Humble servant of the Nation

One Perfect Day

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I guess everyone has days like this from time to time. Utterly perfect days, when everything falls into place, where expectation meets denouement, and everyone involved walks away a winner. Clearly, I am not talking about politics in this country. It is something a lot more important.

As readers of The Australian will know, I was diagnosed with bladder cancer in 2016 and after a series of cowardly attempts at avoiding surgery, I was left with no alternative. The knife beckoned.

In layman’s terms, my bladder, prostate gland and a foot or two of urethra were hacked out and casually hurled into a cytotoxic bin before being incinerated at 1500 degrees centigrade. Wafer-thin slices of my pelvic lymph nodes were sent off for pathology to determine if the cancer had or might spread to what remained of me.

The old bladder has been replaced with a brand, spanking new bladder which is not really a bladder at all. Rather, it is a piece of bowel that is suffering a deep existential crisis but if everything went swimmingly, the new kid on the renal block would develop a rock-solid five schooner capacity.

In the bland words of my medical report, the word swimmingly made no appearance. My recovery was compromised by hypotension (low blood pressure), hypothyroidism (brought on by failed earlier attempts at immunotherapy) and one or two problems with the surgical wound that had to be corrected with another bout of surgery.

I aspirated into my lungs during the first surgery, which led to a bout of pneumonia. Post-surgery, the nurses could no longer find a vein that would pump nutrients and antibiotics into my body, so a PICC (peripherally inserted central catheter) line was installed by angioplasty.

In the early morning the day after the major surgery, I roused from a gentle opioid slumber to find at least two dozen nurses and doctors standing around me with brows furrowed, looking deeply concerned. It is the way of near-death experiences that the near-expiree is always the last to know.

My blood pressure had plummeted. I drifted in and out of consciousness for the remainder of the morning while they pumped my body with 17 litres of fluid. It worked, although the following day I turned into the Michelin Man. My hands looked like I was sporting a pair of flesh-coloured wicketkeeping gloves and, peering underneath the blankets, my scrotum had become elephantine in both structure and size.

I underwent what is politely called nasogastric intubation. Of the many indignities and outrages my body was subject to, this was by far the most unpleasant. My bowels had temporarily packed it in and the tube would enable the nurses to pump out the awful green, bilious contents that had backed up into my stomach. I was conscious throughout as what felt like seven feet of garden hose was thrust up my left nostril. The doctor urged me to swallow and keep swallowing while the tube went past my throat and into my stomach.

At the time, the thought occurred that death would have been preferable, but once the tube was in place, there was no discomfort. I merely felt like a horse with a bad dose of colic.

Those undergoing any form of renal surgery will awake to find themselves attached to various tubes, bags and drains. Often a patient might have one or perhaps two. In my case it was four.

In the two weeks post-surgery, this led to a baffling assortment of bendy hoses leading to drains attached to my hospital bed. At the beginning of their shifts, the nurses would examine all of these and ensure they understood where each tube led. They would then carefully record how much had come out. It was only a matter of time before the tubes looked like the tangle of phone chargers and electrical cords that run out of the power boards behind the telly in most suburban homes. If I wanted to go for a walk around the ward it required the kind of logistics planning normally associated with a polar expedition.

I’m sure endocrinologists would not want me to make light of hypothyroidism, but it led to some amusing encounters and generally lifted my popularity in the ward from just another boring patient to somewhere between multimedia celebrity and sideshow freak.

Within a day or so of surgery, the first of the unscheduled visitors started arriving, pulling back the curtains theatrically as they might when viewing the Bearded Lady or Lobster Boy at P.T. Barnum’s.

They were second-year medical students. They showed little or no curiosity about the tubes and drains hanging out of me, but my neck was of particular interest. It transpires the endocrine system and how and why it goes awry forms a major part of the second-year medical syllabus. And there I was, effectively a rare, captive example of endocrinal dysfunction, available for poking and prodding at will. Roll up, roll up.

By my third week in hospital I had received 40 or so medical students all prodding about my neck and asking a bunch of questions.

There was nothing quite like these visits for kicking in the Joseph Merrick syndrome and I wondered if, after they got home, some of the students would start off the dinner table conversation with a comment like: “You should have seen the misshapen bloke we clocked today.”

I was nil-by-mouth for nine days. I dropped 20 kilos. The expected stay of 10 days became 23.

These and other sundry adventures took place in the surgical high dependency unit at Sydney’s Westmead Hospital – one step down in seriousness from intensive care. It’s an odd sort of ward nomenclature and I suspect health bureaucrats were briefly infiltrated by bean-counters from corrective services when they came up with it. The nurses were wonderfully attentive and endlessly patient; the docs coolly efficient.

For all the fun I had at Westmead by the end of May it was time go. As I gingerly left hospital (with a couple of tubes still attached to me), I still did not know if all of this had been for bugger all. I’d asked the doctors on numerous occasions and got equivocal answers. In fairness, they are urologists and were fixated on the success of the installation of the neo-bladder.

I found out on that glorious Thursday last week. Lymph nodes negative. The only cancer they found were on the bits of me that had already been cut out. It is not quite remission but I am cancer-free. Even that little confused bladder of mine has begun pulling its weight and ahead of schedule.

This is all wonderful, of course – but as happy as I am, I’m struggling to comprehend it.

You see, over the past three years, while others would plan overseas holidays, retirements in sunny climes or the pursuit of new adventures and opportunities, I would lay awake in bed at night planning my funeral. That’s how cancer works. It is a constant reminder of one’s own mortality, like a grim shadow, a cartoon cloud that sits above pelting rain and lightning bolts down while all else around is blue skies and sunshine.

I got so used to it that I’m not quite sure what to do now – but I’ll figure something out.

This article was first published in The Australian on 20 June 2018.

729 Comments

  • Penny says:

    Najib arrested. I cannot begin to describe what joy this news brings to me. Our Malaysian friends who had their Hajj money stolen, their retirement funds stolen, their livelihoods stolen by this kleptocratic government. To our dear friends who have two sons and couldn’t afford to feed their children without help from us and others, to all decent Malaysians who faced an uncertain future, today is a good day. Inshallah (appropriate in these circumstances, before you all throw a hissy fit) the future for the country and it’s citizens will be great. Now to go after the greedy wife…

  • Robin says:

    Glad to see you getting better JTI. Keep up the good work

  • Dismayed says:

    one trick um er ahbut um er ahbut one trick tony is doing all he can to ensure he is again opposition leader after the next election. one trick tony only know how to wreck and divide. the sooner he and people like dutton leave politics the better off the Nation will be. No surprises.

  • Henry Blofeld says:

    I just wonder, Mr Insider, could the unthinkable happen and Russia go on to win the World Cup? One would surely be smelling a large Rat if that did happen. I can’t believe they are into the QF! Cheers

    • Jack The Insider says:

      Depends if the Russians are on enough EPO.

    • Boadicea says:

      My opinion is that they will definitely get to the final match. Whether they will get away with a win under close scrutiny is anyone’s guess. Unless of course it goes to a penalty shoot out.
      Does the Russian team have asthma?

      • Henry Blofeld says:

        They may not have Asthma, Boadicea but the thought of a “holiday” in Siberia has inspired them. Cheers

  • Bella says:

    Congratulations to Sarah Hanson-Young for deciding not to take the sexist abuse dished out by that vile, irrelevant dinosaur Leyonhjelm.

    Every woman, every parent of a girl and for that matter a boy & every man should be outraged that a people’s representative can speak so vulgarly and dismissively to a woman without consequences.
    That he refuses to apologise says everything about his character.
    Go get him Sarah. 😤

    • Jack The Insider says:

      All right. We’ll have no further comments on this one. It may well make its way to court and I will not enjoy being dragged before it on a contempt blue.

  • Milton says:

    To think it has taken this long to come up with the upside down bikini. The science is never settled.

    • Milton says:

      Along this line I spent the afternoon working on the upside down budgie smugglers until I was blue in the face.

    • Trivalve says:

      What are you talking about Milton?

      • Milton says:

        Have a search, Trivalve. I sent a link but it may have been a bit too gratuitous for the more mature folks on here. I’m a fan but I don’t have any daughters so that would make me a hypocrite or something similar.

  • JackSprat says:

    https://www.nytimes.com/2018/07/01/world/europe/denmark-immigrant-ghettos.html

    Now this is a very slippery slope to somewhere that I do not want to imagine.

    Can’t see it getting past the EU Human Rights lot and that will create a whole new set of problems.

  • Wissendorf says:

    I am happy that your procedure has been a success, and that you will improve further over time. Your article makes me glad mine was ‘just heart surgery’; there were dangers but the op was routine. We live in an age of medical miracles. However, I was stunned to learn an Italian surgeon is going to attempt a head transplant later this month, removing the head of a very sick Russian man who has volunteered for the procedure, and transplanting it onto a cadaver. There are ethical questions I’d like to explore but the ghoulish Frankensteinian nature of this work chills me, despite the fact it could lead to a life being saved. It will require 36 hrs of surgery, and a medical team of about 150. The burning question is why? Humans do come down with diseases that kill. Death is inevitable for everyone. Is this vast expenditure of money, endevour and expertise justifiable? Walt Disney might have a different view, but I think this is a step too far.

    • Jack The Insider says:

      Haven’t we all longed for a new head at one point or another?

      • Wissendorf says:

        You’re damn right Jack – I would like a melon like Humphrey Bogart please. That was a pretty swish melon. Or a Poppa Hemingway for that ‘rough around the edges’ look. And while we’re swapping out parts for new and improved versions …..

        Things that make you go hmmmm.

        I have believed for years that Disney had his head surgically removed and deep frozen after he died, waiting for a medical advance that would return him to life but I have not been able to confirm this anywhere.

      • Carl on the Coast says:

        Wiss, it gives a whole new meaning to quit while you’re a head.

  • Boadicea says:

    Great that a priest has been “jailed ” for protecting paedophiles – but why is he given the luxury of home detention?
    Surely he should be locked up and share a cell with those he so assiduously protected?

    • Jack The Insider says:

      I think the sentence is appropriate given his age and health. What matters to me is the Archdiocese’s continued public support for Wilson. That needs to change. Wilson should be obliged to formally resign — indeed that should have happened when he was first charged — and the Archdiocese loudly condemn what Wilson has done. Wilson committed the offence in the Maitland-Newcastle diocese and again the church leadership there should officially condemn him. I have my doubts this will occur. Friends of mine from Ballarat have expressed their dismay that a senior priest in that diocese, Fr Adrian McInerney who was found by the Royal Commission to have known of Gerald Ridsdale’s offending and done nothing about it, has recently been praised by the principal of a local Catholic High School after McInerney retired as a co-governor of the school. God only knows what the parents of the students at the school make of it. “They have learned nothing and forgotten nothing.”

      • Bella says:

        It’s just wrong that his health is a consideration when he never bothered to worry about the kid’s life sentences.
        The hide of these scumbags to still be fighting to protect confession.

        • Jack The Insider says:

          In our legal system a convict’s age and health comes into consideration. I am certainly more concerned that he will keep his place as the Catholic Archbishop of Adelaide and presumably his other positions including a seat at the Bishop’s Council.

  • Tracy says:

    Good memes about that chronic over-actor Neymar, should have got a yellow card
    https://www.complex.com/sports/2018/07/neymar-receives-meme-treatment-after-flop-in-mexico-game

    • Jack The Insider says:

      Yes, he seemed to be in terrible pain all of a sudden for no reason. Any sensible doctor would have given him a shot of Nembutal.

      • jack says:

        first you would need to whack him over the bonce with a house brick to stop all the writhing around and carry-on,

        best treatment, red card, miss next match or two, that would fix his illness and provide immediate inoculation to the other divers.

        problem solved.

        • Jack The Insider says:

          I find your callous disregard for his health and safety disconcerting, mate. For all we know he may have been horribly injured although he did manage to get to his feet and soldier on, sometimes at a pretty quick trot. We should be celebrating his courage.

          • jack says:

            yes, I am a horrible person, I shall immediately resign any and all positions I hold, shun myself, and withdraw from society.

            I guess after about ten years penance I can do a John Profumo and take up good works in helping the poor and needy.

            perhaps I can start a charity and support group for hospital physiotherapists with incomes over 350K who find childcare too expensive.

    • Milton says:

      I reckon close proximity to a fully charged defibrillator would have the likes of Neymar and others back on their feet and ready for action in no time.

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