Thanks Scott, he is doing as well as can be! We have a scan in the next 2 weeks - just have to try not to hold our breath until we get the results :)
You won't fathom what it means logistically but you can do it- it will smash you in the face- hard & fast. The key- be prepared! Now is the time to make extra meals at dinner time & freeze them. Start doing little things now like cooking biscuits that you can freeze, muffins etc all easy things that work well for school lunches that you can pull out the night before or even that morning for their lunches.
Also have a range of food for your wife, jelly, custard, crackers are a staple in our house- so that if dinner makes her feel nauseated she will have options. The key with chemo is to keep them healthy, so if she feels hungry at 1am not 8pm tell her to eat at 1am. If you get malnourished - chemo stops.
Get your support team in place, arrange with family to help out, make it routine. If you have no family help, try to arrange a baby sitter that you can create with the kids a relationship.
You will need a break, and they will need attention from someone who is completely focused on them.
Make sure your school/ kids teachers know the situation, know chemo weeks etc- they will help too if the kids are emotional or just need to chat.
Don't do more than you have to do, don't volunteer for anything. Some weeks will look awesome, then the next you will feel like your drowning!!! Like my washing this week- arghhhhhh...... it is an avalanche and I seriously can't seem to get ahead with it!
Kids are resilient, they handle it better than me 🙂
Last of all- come in here to vent 🙂 Blog away :)
My 1 year old doesn't want to sleep tonight- I would really like her to give in- stubborn little bugger!
Hug your wife, say I love you all the time, get family photos done, get your financial affairs into place (wills, enduring power of attorney etc) and like the previous poster said- sit down, buckle up, and try to enjoy this roller coaster.
Mel