Before and After with Blood Cancer–Lisa McKenna’s story #ThisIsBloodCancer
Who was I before the CLL diagnosis?
A fierce Scientist/businesswoman. I owned and operated an Environmental, Health and Safety (EHS) consulting firm in Jacksonville, Florida. I would travel to conduct environmental audits – one week in steel toe boots, safety vest, safety glasses, and hard hat. The next week meeting my client – usually Senior Counsel, in my Brooks Brother’s suit and 4” heels. Some projects kept me from my wonderful husband and cats for a month at a time, such as Libby, Montana v. W. R. Grace and September 11, where I was technical lead. I was also Caregiver to my parents and aunt. Meanwhile, I sang in a Cathedral Choir. I never thought much about extending myself so much. I loved my life. It was very fast paced, but I thrived on it.
For years, I knew something was wrong with me medically. I began having trouble with severe fatigue and constant infections. Some days I realized my colleagues (who were not in good physical shape – drinking 4 martinis at night) had zero problem getting to the gate at airports, while I was struggling to get to the gate (not drinking 4 martinis a night). I tried getting answers from my PCP, but he kept saying my 100-hour work weeks were the problem. My WBC counts were up and then down, and constantly anemic, protein levels were wonky. Joints hurt like crazy. Had every test imaginable. Nothing – “You work too much!” Had breast cancer in 2013 and never quite ramped back up to being me. Though I survived breast cancer, I felt a double mastectomy would be the best choice for survival (which now I realize was a great decision).
Then I went to breast clinic one day in 2018 because I felt my radiation oncologist had my back – while my aunt and mother were in hospice care. My radiation oncologist asked how I was doing. Told him I was sick and tired of being so tired. Had lymph nodes growing in my neck and groin. I had really cut back on my work load it was that bad. He looked at me and said I didn’t look quite right – pale and not my usual bubbly self. He ordered a ton of blood work and 2 biopsies Two days after my aunt passed and 3 biopsies later, I received a phone call nobody wants: “Lisa, this is Paulette with Dr. Herrera’s office. You have Non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma – it is called CLL/SLL – Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia/Small Lymphocytic Lymphoma. You will never get rid of it. Don’t you quit. Do you hear me? Don’t you quit! Do you want to go to the 8th floor oncology group, or the 4th floor Mayo group?” I was in shock. I couldn’t speak. “Wait. I have what?!” I can’t have cancer; I have a PhD in Environmental Engineering. I own/operate a company. I spend my time helping the environment. What the hell just happened to my life?! I was one of those with the dreaded karyotypes del(17p);TP53, 9q partial deletion, 11q22.3 (ATM deletion), 13q14 deletion, Unmutated (IgVH VH3-33 family), Zap 70+, NOTCH1 and needed treatment upon diagnosis. My Mom passed one week before I began treatment. Meanwhile my husband was acting very strangely – very detached. Usually a very, very caring person, he didn’t think a thing of my diagnosis – let alone provide support. Not even a hug. Little did we know that he would be diagnosed with a benign brain tumor a few months later and fight for his life. I was a Caregiver to a brain tumor patient during and right after finishing first-line cancer treatment for CLL. I closed his law practice while recovering from microscopic colitis from Rituximab infusions.
Who am I now?
A retired person who is in Mayo Clinic Clinical Trial 1784 (Daratumumab and Ibrutinib) who is kicking cancer in heels (not really – too much bone pain for heels), a devoted choir member of St. John’s Cathedral – who sang throughout the pandemic. Most importantly a devoted wife to an incredible husband who survived 2 brain surgeries and gamma knife radiation and a “Mom” to 5 wonderful cats. I took up nature photography to compensate missing my work – photographing/enjoying nature, rather than protecting nature. My life is a very calm life now. No pressures. No work deadlines. I have learned that we all must be our own patient advocates. Physicians are just a person with degrees – they will make mistakes. We must look out for ourselves and utilize the voice God gave us. Do I miss my former life? Yes, but always remember, a lady learns to adjust her sail to the storm and straighten her crown! #CLLWomenStrong #KickingCancerInHeels
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