From the Los Angeles Times
The cancer drug
Cancer opens one's eyes to the many facets of
marijuana.
By Diana Wagman
December 22, 2007
Ahh, cancer. One learns so much from being diagnosed with a
death-sentence disease. Of course, 95% of it is stuff you would rather
not know, but that other 5% is downright interesting. For example,
"America's Next Top Model" is much more fun to watch when you've lost
15 pounds without trying. During chemotherapy, vanilla smells good, but
vanilla wafers taste disgusting. And eyelashes really do have a
purpose; without them, my eyes are a dust magnet.
But
the most compelling fact I learned was about my friends. Not just what
you would expect: how they cooked for my family and picked up my kids
and took me to doctors and pretended not to notice how bad I looked
and, most important, that I could not -- cannot -- survive without
them.
No, what really shocked me was how many of my old, dear,
married, parenting, job-holding friends smoke pot. I am not kidding.
People I never expected dropped by to deliver joints and buds and
private stash. The DEA could have set a security cam over my front door
and made some serious dents in the marijuana trade. The poets and
musicians were not a surprise, but lawyers? CEOs? Republicans? Across
the ideological spectrum, a lot of my buddies are stoners. Who knew?
OK,
I admit it, in college I smoked dope with the rest of them. I mean,
everybody was doing it -- an excuse I do not allow my children -- and
at parties I didn't want to be uncool. Plus, I felt my only other
option was alcohol, and the sweet drinks I liked were too fattening.
But that was a long time ago, and since then I have learned to drink
bourbon straight, get high on life and appreciate the advantages of not
doing anything you wouldn't want your kids to do.
I thought all
my friends felt the same. Boy, was I wrong. When I surfaced from my
chemo haze enough to care about anyone else, I was curious. Why do so
many 40- and 50-somethings still get high? I asked my suppliers. Pain
was the No. 1 answer. Not just the psychic angst of being mothers and
fathers to teenagers, but real physical pain. We're all beginning to
fall apart, and for those who imbibe, a couple of tokes really take the
edge off the sciatica, rotator cuff injuries, irritable bowel syndrome
and migraines.
The second biggest reason was anxiety. Perhaps
we can blame politics for middle-age pot use: the war, the environment,
the loss of our civil liberties, little things like that.
Obviously
some of us use drugs to ease the lives of quiet desperation we never
thought we would have back when we were getting stoned the first time.
Our drug use now is really the same as in college. Then I got high to
relax, to gain confidence, to forget I was an overweight, mediocre
college student terrified of the future. Now we get stoned to relax,
forget our disappointing careers and mask our terror of not just our
own future but the future for our kids as well. Is it so different from
my dad coming home from work and having a couple of martinis? Or my
mother and those little prescribed pills she took when she felt
"nervous"? At least -- we can rationalize -- marijuana is all natural.
I
spoke to my oncologist about the pros and cons of marijuana use for
cancer patients. He said he was part of a study 25 years ago on the
effects of pot on nausea, joint pain and fatigue caused by
chemotherapy. It worked then, he said; it really helped some people.
But now they have great new drugs, such as Emend, dexamethasone and
Ativan, that keep the nausea and other pain at bay. He said the people
who use pot now do it because they like it. Or maybe they use it
because they would rather support a farm in Humboldt County than a huge
pharmaceutical conglomerate.
After chemo No. 1, I was
violently ill. Anti-nausea drugs notwithstanding, I was hugging the
porcelain throne. My body did not want to be poisoned; I guess it liked
cancer better. I was willing to try anything, so I lit up. It helped. A
lot. I collapsed on the couch, I zoned out watching "Project Runway," I
was able to take deep breaths without puking.
My 15-year-old
daughter was shocked. The look on her face was proof that her
elementary school D.A.R.E. program had really done its job. A friend --
not a supplier or a user -- explained to her it was just to make me
feel better and that if it worked, wouldn't that be great? My daughter
reluctantly agreed, but I knew she didn't mean it. I had come full
circle in my life -- the next time I had a toke, I stood in my bathroom
with the fan on, blowing smoke out the window, but instead of my
parents, I was scared my kids would find out I was smoking dope again.
The
biggest pain of cancer is the gnawing, scratching, bleeding dread that
they didn't find it all, that you didn't go to the doctor soon enough,
that it is growing out of control at this very moment. My doctor
recommended meditation. Yeah, right, I thought, more time sitting
quietly trying not to think about dying. I had carpool for that.
Meanwhile, I lost all taste for alcohol. Even half a glass of wimpy
white wine could make me toss my cookies, so I turned to my friend Mary
Jane occasionally, only when nothing else would do.
In the
middle of one post-chemo night, my husband was out of town and I was
sick and I got up and tried to get the little pipe lit and take one hit
so I could maybe sleep. My son heard me struggling and he came into my
bedroom. He lit the match for me and showed me where to put my finger
on the "carburetor," the hole on the side of the pipe, to make it draw.
I was too grateful to ask him how he knew all this. He stayed with me
until I felt better. It was mother-son bonding in a new way.
Just another reason to say: Thank you, cancer.
Diana Wagman, a professor at Cal State Long Beach, is the author of the
novels "Skin Deep," "Spontaneous" and "Bump."
Copyright 2007 Los Angeles Times