Friday, September 29, 2006

32nd Injection & Shit Happens...(unrelated)

River Thames, Twickenham

Bloody diarrhea! Where did that come from?

Firstly, let me apologize for the mess I am about to describe.

I was sitting around at my Dads on Wednesday evening, trying to beat him playing golf on the PS2 & I could feel 'Something bad down below!'. The first thing my old man said was; "Bloody Hell Son! You stink!". MMmm, not unusual in itself, but I did think something was up.
After an hour or so, I was feeling more & more uncomfortable. I wanted to go home, leaving my dad victorious in one way (golf) and not so in another (breathable air).
I got home at 21:45, had a chicken wrap I had bought just 3 hours earlier from M&S. I ate that; Switched on the Apple; Checked my e-mails etc. Then an hour or so later, after a series of rumbles & what reminded me of a bubbling cauldron, I felt an overwhelming urge to purge!
What? I don't remember eating that! I looked down to see what had just happened. I instantly thought of a photograph I had took last year of a shopping trolley in the Thames. Fortunately there was no shopping trolley in my toilet!
Instantly I thought of the Hummus I had made the day before. But surely not! All fresh ingredients, canned (cooked) chick peas etc. I must say though; Although I don't think the hummus to blame, I have been totally put off from eating it again anytime soon. Which is a shame really as I really like it:(
Right; Fast forward to the following morning, after numerous visits to the loo. Still have it! I am not too worried though, as I feel kinda fine otherwise. But I do ring my Docs up at the RFH. I try to explain my symptoms in detail, trying not to ruin her breakfast;) She didn't seem overly worried & agreed that it may well have been something I ate. Keep an eye on it, drink plenty of water and report back in 24 hours.
So here I am, sitting in front of my trusty Apple having just 'reported in'. It isn't any worse and may even be a little bit better. Still not right though and rather runny! I am drinking plenty of water and eating too. I have lost my appetite some what, but this is not unusual. I don't often have an appetite so to speak. Maybe about once a day. I do consume 3 meals a day everyday (more like 4 including my 2am feast; but that's another story). I could quite happily live without "eating" food. To me, it is just a source of fuel.
Anyway; My Doctor still wasn't too worried and said these things usually take between 24/48 hrs to pass. So I will leave it over the weekend and see what happens.
I did so want to go out yesterday. I was forced to stay in though as I don't have any water tight trousers;)
My friend wants to know if I am up for our Friday night mountain bike ride. I might do; I think I can control my urge now. I might just suggest a hike instead. I don't really think I should be hammering it around the North Downs at night in the rain! Not if he is directly behind me anyhow;)
I shall see how it goes. All being well, my next post should have a much more pleasant scent about it.

Again, I apologize profusely for my rather nasty "Bog Log".

Also, My 32nd Interferon injection went well. I took it as always at 23:30 last night.

Jason

Wednesday, September 27, 2006

The Numbness Continues...

My hand & My numb little finger

The numbness in my little finger on my left hand is still very much there. I have had it a while now (since Aug 25th) whilst on Hep C treatment. It seems to feel much more obvious in the evenings (the evening time is when I experience my side effects from my HIV drugs). I have had my HIV sides for several years. My finger is numb all the time. It is worse just after i take my evening HIV & Hep C pills, it usually lasts until i fall asleep which is always around 3am. I thought it could be something to do with my bike riding. But i am not so convinced! Yes; the fact that i have been cycling every other day during my Interferon & Ribavirin treatment could have contributed to the numbness, & yes; the fact that my right arm has pretty much had it where strength is concerned, rendering my normal left arm with twice the work it deserves, i have this to say; I have been cycling this way for some time now over the years, and most importantly i was doing so the whole winter leading up to treatment in Feb this year & the whole Summer before that too! I can honestly say i have never experienced this numbness before! And my arm has been this way for years also. I am therefore almost certain that the numbness is mainly, if not wholly a side effect of my Hep C treatment!
My Doctors have said; It is almost certainly numb as a direct result from my mountain biking & to not to exert my self!
I have said; Bollocks more like;)
I'm not complaining though. I just think i know my body & my limits more than anyone else! Plus, it is just a numb finger. It could be so much worse!

Jason

Sunday, September 24, 2006

A Great Weekend Mountain Biking

Hampton Court, Surrey.

Wow! Another day, another bike ride.
Firstly, Friday evening. It was the day after my 31st Interferon injection. It went very well. I am amazed at how easily the needle just seems to disappear into my flesh, without so much as a prick so to speak. Everytime i expect it to hurt like hell. I have had a fair few injections over the decades, but always into a vein. It just seems so unnatural to stick a needle anywhere else. I pushed the whole lot in, including the air inside the needle and syringe. I don't want to loose any amount of "Liverade" at all! I have read that some of the Interferon injection packs have some pretty suss design issues, where some of the Interferon comes out when 'screwing' the needle onto the syringe.
I have the 'push on' needles & syringe with the little red plunger. I haven't had any problems so far. Still collecting them! I intend to make some sort of canvas with them when i have all 47. I am still missing the very first one, as i did this one at the hospital. It went in the bin there. I don't suppose it is still there;)
Now to my cycling.
I went out on Friday evening with my friend Lee. It was clear, but had been raining the night before. He had a nice set of lights (like mine) that i helped get him for his birthday. His first time out with them, and next to me, we could see for miles. We were right up in the woods on Pitch Hill, Surrey. This is great mountain biking country. As usual though, we didn't see another soul the whole way round. In the day (especially at the weekend) the place is rolling with us.
I usually feel a bit fluey/chilly on my Friday night ride, but i was feeling greater than ever this time.
Time passed very quickly after dodging fallen trees and getting lost in some quite thick fog on the summit. but all said and done we had a great ride with no casualties. Lee did have to dodge a jumping frog, which he first thought was a jumping rock! Mmm, maybe his lights aren't that good after all;)
Today (Sunday) I went alone to the same place. It was nice and sunny, but muddy for all the rain in the night. My bike needs a good wash me thinks. The place was crawling with fellow mountain bikers, all covered with mud.
I took off in an area i hadn't been before and found a very pretty windmill in Ewhurst, Surrey. What surprised me though was that is was in amongst a whole load of very big trees! I thought they were always exposed to catch the wind. I was hoping to get a nice photo of it, alas the picture i took is not worth posting here:( I had a great ride (3 and a half hrs) and Loved every minute of it. I did see a mountain biker crash though and hit a tree head first. She was fine thank goodness. I have been over the same section loads of times and it always brings my Haemophilia back home to me when i see someone come a cropper. I certainly don't take any unnecessary risks. I have seen some pretty nasty crashes in the past. Too fast and not careful enough!
Anyhow, i don't want to frighten you away from my blog, so i will finish here with today's ride.
I still haven't made my Humus yet. I am going to attempt to make some tomorrow. I have a few recipes to try out, including one from a fellow Hep C Blogger (thanks Chris).
Oh, i joined the Hep C Forum proper last night. And what a wonderful forum it is too. I shall write a post about it soon.

Sleep well & take care:)

Jason

Friday, September 22, 2006

31st injection & another week done

My best friend Lee, Holbury Hill last Sunday

That is my friend Lee. I have know him for over 25 years! We first met by chance. I was with a friend and we were down by St Marys church right on the river Thames in Twickenham. It was the summer holidays in between junior school and senior school. Lee was with his older brother Mark. My friend & i being the little shits we were at the time started throwing stones at them both. Somehow we began talking more like normal people and Lee and i found out we were due to start at not only the same school, but in the same class too! The rest as they say is history. He is great to have around! Especially outdoors. He seems to have a natural compass built in and we never get lost whilst out hiking or mountain biking. We have done everything together; BMXing, hiking, computer games & PS2, making our own fireworks, camping, climbing trees, graffiti, mountain biking, Kayaking, fitting my bathroom & kitchen. He is tall too. 6ft 4ins. He is great at putting up shelves;) Actually, he can do almost anything he puts his hands to! I am very lucky indeed that he didn't run away that day i pelted him with stones:) I do still throw the odd stone at him even today. My speciality is the magnifying glass on the back of the neck;)
Seriously though, he has always been there for me. He has seen plenty of my blood too. He has even injected me for my Haemophilia. He was a pro.
Lee is the one i go mountain biking with if i am not on my own. How is it that if we go out in the mud, he always comes back clean and i look like the Swamp Thing! I have mentioned him before on here & i expect you will hear more of Lee in future posts. I just thought it high time i put his photo in my blog;)
He is also married to my twin sister Nicola.

Anyhow. Treatment is going well. I still have the numb little finger. Apart from that it is just another week.
No rest for the wicked though! Lee and i are going out for a night ride in the Surrey Hills tomorrow night. He has some new lights. The same as mine. He will be able to see where he is going now! Tell you all about it in my next post.

P.s. Does anyone have a good recipe for home made humus? It is my favorite food!

Jason

Wednesday, September 20, 2006

Being replaced

York House Gdns, Twickenham

Do you ever get that feeling that the only reason that you are here at all, is just so you can be replaced by a better, far superior model? One that isn't rotten or infected! And the sooner, the better me thinks!
In the photo of the statues, is one helping the other up, or is one being lowered down by the other? Either way could be for good or bad reasons! I was watching a man cutting back a gigantic tree outside of my flat. I was thinking the same thing. Is the tree being helped or damaged. The tree looked fine before, thick strong branches with plenty of leaves, all attached to a wide, accommodating trunk. And now it looks like a sheared sheep! I feel similar about myself sometimes. I feel as though the world would be a better place if the likes of me were "gone". Well, i must say, whoever those "people" are, they're not doing a very good job! I mean this year is my HIV's 21st Birthday. My Hep C's 30th. Celebrations all round me thinks:) I am serious too! I quite often feel like running around the streets and shouting at the top of my voice exactly what i have and for how long and say, look at me and look how healthy i am. Look what i can do!
They say life ain't easy! At the age of 16 i was told only of death! Death ain't easy either! But it's all i know! I want to live forever (or die trying), just so i can say "You can't replace me, there isn't anything wrong with me. And besides, i am too old".

Jason

Tuesday, September 19, 2006

Everything is "just" fine

Fungus, Pitch Hill, Surrey, Today

Hi to all & everyone in Blogland. Today was a better than normal day today. It was rather quite nice. Nothing much different from other days really, except for a complete lack of other people. I think that is what i need when i am feeling pissed off and angry. People make me mad usually, so i have to take away the '"people" for a day and i am much better for it. Today i had (needed) the smallest amount of contact possible with my fellow humans. I spoke to two people today, a chap who sold me some petrol and a fellow mountain biker. I suppose i could stay indoors all day, but that wouldn't do would it now. I need to get out in the trees and dirt.
I had a good ride too. I took several photos of me and my bike 'Dessert Storm', but thought maybe you'd had enough of them for a while;) I took this picture of some sort of fungus. I don't know why, i just like the look of it. There is some pretty cool singletrack on Pitch Hill. At the top of one particularly bumpy and rooty section, i nearly came off! I stopped just before to look at the route i would take and just then i nearly didn't do it. I lowered my saddle a bit to make more room whilst leaning back on the descent and went for it. I seemed to gather speed much faster than i anticipated, although i had my disc breaks on full whack! I have no idea how my feet stayed on them there pedals! They did, for which i am eternally greatful;) I raised my saddle back up and off i went to find the bottom. After descending a few hundred more yards, i came to the bottom section. I new straight away i wouldn't be doing that! I looked at it for a few seconds and soon jumped off! I had to almost climb down with my bike to the bottom. I'm not worried about missing out though. Having had a life time of Haemophilia, i certainly know my limits. My arm hurts & my ankles ache, but hey! Thats cool;)
Talking of Haemophilia, there is a movie called "Factor 8" The Arkansas Prison Blood Scandal. It is showing in London on Friday and was thinking of going to see it. I know a few more Haemophiliacs are going to the screening, who also have HIV & Hep C. I may or may not go. It depends how i am feeling. I know what it is about. It is where i got my viruses from. I think i may just prefer to wait and watch it at home on my own. You may want to check out the movies website in my links.

Jason

Sunday, September 17, 2006

The Glass Elbow

The Train Window, London, 2004

For years & years i had been highly embarrassed of the way my right arm looked! It would look more at home on a 9 year old boy! It has had so many bleeds in the elbow joint from having Haemophilia, i could probably have filled an olympic sized swimming pool. As a teenager i hardly ever took my t-shirt off in public as i thought people were staring at my "skinny arm". Of course, everyone i knew would and still do tell me they don't even notice it. I am still self-conscious of the little extremity. But i wish it had a tad more strength in it.
Today i was out with a friend. His name is Lee and i have known him for 26 years. He has been married to my twin sister Nicola for ten years. He is a good mountain bike companion, as he never falls off or crashes and isn't afraid of steep descents & getting muddy and frozen in Winter. And he knows all about me and would know what to do if i came a cropper down at the bottom of "Deliverance".
This afternoon we completed a 3 hour ride from Holmbury Hill to Pitch Hill and back again, via a downhill single track called "Barry Knows Best". Only God knows where the name of that one came from! It was the first time we had done it. Nice and fast, twists & berms and a few jumps too. We Loved it, but my elbow did not! Lee was complaining about his legs though, which made me feel a bit better:) We carried on anyway and had a great time. And those familiar eels (roots) were out in force again today, but there backs were dry and thus ripe for rubber.
He, like the rest of my friends and family have put up with quite a lot over the years, what with my moods just before and during a bad bleed. I suffer from physical pain on a daily basis and it must be hard for people around me, at times unbearably so. And more recently with my anger frustrations being on Ribavirin. They don't tell me, but sometimes they must feel like punching me in the face!
As for my elbow. I wish it was made of glass. At least then it would be invisible.
Ok, maybe not glass, but Pyrex instead.

Jason

Friday, September 15, 2006

30th injection & Frogs

Frog, Box Hill, 13th September 2006

18 injections left to the end of treatment! January sometime. The month i turn 36 too!
Anyhow, i feel good mostly. Been having some anger issues. Not much of a problem. Just something to concentrate on, so i don't come across as too much of a dick to my family & friends. BBQ tomorrow around my brother-in-laws in Strawberry Hill. Lots of people and children and socializing ect. But guess who is doing the cooking? I don't mind;) I like to make sure that it is done properly.
My trip to the Royal Free Hospital today was rather uneventful really. I like the train ride into North London ( Hampstead), as i get to see the graffiti. I used to do it myself back in the 80's and i still Love looking at it. I have been making the same train journey every year since the late 70's.
Anyhow, It has been 4 weeks since my last bloods & they were very good. I normally go get the results straight away, but today i didn't need to as my docs were happy to wait for them. They could see i was well too. My weight was 79.9kg compared to 79.5kg last time. When i started treatment, for some reason they seemed quite concerned i kept an eye on my weight! I'm not sure why? My weight has been consistent all the way through.
I mentioned my little finger & it's feeling numb and they agreed that it was almost certainly related to my bike riding stints (thanks Ample:) And said i shouldn't exert myself too much! Fat chance;) I will keep an eye on it though.
Do you like the Frog? I went out on Wednesday for a hike instead of my normal bike ride. As i was walking around it started to rain and all these frogs kept coming out of the long grass, onto the short grass at the top of Box Hill. I took a few photos and they all posed for me like professionals;) There is so much more wildlife at night, especially whilst it is raining. But my ankles were sore as they weren't used to it. I think i mentioned this in my last post? Rambling again!.....Just had a quick look at my last post. Looks like i didn't. I am going mad! Or should that be madder?
My best friend Lee was back on the saddle tonight. He has been away for 3 weeks! He found it a bit hard going, but felt good for doing it. It was quite damp out tonight and those exposed roots are like giant solidified conger eels, just waiting to pounce with their slippery backs! I felt a tad chilly at first, but soon warmed up. I always feel a bit chilly the day after my jab.

"Blake's 7" calling! (dvd)

Nunight

Jason

Thursday, September 14, 2006

Bodies obtained...

Stencil, Brick Lane, London 2004

I am due to take my 30th Interferon injection tonight @ 23:30pm. I have been feeling fine(ish) since my last jab, except for this niggling feeling of being moody and rather irritable lately. I have had it before, nearer the beginning of my treatment and learned to control it as i find myself doing so now. But i just cannot completely push it to one side or prevent it from happening in the first place. I know what could be causing it. Riba-rage i think they call it. I say 'could be', becuase as far as i can remember i have always been susceptible to mood swings & feeling quite angry about the most insignificant things. My living room walls have had the misfortune of acting as some kind of horizontal landing platform for numerous fast moving phones & TV remote controls over the years. I am happy to say i have stopped throwing things, but the anger is still there at times.
My anger problems may have stemmed from my not being able to understand other peoples actions, not necessarily towards others, although bad enough! But towards themselves! For example; A heavy smoker runs for a bus and then complains when they miss it, all the while coughing up there lungs! Or as you are walking around the local supermarket looking for something nice for dinner and all of a sudden you get this long, nose burning stench from the armpits of the man putting out fresh bananas! I know there are instances where some people have a medical problem, but surely not 1 in 4 'Tescos' staff members.
Obviously, these things i can & do live with as i still go to Tescos for my shopping. But what really made me angry and immensely saddened was the time when back in 1998 i wrote to the Haemophilia Society Newsletter explaining how i was feeling, how isolated i felt and wondered if they could publish my letter to see if there were like minded Haemophiliacs with similar feelings. I got several replies, all whom had Haemophilia, HIV & Hep C. All were of a similar age to me. It went quite well for a while. We arranged to meet with each other. Go out for dinner and just be blokes. It was nice, but i couldn't understand why although we had so much in common, we also couldn't of been more different in so many other ways. I would steer clear of things like smoking & alcohol completely. And recreational drugs too. But these lads didn't. Nor did they take their medication all the time. One lad didn't take his at all! And several months later they started to die of Hep C related illnesses! One by one! There were five to start with, not including me. I got to 3 deaths in a period of 2 years and decided i couldn't deal with it anymore! The rest of us gradually drifted apart and to this day i still don't know how the others are or if indeed they are still alive at all! I knew what was killing them, but just could not help! Surely they must've known they were putting themselves in danger? David, who was a year younger than me at the time had very similar interests as me. He was a big Star Wars fan & Loved music. So much so, he was the singer/songwriter of his own band. He even had a CD album made. Very talented. Such a waste. But having said that, he has probaby achieved more in his far too short a life than i will have in twice that time. I spend too much time & energy trying my best to keep myself healthy and live as long a life as i possibly can, i sometimes seem to forget about having fun & being 'just a bloke'.

Jason

Monday, September 11, 2006

"For the Love of Livers"

Twin trees, Box Hill, Surrey. March 2005


Like a mother might with her new born baby, I cradle my liver in my arms. I stare at it in complete and utter wonderment. Did this come out from me? There was room in there? I can't take my eyes off it. Gently rocking my liver from side to side, holding it tight. It is heavy! Not with flesh and bone, crying or the dead weight of a sleeping baby! But with dirt! Bad dirt that just won't wash away! Not in the normal sense of the word no. But as I close my eyes, i can feel this wet, slippery lump in my tired arms. Trying to wriggle away and leave me all alone. I hold on tighter. He comes back to me. He knows where it is most safe. I can feel the dirt on the surface of my liver. I have traces of dirt on my hands & arms from holding him. I want him with me! Forever! I won't let him go! I want to wash all the dirt away. I figure that if I have soiled hands, then I can wash this filth right away! I scrub and I scrub, with all my strength! The dirt is coming away now. Soon it will all be gone. I continue to cradle my liver. Day in & day out. Whatever it takes! I am there for it. My liver is resting now. The cleansing has begun...


Jason






(C) JPT 2006

Sunday, September 10, 2006

New Dawn Fades

Banksy stencil, South Bank, London 2004

I am normally pretty calm as a rule. I do get moody sometimes though. And today i was moody.
Not at first i wasn't. It was a Lovely morning. Nice and sunny, calm. Got all my stuff together and left for Leith Hill. Got a parking space too. Great. Things are going fine. I cycle to the top, amid several other mtb'ers, where the tower is, to see what time it shuts so i can get back in time for a sandwich. They shut at 5pm. I was there at 12:30pm. I then started my bike ride proper with the intention of going via a series of single track trails and coming back to the tower for some lunch. So off i headed towards the top of a single track called 'Waggle Dance'. But after 10 minutes i got a double puncture (in one tyre). My first puncture in nearly two years! Not bad going eh! I had trouble getting my tyre off and i could already feel my right elbow beginning to hurt. I had already taken something for my Haemophilia before i left so i was quite happy that it wouldn't get much worse. I got the flat fixed and carried on through Waggle Dance to the top of another single track named 'Summer Lightning' which i like loads. If only it was longer. Eventually i ended up back at the tower an hour & a half later and went to get a sandwich, only to find they had all sold out except for a grated cheese & sliced egg! I got it anyway, although i new i wasn't going to eat it. They are usually very good. I did have some cake my mum made. MMmmmm. I was carrying 2 and a half litres of water in my CamelBak too. My next destination was to ride to the view point on top of Holmbury Hill via Holmbury St Mary Youth Hostel. I did that and had a Lovely view of Leith Hill and also my next destination, Pitch Hill. My arm was hurting more now, but i thought sod it, and carried on regardless. I didn't make it to Pitch Hill because the route i took wasn't bike friendly. I wish they had some signs up at the beginning of the track, rather than making me cycle all that way only to have to turn back! By this stage i was hurting more and cycling one handed when i could. I still had a good several miles of off road riding to do before i reached the car. My arm hurt quite a lot, but it wasn't a bleed yet. So i just rested my arm on the easy bits and went for it on the long uphill in the opposite direction back up Summer Lightning and then Waggle Dance to Coldharbour and finally back to the car. Yay! I made it and my arm was ok. I was tired and in pain but i had an ok time. But then i leant my bike on my car and it slipped, dented & scratched the body work. Drove the 20 miles home, one handed. Got home remembering not to put my car away in the garage until i had unloaded my bike!! Got in and had an injection for my elbow. That all went wrong and had to start over having wasted 3000 units of Factor VIII. Made dinner which was rubbish! I was tired and in pain. I ate it anyway. Had a bath listening to 'TV on the Radio' which seemed to calm me down a bit. Then got some very painful cramps in my inner thighs. Sorted that out. And now my day is over, and yes... I probably over did it today! Was it worth it? I don't know. Will i do it again? Undoubtedly!
I was thinking while i was cycling. I was wondering how long i will be able to do this kind of thing for. When will my arm & ankles be so bad that i won't be able to go out on my bike? If i can't go out on my bike, what else is there! It's all i do.
Oh well. There is always knitting;)

Jason

Saturday, September 09, 2006

Hiking or Biking?

Nutter!


Hiking or Biking? That is the question!

This photograph was taken by my best friend Lee up at Leith Hill. If my Mum saw me do this, she would have kittens! Don't worry, not every photo will be of me and my bike;)

I was all up for a hike on Friday night. Up and down and all the way around Box Hill, Surrey. My mtb was in for a loose bottom bracket. The bloke in the shop said Saturday. Oh well, i thought. I will go for a hike instead. But i got a call saying my bike was ready and the BB replaced with a new one. The one i had was a downhill BB, but i must do some pretty rough riding to bugger it up so quick! Plus i don't have rear suspension which also gives the BB more of a pounding.
Anyway. I ended up going out for a ride instead. So i guess that the answer to the question is obvious. I Love cycling!

I also like hiking too. But i haven't been properly since last October, when i hiked up Ben Nevis in Fort William with my two friends Lee & Nathan. I have done it twice now. But normally, i hike (more like walking) around Box Hill and the surrounding countryside. I was doing quite a lot of night hiking before and during the beginning of my Hep C treatment. I like the isolation and the sounds compared to what you experience in the day.
I will post a seperate post detailing the Ben Nevis hike another time, as it was quite a big deal for me i suppose, having two pretty whacked ankles from Haemophilia and all. I will be doing more hiking this winter, when the ground is a tad too frozen and slippery over them roots and chalk and stuff! To keep fit i shall just have to ride my bike around Richmond Park when it is really icy. I don't know what i would do without living so close to these places. I'm not a fitness freak or anything like it. But i do Love to keep fit and have fun at the same time. I remember the Gym i went to for every other day for 14 months was so very boring!
Tomorrow is going to be a nice, sunny, warm day. You know where i will be? You guessed it;)

P.s. My 29th Interferon jab went fine Thursday night. My right side this time (my Love handles). I alternate from left to right every week. Before i started treatment, i envisioned that i would have lots of marks where the needle go's in. I'm not sure why really, because of all the thousands of needles i have stuck into my arm veins, i don't get marks there.
My numb finger is no worse & my toothache ain't no worse. But my right elbow is a bit sore. Thats just because it is pretty wrecked, like my ankles (check the photo out and look at the difference between my left & right arms. An injection of the Factor VIII kind i think.

Jason

Thursday, September 07, 2006

29th injection & My life in pictures

Jae & Dessert Storm

Hi everyone. Before i continue with my blog, i will just add first that as from now i am going to add a photo for every post i write. For each photograph i shall add a little information about it.

This first photograph i took of myself last night, on the very top of Leith Hill in Surrey. The tower is in the background. The moon was almost full and the sky looked absolutely amazing! I was all alone, apart from all the animals and insects i could hear. I Love being in places just like this.

Anyway, i shall continue.
Tonight is the night of my 29th Interferon injection. And just a few days ago, i completed my 1176th (7th bottle) Ribavirin tablet. I feel exactly the same as i did 1 week ago. The numbness in my little finger isn't any worse. I have been having tooth ache though in the past week. But i doubt that has anything to do with my treatment. More likely it has something to do with the fact that i never looked after my teeth as a child. I do now of course. It may even be a wisdom tooth coming up and saying 'Hello', i am here and i won't go away! It does come and go. The pain that is. I really don't want to tell the doctors yet, as i know they will suggest having them looked at. I hate going to the dentist, because every time i have been they have this very perfect knack of making my gums bleed! This bleeding, even with tonnes of Transamic Acid, lasts for well over a week and having a bloody mouth for that long is quite deppressing! I shall keep my eye on that too.

I have just finished dinner and am now watching a documentary about the terrible events on September 11th 2001. My problems seem so insignificant in comparison.

Jason

Monday, September 04, 2006

Numb finger & other side effects

Yes, i still have a numb finger. Well, when i say numb, i don't mean totally numb. I can still feel it if i stroke it or put it under the cold or hot tap, or pinch it. It is only the one finger at the moment and i expect it may go to the others in time.
My next hospital visit is on the 15th September. I will wait until then i think, unless it starts to hurt or go totally numb!
I don't think i have mentioned before that i also get mild side effects from my current HIV drugs. I have been on some sort of HIV medication since 1987 (yes, i wasn't even told for 3 years!). Firstly i was on the Concorde Trial for AZT and then another trial where the name of the drug has escaped me for now. But really, since i first started HIV treatment my side effects have been very mild, almost unnoticeable. That is to say until i started a drug called Indinavir!! It was a very potent drug for me for some reason or another. I can't remember how long i took it for but i think maybe for a year and a half. I remember going to Tunisia for a 'Star Wars' location finding holiday whislt on the drug and i still can't look at the photos of me! During my time on Indinavir (circa 2000) my face changed shape (lipodistrophy), the hair on my head went very thin and light. I lost all the hair on my arms and legs. I got kidney stones and dry, itchy skin all over my body which wasn't very nice. But the worse thing that the drug caused was i had these tiny red bubble type things growing out from the sides of my nails on both my big toes, They got bigger and bigger and very painful! The doctors hadn't seen them before and even sent me to the hospital photographer to have them documented. I had 4 of them, each the size of a large kidney bean. And red in colour. I had to wear sandles for several months so my toes could stick out and not be touched by anything. Just thinking about it now makes me cringe! I had to wash them and re-bandage them every day. They kept bleeding and discharging some kind of fluid too. In the end the RFH decided to cut them off. So i had them cut away and half my nail too. But after a month they had grown back and were worse than they had been originally. So, in for another op and cut away again, this time all the nail too and this did the trick. My goodness, those things were horrible!! It was called 'Chronic Paronychia'. Obviously, by this time i had been taken off Indinavir and put onto something else.
I used to say to myself at the start of my Hep C treatment that if i coped with all that, i can cope with this. I think it has helped me a lot thinking that way.
The only side effects i get at the moment from my HIV drugs are a really odd feeling of being out of my body so to speak. I feel that if i cut my self or punched a wall really hard, well, i feel as if i wouldn't feel it!. It only happens in the evening a couple of hours after my evening drug gulp, which is and always has been at 20:27pm every day since about 1987. Some evenings are worse than others. It really seems to depend on what i have eaten. And if i am out mountain biking at the time i take them i don't hardly feel it at all. Maybe because my heart rate is increased? I am fine in the morning because i have a slightly different concoction, & i am lucky enough to be able to go back to sleep after my morning drug gulp at 08:27am for about 2 hours as i don't work.
I was out on my bike this afternoon, cycling around Leith Hill & Holmbury Hill on the North Downs. It was very quiet and it sometimes get a little lonely all on your own. But i do come across other mountain bikers during the day. I even fixed a puncture for a fellow MTB'er whom was pushing his bike down a very steep track. My good deed for the day:) I needed the rest anyway. Oh, and at the top of Leith Hill, i had a slice of date & marmalade cake that my mum made me. Lovely!

Jason

Friday, September 01, 2006

28th jab & counting

A pinch & a punch, the 1st day of the month.

Anyway, last night i had my 28th Interferon injection. Do you know that i have been keeping all the used syringes. All except the very first one, where i did it at the RFH (Royal Free Hospital). Oh well, we can't have everything!
Just a few things first. You may be thinking about the title of my Blog. 'The Mighty 'C'. I named it that way because although my blog is about all of me and not just Hep C, it is the Hep C which kind of made me do it in the first place. And i have always thought since being told i had Hep C that that was the disease that would eventually kill me first! Not HIV, not bleeding to death, but Hepatitis 'C'. Hence The Mighty C.
There, now that's out of the way i will continue. I have been out for a bike ride tonight around Leith Hill again and on my way round i was thinking about how i felt and i came to the conclusion that Fridays are certainly the worst day of the week for me as it is the day after my jab. I just feel a bit more tired than normal and maybe a little cold in the head if you know what i mean. I was out for an hour and 20 mins cycling off road and although i could of done the same again, i just couldn't be bothered. I normally go with a friend on Friday evenings and an hour or so is plenty as he works all week and has a baby too. But come Sunday (the next time i usually go out) i am feeling great and stay out for 2-4 hours.
I was beginning to think that i don't notice much of anything on this treatment and i am wrong. Although the things that i do happen to notice are usually swept aside as just little things that come with the whole deal.
I don't think i have mentioned yet that on my 12th week i was told i had already cleared the virus. Obviously i was really hoping for that kind of result and only when i went up there for the result did begin to think what i would do if it was bad and had to stop treatment. I still don't know what i would do or how i would feel. I hope it never comes to that! But i would probably just carry on as normal and soon forget about it, because that is the kind of bloke i am.
That's about it for today, except that i have had a bit of a numb little finger on my left hand for about 5 days and am beginning to wonder what it is. It feels like when i drove to Fort William in one go in 7 and a half hours and where my hand was gripping the steering wheel my thumb went numb, but soon went back to normal the next day. It is obviously the treatment i am on and if it don't hurt me i can live with it.

Jason