Hopefully Pessimistic

By | Blog

It’s hard to mix optimism and Metastatic Breast Cancer.

Even for people who are more naturally optimistic like Dan.

Today we head back to the Mayo Clinic to find out if Cassie gets to lose the horrible back brace she has been in for ELEVEN weeks! It’s been a particularly tough stretch that has made us feel like our already condensed lives were even smaller. The brace has a huge negative impact on Cassie’s quality of life — both of ours actually — and we’ve grown to loathe it with a passion.

As this day approached, Cassie said “I don’t think we should get our hopes up.” To which Dan immediately replied” “That train has long since left the station.” We are both hoping so much that today is the day. As we’ve noted before, our home is filled with a lot  of dark humor and we’ve both recently taken to joking about how much we want to get back to the “good old days” when all we were dealing with was a terminal cancer diagnosis. So we hope and pray that the brace comes off.

But we are not optimistic. How can we be when it seems like most visits to the doctor brings a different form of bad or hard news? You have MBC. You might be paralyzed. You need to wear a brace. Your cancer is growing again. Optimism is in short supply. Even cautious optimism. But that doesn’t mean we’ve lost hope. It just means that our hope now comes with a generous dollop of pessimism. 

So here’s hoping that in a few hours we are in Winona for the first time in months and cracking open a good bottle of wine to toast a return to life without the brace. We are not counting on it, or expecting it but we sure are hoping for it. 

Love in THIS Moment

By | Blog

It’s easy to be cynical about Valentine’s Day. The price of flowers go up. It’s almost impossible to get a restaurant reservation (in normal times) and when you do the meals usually disappoint. Presents. Cards. Bubbly. It can be a lot. And all of that is of course on top of thinking about what the day might feel like for people who don’t have someone special. So yes, cynicism on and around St. Valentine’s Day is perfectly understandable.

We choose the opposite though. Embrace over cynicism. Not for the commercial aspects but for a day that intentionally and unabashedly is about embracing love. So on this February 14, as we get ready to celebrate with Cassie’s parents. As Dan dons his traditional Valentine’s Day socks and as we look forward to a multi-course, Italian-inspired feast, we wanted to share 14 things we are feeling special love for in THIS moment.

  • Ted Lasso
  • Our nieces and nephews. We heart you Slv, Hank, Mal, Evie, Mimi & Ari!
  • Wine
  • Heat that works and pipes that haven’t (yet) burst.
  • Plans for future travel
  • Love songs (if you want our Spotify VD playlist just ask)
  • Online poker
  • Joe Biden and Kamala Harris 
  • Cassie’s parents
  • Our new treadmill
  • The Frozen River Film Festival
  • Cancer meds that didn’t even exist five years ago
  • Chocolate delights from our dear friends the Richmans

And of course each other. We first celebrated Valentine’s Day together in 1992. Some break-ups followed and it wasn’t close to a straight line from then until now. But our love is strong and enduring and full of joy, strength and laughter and for that, above all else, we are grateful. Today on THIS Valentine’s Day, we choose to put aside the hard shit that surrounds us and celebrate all the love in our life. 

Tell someone you love them. Don’t wait. Happy Valentine’s Day.