New trials
Well, last Sunday all seemed golden, but matters have a
tendency to switch around here with frightening speed... Since last Tuesday I
am in the middle of a new health crisis with Keita’s blood (haemoglobin) count
suddenly plummeting to a very worrying 3 – normal value is 12! This means he
has to have immediate blood transfusions and he has had some, but not enough.
He is in Segou at the moment.
I am leaving Djenné Thursday for Bamako and will
meet him on the way in Segou. We will stay with Eva again and I am going to photograph the new MaliMali collection. But it looks as if health matters will once more take over...After Keita's
crisis in the autumn when he responded so well to the treatment with the drug
Velcade we thought all was going to be well for a little while at least, but
the Enemy has been quick to return...
Keita needs to change his medicine regime to try and ‘fool’
the cancer. Therefore I have been trying to buy something called Lenalimide
from India for the last month, but the procedure is long and labyrinthine: the
Indian invoice has had to be scanned and
delivered to the airport in Bamako together
with a request from his doctor for an
import licence which then has to be sent to India.
First we could not get hold of Keita’s doctor for weeks, then
the person at the airport who signs and stamps the document was away on holiday
for another few days, during which time the money transfer from the UK to India
also got lost but finally turned up. Meanwhile Keita’s health is
deteriorating every day!
This morning everything finally seemed to be in order and I
could not imagine that anything else could possibly be required but the long
awaited confirmation from New Delhi was not forthcoming. So I wrote another
email asking what was happening and was given the response that the drug company now needed a scanned copy of
Keita’s passport before they were able to send the drugs! Now this is when I
lost my temper: why on earth did they not tell me that before! We could have
organized that during the time we were waiting for all the other things to fall
into place!
Keita is too weak to rush around to the cybercafé in Segou
and he does not have a scanner at home. So he dispatched his friend Boubakar
who now says he has scanned and sent it to me. However, I have not received it.
Surely emails are instant are they not? I have a feeling that they have not
managed to type the email address out properly for I have received nothing here. Therefore
the medicine will not leave India. I can’t bear it.
And just to cheer me up, there are whole swarms of goats in
the garden who have already managed to destroy the new mango tree seedling we
planted with the money we received from the goat owner last time. The little
seedling was standing in a bamboo protection surround. The goats must have
performed an advanced piece of acrobatics to get to it, but they did. The next
time we catch one of them we will take no prisoners, it will become a kebab.
P.S. Some nail biting time later: having overcome a sporadically malfunctioning internet connection I have now managed to send off the missing identification to India. I would like to sit down on my sunset terrace with a large glass of whisky and ice, but of course I can't. It is lent and I am cutting out alcohol- is there going to be no end of today's trials?
Tuesday afternoon.
Still no confirmation from India that the medicine has left. It is now well past Indian closing hours and it must mean that it has not left. Why? Keita is sounding bad on the phone although as always he keeps up a positive front: 'ça va. ça commence à aller'...
I keep working in the studio in order to have something to do.
P.S. Some nail biting time later: having overcome a sporadically malfunctioning internet connection I have now managed to send off the missing identification to India. I would like to sit down on my sunset terrace with a large glass of whisky and ice, but of course I can't. It is lent and I am cutting out alcohol- is there going to be no end of today's trials?
Tuesday afternoon.
Still no confirmation from India that the medicine has left. It is now well past Indian closing hours and it must mean that it has not left. Why? Keita is sounding bad on the phone although as always he keeps up a positive front: 'ça va. ça commence à aller'...
I keep working in the studio in order to have something to do.
2 Comments:
Sophie, nous pensons beaucoup à toi, à vous et on espère que vous allez gagner cette nouvelle course contre la maladie.
Amitiés
Well, people generally resent cancer being described in battle terms, but you are still Keita's unbelievable knight in shining armour - and indefatigable. I think under the circumstances you should just allow yourself one drink on your terrace each evening: don't be hard on yourself in that respect, you've got so much to cope with. Our thoughts and love as ever to both.
Reposting because, slipshod, I put 'army' and not 'armour' - though not many armies would be as efficacious as you in your sole doughty personage.
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