Tag: tyler

  • Kidnapped by Breast Cancer

     

    Moira-McLaughlin-Tyler-Cancer-Square

     

    I Have to Tell You Something
     
     
    I've always been afraid of windowless vans. They're kidnapper vans, right? So I'm usually on the lookout for them.
     
    Unfortunately, my windowless van came disguised. It appeared as a cheery phone call from a nurse the day after my routine mammogram, October 7, 2014.
     
    "It's not cancer," the nurse said.
     
    Of course, I thought. I've never been called back for suspicious tissue since I began my yearly mammograms 15 years ago at age 35 (early in life because my mother and both grandmothers had breast cancer. None of them died from it).
     
    Mentally ending the call, I realized the nurse was still talking.
     
    "It's called LCIS. But it's technically not considered cancer."
     
    Her voice streamed through receiver as I Googled a second opinion…
     
    LCIS is Lobular Carcinoma In Situ.
     
    There is was, "Carcinoma."
     
    BAM. The van's door slammed shut on me and I was kidnapped by cancer.
     
    Strangely, I didn't know it yet.

     

    Moira-McLaughlin-Cancer-Center

     

    My First Day at the Cancer Center — Really?!
     
     
    It's true. LCIS is not cancer. It's abnormal cells that indicate you might get cancer, or you might already have it. It sets you on a fact-finding mission that starts with an ultrasound. I went for the procedure that morning even though I was still sore and exhausted from the mammogram.
     
    Physically, mammograms are not a big deal. But since 1999 I have been debilitated by fibromyalgia. I haven't written about that here because Dog Art Today has been my healthy avatar, a blog by someone who isn't in chronic pain.
     
    The ultrasound showed areas of "architectural distortion." This prompted a core needle biopsy, which feels like being upholstered by a staple gun. It hurt. A lot.
     
    The doctor removed tissue and placed a titanium clip inside my breast. The clip was an anchor for a wire that would poke outside my body on the day of my lumpectomy that was now scheduled.
     
    This all felt extreme, since I did not have cancer. I had LCIS. Mistakenly, I had latched onto the first part of the diagnosis (it's not cancer) and detached from the second part (it could be).

     

    Moira-McLaughlin-Breast-Scan

     

    The Trunk Not the Leaves
     
     
    The first chink in that detachment came from the nurse assisting the biopsy that day. When the doctor left the room, she confided that 20 years ago she had had cancer that resulted in a hysterectomy. I thanked her for sharing, assuming her story was one of post-cancer normality.
     
    It wasn't.
     
    When the doctor left the room again, she told me how hard it was. Not because of the cancer, but because of the friends who fell away from her. Looking back, she said, it was for the best. It ended up being an efficient, though painful, way to rid herself of toxic people all at once.
     
    It was a disturbing message, but one that didn't apply to me. I certainly didn't have toxic people in my life. And I didn't have cancer.

     

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    My Oncologist's Door
     

    But, I was being treated at the cancer center and that meant I needed a team. So I met with an energetic surgeon with a penchant for drawing pictures with Sharpies (his comparison of lobules to broccoli was quite helpful), a young, beautiful, Chinese oncologist with instincts of a Jedi, and a charming radiologist of the cashmere-clad horsey set from Napa.

    I felt the worst for the radiologist. He was passionate about his graphs and flow charts, eager to share his wealth of the most current research. But it seemed to me that I was wasting his professorial office hours for a college course I intended to drop. 
     
    But as he dissertated on what a lumpectomy might reveal, it happened, I experienced a mental eclipse. Something dark sent an internal memo to my conscious brain. It read, "I am a cancer patient. And this is not going to be 'journey' or even a 'battle,' both terms that imply agency. This was a hostage situation, one I might not survive."

     

    Moira-McLaughlin-Tyler-Foote-Night-Nurse

     

    Tyler Foote:Dark Night

     

    Being sick is hard work. Metaphorically speaking, I was transported to a labor camp not a cell.

    My mother, a three-time cancer patient, compares it to being Shanghaied — arriving doped and alone in a foreign country. And in this new world, where you don't speak the language, you're expected to get your masters degrees in medicine, financial planning, healthcare administration, and existential philosophy.

    Your will and your advance healthcare directive are due immediately.

    And, most devastating, you need to plan for someone to take care of your dog. Who will understand that he likes to go out three times before 10am. That the words "indoor bark" will turn down his volume. That he loves to catch his small, orange Chunky ball in his mouth, and that he needs to have the fur between his toes checked for foxtails every time he comes in from a walk.

    It was too much. But it all had to be done. By me.

    The lumpectomy went well.

    The pathology report did not.

     

    Moira-McLaughlin-Pathology-revised-low-res

     

    Waiting for My Pathology Report

     

    I had cancer. Two kinds, my surgeon told me as he read the report just coming in on his laptop: Ductal Carninoma in Situ (DCIS) and Invasive Lobular Carcinoma (ILC).

    Silence, as he stared at the screen.

    "Well, obviously I'm disappointed," I said.

    Finally he looked at me and said, "You're going to have your feelings. But it's better to know."

    His lack of drama was reassuring, like a plumber telling you the clog is on your property, not the city's. The old oak is going to have to come down. Sad, yes, but do-able. Let's get to work.

    But things got complicated fast. I was scheduled for a lymph node removal to see if the cancer had spread. But a pre-op MRI showed suspicious tissue in my other breast. 

    My Jedi oncologist postponed my surgery and ordered another MRI.  It showed probable cancer in my other breast. Another core needle biopsy confirmed it was cancer.

    Now I was bombarded with decisions as I felt rogue cells metastasizing with each passing second. And here's the truth that Pinktober doesn't convey, breast cancer is grotesque.

    Bilateral mastectomy with or without concurrent reconstruction. Implant rupture. Tissue rotation. Nipple preservation. Areola tattooing. Massive scaring. Excessive bleeding. Breast prostheses. Flap failure. And "the chance that the cosmetic result will not be as pleasing as expected."

     

    Moira-McLaughlin-Cancer-Selfie-600

    Breast Cancer is Not Pretty

     

    After hours of conversations with my mom (my long distance guru) and my sister (my nearby caregiver), I decided to stay with my local team in Grass Valley, a small, rural community in Northern California.

    I had two surgeries for lumpectomies, lymph node removal, and a reexcision. My prognosis worsened with each new pathology update. But after my second surgery, things turned around. My cancer was stage 1. It hadn't spread to my lymph nodes, and I didn't need chemo.

    (This is for other breast cancer patients. Feel free to skip. I had LCIS, DCIS, ILC, ER positive, PR positive, HER Negative, BRCA negative, and an ONCO Score of 10.)

    A cancer diagnosis is not like in the movies, that scene when the doctor explains the whole situation to the character and the audience. A full diagnosis comes in pieces, from labs across the country that lose your tissue sample and take weeks to respond, from  MRIs that are unreadable for no known reason and need to be re-administered, from corporations who own the rights to genetic testing that your insurance first has to approve. It takes weeks, and for me months, to get the full picture.

     

    Moira-McLaughlin-Puzzle

     

    Unfinished Business at the Cancer Center

     

    Surprisingly, I managed the surgeries and the six weeks of radiation pretty well. I was exhausted and in pain, but I was functioning. I posted on this blog for a while and was able to make art and mount several shows for the DANK artist collective I was in. 

    Sadly, the nurse who told me cancer could spread to relationships more aggressively than to cells turned out to be right. Not everyone wants to deal with your cancer. And it becomes clear in a terrifying way that you are only the protagonist in your own life. To others, you're a bit player, easily dropped.

    The flip side of this free fall is that people surprise you in unexpected and beautiful ways.

    But, to be clear, I'm not saying  "Cancer is a gift."

    This concept enrages me because it victimizes patients who are scared, hopeless, angry, and alone. I felt myself butting up against it (and colluding with it) as I told people about my diagnosis. I always had a sunny lilt in my voice. I'll be fine, I told them. It was phony, but it was an easier narrative to say out loud, and marketing companies had done an excellent job laying the base for how pretty and empowering breast cancer can be.

    Former breast cancer patient (I also hate the word "survivor") Barbara Ehrenreich, author of Bright-Sided: How Positive Thinking is Undermining America gets it right in her article "Smile: You've Got Cancer," when she notes…

    In the mainstream of breast cancer culture, there is very little anger, no mention of possible environmental causes, and few comments about the fact that, in all but the more advanced, metastasized cases, it is the "treatments", not the disease, that cause the immediate illness and pain. In fact, the overall tone is almost universally upbeat.

    When I couldn't put on that upbeat performance, I isolated. It's why I stopped blogging. And why It's been so hard to start again.

     

    Moira-McLaughlin-cancer-bulletin-board-600

     

    Is this helpful?

     

    The truth is I had the "good kind of cancer" and it is a nightmare.

    It's been over two years since my treatment ended and I am still struggling. Granted, fibromyalgia exacerbated my pain and my genetics have made my depression clinical. But this is what it means to have cancer. You always have it, even when technically you don't. As they say on the breast cancer message boards when they quote The Eagles' Hotel California, "You can check out any time, but you can never leave."

    Writing this is post is a sign that I'm feeling better, though I still feel removed from many of the things I used to love. I've had a crippling case of "why bother." But today I feel well enough to Photoshop a selfie for you so you'll believe that I'm on the mend…

     

    Moira-McLaughlin-Cancer-Polaroid

     

     Moira McLaughlin: Self Portrait with Cancer

     

    I don't know if Dog Art Today will remain the same or how often I will post. And I am warning you now that I don't feel neutral about the man in the White House, so Trump voters feel free to delete me from your inbox. But I'm here. I've missed connecting with you. And the dog I saved five years ago has saved me every day since I was kidnapped.

     

     

    Tyler-Foote-New-Perspective

     New Perspective

     

    I look forward to sharing more from my new perspective.

    P.S. If you can't remember the last time you had a mammogram, call and schedule yours right now. My surgeon is right. It's better to know.

     

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  • Dog Art Today Bumper Sticker Drive

     

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    DAT Euro-style Bumper Sticker for $7

    Three times a year our local radio station does a membership drive, and I always say to myself, "I should do that for Dog Art Today."  Then I don't.   Because:

    – Fundraising makes me uncomfortable.
    – It always seems like a bad time; graduation, Father's Day, etc.

    I finally decided if it's ok for KVMR, PBS, NPR, it's ok for DAT.   

    And I made these bumper stickers.  To me they are a big deal, because growing up my parents were so repulsed by bumper stickers, the thought of putting one on your car would be like tattooing your face.

    DAT_bumper_sticker_dog_art_today_2

     

    My First Bumper Sticker

    Want to try it?

    You're totally allowed to put a bumper sticker on your car. 

    And you will be showing your support for the dog art content and artists' community you've come to know and trust at Dog Art Today.  

     

    Buy your DAT Euro-style Bumper Sticker
    $7 + free shipping

     

    Dat_bumper_sticker_dog_art_today_1

     

    Tyler says, "Support Dog Art Today."

     

    If funds are low, but you want to put a DAT bumper sticker on your car, email me and I will send you one.

    If you just want to make a donation, that would be awesome too.

    Thank you — Moira McLaughlin

  • Did You Ever Want to Have Kids?

    As a childless 45-year-old woman, I'm sometimes asked, "Did you ever want to have kids?"

    The truth is, I never did until I moved to Nevada County.  Luckily, my landlord lets me borrow his.  Meet Braydon and Munch , Pygmy goats who stayed with us this weekend. 

     

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    Braydon and Munch

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    Alfalfa and Oats for Breakfast

    Goats_5

     

    Tyler Wants to Play

    Gpats_4

     

    A Head Butt Means I Like You

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    Seriously, Let Me In

    Goats_10

     

    The Burn Pile is Yummy

    My nieces also came to visit…

     

    Layla_sabrina_fairy_water

     

    Making Fairy Water

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    Fairy Water

    Sabrina

     

    It's Hard to Photograph a Fairy Who Doesn't Want Her Picture Taken

     

    Happy Mother's Day to all the mothers who care for kids and fairies every day, especially my own mother who instilled in me a love of both.

  • Why Tyler is My Dog

     

    It's still a mystery how I knew Tyler was my dog.

    But I think it has something to do with his socks…

     

    Tyler_red_boots

     

    Tyler Foote at Dog Bar by Moira McLaughlin, 2012

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    Kathleen and Moira McLaughlin, 1972

    I didn't like running around in my bare feet either.

  • The Story of Tyler’s Stick

     

    Tyler_4

     

    Bosco, 6 month Schnauzer/Terrier Mix by Debby Burchett

     

    It was Saturday night.  I was in bed, depressed, and trolling for dogs when I saw the photo of Bosco (above).

    I emailed the rescue.  The next morning, Cheryl Douglass of Chows Plus emailed me back. Yes, Bosco was available. He was with his foster mom, Debby Burchett in Folsom.  I called Debby.  We had a long discussion about how sweet and happy and affectionate Bosco is.  She also mentioned he had an abscess. It didn't sound like a big deal.

    I thought about Bosco all day Sunday.   I showed his photo to my friends at the pub (seriously we have a pub called Ol' Republic in Nevada City now). I emailed his photo to my mom and dad.  I called my friend Kat and asked her to go with me to Folsom on Monday morning. She agreed.

    Kat and I arrived at Bosco's foster mom Debby Burchett's tailoring shop, Alterations Express.  We waited outside for her.  I felt sick.  Am I ready to get a dog?  It's only been three months.

    When Debby arrived we heard the jingle of leashes before we saw the dogs (her other foster dog Raina was with her).  When Bosco saw me, he ran into my arms like a cheesy movie of lovers reuniting.  He circled round and sat in my lap.  Well, that's it.  Here's my new dog. 

    Then I looked down and and saw the abscess.  It was swollen, jagged, and gruesome.  I couldn't breath. 

    Debby reassured me I could flush it out and hot pack it and it would heal.  She was so confident, coming from the world of horses, that I was encouraged.  I called Bosco's vet and they sounded encouraging too.  I talked to Cheryl Douglass and we negotiated the care of Bosco's treatment. 

    I took him home and renamed him Tyler.  He was sweet and happy and affectionate…

     

     

    Tyler's First Day by Sheila Cameron (view it on YouTube)

     

    Then, about 24 hours later he snapped at me.  Very aggressively.  It was late afternoon on a rainy Tuesday.  I had said I would use Bosco/Tyler's vet in Sacramento.  That was an hour away and I wasn't sure I would make it time.  I called Cheryl and she arranged for me to see a local Nevada City veterinarian named Dr. Denny Nolet at Pine Creek Veterinary Clinic.

    I put on my down coat and leather gloves for protection and put Tyler in the car.

    When I got to the office Dr. Nolet examined Tyler.  He said he wanted to clean out the wound.  That meant surgery.  I sat in the waiting room, but then Dr. Nolet asked me if I wanted to come in and see.

    No, I didn't.  Injury makes me queasy.  When I was a kid I was traumatized by the safety town movies and the stations of the cross.  I never grew out of that.

    But I went in.

    Tyler was opened up.  Dr. Nolet showed me the necrotic tissue he took out.  He showed me the suture he found.  He showed me the hole so deep you could see Tyler's rib cage.  I almost passed out.  One of the technnicians rolled over a stool and sat me down. 

    "How bad is it?" I asked.

    "Here's what concerns me…" said Dr. Nolet.

    I looked and tried to not look. 

    "This puncture wound is so deep and so close to the thoracic cavity that there is a risk the membrane that protects it could rupture.  If that happens air would rush in.  And that is life threatening.  There are ways to address it…"  (Here's where I don't remember what he said because it felt like my thoracic membrane had ruptured.)

    I watched as Dr. Nolet took out more tissue, inserted a tube for drainage, and sewed up Tyler.  He scratched his ears as the techs took him out of sedation.  He was very gentle with him.

    For the next two days Tyler and I slept on the couch that I turned into a furniture fort by wedging it against the coffee table, the dog crate, an easy chair, and a folding chair.  I wanted to make it impossible for him to jump down.  I couldn't get a cone on him so I cut up some t-shirts to keep him from getting to his stiches.  He wasn't doing well…

     

    Tyler_Foote_sleeping_in_t_shirt

    But he let me take his photo with his tube in…

     

    Tyler_Foote_tube

     

    On Thursday, I was putting a hot compress on his wound and I saw something poke out. It was hard and white.  It quickly retreated.  I was sleep-deprived and doubted myself.  But I saw it again.   I called the Pine Creek office and told them.  They said bring him in.

    Dr. Nolet brought us back into the operating room.  He flushed out Tyler's wound.  He listened to me as I described what I saw.

    "It could be some tissue," he said.

    "It didn't look like tissue," I said.  After witnessing Tyler's surgery, I knew what tissue from my dog looked like.

    "It looked like a rod," I told him.

    Silence.

    "Maybe it was the microchip," said one of the techs.

    That made sense to me, because it looked man made.

    Dr. Nolet didn't seem convinced.

    I thought about its color and shape. "Maybe it was a tooth," I said.

    "Maybe," said Dr. Nolet, "it could be a tooth from a small animal that attacked him and got stuck inside."

    That would explain a lot, the swelling, the refusal to heal.

    He poked around inside Tyler's stitches and tried to find it.  He commented on what a good dog he was for letting him do it.  I felt proud, like I had formed his personality in the last three days.   Or maybe just proud that I picked such a good boy.

    Dr. Nolet didn't find anything.  But he wasn't dismissive.  He told me that if I saw it again I should pull it out.  He sent me home with forceps.

    We spent another night on the couch.

    The next morning I was doing his hot compress.  And I saw it.   I didn't have time to get the forceps.  I pulled.  And pulled.  It was wooden and sharp and it kept getting larger in diameter.  Tyler was screaming.  I could tell there was more inside him and I had to keep pulling until finally it was out.  It was about 6" long. 

    I think it was a coffee stirrer.

    Or a stick from a corn dog.

    Some people think it was a chopstick.

    Or he got shived in Folsom…

     

    Tyler_footes_stick-enhanced

    Tyler Foote's Stick

     

    I called Pine Creek and babbled what happened. 

    "Tell her to come in," Dr. Nolet said, "and tell her to bring the stick."

    Dr. Nolet cleaned Tyler's wound, checked his tube, and everyone had see the stick and hear the story.  Or maybe I just needed to keep repeating it.

    After that, Tyler healed quickly.  He got his tube out last week and his stitches out this week. 

    I asked Dr. Nolet if I could interview him.  He graciously agreed.  I must emphasize graciously because he confessed during the interview that no vet wants to be known for missing a 6" stick inside a dog he operated on.  But he was the third vet how saw Tyler.  I saw Tyler  opened up on the operating table.  I can't understand where the stick was hiding (don't you love how I am a surgical expert now?)

    Here is our exchange:

    Moira McLaughlin (Me): What did you think when you first saw Tyler's wound?

    Dr. Nolet:  "I thought it wasn't healing properly for the time involved."

    MM: When you performed the surgery, you asked me to come in and look.  Do you usually do this with pet owners and why?

    Dr. Nolet: I ask people if they are interested in seeing it because it can be difficult to explain.  I like to give the pet owner as much information as they want.

    MM: Well, I want you to know that I really appreciate it.  Even though I thought I would faint, it helped me understand what was going on.  And it helped me with Tyler's care.  What were your thoughts when you opened up the wound?

    Dr. Nolet:  I was surprised by how deep it was.  But I tested his lungs with positive pressure and no air was emitted, so that was good.  But, as I mentioned, if that membrane ruptured he could have suffocated.

    MM: What did you think when I called and described the stick?

    Dr. Nolet: I thought if she's saying six inches then it must be at least two or three.  When I saw it I was astounded.

    MM: On a scale of 1-10, 10 being the most strange thing you've ever seen in your practice, how strange was this?

    Dr. Nolet: a 9.

    MM: Do you still have the stick and what will you do with it?

    [There was discussion in the office about where the stick was and it didn't turn up.]

    Dr. Nolet:  If I had it, I would frame it.

    I asked if I could take a photo of Tyler and him. (I haven't honed my photographing-a-black-dog skills.)

     

    Dr_denny_nolet_and_tyler

     

    Dr. Denny Nolet and Tyler

    Later, Tyler and I stopped by my sister's art co-op,  Art Works, and I asked her take a photo of me and my happy, sweet, affectionate, healthy dog…

     

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    Moira and Tyler on Mill St. by Sheila Cameron

    I am still processing this whole situation.   But I want share this: many campaigns promote rescue dogs with the concept that "they are not damaged."  But the truth is even if they are damaged, they still might be excellent dogs. 

    Also, I am in awe of the people who are on the front lines of rescue.   People like Debby Burchett, Tyler's foster mom, who took him in even though he had that wound and she had three other dogs and a business to run.

    And Dr. Denny Nolet and the the staff at Pine Creek Veterinary Clinic. I don't know what would have happened if he had not agreed to see us on that rainy night, or if he had shut me down when I told him I saw something.  Thank you for listening.  And for empowering me to "pull it out."

    Above all, thank you Cheryl Douglass of Chows Plus for trusting your instincts and rescuing Tyler from the City of Sacramento Animal Shelter, who does a terrific dog promoting highly-adoptable dogs, but understandably doesn't have the ability to handle special cases like Tyler's. 

    As promised, Chows Plus paid for Tyler's medical expenses. And incurring that cost challenges the organization's ability to rescue and treat other dogs. If you would like to make a donation in honor of Tyler or Dog Art Today or me on my birthday today, please donate below…

    Thank you.  We are doing great.

  • My New Pup Tyler Aloysius McLaughlin

     

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    Tyler Aloysius McLaughlin

    My new pup, a six-month old Schnauzer/Terrier mix, and I found each other on Monday.  On Tuesday, he had emergency surgery for an infected wound.  He is on the mend.  And I am in love.  More soon about the whole story, once he is healed.

    There are a few more photos on my Facebook page.

    Photograph by Sheila Cameron.