Thursday, September 22, 2011

A compelled post

I have other posts in the queue, but I feel half-compelled to say something about the elephant in the room (at least if you pay attention to current events), the Troy Davis execution.  What with my niche interest in criminal law and all.

But writing anything feels pretty empty and useless right now.  Perusing the interwebs last night, it all seems so backward.  I see a bunch of liberals who, after months of demanding jobs and health insurance from our elected officials, are suddenly disillusioned with the awesome power of government.  In the other corner, we have a bunch of pro-life, small government conservatives who are perfectly fine with government officials dispensing eternal justice despite all doubts.  Yes, of course, it’s different for you than it is for the people on the other side.  Except no it isn’t.  Go away.

I think Jonah Goldberg, an editor of the conservative National Review, captured a common sentiment in this tweet:

I'm in tweet crossfire now. FTR: I'm 100% in favor of death penalty for truly deserving, 100% in favor of not killing innocent people.

You could easily spin that to a position more amenable to people on the left.  Say, “I’m in favor of investment in green jobs, just not debacles like Solyndra,” or “I oppose war, except when a guy I like is waging them.”   

The issue is this: who makes that call?  How do we determine the “truly deserving”?  I think our justice system is one of the best in the world and has many safeguards.  That doesn’t mean it doesn’t mess up.  A lot.  So I refuse to support things that give it more power – mandatory minimum sentences, registries for every type of criminal, and yes, the death penalty. 

Maybe it’s just me, but I just don’t effing trust other people that much.  Especially people who acquire vast amounts of power by winning perverse popularity contests and control inconceivable amounts of money that don’t belong to them.  I don’t trust them to spend that money wisely.  I don’t trust them when they tell me they can create high-paying, permanent jobs with their tears.  I don’t trust them when they tell me that plan X is going to have effect Y.  Hell, I had a team of about 10 actual experts looking at the exact same documents to help exactly one person, me, determine how to treat his cancer.  You saw how fun that decision was.  And you expect me to trust a bunch of elected lawyers to overhaul a health care system?

I don’t trust them.  I don’t trust fallible humans subject to emotion, prejudices, and politics enough to give them ever-increasing amounts of power over me and my fellow citizens.  Including the power to hand down irreversible “justice.”

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

You can take the boys out of East Lansing…

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A quick Saturday night story:

I didn’t intend to mention anything about a certain football team from beating another football team in a highly-anticipated matchup in South Bend this past weekend.

But then I went to a party on Saturday evening.  I was debating whether or not I was going to head out, so I texted a friend to ask how the party was.  “Wine and cheese situation,” he replied. 

I took that to mean this was either an intimate or classy gathering (or perhaps both).  So I asked the friend 1) if there was actually cheese at the party (which would be a major draw), and 2) if it was an intimate gathering.  Friend responded that yes, there was cheese, and via picture, informed me that there was a decent number of people at the party. 

So I got over the fact that I’m at the point in my life where the presence of cheese factors into my party-attendance determination, got in my car, and drove on over. 

True to the “wine and cheese” text, the party was a more upscale affair.  It wasn’t black tie or anything – just think more “wine and tasteful attire” and less “natty and cleavage,” populated by the young urban professionals that half the DC city council would love to murder if they weren’t funneling all sorts of tax dollars their way. 

So imagine my surprise when, from my Coors Light (you can take the boy out of the Midwest…) infused perch on the couch (my ankle hurt and even if it didn’t, I don’t dance and I don’t mingle) saw two green Michigan State hats hovering amongst the crowd.

I wondered who these characters were.  There aren’t too many Michigan State grads in DC, mostly because Wrigleyville is located in Chicago, but I figure I know most Michiganders in our social circle.  One of the kind young ladies who lived in the home, unfamiliar with these two gents, approached Ace and Gary and asked them who they knew.  “John,” they replied.  Knowing that our friend John, at the party as well, was a native Michigander, the young lady assumed they were friends of ours, and didn’t immediately spray them with a fire extinguisher as is standard protocol when approached by two identified Spartans.

Alas, these fine young Americans did not know John.  They did not know anybody.  And the Coors Light I was enjoying on the couch would be my last of the evening.  I would switch to wine once upon being informed that all our beer was gone after two gentlemen in Michigan State hats had raided the kitchen and took off out the door. 

Sparty on. 

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

I’m sorry, Jamaal

Step 1:  Draft Jamaal Charles #4 overall in your work Fantasy Football league

Step 2:  Go against your Fantasy Football philosophy (never put all your eggs in one basket) to select Jamaal Charles #7 overall in your college buddy Fantasy Football league because you really can’t pass him up there, plus the Chiefs run more than anybody else and he’s only 24. 

Step 3:  Remember the karmastank that has been hovering around you for the past year or so and scramble to pick up Thomas Jones and Dexter McCluster in your leagues. 

Step 4:  Watch your Fantasy stud destroy his knee while crashing into your hometown mascot:

Jamaal, you have my sincere apologies.  I’m like the Madden cover on steroids.  From the second I hit “Draft,” you never had a chance.  I promise to be more responsible with my awesome power in the future. 

Now if you’ll excuse me, I have to go trade away Matt Stafford and Calvin Johnson. 

Monday, September 19, 2011

The Pilgrimage

[Yes, I know it’s a week late, but I got home last Sunday night after an 8 hour drive and a whirlwind weekend, and then I didn’t have a computer, and then wing night, and then I set up the computer, and then happy hour night, and then Friday.  So I write this now].

The weekend started off well.  I was heading back to Ann Arbor with a couple friends and a single dog.  The plan was to hang back in DC until Emily was done teaching her 5 year olds things, which would have led to a 4pm departure time.  Not ideal, but whatever.  We were going to that damn game.  The first night game in Michigan Football history.  Whatever it took to get there, we were going. 

And damn near everybody we knew was doing the same thing.  Literally hundreds of thousands of people from all across the country and world were converging on Ann Arbor for a three-hour football game.  “This must be what a pilgrimage to Mecca is like,” a friend dryly noted.  The statement was in jest, of course.  But it wouldn’t be hard to find similarities. 

Lucky for us, Fairfax County Schools were “rained out” on Friday.  So we got out a little earlier…and immediately hit horrible traffic and weather.  So I was just a little irritated when I finally go the call.

***

A little back story – back in May, when I was in for my 6 month checkup, Dr. Ambinder noticed my white blood cell counts were a little low.  This isn’t terribly uncommon for lymphoma patients, especially those who receive high-dose Rituxan.  But it’s not fun, and if the WBC counts drop below a certain level, problems can pop up. 

So Dr. Ambinder ordered a blood test form and told me to get my blood tested in a month or so and fax him the results.  Of course, I didn’t.  My thinking was this: I’m lazy.  But on top of that, if I got sick, then that was evidence that my WBC counts were low.  As long as I was fine, my blood was probably fine.  Or something like that.  I tried to get my blood drawn once at GW hospital, but they would only do it for their patients.  So…B- for effort. 

Fast forward to late August.  My stomach had been bothering me for a couple months.  As a recovering cancer patient, things are jacked up.  Chemo tears you up pretty good, and it can take a year or so before you are fully recovered.  Plus, I’m currently smack-dab in the middle of my own danger zone, so every sneeze gives me the creeps.  Because of this, I fight a daily battle between ignoring any transient ache or pain and getting overly concerned about anything that lingers.

The stomach deal was the third item in a string of irritating, lingering, odd issues.  Last winter, I’d experience minor discomfort in my left temple.  It led to a CT scan, which showed that everything was fine.  And it went away for good after my horrific brush with intrathecal chemotherapy.  Or maybe I vomited out whatever the problem was.  Either way, it stopped. 

A few weeks later, my upper left axilla (underarm/chest area) started bothering me.  This was particularly troubling, since this was ground zero for the first big incident.  I let that go for a couple weeks and then had Don, Dr. Ambinder’s PA, check it out.  The nodes were fine; a few weeks later, a CT Scan confirmed this, and I let it go.  The pain went away shortly thereafter. 

And then the stomach deal started.  It wasn’t a huge deal – basically some very mild discomfort, almost like a pit in my stomach, that came and went and never really seemed to do anything serious.  So I forcibly ignored it for a while, saw a primary care doc when it persisted (I figured I should get one of those in DC; of course, he went to Michigan).  Primary care doc recommended giving the people up at Hopkins a heads up, so I did that. 

I met with Dr. Ambinder a couple weeks ago and explained my deal.  I always feel like a jackass when I do this, in part because all junior associates feel like jackasses all the time, but in part because I feel like I’m wasting the doc’s time by wandering in with every little ailment when there are actual sick people out there.  But Don made a good point the last time I saw him – they’re most irritated with the patients who wander in and talk about some lump or ache that they’ve been ignoring for six months.  And the people up there have been fantastic about getting me in whenever I need, so I feel slightly better about the whole.  Plus, it’s cancer.  And I hear that is quite serious. 

So Dr. Ambinder does his exam, pokes at all the nodes, and tells me he’ll be right back.  But he didn’t say anything else.  And as he’s gone for two minutes…three minutes…five minutes…ten minutes…I start to worry.  He comes back in the room about holding some papers.  He hasn’t given me the all clear yet.  I wonder if I’m about to get smacked in the face. 

“Well here’s the thing…your counts are a little off, so I think we want to check that out a little further,” he says.

“Uh…what do you mean my counts are off?”, I ask, wondering how he could determine all this from a simple physical exam. 

“Your blood work.  Some of your numbers here are a little low,” he replies.

“I didn’t get any blood work today.”

Searches the page for the date

“Ah shit. Well, let’s get you some bloodwork.  Everything else is fine by the way.  I wouldn’t pursue this any further.” 

So I go and get the blood drawn, slightly relieved but still hoping that my counts from May have returned to normal levels.  Dr. Ambinder says he’ll give me a ring when the work comes back, and I head on my way.

That ring came a week later, on the drive from DC to Ann Arbor.  My blood counts have returned to normal.  That was the first victory of the weekend.

***

299823_10100859589033503_2203041_66163894_1977052067_n

You know when an athlete does something he hasn’t done in a long time – like when a baseball player returns from a season-ending injury, and they flash that graphic at the bottom of the screen that says, “First hit since (some date like two years ago)”?  I felt that was the graphic that should have accompanied the cracking of my first Coors Light last Saturday. 

There was less fanfare, of course.  But it was even more meaningful, to me at least.  Because it was a major step toward putting the past in the past.  I remember the start of virtually every football season, and as much as I enjoyed finding some tickets on the ground to last year’s opener, I didn’t much enjoy the rest of what I was going through at that time.  And I wasn’t particularly enthused about being the odd man out, dragging around bags of water, Gatorade, and pills.  I very much enjoyed taking in the Iowa game in Dave Brandon’s suite.  I didn’t care for the reason I was up there. 

So yeah.  This…

tailgate

There’s a point at which you seriously wonder if you’ll ever get to experience this again.  And once you reach that point, you will never take it for granted. 

***

Something else happened over the course of that Saturday: It was the first time in a long time that I felt that the Universe wasn’t actively kicking me in the groin.  I’m certainly grateful for the current status of my cancer battle, but I had also been dealing with random, irritating and mysterious aches and pains, culminating in a week where I gacked up my ankle (still gacked up, btw), got caught in an earthquake while I was on crutches, and then got hurricaned.  That sequence sort of makes you wonder what plague is up next. 

But last Saturday.  We were expecting rain, we had the ponchos purchased, and we had the umbrellas ready.  But then this:

umbrella

Turned into this:

sun

In two hours.  And after all the shit I had been through, it was hard not to feel the faintest bit of optimism for the first time in a long, long time. 

***

pregame

The game…well there’s not much I can say about that that hasn’t already been said.  We shelled out…more than a couple dollars to make it to this game. 

I guess I’ll go with this:  In the waning seconds of the third quarter, the Notre Dame fan section (that I was sitting next to) began an “It sucks…to be…a Michigan Wolverine!” chant.  I thought it was odd.  Odd in the sense that it hasn’t been very much fun to be an Irishman from Notre Dame this past decade, and given the last-second victories we pulled out the last two years, you might think it was a little bit early for that chant.  Chicken counting prior to hatching and all that. 

Seconds – and I mean seconds later – they got this in their faces:

Minutes later, this would happen in front of me:

And the comeback was on.  When Michigan scored with 1:12 left, I thought there’s too much time left.  When Notre Dame scored with :30 left, I thought, well, this won’t be the worst thing that ever happened to me.  And there’s still time left.  Then Jeremey Gallon turned invisible and Roy Roundtree did Roy Roundtree. 

In the aftermath, I posted this Facebook status:

sorry

Which was a cryptic way of communicating that after several years of universe inflicted pain that manifested itself in on-field pain and off-field tumors, it finally felt like there was some closure.  This wasn’t just because of the game, of course.  But it was significant, for reasons I’ve mentioned, for me to be back in Ann Arbor, somewhat normal again (at least as normal as I get), with friends, watching a football game. 

And it was even more significant that things turned out the way they did.  Often times, we think somebody or something has it out for us because something bad happens.  Or a couple bad things happen in succession.  I know I’ve been guilty of that.  But I think the real reason is that the little things that do go well go unnoticed.  Our selective focus picks up on the bad, and then we tend to build exaggerated patterns out of those events. 

But I just went through a period where all of that was reversed.  Where things were so bad for so long that you just stopped noticing the bad stuff, and you focused on the good.  Think about a day where all your hair falls out, you have cancer, you’re not quire sure what the future holds or if there will even be much of one, and your itinerary contains the administration of 11 drugs over the course of seven hours, followed by you trying to fall asleep before you throw up.  So when that becomes a part of your daily routine, you really start to focus on the good things.  The good things become anomalies, and instead of focusing on the bad and wondering who is out to get you, you focus on good things that happen and thank that very same cosmic force. 

Hence the above status.  Since a number of life changes – geographic, home, professional – coincided with my cancer ordeal, it has been pretty difficult to find some closure.  Everything is different now and it’s hard to separate many of these changes from the pre-cancer post-cancer fault line. 

That Saturday went a long way toward accomplishing that goal.  Even though I was sitting amongst the proletariat and not in the AD’s suite, I was very much like the other 114,000 people in that stadium.  Instead of being very much unlike them.  I was back in a familiar place doing familiar things, just the way I had always done them. 

[Ed: Of course, it wasn’t all the same.  I kept wondering if they made college girls that young when I was still a student.  It’s like they’re admitting fetuses now.  And if their fathers knew that they were out in public dressed like that.  Dear Lord.  Made me uncomfortable.  And I went to Red Hot Lovers (hot dog joint) where I proceeded to refer to the place as Red Hot Lovers until the dude behind the counter told me it was now called Ray’s Red Hot.  And I tried to buy a case of beer at Champion’s only to find out that Champion’s is now a giant hole in the ground.]

All of that, combined with a stunning victory on a historic evening, got me a little closer to normal again.  After a while, you begin to wonder, when was the last things really broke in my favor?  And not in the “your cancer hasn’t spread very far” sense.  When was the last time I really felt normal?

For the first time in a long time, that Saturday was it.