Saturday, June 7, 2014

A Fantastic Cancer Voyage Chapter 2 VIII


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From the first moment my wife discovered she had breast cancer, there was a deafening silence from the men I know. Even ones whose wives, mothers or girlfriends had breast cancer seemed to have received a gag order from some Central Cancer Command and did little more than mumble about the experience. Not one to shut up for any known reason, I started this blog…

One of my fondest memories as a kid is watching the movie FANTASTIC VOYAGE. In it, a group of scientists and their ultra-futuristic laser-packing “submarine” are reduced to cell size and injected into the blood vessels of a world diplomat in order to destroy a blood clot in his brain.

What would a FANTASTIC VOYAGE: Breast Cancer look like? I’m going to write a novel here, short chapter by short chapter and I’m going to include the latest research and I’m going to imagine the entire story here for your delectation. If you want to start at the beginning, look left. Scroll down to LABELS. The first one is “A Fantastic Cancer Voyage”. Click on it. Scroll to the bottom and you will find episode one. Let me know what you think after you’ve read the whole thing!

Ohloo – Dr. Olubunmi Nwagbara – Ohloo to her friends, if not her family – held up her hands in surrender, “I’m not Mother Teresa. I’m just a surgeon…”

“…who has the opportunity to free women everywhere! How can you not see that?” Machig Rabten was a long-time colleague and had once been a patient. She was older than she looked. Approaching seventy, and a physician’s assistant, she’d refused several attempts by friends and family to push her into med school. She’d wanted to work among people, not wrestle with bureaucracy. She’d served in Calcutta, Beijing, Lost Angeles, Mexico City and finally in the Mayo as Ohloo’s confidante and right-hand-woman.

Ohloo shook her head, saying, “I see Kim Lin Ghandi laying in her bed while cancer eats her body up unchecked. I need the absolute best team with me while I dive into her bloodstream and operate. That’s all I see. The rest of the details I’ll leave up to you.”

Machi’s lips twitched then she nodded. “All right. Leave it to me, Doc. I’ll shoot you a the team list with bios attached with an analysis of how the skills will interact.” She spun to leave and Ohloo stared after her a long time before she tapped her computer to life and set into answering her emails and queries.

It was long dark outside the windows of her seventeenth story office when she shut off her computer.

The override – possessed by one person – turned it back on and a simple word document popped up in characteristic Georgia 12 point font. Ohloo smiled. Machi’s work. There was no intro, no explanation, no frame.

There didn’t need to be.

Subject: Kim Lin Ghandi, world-renowned philosopher and The Last Hope For World Peace, Catholic-Buddhist-Hindu-Daoist

Dr. Olubunmi Nwagbara

Dr. Isamar Noor, Official clergy and observer

Chief Right Honorable Mister Nnamdi Oko Nwagbara, Prime Minister of the Commonwealth of West Africa

Dr. Mackenzie Phan, expert in breast cancer theory (a BC survivor)

Machig Rabten, P.A., breast cancer expert in application of theory

Dr. Yameri Niazi, specialist in metastatic breast cancer (a BC survivor)

Alex Benton, chief administrator of Mayo Medical Center

She leaned back in her chair and said out loud, “You want Benton to be part of the team? What for?” Her earphone blipped. Scowling, she tapped it and said, “You have my office bugged?”

“Why would I need to do that?” Machi said.

“Because I just asked a question and you called a millisecond later to tell me the answer.”

“What question did you ask?” Ohloo didn’t say a word. She’d learned the art of waiting at her father’s knee during his gradual rise from Paramount Ruler, to Chief, to Ambassador, to African Congress Senator, to the place he now sat. Eventually Machi, an often-times fiery woman with a passionate Israeli heritage said, “Fine. Yes. You need Alex. He’s the ‘every man’.”

“The what?”

“You ever read his bio?”

“No. Should I have?”

“Starts with a public high school, community college, four-year state university, and then skips to Harvard business management, and ends as the director of the most recognizable hospital on Earth. He’s what every man or woman can be if they work hard and have a clear, high goal. That’s why he’s there. To connect you to the common man. His wife will stand beside him to connect the world to her common womanhood, and his kids will make their appearance. You’ll have to world eating out of your hand when you pull this off.”

“If. There’s a big ‘if’ there. Cancer surgery – cancer treatment – even in the late 21st Century, is still far from an exact science. We could still lose her to her cancer,” Ohloo hated the faint whine that’d edged into her voice.

There was a long pause, then Machi said softly, “If that’s the case, then you can kiss your career – and quite possibly life on Earth – good-bye. Have a nice night, dear.” The line went dead.

Ohloo spent the next hour staring into the frozen darkness beyond her windows.

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