Monday’s MRI shows no detectable tumor growth. Short of the fulfillment of my magical thinking (it could have shrunk or disappeared) this is good news. Now we have to send the CD and report to the brilliant Johns Hopkins doctors so they can read, interpret, and make recommendations. I assume they will advise me to continue the watch and wait routine. Unlike when we left there in disbelief in mid October, it is a recommendation I can now accept. On difficult days I just want to be back to regular old pre-tumor days. Fortunately bad days are infrequent and watch and wait is acceptable.
Monday was an interesting exercise in rapidly readjusting expectations. I had rescheduled and double-checked to make sure the MRI technician on duty was the technician who did my first MRI. When I had my blood drawn the week before, I made sure the nurse understood that the results needed to be at the Imaging Center by 11:00 Monday morning. I watched as she wrote special notes on the vial and file. Right. As you may have guessed, neither of these two things happened. Oh well, more small experiences in conceding control.
Thanks to all of you who have been watching and waiting with me. I know I have not gotten back to each person who asked me to let them know the results as soon as I heard. Somehow, although I am very grateful that this tumor is only an Acoustic Neuroma and not something much more dreadful, it still sometimes wears me out.
With great appreciation to all of you,
Karen
Karen, you write with candor and grace and wisdom and humanity... and you say everything beautifully to boot. Thanks for the update.
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