a year later, in 2019, they found some polyps, which were biopsied. my doctor again said he wasn’t worried. but two or three weeks later he called said that he was sorry, that he didn’t expect this, but i had colon cancer. he probably hadn’t been overly concerned at first because i was young and didn’t have a family history of cancer.
i was told i would have to have laparoscopic surgery [in which a short, narrow tube fitted with a camera is inserted into a small incision in the belly to check organs, remove damaged or diseased organs, or take tissue for biopsy] to remove the tumour, and that a right hemicolectomy [a procedure that removes the right side of the colon and attaches the small intestine to the remaining portion of the colon] would be done. a portion of my large and small intestine was removed, as well as the iliac, plus 14 lymph nodes, which were biopsied to check for the spread of cancer. it had not spread anywhere. i [was afraid i] might wake up to a colostomy bag [a pouch used to collect bodily waste], or need radiation or chemotherapy, but i didn’t.
i was fine, physically, in about two or three weeks, though it took a little longer for my intestinal tract to be fully normal.
the only medication i’m on is an injection of vitamin b12, which i’ll get every month for the rest of my life. your body needs vitamin b12 to function, but i still can’t absorb it naturally.