Here are the facts: I finished chemo last night and was discharged from the hospital at 9pm. Up this morning getting myself and little C ready for our trip to the city for my final 2 hour infusion for cycle number 4. My appointment has always been at 9:30. I get dropped off and informed my appointment is at noon. No one told me, can you say, "losing it!".
So I explained my child care is limited for my 2 year old, I live far away and I was not given a schedule, even though I asked for one last Tuesday. I waited for about an hour while they figured out what to do with me. I know there were no nurses available, I wasn't on the 9:30 schedule.
The f'd up part is it's not like I can say, "screw you, I don't need to stay here and receive your life saving drug." Well I could, but I am not an idiot. So ultimately they dictate my time today.
So I started to cry. Sitting in the waiting room crying because I am tired of this and this issue pushed me over the edge. I just want to play with my little guy who keeps saying, "mama come home." I don't want to spend 5 more hours in cancer world. Crying got results. I was genuinely sad, not just trying to get in. Part of me thought I am sure they don't want crying patients in the waiting room. They finally found a place for me, all the others in the waiting room heard my story as the nurse escorted me to my room. I just wanted to let the staff know I really do have a life outside of cancer. I am sure they know but sometimes the system makes patients feel like shit and I had to do what I had to do.
I am so glad I have almost finished 4 treatments. Two more seems very close to the finish line. I can see a field of blooming flowers waiting for me to run through with all the energy I could want. I can seeing going on long walks with my family and not fearing exhaustion or pain. And the list goes on.
For now I am tired, frustrated and still wondering if my expectations are too high. I plan to share the facts with the nurse coordinators about the miscommunication. I also am going to try to let it go. I am a fan of blogging/processing my crap and feeling better already. Thanks for listening/reading.
Sent from my iPhone
1 comment:
That sucks. I hear you . . . I've been in a similar situation (not with chemo, but with being treated like a number on a spreadsheet instead of like a human being with needs and feelings) and there's nothing worse. I, too, have broken down and cried at the doctor's office when I couldn't get the care I needed. I'm glad you got your morning spot! Don't lower your expectations!
Marnie
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