University study

I Think I Have Gone Slighty Mad

 

You know when you do something in life and you really wonder why you do it? I think my recent battle with the big C for the third time has done something to my brain.

I have a “bucket list” – a list of things I would like to do/wish I had done in life; and now I have gone and actively registered for one of these things. I have decided to study towards a Masters degree in English through the Open University. I have actually registered for the thing – and after a couple of modules that I need to do first (seeing as my first degree has NOTHING to do with literary critical analysis and big important literary jargony type words) – I will be the Mary Beard of the Literary world. Well, almost.

Because I already have a degree, I don’t need to do another undergraduate one – thank goodness – but the staff at the OU have recommended I get up to senior arts student level by doing these two modules first….the first one involving scrutinising 14 (yes FOURTEEN) pieces of writing, six dissertations and an exam. Sounds a bit like a Christmas carol! I now have the reading list which includes weird and wonderful concoctions such as:

The Sign of Four – Conan-Doyle
The Duchess of Malfi – Webster
Othello – good old Willie Shakespeare
Wuthering Heights – Bronte (no not the Kate Bush song! – plus I’ve already read it)
Candide – Voltaire (read this one!)
Oroonoko – Behn
The Lonely Londoners – Selvon
The Emigrants – Sebald
Dancing at Lughnasa – Friel (yeah, I hadn’t heard of this either!)
Dubliners – Joyce (have read this one – nah nah nee nah nah!)
The Beach at Falesa – RL Stevenson
The Confessions of an English Opium Eater – DeQuincey
Questions of Travel  – Bishop
Metropolis – Fritz Lang

I’ve read maybe three of the above, so that means I have eleven to wade through before the course starts in September. Right now I am thinking “waaahhhh” and now you will see why I think my cancer treatment has done something to my brain!

That’s nothing to what I will have to do in the next module! And I am already fretting about what I will find 80 pages to write about in my Masters dissertation……

See that bucket list of mine – I think it needs revising…….. As for now, I have to pick one of the above to start on tomorrow. Eeny meeny miney mo……

Alternative About Me

Five Weeks To Go (originally published April 2012)

 

It’s been way too long since I wrote my last blog, so it’s time for a quick update on my life, the universe and everything. It’s been a pretty hectic and “full-on” few months!
At the time of my last blog I was awaiting my second operation to remove the DCIS cells that the surgeon hadn’t been able to get out initially – it’s pretty common for this to happen, so I wasn’t as worried this time around. In fact, the nurses had to tuck me into the bed with a “Bear Hugger” to stop me from getting up and “getting in their way” – they were busy and I felt at a loose end! Well, they do say nurses make terrible patients! Fortunately, following this second op, the surgeon was able to tell me that they had removed all the cancerous cells that were there at the time, and put me on a course of tablets (tamoxifen) for two months, stopping for a month before surgery. These were ok actually, I had expected tons of side-effects, but actually instead of gaining weight, I lost heaps mainly due to the fact that it made my food taste metallic and therefore made me feel nauseous. The only meal I could really enjoy was dinner when I totally “pigged out”. So currently I am a size 6, which I can’t complain about I suppose! I also felt absolutely shattered a lot of the time. Unfortunately for me, following my op I have to go back on these darn pills for five years – the reason being that if any rogue cancer cells get into my blood stream during surgery, the tamoxifen will kill them off. So at this current moment in time, I am on my drug break, and have five weeks to go until surgery (the date for this being Tuesday 5th June – just after the Jubilee!). If I’m being honest, I do have my “wobbly” moments, but in another way, I’m looking forward to living without the threat of imminent cancer for the first time in half my life! And a new bod for summer as well, even though for a good proportion of the season I will be under bandages! During the wobbly moments I keep telling myself that of the two evils left to me – a lifespan of 5 years or this operation, the latter is the one I would have one hundred times over as long as it meant I could see my kids grow up etc. Heck, there’s a lot of living left in me to do yet! Cancer is NOT going to beat me this time. No way Jose!
Next Sunday (6th May) I am running Cancer Research’s Race For Life with two of my lovely friends. It’s only a 5k one (the 10k happens just after my surgery, so there is no WAY I could do that, unless someone pushed me in a wheelchair!), but for me – who is a total non-runner, (I have the worst knees out that dislocate easily – so this will be fun!), it is a marathon. I wanted to do it as an almost three-times survivor with a positive message, that cancer doesn’t kill everyone, and the sign I am planning on wearing on my back will say something to that effect. I have benefited from new advances in cancer treatments and cures – and seeing that twice as many patients are cured from cancer than they were 40 years ago (Cancer Research statistic) – surviving this dreadful disease is becoming more commonplace. I’m also running it for
family members and friends who have/have had cancer, and also those people who I do not know who have/have had cancer; as well as those who lost their battles. So that’s a lot of people I am trying to raise money for! To date, I have raised £615 through the generosity of Facebook friends, Twitter followers and personal friends. If you are in the position to sponsor me, please visit www.raceforlifesponsorme.org/june-louiselaurenson or text SJLL71 £donationamount to 70070.
So that’s me. Oh yes, I have also given up my nursing registration – that’s a story for a separate blog – and am looking forward to somehow starting a brand new life chapter and career when things start getting back to normal in August – I’m not sure doing what career-wise yet – but waiting to see what opportunities life throws at me. Life is for living, and that is what I intend to do!
Alternative About Me

Me vs The Big C (originally published Jan 2012)

Me v The Big C. Round Three.

It’s been a while since I updated my blog, purely because I have been busy fighting the dastardly villain known as Big C – and so far, I believe, I have the upper hand.

Many of you will know, or have read on my blog, that I have had Hodgkins Lymphoma twice – several years ago, and that I am cured from that disease. However, not content to be vanquished by attacking my lymphatic system, Big C has come back – this time in my left breast.
Because I had very very high dose mantle radiotherapy for my first bout of Hodgkins, in 1992, (which was situated in my mediastinum – so my upper chest area received the full whack of radiation), I have been going for annual mammograms. My haematologist had warned me that I was at very high risk of contracting breast cancer in the future, way back when my treatment was due to start, but me – being faced with cancer at the age of 21 – just wanted it gone, thinking I would deal with the complications later on. Well, the last 18 years of mammograms came and went, and save one visit that required a repeat xray done, all were normal. I have to admit as to getting a bit lax about these appointments when year after year the same letter came back saying there were no abnormalities and that they would call me back a year later for my next one. I even got to questioning as to whether or not these visits should be continued. After all – that’s 18 years ago, I thought. If I was going to have contracted breast cancer, then it would have appeared by now…….
Then came last November. Oh joy, I thought, another mammogram appointment. Well, I know what the outcome is going to be. I have no lumps or bumps anywhere, no swollen lymph glands under my arm and I’ve been in good health – ach, it’s a waste of an afternoon, but I’ll go anyway. I went, got all the xrays done, thought no more of it. Until the following week. When a letter arrived on the front door mat. I could see from the franking on the envelope that it was from the clinic, and I was surprised they had got back to me so quickly considering everything was ok, but all became apparent that things were not quite as normal as they should be. I had to go back for a mammogram, an ultrasound and possibly a biopsy the following Friday. That was all the letter said. They would tell me why I had been recalled at that visit. Well, I got a little stressed about this for a few minutes – but then remembered I had had a recall several years earlier and everything was ok, and despite them mentioning the other tests, I probably wouldn’t need them – it would be a standard letter. I was also informed to leave most of the day free for this appointment.
Roll on a week and I’m back at the clinic. Mammogram duly repeated, and an ultrasound done, I got called into a doctor’s consulting room and was shown my films. Both xray and ultrasound had confirmed that there was a tumour in the left breast, but until they did biopsies, they couldn’t tell if it was malignant or not. Would I please take a seat in the waiting room whilst the doctor finished her clinic and then they would do the biopsy afterwards?
An hour went by. People came and went. I won’t forget that waiting room. It was small, chairs all round the wall, tea and coffee-making facilities and a radio tuned to the local station emitting some well needed silence breaking tunes. And an overpowering sense of fear. Lots and lots of very very scared women, I have to say, me included. “Ach”, I thought. “You know what? If it is malignant, well then I’ll just do what I did with my Hodgkins and beat it to a pulp. Cancer is not a death sentence”. But I was still scared. Even though I had no symptoms whatsoever.
Eventually I was the only one left in the waiting room. Silence, apart from the radio which was playing this song (below). Freakily, it has stuck in my head since and is my mantra when I find things get a bit too much… In fact it is my cancer theme song.
After a wait of about an hour, I got my biopsies done (eight samples were taken under local anaesthetic), and a further wait of four days ensued. Went back to the clinic on the fourth day and was told that indeed, the tumour was malignant. The world didn’t come crashing down round my ears – I just put on the armour I remember putting on when battling my Hodgkins and knew that I would be the victor in this battle against Big C. Round Three. Ding ding.
An MRI was done, which indicated that it was a small tumour – about 11mm in size, and that it had not spread to my lymph nodes. Further tests showed that it was also non-aggressive and slow growing, so if there was any good news from this whole thing – that was it. Dates for surgery to remove the tumour were made, and treatment was discussed. Because I have had radiotherapy to that area in the past, standard modes of preventative therapy are not open to me, but I agreed with the surgeon that tumour removal and a course of tamoxifen for five years would suit me fine at this stage. He warned me that I am more likely to have a recurrence – but I said, if that happened, I would deal with it at the time.
I had surgery as a day case on 28th December 2011, which kind of spoiled my Christmas but at least I would be starting New Year cancer free. Before I went to theatre I had to get a wire inserted into my left breast so that the surgeon could locate the tumour. That was a relatively painless procedure – a bit stingy but that’s all. Surgery was performed, and four hours and several hundred cups of tea later, I was home.
I went to my follow-up visit at the clinic yesterday afternoon where I was told the results of the surgery. I had gone to the clinic expecting to start tamoxifen treatment, but as they say…”the best laid plans of mice and men”. The surgeon told me that the tumour itself had been removed, but pathology shows that there are still some DCIS (ductal carcinoma in situ) cells left  in me, that need removed before they develop into another tumour – so a further operation, smaller this time, would be required so that they could remove the affected tissue. That was a bit of a bummer (pardon my French). So the date for that is 1st February. Then, armed with research and statistics, the surgeon then explained that I am at extremely high risk of cancer recurring within the next few months. I won’t bore you with all the numbers, but put it this way, the choices I have are to keep my boobs and have a much shorter lifespan, or to have a bilateral mastectomy and live into old age. That hit like a brick! To be honest, I guessed that a mastectomy would be in the offing, so I was prepared for it, but not quite so soon as what the surgeon was proposing. However, with two children, I just know which decision I am going to choose. I want to see them grow up, get married, have children. I want to live into old age being a crazy Granny. So the bilateral mastectomy and reconstructive surgery it will be – probably mid-June time. It’s going to be emotional, but conquering Big C isn’t easy. He doesn’t go away without a fight. But I know in doing this, I am going to win.

“You gotta be bad, you gotta be bold, you gotta be wiser. You gotta be hard, you gotta be tough, you gotta be stronger. You gotta be cool, you gotta be calm, you gotta stay together. All I know, all I know, love will save the day” (Des’Ree “You Gotta Be”)

Stay tuned.
Poems

Look At Us Now

 

As I compile my family tree,
Tapping away on my laptop PC,
I wonder what those, whose names I type,
Would think of life now, and all its hype.
In days of yore the man was provider,
And the Web they knew was spun by a spider.
Morals have changed as well, it is true,
They’d wonder what the world has come to!
These days of glamour and fast cars,
Celebrity, millionaires and scruffy pop-stars.
Televisions with super-size screens,
And almost all thinking being done by machines.
Eighty years ago, who could have known
There would be such a thing as a mobile phone?
And if you’d thought that computers were bad,
There would suddenly emerge the Apple iPad.
And you may as well forget about writing a letter,
As these days emailing is found to be better.
One goes into bookshops, to buy or just look
For a novel to download to one’s brand new e-book.
The news reports crime due to family dysfunctions,
Or celebrities taking out super-injunctions.
While we all live with the greenhouse effect,
And the sad loss of manners and general respect.
Technology moves fast and sweeps us along,
But are all of these changes necessarily wrong?
Cures for diseases and a widening of knowledge,
And huge numbers of students at Uni and college.
Answers to questions, which couldn’t be solved
Are nowadays nearer to being resolved.
The age of the earth, the planets in space
And the manifest wonders of the human race.
As I compile my family tree,
Tapping away on my laptop PC,
I wonder what those, whose names I type,
Would think of life now, and all its hype.
General

Ward whoppers

 
I have recently decided to take a career break from the profession I worked hard at for 16 years. After working in areas as diverse as psychogeriatrics to Pharmacological research, earlier this year I decided to hang up my virtual “nurse’s cap” (they did away with these items of uniform along with the shocking electric blue dresses when I finished my training) and graze on pastures new. I’m not yet sure what these pastures will be, but I know they will be something completely different from what I have done.
Looking back over the years, there have been – as with any job – good days and horrendous days. Days when patients who were at death’s door improve so much that they are able to go home to continue their rehabilitation; and days when patients unexpectedly and suddenly pass away leaving devastation among both staff and families. As I have been reflecting over the years I have worked in the nursing profession, some of the funnier stories have come to mind – and I thought I would share them with you.

When I left school I took a Gap Year before Uni, as I had changed my mind from studying English to applying for a place on a Nursing Degree, and I wanted to make sure I was doing the right thing before I started on the course. For this year, I worked in a psychogeriatric ward, where all the patients either had Alzheimers or Dementia. My job was that of a nursing assistant – and coming straight from a very strictly disciplined and elitist girls’ school, it was a real eye opener. It was during this year that I saw my first naked person, and I was embarrassed in bathing people and helping them to the toilet.

Mr and Mrs
One of the patients had been a hospital matron in her day – and she liked to help the nursing staff out with little jobs. Except that this lady was suffering from dementia, and really thought she was still back in her hospital ward ordering people about. One morning I went into one of the bedrooms to open the curtains, and I was met with a lot of even more confused women (they were confused enough to start with) trying to beat some of the very confused male patients out of their beds. Apparently our matron patient had believed they were married couples and had insisted that they shared beds.
Dent-Your Pride
Our matron patient also liked to clear all the dentures off the lockers by the beds, tip them into a communal bowl, wash them and return them back to the dishes on the lockers. The problem was, she was so confused that she didn’t match names to teeth, nor sets of dentures. So one morning, when I did my usual walking into the room and asking how patients were, I had a bit of a surprise when one old lady opened her mouth to answer. I thought I was talking to Mr Ed in a nightdress. The poor soul had been given two top sets of dentures from our matron patient and had been “ordered” by her to put them in, the result being that all one could see was teeth. Her neighbour in the next bed was having major difficulty talking without one set of teeth falling down, until I realised she had two bottom sets! It took a long time for a colleague and I to fetch back all the teeth, wash them thoroughly again and return them to their rightful owners.
Amateur Dram-atics
The next story was a goof up by me. By this time I was a student nurse and I was in one of my first ward placements. I think I was about 19 years old. I was working a late shift and we were trying to get the surgical patients comfortable for bed, as it was coming up to 9.30pm, and the night staff were due on. One of the staff nurses had done the drug round and got called away to give report. She turned to me as she headed to the office and said, “oh Mr So-and-so needs his nightly dram. It helps him sleep. Could you sort that for him please?” and disappeared. She had told me where the whisky was kept, so I got the bottle and then…….wait a minute…..how much IS a dram? I should make it known that I have never been a pub/club fan, and my parents never drank whisky. I knew there was such a thing as a dram, but not how much it was in volume. I walked down the ward to see if anyone else was about I could ask, but the others were either handing over to the night staff, or were busy with patients. So, I was going to have to guess. Now, at this point I should say that now I believe a dram is about 30mls. Student nurse me decided to fill a glass ¾ full of whisky….surely that is a dram? Not too much, but yet not too little. Yeah….I’m sure that’s about right…..and I took this liquid nectar to its expectant recipient – an elderly man with Friar Tuck hair, and no legs. Well, the patient took the glass, seemed VERY happy with his portion, thanked me and I went out of the bedroom.
A few minutes later a call-bell from this six-bedded room was sounded and I went to answer it. On entering the room, I was met with loud raucous singing and laughing; as well as five other baffled male patients. My invalid patient had got so merry on the “dram” I had given him, he had rolled off the bed, and was rolling about the floor like a Weeble toy, singing his heart out. We had to put him in the ward sitting room, with glassfuls of water, until he sobered up. After that, he asked for me to give him his nightly “dram”, but I avoided it like the plague! The other members of staff found it highly amusing.
Verbal Diahorrea
Three years later, I am about to finish my nursing degree and I am doing my management/senior student placement in a gynaecology ward. Students in these environments are nearly always given the enemas to do, and I was always glad when more junior students to me were working my shifts.
On the occasion in question, I was working with a second year student. I had worked with her a lot, and taught her a few things – including how to give enemas and suppositories. On this shift, I was exceptionally busy; I had dressings upon dressings to do and I was also conscious that one of the women needed a pre-op suppository given to her. The student was at a loose end, so I asked her if she would be happy to do the “pre-op supp” for me – she had watched me doing it enough times after all. Or I thought she had. Yes, she said she was fine to do it, and scurried off to get the necessary item.
About ten minutes later, I was doing an amputation stump dressing, when a face peeked around the curtain. “June”, said the student. “Mrs So-and-so is refusing her pre-op medication. Could you maybe try?” I waited until the dressing I was helping with was done, and then I went to attend to Mrs So-and-so, expecting her to be a bit “Bolshy”. Quite the opposite, I had a chat with her, gave her the pre-op supp, left her to it, washed my hands and got on with my duties. A short time afterwards the student cautiously approached me. “Did you manage to get Mrs So-and-so to have her medication?” she asked. I replied, “Yes I did; and for future reference – patients don’t normally agree to swallow suppositories!”
A day in the Theatre
Another tale from my student days – this time in my Operating Theatre placement. It was my second day, the awe of the hallowed static-free room where you see bits of people you don’t normally see, was still pretty potent. The surgeons were some sort of gods who could perform miraculous healing surgery, and it involved a lot of standing. We had been warned at Uni that Theatre placements are notorious for staff winding up students, and had been told about the “Long Stand” trick, so we thought we were prepared for everything. On this day, I was just an observer. After the two surgeons had argued about which music should accompany the operation, the hacking began. I had been told that I was in to watch a varicose vein operation, it was apparently one of the bloodiest, and you had to be careful to dodge the blood when the vein was removed. At least, that was what I was told. So I was concentrating on waiting for the blood gush and trying not to feel faint, when the main surgeon turned to me and said, “You. Stripper!”. I looked round, not sure if he was talking to me. On blankly looking back at him he repeated, “you. Stripper”. I shyly replied that no I wasn’t that cheap kind of girl. “I need a stripper NOW! Go and get me a stripper!” he bellowed, and out that operating room I ran, trying to work out WHY a surgeon would want some floozy stripping in the theatre when he was meant to be doing an operation. The operating suite was busy that day, so I made a bee-line for the Recovery room and told the staff there what the surgeon had asked for. “Oh, he is wanting a new vein stripper, my dear”, said one of the nurses, who then showed me exactly where to find them. It was a very sheepish me who crept back into the Operating Room with the words, “the stripper is now ready for you”. A lot of hilarity ensued.
A cutting question
A year or two later, I was working in a large General Hospital as a Staff Nurse. One day, during my lunch break I went down to the WRVS to buy a newspaper for one of the patients who had missed the paper trolley on its visit to the ward. On my way back to the ward, along the main corridor, I was stopped by an elderly man who seemed a bit perplexed. “Excuse me nurse”, he said. “I wonder if you could point me in the direction of the Lawnmower ward? “ (He actually was meaning the Longmore Ward – the name of which was taken from the hospital from which the patients were transferred, when it shut down; a ward that dealt with breast cancer chiefly). I told him the correct name, and he seemed relieved. “Ah, that explains things,” he said. “I couldn’t understand why they had put her in Lawnmower ward when she doesn’t like gardening!”
High standards
My last humorous tale occurred in Recovery, just before I left to go on maternity leave. A patient had come out of Theatre after having had a Hickman Line inserted, and it was routine that they had an xray, in Recovery, to ensure that the line was in the right place. This particular patient was a very frail, elderly man, and he was on a new-fangled profile bed, to prevent pressure sores. This bed was quite broad, so we put some extra mobile screens around it for privacy. The radiographer wheeled in the xray machine and set it all up for the man to get his film. There were no other patients in at the time, and the staff were all ushered out of the room whilst the xray was in progress; but we could watch the still sleeping man through the window in the doors.
The radiographer was all set and ready to start the xray, when all of a sudden, the bed started heading heavenwards. The patient was hooked up to drips and monitors which all started alarming as the tension on the tubing and cables got too tight. Still the bed went upwards, and the patient remained asleep. Then, suddenly, the bed started going down, down, down, down…….and just as it was about to start its ascent for the second time, we all went in to find out what was going on. In actual fact, the radiographer had accidentally knocked a “demo” button on the bed as she was leaving it, after setting up the xray!
Eventually the xray was taken, the line was fitted properly, and the man woke up – unaware that his care in recovery had been of an unusually high quality……
Then of course, there WAS that surgeon who was the double of Mr Bean, who used to scare the patients rigid on his pre-op visits, especially when he told them he would be doing their surgery…….
I’m going to miss nursing, there is no doubt about it. As it is an extremely stressful job, and is getting more so, finding the humour in the smallest things is important. I hope you have enjoyed a few of the gems I have shared with you.