Another note to readers

Another note to readers

vor 3 Jahren
9 Minuten
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A newsletter, podcast, & community focused on the technology, politics, and policy of decarbonization. In your inbox once or twice a week.

Beschreibung

vor 3 Jahren

Readers, I am keenly aware that you subscribed to this newsletter
to get articles and podcasts about clean energy, not to hear
about my life and travails. And I’ve already sent you one
life-and-travails message this year. So I debated with myself a
long time about whether to send this one, especially given all
the other horrible stuff happening in the world.


But, in the end, there is an unavoidable intimacy to this format
and that is one of the things I like about it. I don’t have any
bosses or advertisers or funders to report to — there’s just me,
trying to create good content, and (some of) you, paying for it.
Given that life events are currently affecting my ability to
work, I feel I owe you some explanation.


Attentive readers may recall that I’m supposed to be in Italy
right now, vacationing with my family to celebrate my oldest
son’s high school graduation and impending departure to college.


As fate would have it, that vacation has been canceled. Why?
Well, part of it is that, as followers of my tweets may already
know, my entire family has Covid at the moment. But the other
part, which I haven’t yet shared, is that I also have cancer.


Specifically, I have a relatively rare cancer called urothelial
carcinoma — a 4.5-cm mass in my right kidney cavity. It was
identified via a CT scan about a month ago. A few weeks ago, I
had a procedure: a right ureteroscopy with biopsy and ureteral
stent insertion. They also fired some lasers at the mass, which I
found oddly gratifying.


The good news is that, somewhat to everyone’s surprise, the
biopsy indicates that the cancer is low-grade. The bad news is
that the mass is so big that it’s got to come out regardless; my
surgical options are no different than if it were high-grade.


Because it has gotten so big, trying to laser it to pieces could
take two, three, or even more full surgeries, followed by a
lifetime of vigilance, since this type of cancer tends to recur
in surrounding tissue via the “field effect.” Recurrence in my
kidney or ureter would be bad; recurrence in my bladder (which I
only have one of) would be worse.


The other option is just to have my right kidney taken out
entirely, which is what I’m scheduled to do next month — what the
official documentation refers to as a “nephroureterectomy,
robot-assisted,” which I also find oddly gratifying. I like
having robots and lasers on my side.


Having a kidney out is not a small thing — it’s a serious surgery
— but there are very good chances of full recovery. People lose
or donate kidneys all the time and go on to live long, healthy
lives. My colleague at Vox, Dylan Matthews, donated one of his
kidneys out of pure altruism and wrote a detailed account, which
has been a great comfort to me.


To be clear: I’m in no pain. The cancer itself is causing me no
symptoms outside of hematuria (bloody urine), which admittedly is
no fun, but it was the only way this thing got caught. A tumor in
your kidney lining (as opposed to the cavity, where mine is) can
grow for a long time and cause no symptoms at all. It’s a good
thing my tumor made a ruckus.


Suffice it to say, in the vast hellscape of possible cancers, I
could have done a lot worse. I am, in the grand scheme of things,
quite lucky.


That said, losing the vacation is a real bummer. For one thing,
it was all set up: the plane tickets were bought; the lodgings
were booked; the train tickets were reserved; the cars were
rented; the tours and outings were all lined up. It was going to
be magic. But what really hurts my heart is not getting to send
my son off with some indelible memories of his final summer with
us. I wanted that time with him so badly.


As a sad, sweet gesture, Mrs. Volts made us reservations at an
Italian restaurant in Seattle for last Monday night — the night
we were supposed to leave for Italy — but then, over the weekend,
the older boy tested positive for Covid. He isolated immediately,
but the next day I tested positive and the day after that, Mrs.
Volts and the younger boy.


To summarize: rather than nibbling gelato and sipping espresso at
a street-side cafe in Florence, we are at the end of a week spent
slumping around our house, coughing and snorting and unable to do
much but watch TV. (The Old Man is really good.)


One additional downer: remember a while back I told you about my
aching wrists and elbows? Yeah, that’s worse than ever. I can
type for short bursts, but holding my hands steady in any
position for more than about 30 seconds brings sharp pain. This
means I can’t really sustain concentrated work on longer writing.
I can basically … tweet. And given that tweeting is already what
I do when I’m anxious, I’ve been tweeting a lot lately. It’s not
great.


I tried some voice control and transcription programs, but I
found them weirdly enervating. It is exhausting to talk all the
time! But I’m going to have another go at them, since this
doesn’t seem to be going away and I still can’t think of a
practical way to take six months away from a keyboard to let them
rest.


Anyway. I have lived, on balance, an extraordinarily fortunate
and privileged life, and I’m still living one, but I tell you —
when it rains, it pours.


I will get my kidney out; Covid will pass; I will figure out how
to deal with the tendonitis. Some day soon this will all be
behind me and I will get back to full productivity, including
writing the long explanatory articles that I desperately miss
writing. I want to bring in more guest pieces, do more deep
dives, and set up some regular features and themes.


But in the meantime, while I am navigating this crapstorm, there
might be some slow weeks and months around here. I’m going to try
to keep up the podcasting, but it may be a bit more sporadic.


As I said last time, if anyone feels like they’re not getting
what they signed up for and wants to unsubscribe, I understand
and do not begrudge. Subscriber growth slowed considerably when I
shifted from writing to podcasting, as I suspected it might, but
it hasn’t yet ever gone down. Y’all have stuck with me and I can
not tell you how grateful and humbled I am to have you all here.


In the meantime, my prognosis is good. My health-care providers
are good. My insurance is good. My wife is a superhero. I don’t
need or want for anything. I just thought I should let y’all know
where I’m at. Volts is one of the things that keeps me going, so
thank you for reading and listening and just being out there.


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