Chimney House Road News
In June, 2017, Cindy had an operation to remove cancer of the tongue. In late 2018, the cancer recurred in her neck; after an operation, radiation treatments and immunotherapy, she entered home hospice care in December and passed away January 5th. In lieu of emails, this blog will keep everyone informed on plans for celebrating her life.
Wednesday, January 15, 2020
Reston: January 15th
A
celebration of life will be held on Sunday, February 16th, from 2:30 to
5:30 in the Reston Community Center at
Lake Anne (1609 Washington Plaza North). The dress will be casual and you'll be invited to share memories. If you plan to attend, please let us know at van.foster @comcast.net or
703.437.3138. Please check this site periodically for any updates.
Monday, January 13, 2020
Reston: January 13th
Lucinda C. Foster 1940 - 2020
Cindy Foster, wife of Van Foster and mother of Dana and Lisa,
started cancer treatment in 2017, entered hospice at home in Reston in December
2019 and died peacefully on January 5th, 2020, at age 79. Her daughters and their families were able to
visit her at Thanksgiving and Christmas, which Cindy greatly enjoyed.
Cindy was born in Chevy Chase, MD, the youngest of five and
consequently the resilient one who raised herself. She attended Sidwell Friends School and Tufts University where she met Van. An
education major led to teaching elementary school in Connecticut, Fairfax and
Clark Air Base and retirement in 1995. But
after a few years she took up tutoring with a local charity (one child at a time
was a pleasure) for ten more years.
Van’s work included
three years in the Philippines where vacations included touring parts of East
Asia and a gamey road trip in northern Luzon.
On a two-year posting in Liberia, their 4WD Chevy Blazer took them to
Sierra Leone and Ivory Coast. Best was
probably the bush taxi ride from Bamako to Bandiagara and the Dogon
country.
She was a lifelong athlete in field hockey, tennis, swimming
and girls basketball (the latter in the “six-on- six” days when players were
limited to half court, which particularly rankled Cindy). Van took up racquetball after finding he was
no match for her in tennis.
Although the tennis faded with age, hiking, birdwatching and
quilting kept Cindy busy. Travelling was a itch first scratched when she and a Jackson classmate toured Europe in Cindy's new red VW the summer after graduation from Tufts. The itch didn’t fade and after retirement she and Van spent a cumulative 16 months living
in a VW camper while driving around Europe and the US; all told, they were away
from Reston about 40 percent of the time.
Her parents’ hilltop cabin in Maine played a big part in her
early life and inspired building a cabin on nearby Long Lake where she enjoyed
kayaking, snorkeling, skiing and poking around in the woods. In 2004, she achieved her life goal of
climbing all forty-seven 4,000 footers in the White Mountains.
During much of this, Cindy was also raising two wonderful
daughters who went on to careers and children of their own. She was immensely pleased to host
everyone at the cabin for several weeks each summer.
Cindy lived a full life and toward the end said she “was
ready”. That may be what fate called for
but, absent her cancer, she was headed for more adventures.
A celebration of life will be held on Sunday, February 16th, from 2:30 to 5:30 in the Reston Community
Center at Lake Anne (1609 Washington Plaza North). If you plan to attend, please let us know at van.foster@comcast.net or 703.437.3138.
Sunday, January 5, 2020
Reston: January 5th
Cindy passed away on Sunday, January 5th,
peacefully in her bed at home. The
hospice service had been invaluable in providing thrice-weekly nursing care,
pain management and sympathetic advice. Dana
was fortuitously able to remain in Reston after the family Christmas to help
with Cindy. With all the care, Cindy was
comfortable and pain-free to the end.
Cindy
got to experience a last joyous family Christmas in Reston including Lisa,
Morgan, Dana, Marc, and Lucy (Lisa’s husband John and son Jack couldn’t make it
when Jack got sick, and Dana’s stepson Zach was spending Christmas with his mother.)
Cindy particularly enjoyed watching the
tree get set up and decorated, and also loved opening her Christmas stocking
and presents.
Plans
for commemorating Cindy are gestating but will probably include an informal
celebration of life in Reston and a summer family ceremony in Maine.
Saturday, December 7, 2019
Reston: December 7th
Since
the last post in August, Cindy has been treated with immunotherapy every three
weeks and, although the cancer seemed to abate at first, the Keytruda has not
been effective. Consequently, we have decided to end the treatment and she has entered home hospice care this week. A nurse comes several
times a week and the objective is to keep her comfortable and reasonably
active.
We
hosted Dana and Lisa and their families for Thanksgiving (we weren't sure the
house would sleep nine but the guests were very adaptable). We think this
is the first Thanksgiving together in about twenty years, so it was special.
The barbecued/rotisseried/smoked turkey turned out well, perhaps making up for
a disappointing roast beef earlier in the week.
There
were some walks around Reston and a nice excursion to Great Falls. It was
wonderful to have the family together.
Monday, August 19, 2019
Reston: August 19th
We spent
five weeks in Maine, returning to Reston in late July. We enjoyed three weeks with Dana’s and Lisa’s
families, basked in cool Maine weather but then medical issues required us to
return home. Cindy had some follow-up
tests in Maine and the results indicated that her situation wasn’t quite
over.
The upshot is that the operation and
radiation did not eliminate the cancer; it has continued to spread down her
neck and shoulder. As a result, the
outlook is for retarding rather than eliminating the growth.
Last Friday, she started a course of
immunologic therapy (Keytruda) with the objective of slowing the cancer’s
progress. She is having some neck/shoulder
pain and difficulty eating so she’s on Percocet and back on relatively soft
food.
To get prepared for whatever comes,
we’re exploring the services of palliative care doctors and in-home hospice
providers.
We put the blog in hiatus during the diagnostic testing
and wish the news had turned out better.
Cindy is relatively comfortable and still taking walks around Reston and
wishing we were still in Maine. We
enjoyed a five-day visit from Dana and daughter Lucy; we took the opportunity
to test some recipes from Yotam Ottolenghi’s book on our guests. Lucy didn’t approve.
Monday, July 1, 2019
Maine: Week One
Maine is
great, but there are still some residuals from Cindy’s operation. Friday, she had a routine follow-up CT scan
of her neck at the Bridgton hospital.
Otherwise a very pleasant first week, aside from the endemic
nuisances (ticks and mosquitos).
Monday, June 24, 2019
Recovery: Week Six
Monday was
a follow-up appointment with the Baltimore Medical Center surgeon who did the
operation in January. It was a reminder
that this sort of thing is never quite over. At her request, we’re arranging
for a CT scan in Bridgton and then a later (when all the recovering tissues
have settled down) PET scan in Reston.
The schlep to Baltimore was a chance
to have a crab cake lunch with an old (well, a “long-time”) college friend. The crab was chunky and delicious, though
light on Old Bay seasoning. (Van has
been known to go overboard with the Old Bay and jalapenos in his crab cakes, so
this was a lesson in the merits of moderation.)
Saturday and Sunday were the trip to
Bridgton and the start of another glorious summer in Maine (current forecast is for a two-blanket
night).
Sunday, June 16, 2019
Recovery: Week Five
An
uneventful week as far as recovery goes.
On Friday Cindy had a follow-up appointment with the radiation
folks. They were pleased with the
recovery from the radiation related effects, were satisfied that she was eating
enough and again encouraged a fulsome diet.
Since Cindy was done with stomach
tubes and Ensure cartons, the puzzle was what to do with a three week leftover
supply and various tubes, gauze and containers.
BioScrip doesn’t take them back so we contributed them to Cornerstones,
a local nonprofit providing food, shelter and services to those in need.
On Wednesday, we joined a gaggle of
other seniors for a Reston Community Center trip to Tangier Island in the
Chesapeake Bay. Hour and a half ferry
ride each way, three hours on the island, a forgettable group lunch. The attraction is the isolated community, the
local accent, economy based on crabs and the islanders’ wistfulness about the parts
of the island that sea-level rise has already inundated.
Saturday, June 8, 2019
Recovery: Week Four
Cindy was relieved of her PEG
(stomach tube) on Wednesday. She had
disdained the use of it for the past week or so and is pleased that she can
sleep on her stomach again. The removal
involved checking in with the hospital reception, filling out several forms, the
wristlet ID bracelet, the escort to the surgical area, dressing in the typical
hospital johnny gown, confirmation of the correct procedure with several nurses
and then the wait. Then the exceedingly
friendly nurse/PA arrived, released the air out of PEG port that keeps a balloon
inflated inside the stomach (the anchor for the PEG), pulled it out, slapped a
piece of gauze over the incision, put on a six-inch diameter bandage and
pronounced it good. Took about a
minute. Seemed embarrassed that all the
rigmarole was necessary and gave simple care instructions. (One
is astonished that dealing with a hole in the stomach is quite so perfunctory.)
Thursday Cindy had her last session
with the PT specialist and added a few more exercises to her to-do list. Thursday evening another dinner on the
Kennedy Center terrace and things seem to be returning to a new mode of
normal.
Saturday, June 1, 2019
Recovery: Week Three
Difficult
to keep Cindy from pulling her PEG this week.
She still has issues with chewing and swallowing some things like meat,
but is pretty much back to a normal diet supplemented
now and then with some Ensure.
So, Thursday we started the process of getting the PEG removed,
hopefully early next week.
She had her last session with the
swallow wallah and continues with the physical therapist who keeps adding new
exercises to stretch and strengthen things.
Sunday, May 26, 2019
Recovery: Week Two
A
relatively routine week with physical and swallow therapy appointments. By week’s end, Cindy was venturing beyond a
liquid diet and becoming adventurous with her meal choices: this noon toast with
strawberries and tofu. A bit eccentric
and innovative but needed some Ensure (by mouth, thankyou) to top up. She is now lobbying for removal of the PEG
(stomach tube) and had to be convinced that it wasn’t quick disconnect.
Meanwhile, she’s been out thinning the enthusiastic
plants in the patio and generating about twenty pounds of green refuse.
Saturday, May 18, 2019
Recovery: Week One
Physical
therapy was the theme for the week. The
operation resulted in Cindy’s neck being tight and touched a nerve to the
muscles around her shoulder causing it to slump forward. The therapist worked on loosening up her
neck and strengthening her shoulder. So
now Cindy has a broomstick and a set of flat stretch bands as her equipment
plus a set of eight or so exercises (so far) to do several times a day.
BioScrip delivered a 30 day supply
of Ensure and accoutrements so we’re set for recovery to proceed at its
leisurely pace.
It isn’t all recovery all the time; this week was one of
our National Symphony Orchestra subscription dates at the Kennedy Center. The weather was pleasant and we had dinner
outside on the rooftop terrace. Alas,
Cindy could only have yogurt.
Sunday, May 12, 2019
Radiation Out, Recovery In
Tuesday
was Cindy’s last day of radiation and transitioned to the recovery phase. However, it will take some time for the
tissues in her mouth and throat to recover, so she will continue to get the
lion’s share of calories through her stomach tube. Food by mouth is remains limited to yogurt
and the like.
She saw the swallow wallah this
week. The nurse’s main concern was
aspiration of liquids that could bring on pneumonia. Yogurt or other gels are good and plain water
is fine but OJ isn’t. Recovery will take
six weeks, give or take. Meanwhile,
Cindy isn’t a happy camper at mealtime.
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