November 29, 2012

A Cancer Story

"But...everything is going to be okay right? I mean it can't be...cancer? We're too young, she's too young...right? Right?"
...
"Dad?"
After a long silence he says "Honey, as you get older...::sigh::..as you get older things start happening, good things and bad things...and well...I don't know if it's going to be okay...it looks serious, very serious..."
I started to cry. And I had a bad feeling. I realized this was the first time ever that my dad couldn't tell me if everything was going to be okay. Probably because he had read her test results and picked up on words like 'metastatic' and 'tumor' and already knew what they meant.

I remember that call like it was yesterday and this was the first of many scary months and phone calls ahead. It was around this time last year that I called my best friend Julia to catch up--she had had a cough for a few months and it just wasn't getting better--"dude your cough sounds nasty! Are you sick?' But like best friends, we moved on to other topics and talked about our secret plot for Christian and I to fly home for Christmas a few weeks later to surprise my parents.

Fast forward and we were in Cali for Christmas and Christian and I had just gotten engaged! And guess what? Julia and my other best friend Smitty were on the beach with us snapping pics and watching as Christian got down on one knee and proposed. Throughout that same week we talked about how amazing the summer had been--Julia and Smitty spent a few weeks in Amsterdam a few months earlier, we barhopped, lunched by the canals, partied in Berlin, they joined me for my twin sister's bachelorette party in Vegas and wedding in Cali and now we were celebrating my engagement! "You guys, this year is one for the books." 

But Julia also told me the same week that she had gone to the doctor several weeks earlier to get her cough checked out and an x-ray revealed some type of mass in her lung. But the doctors didn't express too much concern and assumed an infection and they'd keep an eye on it. Just before Christmas though, Julia started coughing up a bit of blood and decided to go back. 

A few days later it was time for us to return back to Amsterdam, so I hugged her tight and told her to get it checked out again and that I'd miss her so much. 

Over the course of the next two months, Julia got more x-rays, blood tests and check-ups. Each appointment resulted in another appointment which was exponentially more urgent. I remember thinking 'wow they sure are moving fast with this now.' It was clear that CT scans and biopsies were triggering the next phase of testing now, not next week, not next month, as in "Julia, you need to come back in tomorrow, or actually we can do your test this afternoon." 

Smitty and I discussed possibilities, never believing that it could be cancer. She's our best friend and we all just turned 26, I mean the thought of cancer was just not possible. We comforted her with these ideas and got her mind off of it--"hey I think the next time I'll fly out again is February 2013, just in time for your b-day! I owe you a b-day celebration, let's plan a tropical getaway.'

By this time it was the end of February and the words 'PET scan' came up--the last test they do before they diagnose cancer. At this point I started freaking out. Within the same week, they did a biopsy of tumors which were found in her lung AND liver. 

It was March, the week leading up to St. Patrick's Day--a week I will never forget. I knew she had these tests done at the hospital that week and told her to call me no matter what time it is. And I gotta call. It was Smitty, she was sobbing and she said the words I prayed wouldn't be said: 'Julia has lung cancer.' My world stopped. As soon as I hung up the phone, I saw the lengthy text messages from Julia but only a few words stood out--'it's malignant, I have cancer.'

I picked up the phone and called her right away. My voice was shaky but I tried to keep it together. I was in shock. I just wanted to be with her. I wanted it to be me. She said she had to get another scan to make sure it didn't spread to her brain--omg is this a nightmare?! Fortunately (if that word can be used), the cancer was only in her lung and liver.

They wouldn't know the staging until she met with the oncologist the next day--it was a Thursday.

Early on Thursday, Christian and I had decided that it's best for me to fly out to California ASAP. I sobbed the entire week--out of fear, sadness, anger, love. I was just so scared.

Then her oncologist appointment came--stage 4 small cell carcinoma. I had bought a ticket to fly out 2 days later and probably to prevent a nightmare-ish flight home, no one told me how severe her cancer was. But I did found out. The night before my flight I joined a friend at a bar to bid her farewell since she was off traveling for the summer, then heard that Julia's cancer was stage 4. I cried and cried and cried, begging the friends I was with to wake me up from this nightmare I was in.

I went home, threw some things into a suitcase and boarded a flight to Cali the next morning. And let me tell you...8 hours to JFK, an 8 hour layover, then another 5-6 hours to California is a damn long time alone in transit thinking about the week's events. I cried the entire time thinking, praying, begging that I would do ANYTHING IN THE WORLD to make Julia's cancer go away, wondering why it had to be this kind and why this stage

As soon as I arrived, my sisters picked me up and when I walked in the house, I put my head down and stared at the ground. My mom and sister put their arms around me. I pepped up though, because Julia would be there any minute. And then when she walked in the door, I hugged her tight and didn't want to let go.

Over the next 2 weeks, Julia, my other best friends and I talked about cancer and what we will do to celebrate her cancer victory one day. She started chemo immediately. I brought a movie to watch and a salad to share during two sessions of her first week of chemo. I looked at the bag of chemo as a scary hero leading to my best friend's arm. But she still kept a smile on her face.
Over the next 2 months, I told friends, family and co-workers through teary-eyes. Maybe the more people I told, the more untrue it would become. Fortunately, her tumors started shrinking immediately. Her side effects were minimal but the chemo was strong, so hair loss was a necessary evil. And she did lose her hair--knowing this still didn't prepare me for the first pic she sent me with a bald head. At about 6 feet and blue-eyed bombshell though, she still looked beautiful. 

Julia's friends did a DJ fundraiser for her, we did a boat fundraiser in Amsterdam and she remained so optimistic throughout the summer. Even despite the terrifying statistics we read over and over online. 

I am so proud of her. I know she's scared but she's staring lung cancer in the face.

Once July came, Julia went off her 3-month chemo routine because her tumors stopped responding. One day I called her and she said she found some small surface tumors around her body--god no. So Julia went back on chemo, a harsher one, with increased side effects that often leave her with crazy body aches--like deep into her bones. While she was active and working before, this time she sometimes stayed indoors for several days :(. That hurt my heart. 

A few weeks later I flew out and surprised Julia. I just wanted to be with my friends! Albeit a few days' trip to California and subsequent road trip to Oregon. I just couldn't miss it :).

Fortunately, the last few months proves she's a fighter. Julia's harsher chemo stabilized the tumors and most of the surface tumors were benign! She started another treatment alongside her chemotherapy at the Immune Institute of Huntington Beach, CA, which curbed side effects tremendously.

{Julia and I on our first ever trip to Amsterdam in 2005}
And now here we are on the brink of Christmas, and I couldn't be more thankful for my best friend of almost 12 years. Our friendship started from the day we met on the volleyball court in highscool. Every year since has been a blessing for any friendship: homecoming dress shopping, our fun rides to volleyball practice in Irvine, CA, three times per week, trips to Hawaii, Mexico, Amsterdam, boyfriends and break-ups, her moving to Oregon and back, her lending me her favorite scarf when I left for 6 months in Finland, college parties, thousands of beach days, my move to Amsterdam, her 3 week visit, and eventually her being in on Christian's sneaky proposal last Christmas. 

The baffling part is that when these scary things happen, people you say you appreciate them more. But I've always been so ridiculously thankful for my friends, always so grateful for this friendship that has been filled with so many years of good times.

So why did I write this after so many months of knowing about her cancer? A few reasons:

1. PROJECT JULIA: Last week, a contact at the clinic she is seeking one of her treatments from started a donation site on Julia's behalf. While her treatments are mostly covered, there are still those small percentages of extremely large bills that are not. 

The site kicked off last week and the donations and comments have been incredible. Complete strangers have been donating every single day. 

I had no intention to mention this personal story on this blog until I realized how many people--strangers--wanted to help and how reaching out is so important. Therefore, I decided to share this story in case any bloggers wanted to contribute. Cancer touches the lives of so many people. It's been a tough lesson to realize that cancer just doesn't happen to other people. It happens to all of us.

Donations in any amount will help Julia against her fight. If you have been touched by cancer, this story or just want to show support for Julia or read her story, please visit her donation site: 

http://www.youcaring.com/medical-fundraiser/Project-Julia/35240 

If you can't spare anything, no problem! Even a comment to her would be uplifting. She is so incredibly brave and I am so proud to call her my best friend. Her next chemo treatment is next week together with a few full days of immune infusions to keep her body strong (all funded by the donations she has already received in the last 7 days).

2. HEALTH & AWARENESS: These days, cancer is caused by everything. I had no idea that a large majority of lung cancer (especially in young people) is not caused by smoking and lung cancer is hard to catch in it's early stages (nearly 70% of lung cancers are already in advanced stages at the time of diagnosis). There's a reason cancer-fighting foods are encouraged so eat your raw fruits and veggies and stay active. Also if you just don't feel right (such as Julia's many months of coughing and chest pressure), get it checked out! My friend Jeanelle said it best: trust your body

3. APPRECIATION: If this experience has taught me anything, it's to appreciate this life every single second of every single day. Suddenly a rainy day doesn't bother me, almost getting run over by a biker in the pedestrian path doesn't either. And suddenly trying to travel as much as possible isn't on my mind 24/7. It's friends, family and those little moments that make life worth living. Don't worry about grudges, bitterness, or that last fight you had. Say 'I Love You'...say it now and say it often. 

4. LIVE LIFE NOW: Ya know that thing that you wanted to do and never did it? Or that friend you never texted back? Or that place you always wanted to see? You never know which day will be your last or what life throws at you. 

There's a quote I heard once that went something like this: 'it's not the years in your life that count, it's the life in your years.' Do it now.

In the fight against cancer, we are all in this together. 

If anyone has ever been touched by cancer, I'd really love to hear from you with advice, tips, stories, anything...good or bad. This year has been so hard for Julia and everyone around her and as someone who never knew anyone with cancer, it's been a tough reality to accept. Everyday more and more people stand behind her.

If anyone makes donations to Julia's site, I thank you from every single part of my heart.

Help Julia fight! <3

{Julia visits me in Amsterdam in 2011!}

November 26, 2012

Thanksgiving Weekend by iPhone

 Wow what a long (but fantastic) weekend. It went a bit like this…

- Thanksgiving: whipped up some roasted turkey breast and green bean casserole (my fave) before skyping with the family back home.

- Friday: Opened a few bottles of wine and helped some of my favorite Hungarian-Slovenian-American friends decorate for the holidays.

Saturday: Christian and I joined Lily, Carly and a few other Americans for a delicious expat Thanksgiving which included Lily’s homemade mini pumpkin pies and a Johnny-Cash-jam-session by her Dutch guy (it was great! Encore…seriously…haha).

Sunday: Christian’s family came up from Maastricht and we walked around the Artis Zoo with his tiny twin nieces.

Oh Monday, why do you have to be so soon? Hope you all enjoyed your Thanksgiving weekend!
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November 15, 2012

Weekend Indulgences at the Neighbourhood Food Market

It’s that time again! Oh yes the Neighbourhood Food Market in Westerpark is this weekend :). Christian and I finally made our way to this once-a-month food market a few weeks ago and were definitely not disappointed. Tapas, fresh soups, artisan bread, a Greek AND Lebanese deli, a California-inspired bakery, Ethiopian and Vietnamese dishes, oh boy I can go on for days!! We’re hoping to roll out of bed this Sunday and straight into the food market again (that is if I don’t spend all of my cash at Primark on Saturday).

Hope your weekend is just as delicious as ours will be :).
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November 9, 2012

A Tasty Bokbier Festival

A couple of weeks ago (the weekend of the street market saint and crunchy fall leaves), Christian and I ventured into the city center for Amsterdam's Bokbier FestivalBokbier is sweet, dark autumn beer and is really tasty during the harvest season. What was meant to be just a few samplings turned into a 3-hour bokbier extravaganza! It was early Saturday evening and the place had tons of beers to sample. A few hours later, we walked out of the place tipsy and smiley--we had become full-on autumn beer enthusiasts! Throw in some Thai takeout on the way home and we labeled it a pretty satisfying fall day :). 

I'm going to kick off this weekend with one last bokbier--winter is just around the corner after all ;). 

Happy weekend!
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November 6, 2012

Fall in Westerpark

My oh my...Amsterdam sure is a feast for the eyes this time of year! I've officially decided that it's Fall that is my favorite part of the year in Amsterdam. The leaves turn all sorts of Autumn-esque hues, the city is relatively quiet after a summer filled with tourists and the temps waver between a lukewarm post-summer wind or a pre-winter chill. 

Christian and I took a stroll through the blankets of fallen leaves in Westerpark last weekend...check it out!

Also, head over to Laura's blog Of Thoughts and Dreams as I share 3 travel spots you've never heard of!! 
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