Sunday, 17 February 2008
New Look
Wednesday, 13 February 2008
Wills: Living and Otherwise
First was to deal with my (tiny) inheritance by writing a will. On this one I've taken the easy way out and had somebody from the bank write it for me based on my simple instructions. One (pleasent) suprise was to find out that as Carol and I were married under UK law we could deal with inheritance under UK law too. This is much simpler and more flexible than Swiss law which dictates a lot about who gets what before you get your own wishes considered.
Second up was writing a Living Will (Patientenverfügung). This is a document which instructs your Doctors on how you want to be treated when you can no longer communicate with them and to make sure you assign someone to make other decisions on things that you haven't explicitely covered. For instance once I'm in the final stages of my cancer I do not want the doctors to keep me alive artificially but I do want them to help keep the pain down.
Last but not least was writing the funeral arrangments (Anordnungen zur Bestattung) which explains things like coffin types, burned or buried, what you want to wear, the kind of ritual you want etc.
I was lucky enough to get a hint when it was time to do these things, for the rest of you NOW might be a good time. A useful book for people living in Switzerland for all this kind of stuff we found is Beobachter's "So Regeln Sie die letzen Dinge" (How to arrange the last things) which even has templates to fill in for all these documents.
And what am I wearing to my funeral?
You'll have to wait and see, but I guarantee my bum won't be looking big in it.
Sunday, 10 February 2008
Chops Away
The weather has been beautiful for the past few days. It has been cool at at around 8 degrees C but the sun has been intense enough to add some more cancers to the existing.
Anyway we thought we'd take the regular brunch off to a restaurant on a little airfield up at 760m (sun even more intense) where we could pig ourselves out while taking in the view and watching the the little planes take off. Very pleasent. (note - no chops were served, but I couldn't think of a better title)
After returning home, Kayleigh asked me to take some Passport photos for Tasija's passport (what else). Do you know kow how hard it is to take a full face picture of a 4 month old with her eyes open and mouth closed without gluing evergthing in place? Thank goodness we don't use film anymore.
But what about the results., more beautiful than the weather and no glue applied.

p.s. I have had one of my regulars says he has started to get a phishing warning for this site. Please let me know anybody else has problems with this (or anything else).
Saturday, 9 February 2008
British Zombie in Zurich
Still haven't learned how weak I can get on these days so I went into Zurich to do some shopping with Carol on Wednesday. After an hour or so the other shoppers must of thought we were making "British Zombie in Zurich" with hidden cameras.
Now there is a thought, can anyone think of one movie that seriously features Zurich? There must be dozens where somebody calls Zurich to check a bank account but that's hardly a feature and even then there are probably as many "phone calls" to Geneva even though all the banks are in Zurich! Anybody out there who can show me I'm wrong? Otherwise Hollywood now is you chance "British Zombie" has a star and is just waiting to happen.....
Saturday, 2 February 2008
Snow & Chemo 3
Had the grandchildren over this morning for some sledging and snowballing on the hill behind the house and then back to the house for hot chocolate and sausage rolls . Think I'll light a fire.
Friday, 1 February 2008
Just the Shoes
Tumour Treating Fields
An interesting little fact is that because the device is not a drug its not subject to the same complex regulations, so once the trial is finished (assuming statistically significant success) it will be available on the market almost immediately. Not that the my insurer will necessarily pay for it.
One interesting little point that Ms. Magneto mentioned in passing is that Universitätspital's current therapy for recurring GBM's is combined Avastin and CPT-11. This is a very interesting combination of an angiogenisis inhibitor (stops blood vessels from getting to the tumour) and a topoisomerase 1 inhibitor (normal tumour bashing chemotherapy). I need to read up on this a bit more.
Dr. Magneto had taken a look at the Histology from my Biopsy and she commented on the inconclusive results and offered me a second opinion from their labs. I, of course, took it.... more later.