Yesterday, I definitely felt the effects from my big day on the town Friday. I don't know how much longer I can blame this on the chemo and when I have to just admit I am a big lazy wimp. For right now, I will still blame chemo. But at least I felt good enough to pretty much stay awake all day and watch the crazy dogs. All six were in rare form, ranging in size from, I don't know, like nine pounds to about two fifty. Just a rough guess on those numbers. My wife and I ran into a hippo costume for dogs, and thought it would be a wonderful gift for my sister, who when she is not working to save the lives of your pets, has a hobby of finding new and innovative ways to torture her own pets, such as dressing them in hippo costumes. I will have to say, her dog looked nothing like a hippo, unless hippos are about a foot high and run around at high speeds doing figure eights and back flips. Something I did learn from the experience is apparently all dogs have the innate urge to chase hippopotami, all dogs except African bloodline basenjis, which is quite ironic. I guess since she was the only dog in the room who's bloodline would have actually seen a hippo, it was nothing novel to her.
And speaking of that little African bloodline basenji, Daisy was a completely different dog this weekend. She was letting people walk up and pet her. She was very affectionate. She was exploring the house. Then we crossed back over state lines and she turned back into her old abused and neglected self. Well, she is a little better, but certainly not the dog she was at my parents' or even in the car. But it does give us hope that a normal dog is in there somewhere, er...as normal as a basenji can get. We may have to move out of state or build a house that looks like the inside of a car, but at least we have options.
Back home, I am wore out. Tomorrow we have to get up at around five and head to a urologist appointment. I am excited and apprehensive both about this one. I am anxious to hear what he thinks I can do physically and how my recovery is coming along. However, he still can request the dreaded CAT scan, and I have no idea if he will or not. If I were a betting man, more that just two bucks on lottery tickets once a week, I would bet I will just have a few ultrasounds on the boys, I mean, boy. Ultrasounds require significantly less effort on my part than a CAT scan. You just lay back, flop out your junk, they run some magic wand over the goodies, and tell you to pull your pants back up. That's something I can handle, even in my post chemo, lazy, wimpy state.
So tomorrow I will have the final piece of information in my cancer treatment. I certainly won't be done by any stretch of the imagination. Cancer treatment involves years of watching, testing, and of course waiting long after what most people consider the "treatment" part is done. But at least tomorrow, I will know the plan. This is the last doctor I have to get my medical test road map from and for that I am excited. Hopefully it will be a plan that doesn't involve sliding into a big metal tube and pooping sensations.
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