About two years ago, I was diagnosed with a pancreatic
neuroendocrine tumor. Five weeks later,
I underwent a Whipple procedure to remove it.
I was in ICU for four days. On
the first day that I was transferred to a telemetry unit, my surgeon told me
that he wanted me to start walking around the unit three times a day. So I walked.
With my heart monitor in one hand and my spouse holding my IV pole, I
walked. With complications which
required another surgery, I was in the hospital for just under one month. Except for the day of the second surgery, I
got up and walked around the unit three times a day, every day.
When I got home, I had serious digestive difficulties. My cousin, an EMT, told me that walking was
very good for digestive problems. So I
walked. First I walked, shakily, forty
feet to the mailbox and back to the house, with a friend watching anxiously
from the doorway. When I accomplished
that, I walked to the end of the street and back. Then I did that three times a day. By the time my recovery was complete enough
for me to go back to work I was walking two miles a day.
When I was a patient,
I found the Pancreatic Cancer Action Network helpful and supportive. Now that I am a volunteer, I am able to take
part in Purple Stride, the annual walk-a-thon which provides patient support,
legislative advocacy and research dollars to conquer pancreatic cancer. I have been lucky to survive and thrive. So I’ll walk.
1 comment:
Bravo, Leslie! I can't wait for the next time we are able to walk together again! Walks are healing for us all.
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