A note
from Jellicoe
Hello
everyone. Thank you so much for all your good wishes - you’re truly kind. I
feel as though I’ve got friends all over the world.
I have
had an interesting couple of weeks. I’ve met some really nice vets and nurses
who made a great fuss of me, even though they shaved off so much of my fur and
sliced lumps out of me.
I spent a
few nights away from home, which was strange, and quite lonely, because I’m
used to cuddling up with the dogs and The THINKER and The MAID. I wasn’t feeling
very well, though, so it was as well that I was sleeping on my own in a nice secure
kennel. I even had to spend some time in an oxygen tent because I was having
difficulty breathing, and everyone was worried about me.
Soon, I was
well enough to go home, but I couldn’t see out of my eye- the one below where
the lump and the lymph node were taken out – as it was very swollen. I really
looked a terrible mess. The THINKER and the MAID took photographs of me, but
they haven’t shown them to anyone because they’re not nice.
I had a tube in my
neck, which seemed odd. I had to have that because the nice vets had taken some
tissue from my mouth to build up my eye-lid, so my mouth was sore. I was
wearing a soft collar round my neck to keep the tube in place, and a collar of
shame to stop me scratching and licking where I shouldn’t. The THINKER and the
MAID had to feed me through the tube, and it took forever, especially the
first time.
After a
few days, I went back to the hospital to have the tube removed. The nice vets and
nurses were very pleased with me. It was so good to be able to eat
properly again. I had lost quite a lot of weight, so I had to and see
Selene-the-Vet. She was rather shocked when she saw me as I wasn’t my usual
handsome self. My glucose curve had to be checked and now I’m back to my normal
insulin dose.
I still
don’t look very lovely, but the swellings are all going down and I can see out of
my eye now. I look more like a cat than a battered old football, and my fur is
growing back quickly. Next week I have to go back to have my stitches out.
The MAID and
The THINKER discussed whether they had done the right thing in letting me have an
operation, but agreed that the alternative, of letting the cancer take its
course, would have been far worse. They took the advice of Selene-the-Vet first
of all, and then the recommendation of the nice vets at the hospital.
I’m just
glad to be home, where I belong.
(The MAID speaks: you can learn more about why we’re
called The MAID and The THINKER in this blog post.)