Thursday, 9 October 2025

Photons on the Prostate - XX: A year post-radiotherapy treatment

No crowds on cancer’s road

Each day is a blessed day of gratitude in the joy of living, and it was a year ago today that I rang the bell at the Christie Hospital, signalling the end of hypofractionated radiotherapy treatment for prostate cancer. It was a journey with very few companions, a lover, a friend, a sister, a neighbour, a brother, a few colleagues at work and at church, on a road often travelled to a destination rarely known.

The weeks that followed radiotherapy brought fatigue, pain, and urges, but the reality that dawned on me was I needed to be taken care of as my strength waned even as my will and my spirit held on to the hope that there was a better story ahead of my circumstances.

I embarked on sick leave to recuperate, open-ended about my return from Cape Town and hoping to spend as much precious time with Brian who sometimes helplessly watched from afar how I tackled the diagnosis of prostate cancer and navigated the medical establishment and healthcare system to select what I believed would lead to the best medical outcomes.

My gratitude for care and support

In our daily conversations there was a bulwark of support, strength, and encouragement. Against the protestations of others, I boarded that flight, almost an invalid and with a voice that could barely be heard, knowing that Brian would take care of me.

The improvements in the past year have been quite encouraging, as it was last week that I learnt that my PSA test result had fallen to the lowest level since February 2024, after an uptick in March 2025 that left me wondering about how effective radiotherapy was.

While I do find myself having to wield my Just Can’t Wait card even as recently as three days ago, a lot more has settled down, as I manage from the occasional insomnia, the regular nocturia, and my voice slowly returning to normalcy, the opportunities to spend time with Brian have been a blessing.

I am thankful, grateful, happy, and blessed, each new day is full of grace and mercy. Yet we rise encouraging others to attend to their men’s things, notice the changes and have it all checked out. Catch it early, so you have options and the possibility of looking in the rearview mirror at that once threatening cancer that no longer has a hold on you.

Other related blogs

Blog - Men's things XXV: Prostate cancer under control

Blog - Photons on the Prostate - A year from starting radiotherapy

Blog - A prostate cancer diagnosis, one year on

Blog - Photons on the Prostate - XVIV - I Just Can't Wait

Blog - Men's things - XXIV - A presentation

Blog - Men's things - Prostate Cancer blogs

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