π
We landed in freezing Chicago on Wednesday and things have been looking up since. What a welcome change in 2019.
I had been so terribly careful the past few months to ensure I do not get the cold. Again. I was so terrified of the common cold being a party pooper again. Our kids have been shipped off to a cousin’s home for a few months, since we all know it, kids are the most competent germ carriers in existence.
This is what I looked like flying in to Chicago. See the paranoia?

Not only did the mask keep germs away, it also kept people away π Win Win !
Thank you sweet Becki for this gift.
Also, this is a little endorsement for Southwest Airlines, for very kindly giving me priority boarding π Again…the power of the mask.
So Chemo therapy has started. Yesterday was DAY -5! Here is the schedule with days counted -5 up. The 0-th day is the Stem cell transplant day.

HSCT is not a cure for MS. It only aims to halt progression. But since ‘I’ am the one here risking ‘my life’ with this, I have decided to think of the halt-of-progression as a cure. I know that several HSCT veterans think along the same lines and I can absolutely empathize. I have had MS for 9 years now. Chemo therapy is the step to kill my old immune system, the rouge system that attacked my own body for lack of better work. So going along the lines of my ‘cure’, I am calculating that today, after 1 day of chemotherapy, I have 1/5th of the cure flowing in my veins. Do the ‘mathematics’ (not math, see? I’m sticking to my very Indian roots):
1/5th of the cure means that I have only had (9-9/5) 7.2 years of MS. Too geeky?
Okay never mind. Important take away is that I am feeling hopeful.






