In my little curtained-off waiting area in the
radiology department of Roswell
Park Comprehensive
Cancer Center
last week, it suddenly feels like 2015 again.
I’m a patient.
Everyone who steps in asks my name. And my date of
birth. I’m cold. I’m hungry. I’ve been fasting all day for the CAT scan. And
despite my best efforts at super-hydrating to swell my veins, finding one for
the IV isn’t a slam-dunk.
The next poke in back of my hand stings more, but at
least it works. Then the injection and that familiar warm sensation. First in
my nose and mouth, then in my butt.
I have no aversion to the scan – hands over my head, the
slide into the machine’s doughnut hole, the instructions to hold your breath. I’m
less fond of the second IV injection – the dye which highlights my internal
plumbing. As I wait for a return visit to the machine, this time lying on my
stomach, there’s dull pain on both sides of my lower back. The kidneys are not
pleased, but they get over it.
I mention it three days later when I return to Roswell Park for a visit with the man who saved
my life four years ago – Dr. Khurshid Guru, the master of robotic surgery. Back
then, he said I’d have an 80% chance of living five years. Now, after nearly 80% of
those five years, the tests continue to be good. I’m still cancer-free. Dr.
Guru says he’ll see me again in 12 months.