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Cootehill thinks that he is a TOTSE og...
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2018-08-15 at 10:10 PM UTCFolks, but he failed the initiation proceedings miserably.
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2018-08-15 at 10:13 PM UTC
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2018-08-15 at 10:14 PM UTCLolol
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2018-08-15 at 11:04 PM UTCI've been on totse since 2001 or so. It was just a source for text files for me, the forum seemed like a place of ill repute, and I warned against it on one of my homepages (lol, remember homepages?).
Then I gradually got sucked in around 2002, 2003 or so. Just a lurker. I made an account around 2004. Around 2006 I was Issue313, and ran the forum totsealliance.com and the ogame.com totse alliance. It was amazingly flattering to have been chosen as a leader, but I didn't like it very much.
Totse closed around 2009, at the same time as I had cancer and had a moderate chance of survival. While on chemo I posted on Zok's forum, then nothing, now I'm back here.
I'm sorta OG, but in a desperate, clingy, failing to move on and totally non-cool way. -
2018-08-15 at 11:08 PM UTC
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2018-08-15 at 11:11 PM UTCThat's unfortunate about your cancer btw
How did you survive? -
2018-08-15 at 11:12 PM UTC
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2018-08-15 at 11:13 PM UTCApparently Cootehill does not want to talk about his cancer.
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2018-08-15 at 11:14 PM UTC
Originally posted by PrettyHateMachine That's unfortunate about your cancer btw
How did you survive?
Via chemotherapy. My cancer was very treatable, after the first session all my lumps disappeared.
Of course I had 9 more months of misery, with chemo every 2 weeks. Each time I'd spend the first week in bed, then the second week moving around.
And the doctors were real cunts the whole time, even cutting my benzo prescription right in the middle of chemo because once, due to low blood pressure, I collapsed back into my chair after being inflated with the chemo drugs.
And chemo drugs = about 4 litres of solution. I'd have to piss multiple times while having them run into me. Then on the way home they'd hit, and I'd feel like shit.
I still feel ill whenever I see a Pizza hut, because one time I was eating there when the chemo hit. Goddam. -
2018-08-15 at 11:16 PM UTCApparently, cootehill is kosher with talking about his experience.
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2018-08-15 at 11:18 PM UTC
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2018-08-16 at 12:16 AM UTC
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2018-08-16 at 12:22 AM UTC
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2018-08-16 at 12:24 AM UTC
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2018-08-16 at 12:26 AM UTC
Originally posted by Cootehill Via chemotherapy. My cancer was very treatable, after the first session all my lumps disappeared.
Of course I had 9 more months of misery, with chemo every 2 weeks. Each time I'd spend the first week in bed, then the second week moving around.
And the doctors were real cunts the whole time, even cutting my benzo prescription right in the middle of chemo because once, due to low blood pressure, I collapsed back into my chair after being inflated with the chemo drugs.
And chemo drugs = about 4 litres of solution. I'd have to piss multiple times while having them run into me. Then on the way home they'd hit, and I'd feel like shit.
I still feel ill whenever I see a Pizza hut, because one time I was eating there when the chemo hit. Goddam.
How long have you been in remission? Congrats, on still surviving.
I would go in for chemo one week which would result in a weeks worth of puking.
Then I would recover from my excessive weakness for a week.
Then I would go home for a week to get my strength back.
Then when I was feeling pretty good it was time to go back to the hospital and start all over, again.
Eight full treatments -- miss one and you have to start over at the beginning.
Glad you are feeling well enough to BS online. -
2018-08-16 at 12:41 AM UTCCup, anyone who is a cancer survivor... you become fond of... for you... it feels good to be part of a cancer survivor, informal online fraternity. You feel it's where you belong.
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2018-08-16 at 12:46 AM UTC
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2018-08-16 at 12:58 AM UTC
Originally posted by WellHung Cup, anyone who is a cancer survivor… you become fond of… for you… it feels good to be part of a cancer survivor, informal online fraternity. You feel it's where you belong.
WH -- such a serious shared life experience tends to make a survivor remember that others have been where you have and have valiantly fought the battle to overcome the silent killer.
And sir, during the early years of cancer research and treatment one is very privileged indeed to still be surviving.
Thank you for your attention. (I'd leave you a rose if the site admin ever had learned to code smilies for site use in spite of the BBCode Reference.)