Somewhere in the middle of Tuesday night when they were pulling blood pressures like 68/37 I started to adjust my head that we were not headed home Wednesday. I had hoped, planned and packed for Wednesday, but it was to be another “tuck and roll” kind of experience.
Overnight Tuesday was a different world from Monday. It was not because the pain was gone by any means, but because the pain care team here worked until they got her to a place where she could rest. You can’t heal if you can’t rest.
The problem with all these meds is many tend to lower blood pressure. Her’s runs low anyway. Those two things combined together to create a bunch of nervous PCAs, a whole lot of “redo” action by the nursing staff, and a bunch of pages to ortho and pain management. The good thing is she slept through most of that.
Over the last few days we have pieced together where a lot of the ancillary pain is coming from. Monday’s surgery was over 3 hours and had to be done with her face down. The bruising thought her chest area is extensive, and the numbness on the front of her legs can be attributed to this. Those things are likely to fade away well before the leg.
The leg though…
This surgery, although we knew it might be coming, kind of snuck up on both of us the week after Meghan arrived home from the semester.
This leg, and especially this tumor had been causing her grief since 2019. At the time she asked the orthopedic surgeon, who has been a regular part of her team since 2016, for an MRI of her upper leg. He agreed because anyone who knows Meghan more then 5 minutes understands that she knows her body, and something there was giving her grief.
When the scan was reviewed and the doctor started to brace us for an unusual finding, I remember Meghan saying, something to the effect of ‘Thank God you see it.’ As she showed him with her finger exactly where this beast was buried in her thigh. He was impressed that she was so on point as he verified with the MRI images, but not surprised. She was grateful for the validation that she was feeling a real “thing.”
The next few years we tried everything to get at this beast. First we tried ignoring it. Then we scanned. Then it grew. We asked about removal and were cautioned that it would be akin to “filleting” her thigh through a huge open incision. That was definitely not choice one.
By the summer of 2021 as she was preparing to leave for college, she had reached a place where this precariously placed tumor (in between the femur and the sciatic nerve) could no longer be ignored. We got a hematologist with an interest in vascular malformations to see her virtually the week she was leaving. She headed off to college with a script for lyrica. We tried to go slowly but relief wasn’t coming easily. Still, she did her best to do the things college students do, for better or for worse.
She is the epitome of, ‘Those who say it can’t be done should move over for the people getting it done.’
That year was for studying and for swimming and for trying to titrate a dose of this drug. It would likely not have mattered if it was a magic bullet (it was not) the side effects were just too much and by 2022 it was ditched and there was s new plan and a new interventional radiologist.
In 2022 and in 2023 – he worked to shrink this beast with cryoablation.
It shrunk the tumor a solid amount- by more than half.
But the pain. It has proliferated every aspect of her day to day existence. It is hard to know – until you know. Chronic pain changes you. This beast got in the way of anything that required too much moving, sitting, or just about anything else. It’s hard to be 20. It’s harder when you are trying to relate to people who don’t need pain meds just to exist. It’s like you’re side by side with them speaking two totally different languages. At some point you either learn the other language or move on. Very few people are fluent in pain.
This transition Meghan and I are working on, where I am trying to transition her into primary responsibility for her care, it is a delicate one. This year was difficult for Meghan for so many reasons, but the reason swallowing her up was the pain. I knew the call would come, and it did.
She called and asked me to schedule and MRI – just to see what was happening. She was stating that another cryoablation was not the path she would go, but she reached out to her interventional radiologist to try to troubleshoot the images. From his lens the tumor was markedly smaller, decreased by almost 2/3 from its original 4.5cm. He could not figure out why her pain was so much worse. He called and spoke with the orthopedic surgeon.
We got word that we should head to ortho to review his thoughts on the most recent images. We were expecting advil 800. He led with – Let’s get it out of there.
Tuck. And. Roll.
When it was almost 5cm he dared not touch it. Now at its current size he thought he could get it. One of the smartest men we will ever meet stared at her MRI images and described the constant pain caused by the location of this ugly beast. HE said to her, all the things SHE has been saying. He said that is in a terrible spot, between the femur and the nerve. He spoke of his access to nerve monitoring technology to ensure the motor nerves were not damaged. HE said she won’t feel relief until it’s gone and cryoablation took us as far as it could. I swallowed hard.
I knew at some point she’d need to let him try. Too many things stood to get BETTER if she got THROUGH to the other side. The surgery now on a markedly smaller tumor was going to require a smaller incision and made it seem attainable.
And before I knew it the surgery date of June 3rd was set.
The only way out is through.
So here we are. Night 3 in the hospital. Another additional dose (on top of her heavy regimen) just got administered as the pain started to creep out of control again.
She needs to move before she can go home. She knows. She needs to move because it is just better for you. She know this too. And she will, but she can’t yet.
There is no frame of reference for this surgery. It’s nothing typical. There is nothing to base the experience on. Just Meghan. We have to let her body lead.
Occupational Therapy got us through a wardrobe change and a move to the chair in the room.It was a 20 minute session of activity. The muscle spasms on the back end of that, would have been enough to make me want to stay still forever.
But tomorrow she will move again. Residents and rounds and PT and OT will visit. The pain care team will come too. What I’m almost certain will not come are our discharge papers. And that is ok. As much as I am desperate to leave, I can not take her home too soon. There are times in our lives where we have to tuck and roll. These times are no strangers to us.
On Monday the surgeon dug in, literally to the bone and extracted two inches of muscle along with this tumor beast.The hope is that once this very ugly painful time passes, that maybe the tumor pain, and the chronic sciatica, and all the other ugly after effects of this beast will go too.
But,not today. And not tomorrow. I am trying my hardest to trust the process….
I am working on managing expectations. My goal is to find a sweet spot in this parent recliner…
The last of the dilaudin is in. That is my clue to close my eyes….
#beatingcowdens

Hang in there you two – it just sucks so much and I’m so sorry it’s happening. I know that commitment to stay and be there, but you know you’ve got to take care of you too. Hopefully you’re getting some relief here and there – just a bit – just to shut down your vigilance for just a minute or two. She will come through – she is just like mine – she will tough it all out and make it work in the end because she has to. I wish for you both that there is a huge turnaround today and that things progress more quickly toward a safe return to home. You are an extraordinary mom and she is an extraordinary young woman – and thank goodness because this damn damn thing requires that of us. Hugz to all! ~Eileen
No one gets it like someone who gets it!