A week ago today 13 of us ran/walked the MMRF Race for
Research at Carson Beach in South Boston.
Thanks to all you supporters, Greg’s Legs was the 8th highest
fund-raising team, so we had our own tent.
Here are the some of the runners/walkers before the race:
And here are some more of the runners/walkers after the
race.
Left to right standing: Andrew Jones, Laurie Proulx, Mary Littlefield,
Phillip Elmer-DeWitt, me, Arnie Epstein, Carolyn Zettler, Jack Zettler, Tyler
Jones, Jessica Jones (holding Tyler).
Kneeling behind the strollers or in the strollers: Gabriel Jones, Emma
Jones (with the hat), Barbara Jones, Margo Jones, Jack Jones, Bridget Quinn,
Brian Jones, Brendan Jones.
You will notice that the big difference between the before
and after pictures is the addition of jog strollers and a bicycle. That is because the families with children
had trouble getting all the ponies moving early enough to make it on time. Actually they were at the location on time,
but there was a backup in parking, so they didn’t actually make it to the
starting line until well after the start.
So far after the start, that the race directors had already turned off
the “start” detection function to switch it to the “finish” detection function
because the fast runners were within a mile of the start/finish line. So our boys and their families only had the
time since the start of the race, not their elapsed time.
Everybody had a great time.
It was warm enough to run without leggings or a jacket, but the MMRF
T-shirt over a sweatshirt was just about right.
There was a good crowd. Probably
1500 runners/walkers. We even had a few
medalists in some obscure categories:
Margo, who finished first among the above group, came in 2nd
in ladies 65-70. Greg came in 1st
in men’s 70-99. [The second place
finisher was 5 seconds behind me!]
Barbie was 2nd in ladies 70-99. Barbie & I even arrived early enough for
me to make the Living Proof photograph.
That is a group picture of all the people at the race who have Multiple
Myeloma.
Multiple Myeloma patients get a special color t-shirt, and I
believe I was the only one with a purple t-shirt running the race. In total Greg’s Legs raised $7,537.20. That is far more than we have ever raised in
the past. Thank you all very much. If you haven’t donated, it’s not too
late! The website is still open, accepting
donations: support.themmrf.org/goto/GregsLegs.
Meanwhile my own personal bout with Multiple Myeloma
continues to have some drama. In my last
blog, I showed the graph of my free lambda readings as of late January:
A spike of 988.4 certainly put the earlier spike of 450 to
shame. And it convinced us all that
Revlimid was no longer effective in treating the disease. I happened to have a pretty severe cold at
the time of the 988.4 reading, and my oncologist said that it may have
affected the reading. They changed my
treatment to put me back on the 3-drug cocktail that worked so well in the
summer of 2012: Velcade, Revlimid, & Dexamethasone. Basically this just adds Velcade to what I
was taking already, but so far the new readings have been significantly reduced. I have been feeling good, in spite of the
dire implications of the free lambda heights.
The latest little bump along the road happened this past
Wednesday. I noticed that I was peeing
wine. Red wine of a rusty hue. Again, no pain, but an odd symptom. I notified the oncology team, who requested
that I come into Beth Israel. I did so,
and they took normal blood tests + a urine sample that was still dark. By this time most of the hospital was
shutting down, so they sent me to the emergency room. Again, more tests and lots of waiting. In the end I have had multiple ultrasound
tests/images of my bladder + kidneys, but they have not found any obvious
cause. The next day everything was back
to normal, so they may never know what caused it. Maybe passing a kidney stone, but usually
that is accompanied by pain.
The race was lots of fun, and we raised a good chunk of
money for MM research. My experience
with Multiple Myeloma shows that they do not have a cure for it and that the
drugs used initially to fight it eventually become ineffective. So it is important that research identifying
new drugs and treatments continue so that there are alternatives when those
initial drugs lose their effectiveness.
Thanks to all of you for helping to fund a small part of that research.
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