Great to get your call last Sunday. Sounds like the radiation treatment is progressing well and you are able to totally tolerate the procedure. Keep on keeping on and ride wild or walk as you have been doing recently. Personally, I am totally amazed that you are still getting on your bike. Will continue to keep you in my thoughts and wishing you and Sharon a very Merry Christmas - Oops guess I should have typed Holiday Season to stay politically correct. Nah!
Good to hear of your progress and our thoughts are with you on your next stage of the "etape d'hopital". It's like the title of David Millar's cycling memoir "Racing through the dark". Dig in and keep those clipless pedals for your recovery ride! 🙂👍🚲
Happy to hear that you are in the last stretch of this race.. I am sorry about the skin issue... had one as well fairly recently and I guess we can't avoid those things at our age (!) considering the lives we have spent in the out of doors. I hope that tricky liver doesn't play dodge and you are able to get this said and done with! Many hugs as always.. Bonnie and Jim
Wow, torture chamber sounds awful; but, at least when they finally get you zipped up, rotated and inflated, it doesn’t take long. Better start having some lengthy conversations with that liver, don’t want to delay such a wonderful sounding treatment. I would be curious to know, in a future update, just how you successfully double your protein intake. Thanks for the informational update; I’m learning as much as I can from your post. Sending hugs, please share with Sharon.
So the skin problem is out of the way and stitched up - good. Do you stop the chemo when you stop the radiation? And the learning curve goes on - good luck with your high protein diet, and with getting back to at least something approaching your previous level of super fitness. Have you thought about changing sport to one that burns fewer calories? I hope you have a good Christmas and lots of rest (and good cheer) over the holidays. Take care, and love to you both.