Mara, I am so happy that you are doing this for your family and friends!
I do want to add that your problems with speech were hardly perceptible to any one other than people like you and me who are really attuned to your speech patterns. Even David had trouble noticing them at first.
I know it is more difficult for you to talk and you tire easily, but for everyone else you look, acted and sounded like the Mara we all know and love with your great sence of humor, knowledge, love and caring!
Except for being tired and shaving your head, I expect that you will pull though this with no changes to you personality as you have your other health trial! I also know that the best thing we can all do for you is to communicate mostly in writing (emails and cards that don't require replies from you) as visits and telephone calls tire you easily.
This is a real challenge that you are meeting with determination and humor. If it helps, please know that your friends are pulling for you and deeply admire your optimism. We have heard that the people who have the best odds are the ones who have a positive attitude: if so, there is a lot to cheer for in you.
Mara, darling, it's been a good three hours since I posted my first comment, but we just can't stop talking about you and looking at pictures. We all so much admire you, darling! Get well, get well soon! We love you! Talk to you soon, Yours always, Zlatna
Hi Folks! Here's the story straight from the horse's mouth:
August 29 I stumbled over a word. It wasn't a big deal but I noticed. Then on Thursday night (August 30) David and I left on a fabulous long weekend in Syria. Friday we left Damascus for Palmyra. It was really hot. That day I stumbled over a couple words too -- it stood out to me since I never do that....
Saturday we walked all over Palmyra and I was really suffering from heat, or so I thought. I felt like I was making lots of mistakes in my speech -- but David didn't notice. Then I noticed that I had a small numb spot on my scalp behind my right ear. Strange, strange, strange. On Sunday, back in Damascus, the speech got worse (comegranite instread of pomegranite, etc.). By the end of the day I really felt like I was having trouble simply getting sentences out that were in my head. I couldn't make small talk with strangers (imagine that for me!) -- it was stressfull.
When I got home Sunday night I wrote my melanoma oncologist and he said I should immediately get an MRI. So Monday morning by 8:30 AM our fabulous health unit in Amman had me in a an MRI machine. By 9:30 I was out and found that I had metastatic cancer lesions (tumors) on multiple sites in my brain. Most notably, a frontal left lobe that deals with oral expression (the largest at about 1.8 cm). I also have one on the base of my brain where it connects to the spine, which may or may not have to do with the scalp numbness.
So -- Monday was a fabulous day in the hospital in Amman where practically everyone I have worked or played with in the past year came to visit -- it was a big party! By the next morning I was on a plane back to New York, accompanied by the Embassy's excellent doctor -- Curt Hofer. Tuesday night we arrived in New York and took a taxi directly to the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center hospital where we met my mother and oncologist. The past week in New York has blown by with tests and doctors and museums. David arrived from Amman on Sunday, September 9, and is going to be able to spend a month in the States (actually, we had a vacation planned now...).
So -- that's the beef. No headaches. No stroke-like symptoms. Just speech problems. In the last week the numbness on the right side of my head has covered my ear, jaw and moved down my neck and right arm. But as you will see from the blog -- treatment has begun so I hope it will all get better soon.
The plan: three weeks of full brain radiation (with weekends off). That is about all I know. There will be a plan afterward but we have to wait and see what this does before we decide. I still have a number of melanoma "freckles" on the skin of my chest -- so those have to be dealt with. I will keep you all updated regularly through this site!
3 comments:
Mara, I am so happy that you are doing this for your family and friends!
I do want to add that your problems with speech were hardly perceptible to any one other than people like you and me who are really attuned to your speech patterns. Even David had trouble noticing them at first.
I know it is more difficult for you to talk and you tire easily, but for everyone else you look, acted and sounded like the Mara we all know and love with your great sence of humor, knowledge, love and caring!
Except for being tired and shaving your head, I expect that you will pull though this with no changes to you personality as you have your other health trial! I also know that the best thing we can all do for you is to communicate mostly in writing (emails and cards that don't require replies from you) as visits and telephone calls tire you easily.
With infinite love,
Your MOM
Dear Mara,
This is a real challenge that you are meeting with determination and humor. If it helps, please know that your friends are pulling for you and deeply admire your optimism. We have heard that the people who have the best odds are the ones who have a positive attitude: if so, there is a lot to cheer for in you.
We will be thinking about you,
Lou Thompson and Alice Galenson
Mara, darling, it's been a good three hours since I posted my first comment, but we just can't stop talking about you and looking at pictures. We all so much admire you, darling! Get well, get well soon! We love you! Talk to you soon,
Yours always,
Zlatna
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