I suck at updating this blog apparently, sorry guys.
Three chemos back it was kinda bad, it was a little worse than usual and seemed to last at least a few extra days. I didn’t feel nasueous really but felt weird and run down for a few extra days, but it did pass finally. Chemo after that wasn’t as bad, more normal. I had a chemo treatment yesterday and so far it hasn’t been extra bad or anything, but usually Saturday and/or Sunday are the worst, so we’ll see how they go. Been working most days other than the Thursday of chemo to Monday after it. Only taken off a day or two here and there other than that when I wasn’t feeling up to working. So overall been doing pretty well.
Oh, and my hair apparently refuses to not grow. What seems to be happening is that some falls out some time after a chemo treatment but then what fell out last time starts to grow back, because my hair is thinner than normal but doesn’t seem to be getting that much thinner and I have two different lengths of hair right now. Kinda weird but cool I guess, we’ll see if I end up loosing more without having more grow.
Yeah well I suck at reading them. 😉 Believe it or not yours is the only one that I read, let alone post in. Weird ? Well I don’t have and don’t read any FaceBook, Twitter or MySpace pages either. That Meebo.Com instant messenger site (which I rarely log in to) is the closest thing to social networking activities.
Post Chemo, for those that loose all their hair, what percentage of the time does it not grow back ?
I’m baffled as to why Twitter is anything but useless and dumb. MySpace is kinda retarded, I kind of can’t figure out how to actually use peoples pages it’s sucha clusterfuck. As for Facebook, seems like it could be useful and cool, but haven’t taken the plunge.
I think very very few people don’t grow their hair back. I think that’s really rare. One thing I’m probably going to have to check after I’m done with chemo and back to normal is if I’m infertile or not, which their’s a chance I am. Not all that high of a chance (their was a higher chance of it happening on the other, harsher chemo that we didn’t have to go with).