Bob Russ: Farewell: The column I never wanted to writeBy Bob Russ
CantonRep.com staff writer
Posted Dec 31, 2008 @ 02:07 PM
This is the column I never wanted to write. My farewell. For nearly 10 years, I’ve had the privilege of sharing my thoughts through a weekly column in The Repository. In fact, I’ve had a regular column pretty much continuously since 1984 in one publication or another.
But with this column today, that run comes to an end.
My health will no longer permit me to maintain a regular work schedule.
Regular readers know I’ve been fighting an uphill battle the last few years, having had several brushes with death.
I was born with polycystic kidney disease, also known as PKD — a hereditary, degenerative disease that causes huge cysts to form on the kidneys. Eventually, the cysts replace the healthy tissue in the kidneys until there is little or no function left.
At that point, the patient must get a transplant, go on dialysis — or die.
My kidneys gave up the ghost about three years ago, and I’ve been on dialysis ever since. Three times a week, my blood is pumped from my veins into a machine that filters out impurities and toxins, then heats the blood back to body temperature and pumps it back into my body. All told, the procedure takes about five hours from start to finish.
OTHER PROBLEMS
PKD brings with it several side effects as well —high blood pressure, a significantly greater risk of a brain aneurysm and kidneys that grow to massive size.
So large, in fact, that one or both must be removed if there is to be any room for a transplanted organ.
The average kidney weighs a quarter of a pound, but because of the growth of the cysts, my two kidneys were nearly 40 pounds when I went to the Cleveland Clinic last October to have them removed.
Forty pounds!
I’ve been in decent shape, PKD-aside, for quite a while, but I’ve always had a huge, protruding stomach. It looked like a beer belly, only I very rarely had a beer. I’d tell my friends and colleagues, “That’s not a beer belly; it’s a kidney belly.” And they’d smile and nod, all the while thinking to themselves, “It’s beer.” But it wasn’t. In the year prior to having my kidneys removed, my gut nearly doubled in size; it looked as though I was pregnant. The pressure those giant kidneys put on my other organs was immense. I couldn’t take a sip of water or a bit of pretzel without getting heartburn — there was no room for anything in my stomach because of my massive kidneys.
So out they came. Overnight, my gut disappeared and I was 40 pounds lighter. Those same people who used to humor me with their smiles and nods were stunned to learn that, indeed, my huge stomach WAS due to my kidneys.
Now I was ready should a kidney become available for transplant, I thought. But I was wrong. They found cancer in one of my kidneys. The surgeon said it was encapsulated and unlikely to recur; the oncologist who has seen me since agrees. But it put any transplant on hold; I will be re-evaluated in January, and hope to get back on the list.
But in the meantime, my energy level has taken a major hit. My strength and stamina have been continuously going downhill. The last couple of months, especially, have been a real struggle and have made it clear I can no longer keep on working.
I need 12 to 14 hours of sleep a day just to feel relatively normal; on the days I have dialysis, I need another four to eight hours of sleep.
So tomorrow, Jan. 2, will be my last day at The Repository; I am filing for disability. I leave the newspaper just short of 10 years here, with many fond memories. They were, for the most part, the best 10 years of my journalism career.
I intend to keep writing. I’ve always wanted to try my hand at fiction, and there’s a book I’m eager to begin working on. So, although this is the end of one phase of my life, it is the beginning of another.
SPAGHETTI FUNDRAISER
My biggest worries are financial. My medical bills are substantial, soon I’ll be out of work, my monthly prescriptions total more than $100 (with insurance!), my car has 197,000 miles on it and my computer at home (circa 1997) needs to be replaced. And it takes about five to six months for disability to be approved.
As a result, I’m having a fundraiser — a benefit spaghetti dinner from 5 to 8 p.m. Jan. 21 at the Amvets Post 6 at 303 Weirich Blvd. NW in Massillon.
The dinner includes spaghetti, meat sauce, salad, roll and beverage; cost is $10 for adults and $5 for children ages 10 and younger. For ticket information, give me a call at (330) 854-0140.
I have so much more I want to say, so many memories I’d love to share, so many things I’ve learned that I’d love to pass on. But there is only so much room, and only so much time.
I want to thank all of you who have read my work over the years, and those of you who have called, written or e-mailed to share your thoughts and feelings. I’ll never forget you, or my time here at The Rep.
Take care, be well, and perhaps one day we’ll meet again.
So long.
(My note: if you want to email Bob here's the email I have for him bob.russ@cantonrep.com - not sure how long it will work but please drop him a note, mention IHD please. -- okarol)
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