Wednesday, December 24, 2008



SEASON'S GREETINGS!





To the left is Lew and I just before we left for a Christmas party last year. We like to think we haven't changed significantly over 2008!

I chuckle to read Gary's blog. You guys are only getting a little reminder of growing up in Winnipeg! Shucks, we'll take the snow and give you our -30! Actually it has warmed up significantly this Christmas Eve day, and we're at a balmy -18 this afternoon.

Lew is off playing bridge and I've just finished the peanut brittle and have the carrot pudding steaming, ready for a quick heat up tomorrow. Christmas will be very quiet. Just the two of us and the two little old ladies. We have plenty to be grateful for. Lew has finished 20 of his 33 radiation treatments and the oncologist told him yesterday that everything is going as planned. We hope that the middle of January, when the last treatment is done, we can kiss this whole episode good-bye and get on with life.

I'm revving up to do a play in one of our semi-professional Theatre groups here in Saskatoon. The run is the last week of January. Thanks to Lew's help, I have all my lines memorized and am just working on getting all the inflections, gestures, etc. in place.

As soon as that is done, we look forward to heading to Winnipeg for Auntie Merle's party. It will be a grand reunion of all the crew.

In May I officially retire--even if the stock market doesn't recover. We have a Sally Ann and food bank here, so somehow we'll survive! Hopefully we're off to Montreal as soon as the garden is planted. We plan to drive down with our trailer loaded with furniture for my oldest daughter and her fiance. They'll have a job list for us, as they are updating their six bedroom house, and every room needs some kind of attention. We're hoping we can focus more on the exterior of the house. The garden will likely call us home around the middle of June. My Mom is to have a knee replacement sometime this summer, so we hope everything works into a schedule.

Our relatives and friends have been wonderfully supportive during Lew's surgery and recovery. We had a marvellous day in June to hold my youngest daughter's wedding in our back yard. Life is good and we are thankful.

We wish everyone a happy Christmas filled with fun, family, friends and fellowship. May 2009 give all of you good health and happiness, and perhaps the urge to travel to 55 O'Neil Crescent in Saskatoon!

Cheerio!

Phyllis and Lew

Sunday, October 5, 2008

99.9% Out of 100--Great News

We are home from Edmonton where Lew had his surgery on October 1. Nobody (including the surgeons) knew what the outcome might be. We were given "possibilities" as grave as: 1.) He may lose all use of his left arm. 2.) He may have to have the nerves removed and reconstruction attempted by taking nerves from his leg. 3.) He may have any degree of mobility up to 80%.

He was under the knife for a little over four hours. Result? The A-team pulled through! He has at least 85% mobility in his arm and hand with no numbness or tingling. They were able to excise 95% of the tumor. He was released yesterday at noon, only three full days after surgery. He is on precautionary antibiotics and only takes a pain med at bedtime. We will phone the oncologist tomorrow and begin proceedings for radiation. The dosage will be quite low, and there is almost 100% guarantee that the tumor will be completely eliminated. Thus, this past year will become a "blip" on the road of life, we hope.

For anyone who questions the existence of a Higher Being, I can't help but disagree. Our prayers have been more than answered.

My mother looked after house and cat and had a lovely supper ready for us when we got home. Last night was the first night that Lew had a really good sleep. Hospitals are notoriously noisy and disruptive. Although he had a room all to himself, he was right across from the nursing station and public washroom, and everyone who came into the "West" wing had to walk past his room from the elevators. So sleep was not an easy thing for him, especially when he doesn't sleep that well anyway.

He stayed awake for the six hour drive home--probably because I was driving! I think I did a really good job of getting us home safe and sound. Edmonton has grown phenomenally in the past several years and the traffic is getting a bit crazy, but no problems were encountered.

Unfortunately Lew spent three of the most gorgeous Fall days stuck in the hospital. The temperatures were around 26 degrees during the entire time. I made sure I went out for a good walk every afternoon. The drive there and back was beautiful with all the colours. Nobody needs to say that Ontario and the Maritimes have the market on Fall colors. This year on the prairies is more beautiful than we have ever seen. Even my mother, who has gone through 83 years says she can't remember ever seeing such rich color. And to date we haven't even had a significant frost. Flowers are still in full bloom!

Today we are having the first rain in about six weeks. It is an old-fashioned "soaker"--just the kind we should have before winter sets in. Amazingly there were still many fields of grain not combined as we drove home yesterday. I have no idea what the excuse is. Never in my 60 summers has there been a drier, more wide open Fall. I guess too many farmers have too much land and just can't get it all covered.

For now, no further exciting news. We hope everyone else is happy and healthy. Now, "wealthy"--that's another issue with the world economy in such an uproar and the stock market in chaos. Oh well, c'est la vie.

Take care,
Phyllis and Lew

Sunday, August 10, 2008

Garden Pics as promised
















Here is our backyard on July 6, one week after the wedding. Too bad the kids couldn't have delayed for three weeks, as this is what

happens by July 26:


The tent you see in the background is the tent we used for the wedding. My brother, an engineer, figured out how to move it from the lawn to the car park without having to take it completely apart. Four people were able to "walk" it through the gate, post by post. It is now a great place for Lew to park his car. However, the last couple of weeks he has been using it as a cover while he works at re-vamping the trailer. Due to some overloading by his buddy, a wheel bearing fried and chewed up the axle. So a new axle was ordered and new tires were installed. Then the box and floor were completely torn off and will be replaced with new plywood. Since it's down to the bare frame, Lew has scraped and sanded and prepared all the metal for a fresh coat of paint (the color is up for further discussion since I discovered the plan is Robin's egg blue!) Today we pulled new wiring through the conduit, and tomorrow there will be further wiring and new tail lights and lenses will be installed. All in all, it will be right back to "new" again. This is a job Lew wants to get done before he goes for surgery.

Meanwhile I have torn out all the bean and pea vines and hope this will make some room for the cucumbers to crawl. I also pulled out some of the flowers that are now finished and going to seed. Here are some of the closeups--Lew is getting really good with his camera!

Coleus, Portulaca, and Impatiens Ice Plant

< Candytuft and Portulaca ^ Hope for Humanity Rose




Ageratum Day Lily

So there you have it! We CAN grow things on the Prairies--it just takes a lot more work!

All for now. Phyllis

Monday, August 4, 2008

Reunion, Rhubarb and Beans

A week in Quebec in Ontario during July was not exactly a holiday. Taking along 91-yr-old and 82-yr-old travelling companions is quite a challenge! It would have been a disaster if Lew had not been able to go along. The flights there were fine, and the hosts on WestJet did everything they could to help, provide wheelchairs, and generally move us all about without confusion. We arrived in Montreal on the evening of the 12th and were greeted with fresh leek soup and homemade bread at the home of Phyl's kids, Leslie and Trevor. They had borrowed enough beds from friends to fill the "spare" bedrooms in their 6-bedroom house, so everyone had a nice comfortable place to sleep.

There is something about the 13th, though! Sunday the 13th was a disaster. Auntie woke up feeling not at all well. It was our hope that some breakfast might help her, but she couldn't eat and just pushed the food around her plate. She wanted to go back to bed, so Phyllis started helping her back when she collapsed in Phyl's arms. Trevor bodily picked her up and put her on the couch where she gradually came back to awareness. Lew and Trev forced her to drink some sports drink and eat an energy bar in the hopes she would perk up. She never really perked up, but soon after "coming to" she had some major bowel eruptions and caused everyone to pinch their noses. It was an inopportune time for her to be sick since Trev's birthday was the next day, and Lew's the day after and we had a bunch company coming for Sunday dinner and celebrations.

Here we were one day into our "holiday" and our prime reunion candidate had us guessing as to whether she was going to live! We got her back upstairs to bed, filled with Gastrolyte and Emodium, and she finally settled down around midnight. The next day there was nothing planned, so we could look forward to working on her recovery.

Well, Monday morning she got up and dressed herself, ate a bowl of porridge and a slice of toast and had three cups of coffee! However, the bowels were still pretty scary. She decided she wanted to go with the rest of us for a drive, so Leslie drove us all around the area of Hudson, Quebec. It is a lovely suburb of Montreal, about twenty miles South of the Island of Montreal. All the houses are huge, as it used to be a somewhat elite WASP neighborhood where the horse-loving people had small acreages. So it is well treed, and everything was growing lush and beautiful. We got back home to Leslie's safely. Trev was working late, so we left Auntie at home in front of the TV while the rest of us went to a little upscale restaurant for dinner. It was fine, but very expensive for the little that we got. However, there was enough in the seafood to make Ella get sick to her stomach that night. Fortunately it was only a brief illness and she was fine.

Tuesday Leslie was to drive us to Ottawa where we would rent a car, stay with Phyl's cousin, then on Wednesday drive some seven hours through Ontario to Elmvale (near Barrie) where the reunion was to be held. Still afraid of Auntie's eruptions, Phyl and Leslie went to a pharmacist to see what else could be done. The answer was to keep her on Emodium and give her lots to drink. When we got back to the house, Lew and Ella were in a panic. Auntie had gone to the washroom and was passing blood! So in order to get any kind of response, Phyl called 911 and told the operator we needed an ambulance--even though we knew this wasn't really the case. The firemen arrived and took all Auntie's vitals. She was perfectly okay and quite indignant that we would have taken such extreme measures. However, it was the quickest way to get medical attention, as the firemen called the ambulance and told them not to attend, and also called the medical clinic and told them we were bringing Auntie in immediately. Nothing like overkill to get a response!

Long story short, Auntie had only had a hemmeroid. The doctor gave her a clean bill and told us to feed her yogurt (which would build up the 'good' bacteria in her system), and Metamucil to bind the contents of her bowels. Incidentally, that was the best advice we could have had.

Needless to say it was too late in the day to travel to Ottawa. We decided that rather than push our luck any further we had best just book a flight from Montreal to Toronto, rent the car there and drive the hour and a half to the reunion. So we stayed another night in Montreal and landed in Toronto at noon the next day.

Auntie pulled herself together and was able to partake of almost all the festivities at the reunion. She really doesn't remember very much of all that happened, but at the time she enjoyed visiting with all her nieces and nephews, sisters-in-law and cousins. She and Ella stayed with their two sisters-in-law (aged 88 and 84) and everyone survived.

Lew and Phyl spent the evenings with Phyl's brother and his family at their cabin near Orillia. It was hot and humid and rained almost every night. However, the days were nice. One day we took an open boat tour of the Georgian Bay. The next we took a bus tour of Wasaga Beach, Minesing and surrounding area. This was the part of Ontario where Phyl's mother's family originated and is also the same area where Lew's grandmother's parents originated. In fact, in the graveyard in Minesing, we found the graves of Edward and Sarah Lewis--now we are trying to track down the possibility that they may be great-great-grandparents of Lew. Good grief, maybe Lew and Phyl are actually related four or five generations back!

We arrived safely home on Sunday the 20th. Everyone was pretty exhausted. Auntie and Ella just flopped into bed and slept soundly. Lew and Phyl were more emotionally exhausted than physically. It was just nice to have everyone back alive! And Melissa, the cat, was glad to have her humans back.

The next day was supposed to be a day of rest, but the garden had different ideas! The peas were in full production, the beans needed picking. The rhubarb was on another spurt, and the Swiss Chard was getting out of hand. So were the lawn and the weeds. However, the flowers were absolutely glorious. All the pictures are on Lew's computer, and this blog is coming from Phyl's, but we shall send along a few just to prove that we CAN grow things here on the prairies!

On Tuesday, the 22nd, Phyl went off to work. Lew drove to Edmonton to see the specialiast (the same one he had seen in November). The oncologist here had decided NOT to do any radiation until this consultation. So Dr. Paul Paul spent about 3/4 hour with Lew. He agrees that radiation would ultimately be very likely to destroy nerve tissue and render Lew's left arm useless or at least very painful. So he and Dr. Olson (a plastic surgeon with a specialty in nerve reconstruction) will operate. They will remove 7 cm. of the collar bone, then go into the top of the tumor and pick out as much as they can. Their focus will be on removing the tumor from around the nerve endings. If, when they get in there, they can remove most or all of the tumor they will. However, until they open up the site they can't determine how extensive an eradication they can do. There is still a 20% chance of doing nerve damage, but we are banking on the 80%. Once the 4 1/2 hour operation is completed, Lew will likely be in a partial body cast while the bone and muscle heal. Then there will be the possibility of radiation and some extensive physio therapy. The best case scenario is that he will be able to regain all the use of the arm, and that the tumor will be completely removed. Although we aren't really the praying kind, we certainly have sent some requests to whatever Higher Power there is.

Surgery will hopefully take place in the first week of September. We are waiting for the letter that gives us the date. Since Lew's health is a priority, Phyl has opted out of the proposed acting role that was to also take place the first week of September.

Lew has been busy rebuilding the trailer, hoping to have it completed before surgery. Phyl keeps busy picking and canning. The Saskatoon berries were good this year, but we waited a little too long, and managed only to get one ice cream pail full. Also picked some wild pincherries and made some jelly. Then we cleaned out the neighbors' raspberry patch while they were away on vacation and Phyl made three batches of jam. So the larder will be full again this year. No tomatoes ripe yet, but tons hanging on the branches. There will also be some cucumbers. With food prices soaring we're just glad we have some of our own to put away.

All is well otherwise. The days are quieter now that the wedding and reunion are overwith and the interior renovations are finished......???? Phyl always has another one up her sleeve, but is cooling it while the carpenter is himself under construction.

Our best to all. Keep in touch.

Lew and Phyl

Friday, July 4, 2008

A Wedding, then East, then West






Hi all,




June 27 rained all day, but the sun shone wonderfully on the bride and groom on the 28th. Pictured here are Lindsay (Phyl's youngest daughter) and her husband Jukka (pronounced Yooka). They live and work in Jukka's home city of Kuopio, Finland, but they flew home to be married in our back yard. We had a small gathering of two dozen, and it was a flawless day. Wonderful food, prepared by Lew and Phyllis' other daughter Leslie; great visiting; a marshmallow roast in the fire pit, then fireworks after dark. The young couple were handsome and seem so very much in love. They have been together for eleven years, so one would think they know what they're in for!










Pictured here are the proud Mom and step-dad. Behind us is the garden, but it has grown another six inches in less than a week. We have had a sudden heatwave along with a couple of inches of rain, so everything is glorious.













Guess who caught the garter?
So the great day has past, we are eating leftovers at a great rate, the bride and groom are safely back in Finland, and there is a decided emptiness in the house.
A week from tomorrow (July 12) we pack up Phyl's Mom (age 82) and Aunt Flo (91) and fly to Montreal. We'll spend a couple of days with Leslie and Trevor and get a look at their "new" 6-bedroom house. Likely we'll strap on tool belts and pitch in on some of the renovation projects. They have offered to keep us there for several months, but we'll plan to do that later on. From Montreal we rent a car and head to Elmvale, Ontario for the reunion of the Jacobs and Maw families (Phyl's maternal grandparents). Ella and Flo are the only siblings left from a ten-member family, but there are 23 offspring and hoards of "greats" and "great-greats", so this promises to be quite the function. We only hope that Flo can tolerate all the excitement. The final festivities will be held on Saturday the 19th. We'll fly back from Toronto on the 20th.
Meanwhile Phyl's work colleague will babysit the cat and keep the flowers watered.
Once we're back, Lew is off to see the specialist in Edmonton on the 23rd. It is nearly a year since we began the medical journey brought on by the agressive fibromatosis in his left shoulder. He seems to have been shunted back and forth from surgeon to surgeon to oncologist to surgeon after a series of ultrasounds, CT scans and an MRI. The specialist in Edmonton thinks there is a possibility of doing a bit of surgery to remove the tumour from around the nerve endings before giving a series of radiation. There is a lot of concern about nerve damage since this could render the left arm useless, and at the very least leave Lew in serious pain for the rest of his life. So caution is required. If surgery is to happen, it will likely be in Edmonton and probably not until some time in August at the earliest. Then, he will have to be re-mapped for radiation and that could use up most of September. We expect there won't be closure on this whole thing for another two or three months. So we just hang around home and wait, wait, wait.
If we get the medical stuff done, we are tentatively planning to drive back down to Montreal in October, hauling our trailer with a load of furniture for the kids. We will eventually want to downsize, so the piano, Phyl's huge sewing cabinet, the antique oak dining table and a few other things are destined for the 6-bedroom house. Gas prices being what they are, this could be an expensive move. But it will also be the opportunity for us to spend some extra time helping the kids, provided Lew's shoulder will let him do anything. Otherwise he can just sit back and tell everyone what to do. Hmmm, from my experience he isn't the greatest teacher, but I'm sure he'll make a good boss!
Hope everyone is having a fun and relaxing summer so far. We appreciate Gary's blog along with pictures etc., but wonder if everyone else has forgotten how to post????
Take care,
Phyl and Lew

Saturday, May 10, 2008

Hurry Up and Wait !

Hi to All !


My surgeon looked at the MRI and advised me that surgery is not an option. So, I see the Oncologist on Monday to see about starting the radiation treatment. As my form of "cancer" is not immediately life threatening, it's likely that I will have a bit of a wait for my turn to get zapped. I will advise after Monday.

Phyl says Hi to all ! She has been busy doing a lot of outside stuff the last couple of days, including all the roto-tilling of the various gardens we have. My left shoulder is so weak now that I'm not able to do the really heavy stuff. I find lots of things to keep her busy these days. She is back working for SIGA again, but on a part time contract basis.

I've been busy with the bathroom reno - installing the new cabinets, re-doing the flooring, etc.
We got an acrylic drop over tub put in, and on Monday, after my trip to the cancer clinic, I'll be putting in a new plastic tub surround. But, today I hoarded in the open area of our back shed to create more room to store more useless stuff, which we seem to have lots of. !

So, stay tuned folks !

Lew and Phyl

Thursday, February 14, 2008

Happy Love Day

A dozen gorgeous long-stem roses, and a lovely Mexican dinner rounded out the day for us. Aside from celebrating having found each other to share life with, it is a quiet evening. Lew is working on Income Tax files, the cat is curled up sleeping, and I'm just vegging in front of the computer. I read Gary's two blogs and thought perhaps I should tap out one too.

Lew went off to see the oncologist yesterday. Although the tumor is not cancerous, it is to be treated in much the same way as if it were. There may be surgery, radiation, chemo and physiotherapy. The oncologist explained that this tumor is hidden in a very difficult spot, wrapped into the muscle and nerve endings, so it is very difficult to determine exactly how to approach it until the results of an MRI are seen. A "fibromatosis" is a kind of tumor that must be completely removed. Although it will not metastisize, it will return again and again in the same spot if there is any of it left behind. That is why the treatment must be aggressive.

The MRI is scheduled for March 13. We don't expect there will be a fleury of activity once the results are seen, as nothing seems to move quickly in the health care system. Unless the tumor is growing very rapidly there isn't too big a panic. As it grows, it will develop pressure on the left lung so its best to get it out of there before that happens. The radiation will probably damage the lung a little bit, since the tumor is just beside it. In order to zap all the growth there is a certain amount of healthy tissue that will get burned, too.

The oncologist assured Lew that the pain he is experiencing is very likely connected to the mass, since there are many nerve bundles in the area that are being squeezed by the growth. It would be really nice to get rid of the pain, but there will likely be other forms of discomfort before the dust settle. Surgery and radiation burns, then manipulation during physio. The chemo will be a regimen of Tamoxifen which is simply a cell growth inhibitor and is generally prescribed following things like breast cancer surgery. My mother was on a regime for five years after breast removal. It gave her night sweats, so could be interesting to see which one of us is flinging covers on the floor in the middle of the night!

It has been abnormally cold all of February thus far. When it warms up a tiny bit it snows. Then it gets cold and the wind blows, so it's just darn nice to hunker down inside and roll up the thermostat.

I'm very tired of going to work every day, but the time till retirement will be upon me before I know it. I just hope the economy straightens around and the markets get back on their feet or we won't be retiring in the style which we hope to. Our retirement will be filled with picking cans and bottles for pocket money and making regular trips to the food bank if this nonsense keeps up! Of course Lew spends two or three hours a day watching "Report on Business" and trying to make intelligent guesses as to what might happen.

Otherwise everything is fine. I'm busy getting ready to play "Phyllis" in our annual church Dinner Theatre during the first week of March. Not only have I been memorizing lines, I have become the costume seamstress. Lew, as usual, is being called upon to build some of the props. That's the only time he spends any time at the Church--and the Auditorium is far enough away from the sanctuary that he isn't liable to "catch" anything. I'm not exactly a praying mantis, and I can see my involvement with the Church coming to an end as soon as I extricate myself from all the volunteer posts I've taken on. That's another one of my goals for retirement.

Better go and see what illuminating things might be on T.V. Give your spouse/kids/grandkids a hug and don't just save the "I Love You's" for Valentine's Day.

We love you today and every day,

Lew and Phyllis

Tuesday, January 29, 2008

Envy those down South!

Hi all,

We're sitting inside as much as possible. Wind chill factors of -50 don't make you want to stay out for very long. Lew has been shovelling snow the last two days. We got about two inches of snow on Sunday night and the wind howled all day Monday, so it required three rounds of shovelling to keep things clear.

We purchased a treadmill--my combination Christmas/"Anniversary"/Valentine's gift to Lew--and Lew put it all together in the family room. He spent 45 minutes on it this morning. I'll see what I can do tomorrow night. That's the only evening I have free from being at rehearsals for the upcoming church Dinner Theatre.

No call yet for Lew's MRI, so we're waiting to get that over with. Otherwise we're healthy, so that's a good thing.

Certainly wish we were travelling the southern states about now, but I still have to deal with that nasty four-letter word: WORK. With the market going south, it may leave us up North a lot longer than we anticipated.

I have to make something for treats at work tomorrow, so better go turn on the oven.

Love, Phyl

Tuesday, January 22, 2008

Still Waiting

Hi To All,

Here is the latest news on Lew's health situation

The results of the needle biopsy are not conclusive, but do suggest some form of fibromatosis, which is a non-malignant form of tumour. Two pathologists have examined the biopsy, and have slightly differing opinions, but both lean towards the fibromatosis theory. It appears to be inter-twinned into the muscle tissue, so immediate surgery has been ruled out. My surgeon is scheduling me for a MRI to see if they can make a more definitive diagnosis and then recommend some form of treatment. He will also refer me to the local cancer clinic for a possible program of radiation treatment to shrink the mass. Not likely they will try chemo, just radiation.

Still having trouble sleeping due to the chronic pain in the shoulder/arm area which may not have any connection to the above problem.

That's all for now

Best to all !

Phyl & Lew