During Ricki's hospitalization, I often took
her in a wheelchair (oxygen included) around various hospital corridors. We
were familiar with most:
Imaging area - from her repeated x-rays, ultrasounds, and even 2
CT's
Intensive Care Unit- from when she was there
Surgery suite - from her
heart surgery at 3 months of age
Cardiac area – from the clinic before her heart surgery, as well
as the heart scans she has done repeatedly
Clinics area- from the psychiatric clinic
Just about the only area on the ground level of the building which we
had successfully avoided was the cancer patient's area. Which was fine with us.
[image: PET scanner]
Then the doctor informed me that there had
been a few "questionable-looking" nodes on her second lung CT, and he
wanted to do a PET-CT full body scan in order to rule out any problems with the
nodes. I agreed, and was pretty calm. There was no reason to believe that she
had the big "C"; it was just a precautionary test. (And in the end,
thank- G-d, the test came back clean….).
"Well", I thought, as the orderly wheeled Ricki into the
special PET scan area, next door to the cancer area, "I guess we're 'meeting'
this area as well." But I was still pretty calm. I did wonder what
percentage of the people waiting there had cancer…. But hopefully all would be
OK for Ricki.
THEN I saw the sign on the wall. Pictured
was a young, vivacious-looking woman. Next to the picture was the text:
"This area is dedicated to the memory
of so-and-so, mother, wife, and a great person."
THAT’S when I stopped being so d____ laid-back.
They are checking Ricki for CANCER.
CANCER which kills the young.
I am grateful that Ricki's
test was clean. I can only pray that the others there also had clear results.
2 comments:
good news
I had been wondering since you did mention nodes
Post a Comment