December
16th is a day that will never be forgotten in our family... the day Jeff was
diagnosed with cancer.
The
journey that we started 8 years ago changed our lives... there were
really, really bad and dark times... but there were also very uplifting, loving,
and hysterically funny times. There were moments that we didn't think it could
get any worse, followed almost immediatly by a wink, or a gentle hand squeeze,
or the look that Jeff and I give each other when nobody else exists in the
world... it is just us... together... in perfect love... knowing that things
would be alright.
Several
years ago I wrote about the first few hours after diagnosis... I believe this is
the sixth year in a row I have posted this special story. Jeff and I have been
overwhelmed with the touching comments that so many of you send each year... so
as long as you enjoy and/or are touched by our story, I will continue this
annual tradition.
This
story is Dedicated to my love,
my
Sweetheart, my best friend,
my
hero, my husband, Jeff.
Snickerdoodles, peanut
butter, sugar cookies and spritz cookies…that should finish off our holiday
baking. Go on a city drive of Christmas lights. Buy a pair of jeans to match the
pink sweater for Jessica. Spend an afternoon in Julian and get hot apple cider.
Finish wrapping gifts.
It was December 16th, 2004 and a week before
Christmas. I was sitting in the waiting area of the Gastroenterology Department
of Scripps Green Hospital writing my list of last minute Christmas ‘To Dos.’
Anna Grace, then six months old, was waiting with me for Daddy to be done with
his colonoscopy. Jeff hadn’t been feeling well and hadn’t been eating very much.
As he was preparing for the colonoscopy, he told me he was craving a
Double-Double from In-N-Out. I promised I would take him there as soon as his
procedure was over.
“Mrs. Locher?” Dr. Nodurft was standing in front of
me. “May I have a word with you?”
He guided me through a door that led to
the examination rooms. I walked down the hallway, pushing Anna’s stroller in
front of me. All morning, the nurses that walked by Anna had stopped and made
some comment about how cute she was or how happy. There were two nurses standing
in the doorway of an exam room, waiting for Anna’s stroller to pass by in the
little hallway. This time the nurses didn’t look at Anna. They looked me in the
eye. They didn’t smile. They looked down at the floor. For a split second,
things started moving in slow motion. Could there be a problem with Jeff? As the
cold fingers of dread started twisting in my stomach, I calmly reminded myself
that Jeff was 44 years old, in great health, and in good shape. I knew I was
being led to the transition room where my slightly drugged up husband would be
waiting for me, right? Everything would be fine! Everything would be
fine!
I wasn’t led to the transition room, but a small exam room. There
wasn’t room for the stroller, so I left it outside and carried Anna in. Dr.
Nodurft entered the room with us and another doctor followed behind us. The room
seemed to be filled by the exam table and I remember how white the paper liner
looked on the table. Did I say the room was small? That feeling of slow motion
was starting again and I had a bad feeling. There couldn’t possibly be anything
wrong with Jeff. Don’t doctors give you bad news in their private office, or in
a family waiting room…or in a private, small exam room…
NO! I was
cuddling our beautiful baby girl…Jeff waited so long to become a Daddy…nothing
could stop him from watching his children grow up…from walking his daughters
down the aisle…to watching his son become a father and passing the family name
to the next generation…why were they just standing there? But, I knew the
answer, didn’t I!?
“As you know, your husband was here today for a
colonoscopy. He has been bleeding internally and we needed to find the source of
the blood. We found a tumor…” I tried to concentrate on the next words coming
from Jeff’s doctor, but I seem to have gone deaf.
“I guess I won’t be
taking Jeff to In-N-Out.” I told the doctor about my earlier promise. I smiled
and was silent. He seemed to know that I needed a moment to process reality.
I was standing there, holding Anna. I was dizzy and darkness was
creeping in from the sides of my eyes. Shouldn’t the doctor take Anna from me so
I don’t drop her? I sat down in the only chair in the room.
I knew what
my next question was going to be, but how would I ask it? I started my question
several times, but only uttered a few disconnected words… “Is…will…it’s not…he
can’t be…Jeff is not terminal…” came out more as a shaky statement than a
question.
Dr. Nodurft explained we wouldn’t know anything without more
tests and until the pathology was completed on the specimen that would be
collected during surgery. We talked a bit more and I was told that Jeff was
still out and wouldn’t be ready to see me for awhile. The good doctor suggested
a nice, quiet spot outside by the reflection pond where I could make some phone
calls. He assured me he would come get me when Jeff was awake and ready for a
visit.
I sat down by the pond. Nobody was around but the coffee cart
barista. I don’t know what the temperature was, but I was cold and shivering.
Anna was so quiet…almost as if she knew what was happening. She just looked at
me as tears flowed down my face.
I remember thinking of a line from one
of my favorite TV shows, "Lost." Jack, the young doctor character, explained
that in order to deal with the emotional situations related to his work, he
would allow himself to give into his fear/pain/grief for a count of ten. Then he
would take a deep breath and concentrate on what had to be done to rectify the
situation. I slowly counted to 10, took that all important deep breath and
called my Mom.
“Hello?”
“Mom?” I could barely get the word
out.
“What’s going on?” Her voice was shaking by the end of her question.
She knew where I was.
“They found cancer…” came out in one gush of
breath, as if I had been punched in the stomach.
Mom was sobbing by the
time she finished her “Oh my God!”
I gave her the limited information
that I had. “They don’t know how bad…Jeff is being admitted…surgery
tomorrow…Jeff doesn’t know yet…”
I guess Mom knew the “10-second Fear
Rule” because she was quickly down to business.
“I will call your Dad and
get him home…”
“You don’t have to pull him out of work,” I inserted
because I knew Dad had used all his vacation time for the year.
“I can
tell you that he will not be able to work after he hears this news. I will pack
while he gets home and we will be there as soon as possible.” She already had a
plan for getting Anna from me at the hospital, picking up Jessica and Christian
from school, and staying at our house with the kids as long as we needed. Isn’t
that what Moms do best? They take care of business when their kids need
them!
The next call was to our church. I knew Jeff would want Father Jim
to pray with us before the surgery. I requested Jeff be added to the parish
prayer chain. Both requests were granted.
Next, Jeff’s Dad. The
receptionist was telling me Jeff’s Dad was out of the office just as Jeff’s
doctor walked up. “Jeff is awake and ready to see you.” I would track down
Jeff’s Dad after I had a chance to see Jeff.
Anna and I were led to the
transition room. I knew my eyes were swollen from crying, but my “10-seconds of
Fear” were over (actually, by that time, I had gone through many, many 10-second
counts) and I was going to be strong for my incredible husband.
I could
hear the beeping of the medical machines from all the patients hiding behind
their privacy curtains. I could hear the nurses’ shoes squeaking on the floor. I
could smell that unmistakable scent of “hospital.” Our eyes met. I was strong.
He looked like he was still out of it. Everything else faded away. My grasp
tightened on Anna’s stroller. There was a long pause, smiles from both of us,
and almost simultaneously we both said, “I guess we’re not going to In-N-Out.”
He had been told. He reached for my hand. Our grasp was strong. Neither of us
let go. So many questions. Not many answers. No guarantees. Yet, we both felt a
slight feeling of calm, serenity, peace. The feeling was buried by the fear and
sadness and questions and that “spiraling out of control” feeling, but it was
there. You can call it what you want…denial, hope, naiveté…I call it faith. No
matter how small that pinprick of a feeling was, we knew everything was going to
be okay. Looking back, I can pinpoint that moment, that first look and coming
together of husband and wife during a life-altering situation, as the moment
that God stopped walking with us, but gathered us in His protective arms and
carried us. Together.
Ironically, as I finish writing this story, I am
sitting in a waiting room. Anna is asleep in her stroller. It is one year later
and Jeff is having his first colonoscopy since going through surgery to remove
the tumor, which came with a foot of large intestine, some small intestine, his
appendix and 29 lymph nodes. He was diagnosed with Stage 3 colon cancer, has
endured six months of chemotherapy, and two additional surgeries. He is still
dealing with side effects from the chemo, but we know those will fade one day
soon.
“You can come in now.” The nurse is standing at the recovery room
door. I had been pretty calm until this moment. I thank the nurse and start
pushing Anna toward the door. The nurse is smiling at me and commenting on how
cute Anna is. Although I smile back, I think I have stopped breathing.
I
hear machines beeping, nurses’ shoes squeaking on the floor, and recognize that
antiseptic smell. There are five nurses walking around the room. They all smile
at me and make cute comments about Anna. Jeff’s nurse leads me to his bedside.
He appears to be asleep.
Jeff’s nurse hands me the report from Dr.
Nodurft. The first thing I see is a happy face. The report reads, “Well done,
Mr. Locher! Your colon is perfectly normal! Great news. Next colonoscopy is
recommended in three years. Let me know when you get back to cycling and we
should go sometime!”
A single tear is rolling down my face. “Thank God!
Jeff is going to be fine!,” I enthusiastically say to the nurse. I look over at
Jeff…he hasn’t moved…his eyes are closed… and he is smiling.
I love you, my sweet husband! Here's to another, wonderful, cancer free year!