Surgery date change

For those of you that come here just for updates, my surgery date has been changed to February 24th, due to the flu.  I know, right??

Rest.

“Come to Me, all you who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest.” – Matthew 11:28

Rest.  It’s such a simple word.  It’s a beautiful word that just draws me in to grab hold of, but I struggle to do that on a continual basis.  I’m not speaking of physical rest.  I have mastered that one quite well.  I am talking about every other aspect of rest:  mental rest, emotional rest, spiritual rest.  It is a word that has been mentioned to me by so many various people in my life over the past whirlwind of a month, to just rest in Him during this time.  What?  How is that possible?  There is so much to be done!  It seems completely irresponsible to “just rest”.  There are appointments to be made, and dare I say, make the list of all the possible “what-if” scenarios after the surgery is over and we know what we’re dealing with.  I’m a type A, which makes me a planner.  I plan A-Z.  I have back-up plans just in case A-Z don’t work out.  I guess one could interpret that in a way that I am a complete control freak.  It’s amazing that I still question the reasons why God is bringing me through these trials.  What is He trying to teach me?  Anyone, anyone?  (hint: I just said it)

If you read my last blog, you will see the point in time in which I was finally at peace with all of this and for the first time understood what it was like to just let go and rest in Him.  It seems like it should be so easy and so inviting, to just lay down my burdens.  He’ll take them!  He’ll take the weight off of my shoulders so that I don’t have to carry the load!  How can I resist that invitation of rest, especially in the middle of what seems like complete chaos right now?

Well, yesterday was a very convicting day for me.  It was such a productive day for me and I was so proud of the work that I accomplished through the gathering of information in preparation of what the future might hold with this tumor.  I made plans!  And I think they are great!  Ridiculous.  Completely ridiculous.  Did I pray about it?  Did I seek Him first?  Are they His plans?  I don’t know!  I didn’t ask!  Don’t get me wrong, you guys.  God gives us resources and I believe it is our responsibility to utilize those resources to do what you can to take care of business.  But seek. Him. first.  That is the lesson that I have not been able to learn seven years into this.  My time right now should be spent pressing into Him and seeking His face.  The scripture in Matthew I quoted at the beginning of this blog calls for action: “Come to me”.  He wants me to come to Him, seek Him, spend time with Him.  How do I do that?  Meditate on His word and commune with Him in prayer.  I can’t think of anything more restful than that.

I’ll be in surgery exactly one week from right now.  I feel like God has blessed me with the peace of mind to know that He is the perfect plan for the what-if scenarios that might come up next week.  I don’t even need a back-up plan.  He’s already thought of that, too.

“For I know the plans I have for you, declares the LORD, plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future.”

- Jeremiah 29:11

It is well with my soul

I love that hymn.  Absolutely love it.  It floods by heart, mind and soul with peace when I hear it.

When peace, like a river, attendeth my way,
When sorrows like sea billows roll;
Whatever my lot, Thou has taught me to say,
It is well, it is well, with my soul.

and the best verse:

And Lord, haste the day when my faith shall be sight,
The clouds be rolled back as a scroll;
The trump shall resound, and the Lord shall descend,
Even so, it is well with my soul.

This week started out anything but being well with my soul.  It has been a very intense week for me.  I have been warring with some pretty strong emotions that roller coaster from one minute to the next.  I’ve been mad, sad, happy, distraught, joyful, peaceful, in despair.  I was just all over the place depending on the moment you inquired.  I was upset.  I was mad.  I was confused why God was allowing all of this to happen.  Why does he keep dragging this trial out, now going into the seventh year, now.  Why?  Why?  Why?  What are they going to find when they operate in just a few weeks?  What if His will is for this tumor to take my life?  What about my family?  I’m not ready for all of this!

Those that know me know that my mind is one of my greatest assets, but also one of my worst adversaries.  After over-analyzing everything to the point of physically getting sick, I decided to send a note to a dear friend of mine this week.  I poured my heart out in some pretty raw emotion to her and I frankly didn’t like a word of what she had to say back to me.   She said that  “God didn’t promise you healing.  He promised that He would stay with us throughout our sufferings”, among some other encouraging words that felt anything but encouraging at the time.  She referenced this scripture:

“Dear friends, don’t be surprised at the fiery trials you are going through, as if something strange were happening to you.  Instead, be very glad–because these trials will make you partners with Christ in his suffering, and  you will have the wonderful joy of sharing his glory when it is displayed to all the world” (I Peter 4:12-13)

I know that God didn’t promise to heal me.  I’ve been told (warned) of that over the years and it has always scared me to hear that.  I know He’s more than capable, but will He?  It turned me into the obsessive researcher that I am today, just in case I had to take the healing into my own hands (eh-hem). It really has always scared me and I didn’t like that she threw that back my way.  Not. one. bit.  But what she said was perfect.  Since this tumor started gaining some momentum in August, Marvin and I have talked about how I need to get to a place where I’m at peace with whichever path God chooses to take me down, healing or not.  Once I was able to lay my emotions aside and read her words with a softened and open heart, God did such a miraculous, really, work in my heart that broke down some long standing walls and has me in a place where I finally feel at peace with whatever God might ask of me.  I know that God is good.  God is sovereign and He has a plan.  I look back at my life over these past seven years and it is so evident.  You know when you are looking out a window that has so many fingerprints on it, that it’s impossible to look through the window because all you see are the fingerprints?  My life is that window.  You can’t look into me without seeing how His fingerprints have been all over me from the start of this journey seven years ago when I had a grand mal seizure.  One MRI changed my life forever.  But God didn’t.  He never changed, but He has changed me.  He has changed lives through me.  I am so humbled when I think of that.

I’ve had so many people tell me how mad they are and that it just isn’t fair.  I have said, felt and thought that a million times.  I’m very slowly starting to understand, though.  Cognitively, I understood before.  You grow up in the church, you read in the Bible that all things work together for His good.  There are so many scriptures that point to trials and why He allows them and how we are to deal with them.  Last night while driving home from choir, I was feeling peace with why it was fair.  He has not put me into existence so that I can live this carefree life on earth and then join Him in heaven when I’m 90 and ready to move on.  He has put me on this earth as His tool.  If I’m not being used for Him, then what good is my life?  What good am I to you if I’m not pointing you to Him?  Would trials like this seem fair to you if one of your loved ones didn’t know Christ, but came to know Christ through somebody else’ testimony like mine?  Would you be weighing the fairness of my trial, then?  I think not!  I think you would be rejoicing for the trials that God allows because look what came from it!  And then it might cause you to rejoice in your own trials when they come your way.  There is purpose in everything.  Who knows who will be joining you in eternity because of the short amount of suffering you might have to experience on this earth.  Your suffering might have saved them from a lifetime of suffering in hell.  We don’t know.  But He does.  And I’m finally at peace with that.

UCLA (dis)appointment

We went to UCLA this past week to get some follow up scans done on their MRI and PET scanner and then had a follow up appointment with Dr. Liau.  We did this down there because their PET scanner is more sensitive to low grade glioma cells, which is what we assumed my tumor was because it has presented and acted that way for so many years.  We wanted to see if that was truly the case and the PET scanner at the local hospital here wouldn’t show that.

Well, the news we were dealt was shocking, to say the least.  I really felt like we would be walking away from UCLA with the recommendation to do further surgery to debulk what had subtly grown over the past few years to hopefully decrease my visual symptoms and seizures and then to continue on the Temodar to either keep the tumor stable or try to get some regression if there wasn’t any, already.  When Dr. Liau walked into the room to greet us, she put down a piece of paper that was clearly a copy of my PET scan.  My eyes were immediately drawn to the glaringly large areas of bright red on my brain scan.  Hot spots.  I knew that wasn’t good.  Not only had my tumor continued to grow since the prior scan, which was only two months ago, but the tumor has now become more aggressive, which is logical considering the amount of tumor growth since last August.  So is it a grade 3 or a grade 4?  We’re not sure.  The only way to know for sure is to operate and get some pathology on the tumor.

The tumor board had just reviewed my scans prior to my appointment with her.  There were several recommendations.  One was to go straight to radiation to slow down the increasing growth and aggressiveness of the tumor.  Another was to do an IV chemo, which has much more severe side effects, similar to what one imagines when they think of chemo (i.e. hair loss, vomiting, etc).  The one that we have decided to do is surgery so she can take out as much as she can and then follow that up with radiation.  If you read my past post, I talked about putting off the radiation card because my tumor wouldn’t be that responsive to radiation because the cells weren’t abnormal enough and we weren’t at the point.  We’re there now.  How quickly things can change.  Surgery is scheduled for February 17th.  Almost exactly 3 years to the day as my prior surgery.  This will be surgery number four.  I can’t believe it!  We figured out from these scans that what we thought were two separate tumors is really one large tumor extending into different portions of my brain.  It’s the original inoperable tumor that has made it’s own path into a deeper part of my brain and created another cluster of cells.  I asked her what she thinks she can get out.  She said she thinks she can get out most of the hot spots, which is so important.  There are some that she can’t touch, though.  If these hot spots are grade 4 cells, it would be devastating.  That renames this tumor to a Glioblastoma Multiforme.  It is a horrible diagnosis and I don’t even want to entertain the thought of that by going into detail about implications of it here.  After about a month of healing from surgery, I will begin radiation either in Salem or up in Portland.  It’s 5 days every week for six weeks.  Ugh.  If there is still tumor after all of this, then IV chemo will probably be next.  The fact that my tumor is inoperable and a high grade puts me into a completely different treatment regimen, now.  We can’t just wait around and see what the tumor is going to do.  We have to keep treating the tumor until it’s gone on the scan.

These tumors are notorious to recur within weeks.  It’s going to be a tough battle.  I knew this day would most certainly come when the tumor upgrades.  I guess I just thought after being stable and low grade for seven years, that it wouldn’t all change so quickly.

We really need prayer for peace and comfort right now.  Our kids will be away from us for awhile while we’re down at UCLA for surgery.  Tyler is older and will understand a little more and be able to see by looking at my head how serious my sickness is.  We don’t talk about it much with him.  We know God’s grace is sufficient.  It’s brought us this far.  But I won’t lie.  We’re scared.  It’s really scary to think of what might be.  We try to rest in God, but we’re human and our emotions are strong.  Thank you for loving on us and continuing to pray for us.  We appreciate it more than you’ll ever know.

So much to talk about!

I’ve learned about myself over these past few years that when the going gets tough, I tend to internalize.  I could have written about 10 blog entries over the past two months with all of the latest drama that I have mustered up, but I guess I haven’t really been to the point where I actually want to sit down and talk about it.  I don’t really like to now, but I know that a lot of friends and family come here to keep up to date, so here it is!

It started on an evening back in October.  I was sitting in the living room with the boys and my visual seizure aura popped into my vision.  I hate that thing!  I’m so incredibly thankful for these auras, though.  I know at the point that aura comes on, that I have about 30 seconds to find a safe place to lay down before everything in my vision is swirling so much that I have to close my eyes to keep the pain away of my eyes trying to focus on one thing.  So I run into my bedroom and laid down on my bed.  I know it’s a safe place for me when I finally go into the seizure and become unconscious.  Marvin runs to my side while I’m lying on the bed.  I’m actually able to get my breathing under control while my aura is still circling in my vision.  Usually my heart is racing and I am panicking by now.  I was praying that the aura would subside and that the seizure would never progress.  Not at all to be.  Not only did I have one seizure, but my seizure progressed into status epilepticus.  What?  Status epilepticus??  I’ve read about that!  Do you know that people often die from being in that state?  Those thoughts all ran through my head in about .9 seconds.  What that meant for me was that my original seizure kept rolling into another seizure, which turned into three seizures.  I never regained consciousness for more than a few seconds between each one and not at all between one of them.  Scary.  What was even more disturbing was that at the end of my seizure, I lost all functioning on the left side of my body, from my head down to my toes.  I woke up and heard Marvin keep telling me to wiggle my left toes.  I was wiggling my toes and was getting so irritated with him because he kept making the request, but what I thought were my left toes I was wiggling, were merely just the right.  He called the paramedics and I went to the hospital to make sure that all of my blood work and vitals were good, which they were, so then I could go home and sleep.  If I would have been more alert, I would have pushed for a scan to make sure that the tumor was behaving.  Any ordinary breakthrough seizure can signal tumor growth, let alone a seizure that turns into epilepticus.  It was really late at night and the ER doctor thought it would be too much of a hassle to try and get a read, so he just sent us home.

The next day, I started having some lingering numbing sensations throughout the left side of my body, which absolutely frightened me, so I went back to the ER.  This time, though, I wasn’t leaving until somebody stuck me in a MRI machine to see what was going on in my noggin’.  Thankfully the people at the hospital are so absolutely wonderful to me and they were able to squeeze me into a slot to get a scan right away.  It didn’t take too long for the ER doc to come over and tell us what I had already suspected:  tumor growth.  He sat down with the radiologist and the radiologist had just told him that there was small growth of the tumor.  I had 20 other questions about this new “growth” that the ER doctor didn’t know the answer to, so I called the radiologist the next day.  He was great and went over my scan with me.  He said that yes, there is an increase in the signal abnormality (that is how tumors show up on MRIs), indicating growth.  Ok.  But, there was a bigger issue he was concerned about.  Ugh.  I have some ventricles in the right side of my brain that had slightly enlarged.  Was it trapping of cerebral spinal fluid, or could it be an “extension of disease”?  He wasn’t sure, so scans were sent to UCLA for their review.

It was an eternity until I was finally able to speak with Dr. Liau on the phone about what the consensus of the tumor board was about my scan.  She had already mentioned to me in a prior email that they said there was growth, so my gut had been twisting for a few days, already, in anticipation for what they were going to say.

Finally, around 10 am on a Thursday morning, I got the call.  It is the sweetest voice on the other end.  She stammers a little bit and asks how I’m feeling.  She is so incredibly compassionate.  Neurosurgeons don’t make personal phone calls, especially when you’re a nationally renowned neurosurgeon.  She wanted me to know that, yes, there was some growth in the tumor.  I couldn’t bare the anticipation any longer, so I asked her before she could say it.  Is there another tumor?  Yes, she says.  I asked how big and she said that she thought around the same size as the other, which is a little less than one inch.  The new tumor is in the Insula.  It is too deep to operate, much like the original tumor, so removing it isn’t an option.  My gut is sick and now on the floor for the remainder of the conversation.  But she is just so sweet.  I’m talking to this woman, and she is handing me the most horrible news anybody has probably ever handed me, and I just want to reach through the phone and hug her!

So what’s the recommendation?  The tumor board, which I guess I should explain what that is.  The tumor board is a group of radiologists, doctors, oncologists, neurologists and professors that work at UCLA and gather together every Wednesday morning to review patient scans.  They reviewed my scan and the consensus was surgery and radiation.  Confused, I told her that I thought the tumors were inoperable, holding out the very, very slightest (I knew) of hope that maybe something changed and it was all of a sudden operable.  She told me the original tumor has had very subtle growth since my last surgery in February of 2008, so they recommended her taking out that tiny growth.  Bummer.  I was shooting for her taking the whole thing out.  They would go after this small of a tumor for two reasons.  One is to get some pathology to see what the exact grade of the tumor is.  The other would be to alleviate some of these symptoms that I have.  The biggest bummer about tumors in the brain is that it doesn’t take much of anything to disrupt something else in a big way.  The tiniest amount of growth that I’ve had has affected my vision enormously.  This tiny growth has caused my seizures to have gotten to the point where I’m now on  3 seizure medications to try and control them!

What did we decide?  She knows that I’m not willing to use the radiation card, yet.  I will do radiation at the point when the tumor is high grade and will more likely respond to the damaging effects of the radiation.  With low grade tumors, which we’re assuming mine are, the cells are not extremely abnormal, as they are in higher grades.  The more abnormal the cell, the more fragile the cell and susceptible to whatever is being thrown it’s way to kill it.  We’re not there, yet.

We decided that surgery is too aggressive right now.  The risks outweigh the benefits and we wouldn’t treat any differently than what we’re already going to do, anyways.  We’ll put that off.

So Temodar, it is.  I started my first round of chemo, after being off for a couple of years, a couple of weeks ago.  I got quite sick from it this time around.  Everybody swears that I was this sick last time I was doing it, too, but I don’t remember it being anything like this.  I guess that’s the part of your brain that blocks out the bad, remembers the good.  I have a much better game plan in place for when I start this next round to hopefully stay ahead and ward off any of the side effects from it.  The next round begins the day after Christmas.

I was quite thankful that Dr. Liau and I were on the same page about which treatment to pursue right now.  Any of you who know me or who have read my blog know that I am definitely one to make my own decisions.  I am in constant contact with several doctors that manage different aspects of my disease.  I love having that many people because I can get several different opinions and then pick out what I agree with and what I don’t.  Ultimately, it’s my body and these are my decisions.  I have been so blessed with Dr. Liau because she has been supportive in all of my decisions, namely the one to go off of chemo and stay only on homeopathic IV treatment.  She is a gem.

And speaking of the homeopathic stuff, my naturopath and I have started that up again in full force.  If you’ve been following this blog, that has been my main treatment since I visited a natural cancer clinic in Oklahoma a couple of years ago.  Since we were having such success with it, we decided to cut back on the aggressiveness of the treatment this past summer to see if we could back off, but still keep the tumor in check.  A big part of this decision was because of the expense.  It’s not a cheap decision to go the homeopathic road, but I believe in it with all of my heart!  The other reason was the time/emotional commitment of being hooked up to an IV pole everyday, although I am fortunate enough to be able to do that at home while watching football.

So after taking much of the summer off of doing any treatment, which was a much needed/loved break, we’re hitting it as heavy as we can right now.  I know enough about these tumors to allow my mind to be satan’s playground right now.  I’m really struggling with trust.  I know what these tumors can do, how quickly they can kill.  What if that’s God’s will?  I’m having such a hard time letting that go and laying it down at His feet.  I know, I know, I KNOW that His grace is so sufficient.  It has been so evident in our life when this journey started almost 7 years ago.  He has a plan.  He has a purpose.  I need to be ok with whatever that might look like.

Many of you are asking what the next step is.  Marvin and I will fly down to UCLA in January so that I can get an MRI and a DOPA PET scan done on their machines.  The DOPA PET, as opposed to the more common FDG PET, is more sensitive to low grade tumor cells.  It can better distinguish low grade tumor cells from swelling, scar tissue, or anything else that may just be something benign.  It’s an easier way to know exactly what we’re dealing with, without having to go under the knife at this point.  If those scans show some significant growth, then surgery will most likely ensue ASAP to get out whatever she can.  A decision will have to be made at that point of whether to do radiation or not.  Dr. Liau said that if there is just some minor growth on this next scan, that we will likely just continue on the Temodar to see if we can get some response from the tumors.

So that is the plan at this point.  Temodar, homeopathic IVs and a TON of prayer.  There is no treatment more hopeful than prayer!  Thank you so much for your outpouring of love upon me and my family.  I am continually in awe and humbled by the cards, the calls, the meals, the hugs, absolutely everything that you guys shower upon us all of the time.  It’s only by God’s grace and with friends and family wrapping their arms around us like you do, that is getting us through this extremely difficult time.  Just to let you know, we are not sharing a whole lot with our kids about this.  Trent is too young.  Tyler knows I have a tumor.  He knows it causes the seizures that he unfortunately has had to witness on more than one occasion.  We haven’t told Tyler about the second tumor.  We figure, why?  If there comes a time when we need to sit down and talk about it more, then we will do that.  We are wholeheartedly believing, though, that it will never come to that time.  We are believing in God’s faithfulness and His healing hand in my life!

Thank you, again, for all you do.  We cling to your prayers and covet them every single minute of every single day.

With so much love….

Charysse

I’ve been thinking…

I love to write, but I don’t love to write everyday on a blog about random thoughts, daily happenings, etc.  So this site seems to be severely neglected, but my research about these tumors and ways to treat them is quite the contrary.  I am often looking for new news and information that I can arm myself with to fight this tumor.

Yesterday a news article came out about how brain tumor patients can starve their tumor.  I love these news stories.  Knowledge like this is power for any cancer patient.  It’s empowering emotionally, physically and psychologically to know that there is more a cancer patient can do to fight their cancer than just what the oncologist puts out on the table.  If you read the article, you will see that caloric restriction has been shown to be effective in inducing apoptosis in brain cancer cells.  Previous articles have been released about how the ketogenic diet is effective in killing brain tumors, as well, because it elevates ketones in the body.  Caloric restriction kills brain tumor cells because it elevates ketones in the same way.

Something as simple as a lifestyle change can ultimately be the thing that helps save your life.  It’s not all about chemo and radiation.  When you have a brain tumor, the brain is just the window that displays an abnormality that has occurred because of an imbalance happening in the whole body, not just the brain.  Otherwise, the body wouldn’t have allowed the cancer to develop in the first place.  Something like a dietary change can correct the imbalance in the body and reposition the immune system to be able to fight and kill these cancer cells.  If you do chemo and radiation, which certainly can have their place in your treatment, then your immune system and body will be thrown out of balance.  If you take an article like this and apply it at the same time you are doing chemo and radiation, you are not only going to help off-set potential treatment side effects, but you will also weaken the brain cancer cells by not giving them the fuel that they need to survive.

Perfectly logical.

Enormously empowering.

Checkup scan

My scan still continues to be stable!  After the last one in February, UCLA said that I could wait 2 months instead of 3 to get another scan.  I’ve been doing treatment only once a week, so it’s great to know I can stay stable and not have to live my life around treatment.  Dr. Nigh still has me doing DMSO and a high dose of vitamin C.  Other than that, just a few supplements and a lot of green tea!  I’ve also been doing his elimination diet, which I recommend everybody doing at least once to find out if you have any unknown food allergies.  It’s amazing the random symptoms that go away, such as sinusitis, when doing this diet and finding out which foods don’t agree with your body.  You can buy the ebook here and it explains how to do it.  Well worth the $20, especially if you’re experiencing any symptoms of any kind in your body.

Stable!

The results of my MRI showed the tumor to be stable since my last scan, which was almost 3 months ago.  How blessed am I?  This time spent off of treatment was great not only for a break, but so much better for my relationship with God.  I loved it.  I loved that when the fear crept into my head about being off of treatment and the implications it would have for the outcome of this scan, I remembered that I handed it all over to Him, and then I could breathe a sigh of relief.  It was up to him.  He wanted me to do this, so I had to trust him to take care of it.  And he did!

I challenge any of you going through an extremely difficult situation to put yourself (responsibly) in a position where you have to rely upon Him and his help and guidance.  The bondage of the crisis melts away and you often become more free than before the crisis began.  God is so faithful.  Why do we so often doubt?

I posted a testimonial for my naturopath on his new website.  Part of that testimonial said this:  In my world of cancer, he has by far become my most important ally. I have six doctors that I deal with regularly. Five of these doctors mean really well when it comes to treating my cancer. Dr. Nigh is the only one who has taught me that my body must first become well, in order to treat this cancer successfully.

I look at my cancer journey in a similar way spiritually.  I feel like God is teaching me that my relationship with him must become well, too, as part of this healing process.  Not that God can’t and wouldn’t heal me anyways, but for me, these past few weeks of having to lean completely on him was a breakthrough in my relationship with him.  My whole hope and trust was put in him, and the rewards of that have been amazing.  I don’t live everyday in fear of the unknown.  It’s in his hands and I feel like I’m doing my part in putting my body on the path to wellness and I think that he will bless that.  I truly believe that our body was meant to be self healing and that if we treat it correctly and give it the proper nutrition, that it will remain well.

My naturopath and I decided yesterday that the plan will be to do one day of treatment every week.  One day on, six days off.  Love it.  It’s a great treatment plan.  These tumors like to explode and upgrade overnight, so the treatment that I’m doing should keep that in check, but not overwhelm and alter my daily living.

God is good.  The people he has surrounded me with are incredible.  It is an absolute treasure and gift to be taken care of as well as I am.

If you’re dealing with something that is overwhelming, give it to him.  He wants to take it and let you rest in his palm.  Do it and you will be blessed.

I can tell you a little bit about that…

Taking a step of faith

Several weeks ago, I felt like God was speaking to me about where I was putting my faith and trust with this tumor.  Was I putting my ultimate trust in him that he would bring healing to my body, or was I putting all of my faith and trust in the treatments that I’ve been doing?  Easy answer.  I was putting my hope in these treatments, and was sure that they are what is saving my life right now.  God was just a part of my life, but not my complete hope for healing.  He gave me peace and grace when I asked for it, but it was becoming just a prayer of convenience.  My prayer was “thank you God for providing the resources that I need to fight this tumor”.  And while this is right and true, my first prayer should be “thank you God for the healing that you are doing in my life, because I am only here by your grace and mercy.”

Well, that has changed.  God was having a one-sided conversation with me about it for several days.  I knew what I needed to do, but my gut reaction was “that is absolutely crazy!”  When I finally heeded to his prompting in my heart, I decided that I needed to stop all treatment that I was doing for the next four weeks before my scans.  I needed to be put in a position where my faith and hope for healing is totally dependent upon him because I don’t have the other treatment to fall back on.  It is in his hands, and I need to trust him in that.

This is so typical of God, and I love it.  It was a Tuesday and I was going to see my doctor the next day to tell him my decision.  I jumped back and forth about what I was really going to decide to do about every ten minutes.  That morning was my first morning of starting Bible Study Fellowship.  One of the main themes of that morning’s study?  The faith that Martha had to have in Jesus to be able to ask for the stone to be rolled away from Lazarus’ tomb.  The question that was presented to us as we were wrapping up was “what is your stone that is getting in the way of your faith?”  Ok, God.  You could not say it more loud and more clear than this.  So it was that moment that my decision was final.

I have been off of treatment for three weeks now.  If I would have known how I would feel after laying this tumor down completely in his hands a year ago, I would’ve stopped doing treatment then.  (but he wasn’t asking me to do that at that time).  God has been amazing.  The peace, comfort and closeness that I feel with him is indescribable, and it makes me so grateful that he loves me enough to keep knocking on the door of my heart to be obedient to him.  I have been so blessed by this step of obedience.  I feel free from the burden of this tumor.  Not to say that I still don’t struggle with trusting God completely.  It’s a choice I have to make on a daily basis because I like to be in control of making plans and then having back-up plans for those.  But that isn’t what this is about.

Scans will happen on February 23rd, so your prayers for continued trust and for God’s healing touch on my body means more to me than you’ll ever know.  I’m so blessed by everybody that is loving me and interceding for me in prayer.  SO blessed.

So watch out.

God is on the move and he’s doing great things…

Health updates

For those of you who are on this site to monitor what kind of treatment that I am doing that may be helpful in deciding your treatment plan, I am now adding which treatments that I’ve been doing in between scans on the ‘Health updates’ page.  You will be able to see the effects of the listed treatments based upon the corresponding test results.  Thought that might be helpful…