
I'm not sure that I've even finished grieving, or that I really know how. I've thought about death and mortality a lot in my life, but nothing really prepares you for watching your parent die. My mom and I had a complicated relationship, but I still loved her, and I wish I could have seen her more recently while she was alive.
I don't have the stamina to talk about politics, but let's just say that the country became a much more disturbing place in November. Everything that I care about is under attack, and it scares and angers me to see what's happening every day.
And then there's my own health. Last November, I noticed that my belly was protruding a bit (I was still chalking it up to weight gain), and I was having lots of digestive problems. I was getting more and more uncomfortable bending over, and one day the pain was so bad that I took myself to the ER. Eventually I got an ultrasound and CT scan, and it was clear that I had a big tumor growing in my gut. I was referred to a gynecological surgeon, and he suspected it was an endometioid tumor that seemed to be encapsulating my right ovary, and there was a good chance that I had cancer. Whatever the case, it needed to come out immediately. After discussing my options and the likelihood of this problem returning, we also decided it was best to remove my uterus and ovaries. So on December 12, I had a hysterectomy and bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy. He removed the tumor, several lymph nodes, and scraped a lot of endometriosis off my other organs. The biopsy confirmed that I had had ovarian cancer, but the good news is that it had not metastasized.
The rest of the year, and well into 2017, I've been recovering from my surgery, and trying to figure out my next steps. Because my jobs involved a good deal of physical labor, I wasn't able to return to the nursery or maintenance work. I'm slowly trying to get my strength back, but it's just going to take time. I also wasn't prepared to enter abrupt menopause at age 34, and that's presented additional challenges that I'm still trying to navigate.
I want to say good riddance to 2016, but it wasn't all bad...
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