that matters.
My mom—who is probably a little embarrassed that I’m writing this—is the strongest person I’ll ever know. She raised four kids on her own, including a diabetic little terror (who, to be fair, didn’t settle down until… well, let’s say 40). All while caring for my dad as he died of cancer. There was a time when we were all crammed into a small house and didn’t have enough room for everything—including the hospice bed my dad needed. So my mom gave up her own bed and slept on the couch. Night after night. Because that’s what she did for her family.
After my dad passed, she fought a life insurance company that tried to screw us over in a way that makes me hope they have a reserved suite in hell. And somehow, she managed not to drown any of us over the next 15 years while shepherding four wild monsters into the kind of adults we can be proud of.
And in between all that? A thousand other big and small sacrifices I couldn’t begin to name without turning this into a 300-page novel—and even then I’d probably leave something out.
So yeah—if I’ve got even half her strength in me, I’m not going to do something short-sighted and rob myself, or the people I love, of the chance to see just how much of a momma’s boy I’ve grown into.
That’s it for now. I’ve got room service on the way. They had to confirm—twice—that I did in fact order 18 slices of extra crispy bacon and a latte. So now I’m just waiting in this hotel room, looking out at that same view, and hoping my stomach understands how strong my mom made me—and doesn’t go and do something stupid like try to evacuate the bacon. And if it does? Well… I might just reconsider that gun in this one instance. Bacon is no joke!