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On Friday, May 2nd at approximately 3:00 in the afternoon, I sat in the cancer center typing merrily away to Paul on my computer while upwards of $6000 worth of Herceptin dripped slowly into my body. The usual suspects were about: the nurses doing their nurse thing, the friendly older man with the terrible cough that always seems incredibly busy while he’s getting his chemo, the frail old man that always smiles at me but has never spoken to me, the old man with the walker and the oxygen that always talks to me but I can barely understand what he’s saying, the old Spanish looking woman who I’m almost certain never understands a thing the nurses say to her, and Mr. Bacon.

Mr. Bacon is probably in his 50’s. He’s trim and fit with silvery white hair, a sparkle in his eyes and a smile that could make even the meanest sour pusses smile. He’s the kind of guy that you can’t help but enjoy being around; the kind of guy that makes going for chemo entertaining. He is very witty, genuine and has a wonderful sense of humor that he uses to engage in playful banter with the nurses and make people laugh. He’s the kind of person that you want to be like when you’re his age and hope that your kids will turn out like. All in all, he’s a pretty cool guy.

Everything was going as it usually goes — nothing surprising or out of the ordinary had happened or seemed pending, which is favorable when you’re getting cancer treatment — but lurking under the merry facade of Mr. Bacon’s cool, calm and collected demeanor was an unhappy truth waiting to be uncovered.

When the nurses unhooked Mr. Bacon from his IVs, he got up as usual and joked as he walked across the room. But, I realized, he wasn’t leaving yet. He was going in to see his doctor, and was going to come back to the chemo room before he left. I didn’t think much of this deviation of routine and continued typing away on my computer, although it should have been my first clue for what that terrible May day had in store.

Ten or fifteen minutes later I was made aware of Mr. Bacon’s return by the nurses’ eager questioning of, “How did it go?” from across the room. My chair was in a position that put Mr. Bacon back and left of me, so I couldn’t see him without turning around, but when I saw the one nurse’s face drop, it was all I could do to stay in my chair. When I turned around, Mr. Bacon was just shaking his head, not saying a word, and four of the nurses were gravitating toward him. The one nurse said in disbelief, quite loudly, “No! You’re kidding!” I still didn’t know what was going on, what had happened, just that it couldn’t be good. Finally, Mr. Bacon said, “Nope. Not kidding.” By this point the nurses were close to him and they were speaking quietly so that it was difficult for me to hear what they were saying, but then, clear as day I heard Mr. Bacon say, “I won’t see Christmas. I won’t see Christmas,” and it was all I could do not to cry.

He was upset, of course, and I could hear it in his voice, but he spoke matter of factly and remained as calm and collected as ever.

And then he laughed.

From that point on his regular tone returned and he joked and laughed almost like normal, except this time it was about how he was going to die and that there was nothing he could do about it. He wouldn’t be coming back for treatments anymore, since they obviously weren’t working and he had better things to be spending his time doing. I heard him say, “He said I could try radiation, but, I mean….”

I wanted so badly to jump up and give him a hug, but my inhibitions were too great and by the time I plucked up the courage to do it I would have had to have picked up my chemo pole and chaseed him down the hall and into the waiting room out front. Then, as soon as it was too late, I deeply regretted not getting my ass up, interrupting their conversation and giving the man a hug.

After he was gone I asked the nurse what happened. She told me that Mr. Bacon had complained about headaches in his prechemo check up that morning and the Dr. sent him over for a PET/CT scan of the head immediately (they have their own PET/CT unit in the building next door). The radiologist brought the results to Mr. Bacon’s Dr. right away (it usually takes a couple of days), and after chemo Mr. Bacon went to talk to him about it.

As it turns out, Mr. Bacon’s cancer spread to his brain, and once it’s in there, it is near impossible to get rid of. Obviously that meant that his chemotherapy was ineffective, leaving him only with the option of radiation. The effectiveness of that treatment at the stage his cancer was at would be incredibly limited, but the effects of radiation of the brain on Mr. Bacon would have been horrible, most likely leaving him very sick and partially bed ridden for the remainder of his life.

Mr. Bacon didn’t want that.

I asked the nurses if I brought them a card for Mr. Bacon if they would address it for me and send it to him (they clearly wouldn’t have been able to give me his address). They said yes, so that night when I went to the Relay for Life at Lecanto High School, I dedicated a luminaria to Mr. Bacon in his honor and took a picture of it and the word “HOPE” spelled out in the glowing bags on the bleachers. I made him a card with these pictures and a picture of the group of us that went that night on it and sent it to him. I hope he liked it.

Every time that I have talked to some new person about cancer since May 2nd, and that person tells me that I’ll surely beat it because I have “the right attitude,” I want to tell them all about Mr. Bacon and how he has “the right attitude” and isn’t supposed to die from cancer — that he is proof that cancer does not care about its host’s attitude towards it. But I have only done this twice, because it seems that telling people a story like that when they’re trying to be hopeful and inspirational breaks something inside them, and there are only so many times that I can bear being the reason for that terrible, desperate look in someone else’s eyes.

But everyone I speak to on a regular basis knows about Mr. Bacon, and now so do you.

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