This is Dr. Visit week - everyone EXCEPT the surgeon. So, I guess I'll get more impartial information this week, to try to understand how bad off things really are, or NOT... and what treatment is being suggested and why.
Thanks for not drowning me in too much sympathy. I'm doing my best to support the idea (justified or not) that there is a way through and past this; that it's not a death sentence for hubs. Just having a diagnosis. So far, he's not buying it. But then, it seems he's been pretending for quite some time that he's just "old" (at 61), he just needs to rest... yadda-yadda...
We talked some about the experience after his brother returned to business as usual at work. The worst possible thing in the world was that he was going through all these awful tests & experiences alone; and he was alone because I had to take care of myself... or risk being a second patient, just from exhaustion. It was all very surreal to him, and because he wouldn't speak up and ask questions, also confusing. Anasthesia was a big problem; no sensation or memory at all from point A to point B... and it clearly troubles him. So, I gave him what we all know about rumination... about grieving, even... that this is normal up until a point, and that only he knows where that point is, and then he'll be ready to mark that experience "done, over, the past, a thing that happened to me" and put it down and move on to something else. I told him he isn't going to be able to know what happened or to retrieve those moments of self between going under and coming to. Just the way it is.
I let him tell that story about what it was like, over & over... because I know he's processing. And because of that - he has a childlike fear that going to dr offices is simply just a repeat of that experience, despite my explaining that what we should be getting is results of the tests, a diagnosis, a treatment menu of options, and a prognosis at this point. This is where he can say no, if that is really what he wants. My fear, is that he's pretended there isn't anything wrong for so long - that there's not much hope at this point. But I don't know that's the case yet.
Just that he doesn't want food; I doubt he's eating 1000 calories a day. Most of my "care" has consisted of trying to satisfy his food cravings - which seem to disappear when the food is in front of him. Reminding him, it's time for a dose of this or that... because he is extremely fuzzy-headed - although way more lucid than when he came home a week ago Saturday. I've been reading hospice and cancer.org info on the food issue - seems it's usually a bigger issue for the caretaker, than the patient! LOL, yup - nailed it. It's an instinctive physical response from the body that seems to make passing easier.
I'm not going to dance around the issue of the fact that he may be dying - but on the other hand, I need to hear that from someone who's assessed the results of all the tests and his current wasting physical condition. Even though I do trust my observation and senses and intuition... I'm not willing to bet his life on them. This could simply be the effects of putting him through such rigorous tests after no sleep and no food or water for several days in a row. (I don't exactly have a good opinion of that approach, btw)
I don't want him to die; he's my left brain!!!

And sometimes my right brain, instead. The yang to my yin; a perfect puzzle piece that fits within tight specifications to all my oddities of personality. And I simply love what a little boy still lives in his smile and jokes. But, dang if all this medical BS doesn't make things a lot worse and I have very little patience for the paperwork, the endless repeating of the same information (yes, even on the same form) -- when we were ASSURED that finally all this would be streamlined into a single database system, so safe & secure - yet eliminating all this duplication and redundancy. (If you believed that, I have a bridge for sale...)
And then, being told, that because of HIPPA -- I am persona non grata and have no rights to information, even though I'm the one responsible for getting him to care and making sure he follows instructions to the best of his ability.
I have two words for the people who destroyed the health system: UP YOURS.