Healthy Living, Non-seasonal

Mom’s Cancer Story and Sisterhood Support for Cancer Patients and Survivors

Mom’s Cancer Story – February 2019

This past winter my family went through a whirlwind with my Mom that I don’t even know where to start! So, I will tell the story from the beginning… it is a long story, but it will surely entertain you!

Late January on a normal call to my Mom she tells me she’s been sick with the flu (she thought). She sounded exhausted, but normal for someone who says they are sick. 2 days later we get a group text from my Dad that says “Mom is OK. But she is in the hospital. I’ll update you all when we get some info” (vague Dad text). I remembered our conversation days prior and texted back if this is her “flu” and I got a “No flu. We are figuring it out” (vague again).

So, let me back up. What I did not know from my “flu” conversation with her days earlier is she also was healing a bladder infection. She is a second grade Teacher (in portable classroom) so teachers and bladder infections are not uncommon.

Back to the hospital admit. My Dad had taken my Mom to her Doctor because she had become so weak with her self-diagnosed flu and my Dad found her mumbling incoherently in the hallway of their home and drove her right in. My hero Dad waited for her to get her “flu test” (my Mom’s way of saying something is wrong with me and I’m calling it a flu bug and I’ll get over it just fine). The test was negative for flu and now she was really becoming incoherent in the Dr. office so the office offered my Dad to drive her ASAP to the local hospital or accept a call to 9-1-1. He took her and the Dr. called the hospital warning them she is coming and urgent. She was septic!

Septic! Let me speed this up…. she had a bladder infection, went to Dr., had blood draw and given antibiotics. Then started getting sick, felt like the flu and within 5 days symptoms were harsh and she is mumbling. Now she is in the hospital and perceiving to be unaware of where she is. They do a neuro scan (only complaint she had was body aches and headache behind eye). Nothing shows on that scan. They find out she was healing from bladder infection so they do a bladder/kidney scan and THERE IT IS!

She has a huge stone sitting in her right kidney blocking the spot where secretion happens, so nothing is moving through that kidney and backed up and she is septic. She was rushed into surgery where they placed a stent to keep that stone out of the way, flush her kidney and start heavy IV antibiotics to heal her sepsis and blood infection before they deal with shrinking that stone. We were so relieved they found the cause and reversed the sepsis, but what a close call!

I am in the room the next day at her hospital bedside visiting when 2 Doctors walk in and I notice their badges read (GI, MD). They introduce themselves and ask how she is feeling and myself (no dummy to medicine) am highly curious why Gastroenterology is here. My Mom is talking away assuming this would be normal (in her situation a floor MD and Urology, yes, but GI?) Then they say, “when ER did the kidney scan they got a part of your colon (transverse-top section) in that image and I was called to look at what they saw on that scan. We don’t like it, it might be a mass and we need a colonoscopy ASAP in the morning…” the look on my Mom’s face! She is 1 of 7 kids and 2 of her brothers have had colon cancer. The Colonoscopy was done and they were in that afternoon to confirm the mass is the size of a plum and once healed completely from infections they need to take that section of her colon out.

So, let’s recap! Bladder infection-sepsis, blocked kidney, stent in place, stone still in kidney, mass in colon, still blood infection so no one wants to do major procedures so we sit and wait and heal, but…..

Her glucose is sky high since being admitted and BP all over the place. I am there (different trip in) days later when her hospital MD walks in and gives her the update for how she will be discharged, finish antibiotics and follow up with Urology and GI for these procedures for stone and mass. Then it clicks in my head…

“Dr? My Mom had blood work done at that first Dr visit several weeks ago. Did they check her glucose then? We don’t have those results.” Knowing her Dr is the same medical alliance I knew the floor MD had access to that early winter blood work. TA-Da! Her A1C several weeks ago came back at 9.1 (normal is around 7). She is diabetic (GEEZ-no wonder stones and weakness and high Glucose and BP)!! Now that Dr. gives us a panic look like she is just learning this too! I think she assumed my Mom was aware she is a new diabetic and therefore that’s why her numbers are high and slow to come back. But, clearly the staff just found out in that very moment she is truly a diabetic patient, seriously!

Fast forward to now, the stones were ‘blasted’ in an outpatient urethra-scope surgery and he did a beautiful job breaking up the stone. She did leave with a fresh stent (oh, did I mention this was her 3rd stent because in all of this she was discharged but readmitted 2 days later after getting very ill again and it is because that original stent became infected). Stents are painful she found out, but a few days later it was removed and she was stone and infection free.

The cancer, colon surgery, was a huge success. He did have to remove a fairly large section and healing was long. The longest part was waiting on Pathology but it came back as stage 2A and in her case that meant yearly colonoscopy’s from now on but no chemo needed. Yay! What a ride!

She just went back to her second grade kids this week after all of the healing and is tired, but luckily she escaped a chemo lifestyle and is just learning how to be a diabetic and taking nutrition classes.

There is a lot to learn in this story

First of all, if one has blood work done and you do not hear back then don’t always assume no news is good news! As a part of me wonders that if she was contacted many weeks earlier about a 9.1 A1C and started the diabetes healing maybe none of this would have happened!

On the other hand, I can’t help but think that thank goodness this did all happen. Talk about divine intervention! Had she been told about her glucose and started therapy and had the stones never grew then how would she have caught the colon cancer? Maybe by the time it was too late!

The wait for Pathology

You can imagine the emotional roller coaster my Mom and Dad were on for weeks. If you know anyone who has had to have cancer removed and wait for those results it is brutal! She wanted to have many ‘what if’ conversations and had to sit almost a week and wonder if she will be in a chemo office or not soon. If only technology for this was ASAP!

Support for Cancer patients and survivors

As we look back at times as a family on all of this, my Mom keeps saying one thing over and over. Of all the emotions, all the in and outs of the hospital and Dr, all of the waiting and worrying and the one thing that she keeps saying is “I cannot express how grateful I was that Erin (me) was in that room with me the day GI walked in!” When they said the word “cancer” I honestly do not remember anything that was said to me by them. Erin remembered it all for me. I would have had a thousand questions that I had no idea were answered by them in that conversation…” at the moment someone said the C-word she had a family member by her side and that is the 1 moment she is left holding onto.

Imagine patients who take themselves in to an appointment and may not have someone that came with them when they are told the C-word. My Mom was told the word “sepsis” and “diabetes”, but overshadowing all of that and pathology waits, it mattered most that at the very beginning a body was sitting beside her in that room.

Support for a cancer patient? Offer, all the time, and even persist that you accompany them to visits. If there is no way at all for you to be with a loved one at that appointment, call the Dr yourself or make an ASAP follow up for further questions when you can be there. My Mom also told me, “It is so weird how un-scared I felt right away. I thought I should have questions, but didn’t. The fact that you were in the room when they walked in was the blessing I needed or I might have really become more emotional over that talk.”

From the mouth of a cancer survivor, be in that room for them. Be their ears because as soon as they hear that ‘C’ word they are likely to not absorb anything else being said to them and that will leave them at home, later on with a thousand questions skyrocketing their emotions.

OneToughB Sisterhood

Join a sisterhood! Need a recommendation? Visit OneToughB because it is here you will find women with stories like this that need each other! Find apparel and stories, help and a sisterhood!

For OTB, the triangle design symbolizes 3 things:

  1. We’re impossible to break. Just like a triangle’s structure alleviates the pressure of any weight through even distribution.
  2. We are all we need. Just like a triangle, whose shape is solid and stable, all on its own.
  3. We can rise above. Just like a triangle with its upward facing point.

And the circle at the top symbolizes our head and mind, where our inner power lives. Wear it and know the power of you.

College Bound, Gift Guides

3 Unique Graduation Gifts that Promote Safety on College Campus

Sending one off to College? Scary, isn’t it? All we can do is help make sure they have all they need and let them go. For our own piece of mind, we can make sure we set leave them on campus as safely prepared as possible.

These Unique Graduation Gifts that Promote Safety on College Campus are great to give and in a time when needed, they will be so appreciative you made them available for them to use.

1. The Bunk Trunk

This is the best space-saver gift you can buy a grad heading off to a small dorm in College! If you have someone graduating High School and heading off to a College campus in a few months this is a gift that will get a lot of use! Dorm rooms are small and furniture just makes it smaller, so the Bunk Trunk is several spaces in one.

It is a safe/locker, nightstand and work surface all in one. But you can’t mount things or drill into the walls of a dorm room per the rules? There is no mounting hardware! It easily fits above the top bunk in college dorm rooms or under the bed. The BunkTrunk has a digital combo, so you never have to worry about losing a key. It even has a power strip with USB ports to charge your gear when it’s locked away.

The Bunk Trunk protects your valuables while you get to know your roommates and their friends. When student leaves their dorm room, they lock up their Bunk Trunk and take the key with them. Keeping valuables safe is on every students mind and this is a space saver and peace of mind for them. This is your must gift that you can buy HERE!

2. SABRE Pepper Spray Keychain for Women

Mom and Dad, take a breath! Remember putting your daughter on the bus for the first time and not letting out a breath until that little girl walked back off of it hours later? That doesn’t compare to leaving her behind on a big and scary campus! Leave her with SABRE!

Every female student (and males too) should carry a safe protection for themselves. I know a pepper spray is not cool-lookimg to carry around, so how about a pink one with quick release maximum police strength OC Spray. It also has finger grip for accuracy, 10-foot range with 25 bursts. So no one is messing with her now! This can be ordered right now on Amazon!

3. Securityman 2-in-1 Adjustable Door Knob Jammer

This is great for all dorm rooms. Not only does it keep intruders out, but there is no hardware installation needed which most dorms will not allow and it is easily removed in a fire or other emergencies where they need to leave in a hurry.

Whether they are in a co-ed building and needs that extra intruder safety or there is a campus-wide intruder alert they can safely barricade inside. Grips to hard floor surfaces or carpet. Available on Amazon.

Food, Healthy Living, Non-seasonal

NO SUGAR ALOUD – KETO Desserts To Buy

I was sent samples. May contain affiliate links. Opinions are my own.


To my Low Carb; Low Sugar followers! I found the best KETO desserts to buy and it is available on Amazon! I am aware this is not for strict KETO, but I am not on a strict KETO plan so I get to indulge in these No Sugar Aloud desserts!

I was sent the Brownie Mix, Golden Cake mix and OhSome Bread mix. Tonight I have baked up the brownies and my husband and I have both enjoyed ours!

The brownies are made with certified gluten free almond flour, no sugar added premium Belgian chocolate, and organic peanut butter. So far so good. Let’s learn more about the ingredients – No Sugar Added , No Artificial Sweeteners, No Bitter Aftertaste, Gluten Free, No Milk, Egg Free, Vegan, Keto Friendly, Paleo Friendly, Diabetic Friendly, No Artificial Anything.

Making these takes 10 minutes to bake in oven or 90 seconds in the microwave and some cooling time. You won’t need any oils, eggs or butter – just water!

As you can see by reading the label that net carbs is only about 3g. If you bake with almond four and stevia blends then you already may wonder how the consistency is. It is fantastic! The peanut butter icing makes it and I love the crunch of the nut topping.

Here is a tasty tip. I have a KETO vanilla ice cream I love that also has no added sugars. So, stretch these cakes to last longer by spooning half a brownie into a bowl (or a whole one if you can with your micros or a cheat night) and top with vanilla ice cream. If I am eating the brownie later on I nuke it about 12 seconds so it is super soft and add my ice cream. O-M-G!!

Whether you desire cake, bread or brownies, No Sugar Allowed is a great dessert on have on hand. The next Amazon order you do, have these KETO desserts in your cart ready to arrive! The price point reflects the ‘bread can only be done with premium ingredients, is mixed in small batches by hand by a professional chef. Plus everything is in the box including the baking tin’.

Father's Day, Food, Non-seasonal, Reviews

METALLICA | BLACKENED American Whiskey from Cask Cartel

I was sent product for feature. Opinions are my own

METALLICA | BLACKENED AMERICAN WHISKEY REVIEW cask cartel

Did you know that June 14th is National Bourbon and Scotch Day and then Father’s Day lands on June 16th. Celebrate Dad with a bottle of not-so-average whiskey! The best part is you can order his bottle online right now and know it will arrive fast, packaged well and be a premium liquor and at a great price! Let me give you a suggestion of a bottle that is a hit in my home with guests!

I thought I have had good American whiskey before. I get caught by the locked case at my supermarket that I assume are the best of brands. Or I head to a Wine and Liquor store and see so many options and don’t know where to start. I have tasted some amazing straight whiskey and bourbon blends, but nothing compares to METALLICA | BLACKENED American.

By far, it is the smoothest whiskey I have ever tried. Now when guests come over I immediately have those who I know appreciate a good whisky try a sip and they about melt into their chair!

Take a virtual sip below….

It is a blend of straight whiskeys finished in black brandy casks and a proprietary sonic enhancement process called Black Noise. It uses batch-specific Metallica playlists, selected and arranged by the band, to extract additional flavor and characteristics from the barrels. The low hertz sound waves of the music increases the molecular interaction between the whiskey and wood. It was co-created with (the late) master distiller Dave Pickerell, formerly of Maker’s Mark and WhistlePig.

About Cask Cartel

American-owned and operated online liquor store with thousands of selections, from old favorites to top shelf and collector’s items. Each has a full description and tasting notes. All orders usually ship straight to your door within 24 hours, and with a 100 percent guarantee, thanks to the company’s custom foam-mold injection packaging system.

Choose from whiskeys, vodkas, rums, tequilas and more — including some not available anywhere else in the world. You can even take advantage of Cask Cartel’s bidding system, putting in an offer for a case or extremely rare item and see if the seller accepts.