These are the posts I'd made to my personal facebook over the course of my previous treatment. I'll be compiling them all into the book that I NEEDED when I got diagnosed, but that didn't exist. Though, with this second diagnosis, that'll have to wait about 6 months. And it will be twice as long.
Entry 1 - I'VE GOT SOME BAD NEWS. 10/31/2013This past Monday I was diagnosed with Lymphoma, cancer of the lymph system.
I underwent a number of other tests and scans in the past few days and the doctors have found it to be a rare, hyper-aggressive form. It has, in probably three to six months, spread to my spleen and liver and a few of my bones.
The good news is that it is curable (70-90%, depending on some CRAP). The more aggressive the cancer the better it responds to chemo. Starting sometime next week I'll begin the chemo process at Barnes Jewish in St. Louis.
The bad news is that the treatment must be as aggressive as the cancer. This means that I'll likely be in the hospital for the majority of the next 6 months, though we're still getting treatment worked out so I'll have more to say on that later.
I won't take a "LIKE" on this status as you enjoying me having cancer, but rather as you supporting me and my family in this battle. If you do like me having cancer then I WILL STAB YOU IN THE EYE HOLES.
I'm handling this emotionally quite well and am actually still quite happy, as is my custom. I will slay this dragon with the help of all you lovely people and a fistful of modern science.
You're welcome to call or text if you'd like, as I know it's a bit... SHOCKING. I wanted to let everyone know the facts of the matter rather than have it delivered all twisted from shadowy figures.
Thank you all for sending your love and keeping me in your thoughts. It's going to be a wild 6ish months.
Entry 2 - CANCER HUPDAAAAATE (pronounced HUP-DATE): 11/8/2013The longest (relative) week of my existence has passed. On Wednesday we saw the docs at the Siteman Cancer Center here in STL. They put up with my harassment QUITE WELL and managed to stifle their laughter until about 45 minutes into their description of my aggressive lymphoma when I described the success of my visit to the fertility clinic (for BANKING THEM SQUIGGLY BABIES) as a flash flood inside of the lab.
The one piece of news they didn't have back was whether or not there was the presence of the C-MYC gene in my cancer. If it was present, treatment would ramp up and I would indeed be hospitalized. Moreover, my prognosis would get considerably worse and it would be a much harder time.
If it were not, treatment would be the "usual" drug cocktail plus another to protect my precious brain, and I'd 'only' be hospitalized 3 or 4 times for 5-7 days each, rather than for much, much longer.
Wednesday night we celebrated tentatively. The treatment was immensely better than what we had originally been told when in Iowa... so long as that damnable C-MYC didn't come back positive.
And so we waited.
Thursday rolled around and at 1pm in the afternoon my nurse, Barb, gave me a shout via cellphone and relayed the news. "SAM. I HAVE SOME GOOD NEWS. C-MYC WAS NEGATIVE." We were on the street near Pi and a bundle of pleasant looking pedestrians and I yelled at the top of my lungs "FUCK YEAAAAAAAAAAAAAH, BARB!"
I have cancer; I'll yell where I want.
We spent the day bathed in relief, as that was the first time since this thing started two weeks ago that good news arrived rather than bad.
This morning I began chemo. I've had a boatload of chemicals pumped into my system and had a minor allergic reaction to one which was exciting in a minor sort of way.
I will not have to spend the entirety of my time in the hospital for the next 6 months. Instead, I'll be going in once every 3 weeks for out-patient chemo, and after 3 cycles will begin being hospitalized for the last drug that is my brain guardian. It's so POTENT that they have to monitor my pee until they can't see a single bit of it, and then I get to leave.
This is still going to blow harder than a humpback whale in a typhoon. BUT. I'm now on the offensive and finally got some good freakin' news. So I'm feeling good.
ALSO, I shaved my head. Because everyone knows Cancer is a cross-eyed, three fingered barber with a meth problem. My brothers, Adam Coster and Seth Coster, followed suit. As did Diana Zeng, my girlfriend, though I pulled the cancer card and asked her to keep some of it because she has a LUSCIOUS MANE.
Entry 3 - Cheezits 11/13/2013I WAS COOL WITH THIS WHOLE CANCER THING UNTIL I OPENED THIS PACK OF CHEEZITS AND IT DIDN'T TASTE AS GOOD AS IT USED TO.
CANCER I AM GOING TO MOUTHSLAP YOU SO HARD I GET A CHEDDAR CHEESE RUSH.