Friday, October 13, 2023

 

 

 

Background.

My iron levels are very low so I have been tested for possible reasons, beginning with an Endoscopy, which revealed nothing and then, on Friday I had a CT Colonography scan.

Friday 15th September

An "interesting" day. The Colonography scan went well but took twice as long as expected, as they ran it twice. I had to be injected with a dye to enable a different type of scan. At the end I was asked to wait as the Doctor wished to speak with me so I joined Anne in the waiting room. After five minutes the Dr appeared and she took us to a private room where she dropped the news that the scan had revealed a four cm tumour in my transverse colon. 

Since my body was prepped for the CT Colonography and that since the next step would be a Colonoscopy, they had checked with that Department, who fortunately had a gap, and I could go straight up. One of the nurses lead the way up in the lift to the appropriate Department and in next to no time I was on the gurney, tube up my bottie and my insides displayed in living colour on the big monitors.

Yep, a tumour, the Dr took ages checking and double checking and taking countless biopsies and photos.

The next thing is for the surgical team to look at all of the scans and biopsies and decide how to proceed. 

I may well hear something towards the end of next week.

To cap it off, somewhere or another, I lost my hearing aids. I have rung the Colonoscopy Dept and spoken to one of the nurses who looked around for me but they couldn't be found.

AMI have accepted my claim for the replacement, less our $500.00 excess!

 

Monday 18th September

A phone call on Monday from the Hospital, could we manage a 3pm appointment today? Well, yes we could!!

We met a very professional lady Doctor this afternoon (Naomi), who said they had had a cancellation which is why they saw us so rapidly.

Nothing definite can be concluded until after the biopsies are checked out, the surgical team then meet to discuss the situation and someone will call me, probably next Monday to let me know where we go from there.

The bottom line though is, even without the Biopsy results, it is evident there is a major problem. The difficulty is, that because of the six major surgeries I have already had, my tummy is very badly scarred so the surgery is going to be a long one. Keyhole surgery is fairly unlikely for that reason. The risks of me not making it though the surgery or afterwards are probably fairly high, especially given my age. The alternative is to do nothing and in maybe four or five years when the colon will likely be close to being completely blocked, they may try and put a stent in where the tumour is, to prevent it completely blocking the bowel. This can be done from the inside - Colonoscopy stuff, which I am already familiar with as they tried to do that on some scar blockage in my bowel after a surgery which went wrong previously. This is working on the assumption that the tumour is not metastasizing. The good news is that, these days with advances in Bowel surgery techniques, it is unlikely I would need to wear a bag afterwards. Having previously worn one for two years, I am not anxious to repeat the experience.

We said we are prepared to risk the surgery, but ultimately the final decision is left with the Anaesthesiologist, who would have the final say. The Doctor is setting up an appointment with one of these good folk.

The CT Colonography scan also revealed a spot on my liver. They are booking me in for an MRI scan to explore that one further. Talk about living in interesting times.

We are very happy to be "in the system", we have complete faith in the Medical Staff at Auckland Hospital.

So, we want the surgery, regardless of the risk, but the final decision will rest with them.

Monday 25th.

As promised, I got a phone call from Annelies Mittendorff, a Colorectal and ERAS Nurse Specialist today, to give me an update. The Surgical team met this morning and have decided they need much more information about the spot on my liver before they consider the cancerous tumour so I am in the waiting list for an MRI scan which will occur within the next couple of weeks. Once they know what damage, if any is done to the liver they can decide on priorities,

Tuesday 26th

They don’t waste time at Auckland Hospital. I have just been advised that I have an appointment on Friday at 1-30 for a scan along with information regarding the scan and a long consent form. Needless to say, I accepted.

Thursday 28th

An unexpected surprise, I went to bed with a mild tummy ache, woke a couple of times with it becoming more painful and around 4-00 I was making a just-in-time, dash to the loo to throw up. A tricky exercise because I also needed to pooh at the same time. However, I managed both successfully, a couple of further trips to get rid of more tummy content and then finally back to bed. Waking poor Anne of course and she was so solicitous.

Felt uncomfortable when I got up, made a coffee and after I drank it, promptly threw it all up.

Later: Things seem to have settled now, my tummy is still mildly sore but that might because of the vomiting.

Friday 29th

One of the blessing of age and its odd defects is that I only have two thirds of my normal lung capacity. Thank you to the Cigarette companies! Anyway that qualified me for a Total Mobility Card and, as an aside, we later acquired one for Anne also as her mobility is severely restricted. Thank you long Covid. Anyway apart from free public transport it also gives us massively reduced Taxi fares.

So what you mutter? It means I do not need to drive to the Hospital and face the difficulty of parking a large car in carparks designed for smaller cars and to try and thread my way up and down the ramps with their very tight turns. I felt I had enough on my mind without any unrequired drama. So, we were wafted into the front entrance of the hospital, thanks to a very nice driver, up the escalator to level five where we were greeted by a friendly receptionist and directed to the waiting room. We were 20 minutes early but we both had something to read. Around 1-30 a nurse appeared and invited us both into a special area, where my weight and height were checked Hey, I have been just over 6’ tall all my life but I knew I was shrinking as Anne has had to shorten some pants. Today I was 5.10” Blimey!!

Anyway, a lengthy questionnaire and then I was asked to undress and don a gown. Thanks heavens the new ones close in the FRONT not the back so, no more bare bums for the world to see. I have an extremely painful lower back so I needed Anne to assist me as bending (or straightening) can be an issue. The nurse had the usual difficulties finding a vein for a Luer to be fitted so they could later inject a contrast material into my system

I was escorted into the scanning room, I have been through MRI scans before so was not bothered at the sight of this massive machine looming in front of me. They helped me up on the bed, pillows, and knee supports, a push button for emergencies and earphones so I could listen to my choice of music. I picked Beethoven and, to my delight that’s what I got, it was nice to just lie back and let the music wash over me, disturbed however, by the very noisy vibrations from the machine and lots of instructions to “Breath in breath out, now hold your breath”

And of course I was under strict instructions not to move at all.

Well it all passed in due course. The friendly staff helped me off the bed, I had difficulty walking (my back was complaining) so they helped me to an area to change and one of them collected Anne who dressed me. We thanked the staff and were soon back outside and into a cab. A painfully slow ride home, the traffic was diabolical.

In the original letter concerning the appointment they stated that results could be up to ten days after the scan but, given the way the Hospital seem to be pushing things forward I would not be surprised to hear something next week. Of course the big hope is that in fact the spot on the liver was a non-issue. Well, time will tell.

Poor Anne, my back is immobilising me. I have exercises to do (this has happened before) and I am trying to keep them up but it means that a lot of the stuff I normally do, she has to do for me, simple things like footwear, getting dressed, even getting out of my chair. Probably one of the most difficult is putting the toilet seat UP when she finishes. We are both so used to the seat being down but, with my back as it is, bending to raise the seat is a challenge, and so the poor girl has to be “one of the lads” for the time being. She is such a blessing in my life, never once, through all of our many trials and tribulations where she has had to care for me, have I heard her complain.

Tuesday 10th October

Still no word regarding the MRI scan but the letter did say up to ten days so…

I had to See Jim, our Doctor about some possible skin cancers, the three have to be cut out and biopsied and I need to book an hour’s appointment for this. I shall wait until I know what is happening re the hospital. He was able to check and tell me that the MRI report has not yet arrived and, what’s more, it will be posted on the Health Portal (that is our Medical Centre’s website) and he will let me know when it arrives so I can read it for myself. He also told me the spot on the liver is probably related to the tumour. Apparently bowel cancers spread to the liver.

Francesca is up in Auckland looking after Trish (with the broken ankles) and bused and trained over to spend some time with us yesterday. It was truly delightful to see her and it quite made my day and, I am sure, Anne’s also.

Thursday 12th October

A phone call from Greenlane, could I be there at 1-15 tomorrow to meet with an Anaesthetist. From past experience, this means being assessed as to whether or not I am fit for surgery and, if I am, it also means that surgery is pretty imminent. Good news that things are happening. I am suddenly quite fearful. It seems like all the stuff I have supressed for so long with our previous experiences with surgeries gong wrong. All of those various procedures and further operations to try and rectify things,  etc. have hit me hard. I need to keep living in the day, it is NOT happening now, meanwhile there are some lovely things in my world right now.

Friday morning 13th October

Thank heavens for AA and sponsors. I had messaged Brian and told him about today’s appointment and that I was feeling fearful and he rang me. His slant on it was simply this. The Hospital staff a simply saying “here comes this Brady chap, now, what can we do for him to fix his problems and ensure a long and comfortable life?” 

Aha. That put things back into perspective. I just need to focus on the NOW, not what happened in the past.

 

 

 

Friday, May 6, 2016

Day 27, 28, 29 - Back in Wellington for the last lap




Sunday 1 May

I woke during the night with a sore throat, and by morning was not a happy child, although very grateful it had not descended on me earlier. I spent a very lazy day in bed, reading and sleeping, while Lloyd trotted around getting drinks and meals for me.

Monday 2 May

We had booked for the early-bird tour of the Gallipoli display at Te Papa before we left for the South Island, so were waiting in the foyer by 9.15.

 

What we got was a brief talk about the war and how we got involved with Gallipoli, then we were sent in to see the display ourselves. I possibly was affected by my cold, or weary from the whole trip, but did not think it was as good as the one at the Dominion War Museum. However it was worth seeing, and I was pleased I had done so. 



I was even more pleased to be back in our room afterwards, and gave up the idea of heading back to Archives for a final bit of research

I am glad I saw the exhibition. I found it to be informative, incredibly well laid out, the dioramas were excellent and were about 3 times life size and consequently very dramatic. 





Tuesday 3 May.

Feeling slightly better this morning, but Lloyd is now coming down with my cold, and we will both be pleased to get home.

Taxi arrived at the Hostel dead on time and it was a quick trip down to the Railway Station where we checked in and boarded our very comfortable home for the next 11 hours or so.

The train trip started in the rain – the first real rain we have seen since we left home. However it cleared to cloudy after the first hour or two, and Ruapehu stood out well.

The above was written while travelling and now I am giving a more relaxed version.

By the time we got to Palmy the rain had eased off and within the hour the weather was fine and we were able to enjoy the excellent scenery, especially the viaducts, and we could wonder at the incredible labour taken to build these things back in the day of no motors or mechanical tools.
All pick and shovel and hard, hard yacker


















We reached Auckland about 7-00 pm. A shuttle took us to Britomart where we caught our local train to Panmure and trudged our way home.

We are both feeling sad, although it is so nice to come home, it has been a superb trip and we really did not want it to end.

We are now giving serious consideration to going back to the South Island in a couple of years. This time we would take the car and thus be able to spend more time in the many places which appealed to us plus be able to explore the ones we missed. Time will tell.







Day 26 - Picton to Wellington



Saturday 30 April

After breakfast back at the same restaurant, it was announced that the ferry from Wellington was running half an hour late, but we would still go to the terminal and spend the extra time there, as it was a more comfortable place to wait. We went for a walk and took a few pictures (as you do), then boarded the bus and had a quick five-minute drive to the harbour. As we pulled in I noticed that the Edwin Fox Ship Museum was right beside us – a place that I have long wanted to see. And here we are with an extra 30 minutes to spare. It must be meant!

As soon as I had confirmed the boarding time, and had my own ticket clutched in my hand, I headed off with fingers crossed. Fortunately it opened at 9 am, and was only ten past now, so I was able to have a good wander around the displays. The building itself is built of Oamaru Stone, and the internal columns are made of Australian Jarrah, taken from the old meatworks where the ship was used as a coal-store.

This ship is the only surviving Australian convict ship, as well as the only surviving Crimean War troop transport. She has also made about four trips to New Zealand with emigrants, before becoming a coal hulk, and then being left to rot. She really is a very important and historic ship, and what a story she could tell. Timbers at and above the tide-line have been partially or wholly eaten away, but those which remained submerged have survived very well.

Down inside the hull


Although the original plan for the Edwin Fox was to restore her (I have to say, it feels funny calling a ship with such a masculine name ‘her’!), the volunteers are now focused on preservation instead, and it  certainly feels far more authentic walking on her than on the Euterpe, which has been restored and touristified to the nth degree.

The step for the mainmast


It is possible to go down to the very bottom of the ship and walk around inside the hull, touching and stepping on the original wooden floor. I got to feel the timbers, touch the mainmast and the step it is set into, and smell the old odours the sailors and migrants must have smelt. It was an amazing experience, better than seeing the Euterpe, and even better than the Mary Rose, in that I could actually walk on board. 

Timbers above the waterline have been eroded away quite badly

Original copper sheathing on the outside of the hull


Back in time to board the Aratere with the others, we settled in a foursome with Martyn and Linda, so I could show her the basics of Legacy, my family history program. Afterwards we went for a walk, had a bit of lunch and chatted to some of our friends, before arriving in Wgtn just after 2 pm. We boarded the bus in the hold and drove off, then pulled up outside the departure lounge where we first met the tour. After a hurried farewell as eight of us left the bus for the last time, and hugs for Wayne & Ellen, we grabbed a taxi for the journey to the YHA and quietly collapsed in our room for a rest.














After a stroll along the waterfront, we picked up tea from New World, and had an early night.

Sunday, May 1, 2016

Day 25 - Christchurch to Picton

Friday 29 Apr

It looked like a long day's drive on the map, but Ellen had planned lots of stops, and was confident that we would still be there about 4.30. I must say that our whole group are very good at being on the bus - or at least queuing to get on - by the designated times. I can recall only once that we had to wait for anyone. Lloyd timed us getting off the bus at a stop one day and it took six minutes. It is longer when we have shifted from one town to another, and there is more hand luggage being put on the racks or taken down. Probably my one gripe is that they will not use the back door, as there would be no-one to assist us to alight, which slows the whole process down dramatically.

Our first comfort stop was Amberley, only 45 minutes after we started. We pulled up outside a memorial to Charles Upham, the double VC winner, who grew up here.


The Amberley Library

Amberley Craft Market, held every Friday, with an excellent selection

Amberley Presbyterian Church, made from local river-stones








































































Morning tea at Cheviot, then up the Kaikoura coast. Several double tunnels, which we found interesting to go through. We are sitting in the second row back, behind Wayne for today's trip, so get great views of everything.





We stopped at the Avoca Peninsula, where there is a marine reserve, and saw one seal by a memorial. He kindly performed for us the whole time we were there.

Spot the seal (just left of the memorial)


















Fyffe House at the same stop is a horrible pink which clashes terribly with the surrounding area, and evidently tells the story of the whaling carried on here, which neither of us was interested in seeing.

Lunch at Kaikoura, and then another photo stop at 1.30 at the fur seal colony on Ohau Point. Seals everywhere, sleeping, playing, diving, two males huffing at each other - we could have watched for an hour.

A quote from AA Milne springs to mind - "I saw little rabbits 'most everywhere"



Afternoon tea was at Blenheim, and Lloyd chose to stay on the bus, so I wandered one way down the main street and found an ice-cream, then directed several others to the same shop on my way back. I guess everyone had the same idea. 


As we stopped there for nearly an hour, I then trotted on past the bus, parked at the war memorial, and found the Anglican church. It appears to be a relatively recent rebuild, so I was not terribly interested until I came across two plaques to a previous minister by the name of Thomas Samuel Grace, whose story I had been listening to at Timaru.  His grandson David is on the tour with us!





Arriving at Picton we discovered the Beachcomber Hotel is like two sides of a U, and everyone had a balcony facing the harbour, so soon there were folk sitting out on their decks with drinks admiring the view. Although this hotel does have a restaurant, their prices are more than Unique want to pay, and they also only do a-la-carte, no buffets, so that makes it very slow for a large party. However the place we did eat was only a five minute walk away, and the older members were driven up in the bus by Wayne. 
 
Beachcomber Hotel Picton




Day 24 - Tranz-Alpine Train Journey



Thursday 28 Apr 

Our hotel kindly started breakfast at 6.30 for the 18 of us who had booked for this excursion. Two shuttles arrived at 7am to deliver us to the station, and the train left on time at 8.15.

The Canterbury Plains may look very flat, but we were told that in fact they climb from the beginning. Forty minutes into the trip we were 260m above sea-level.
We discovered that the Waimakariri River delivers three million tonnes of gravel to the sea each year, a truly astounding amount. Most of that must be erosion from the mountains. 

The red on the banks is a fungus


We stopped just before the Otira Tunnel and hooked three engines on to the back of the train, so that if anything happened, they would have the power to pull us back up. Very comforting. The tunnel is just over 8.5 km long, and at the time it was finished in 1923 was the longest in the British Empire.



We entered the tunnel at 11:05, and arrived safely at the end at 11:23. Then there was a short five minute stop at Arthur’s Pass to collect some passengers, before we travelled on to Greymouth. Superb scenery, but it felt a bit like the ‘same old same old’ since we have seen so many similar views in the last week or two. Fortunately most of the tour group have a great sense of humour, so there were lots of stories and laughs to enliven the journey.

Autumn colours


We had an hour to walk and have lunch, then returned to Christchurch, this time only hooking one extra engine on the back for the tunnel. Each way is roughly 4.5 hours, total journey 10 hours, so two weary little bears were pleased to get home. 

Braided river