Time to be giving back

Well, there’s nothing like close brush with one’s mortality to remind that it’s time to start letting loose of the purse strings.

Meda retired from the University of Hawaii in 2020 after a startling 50 years on the university payroll, starting when she was still a grad student and continuing through her years teaching at Honolulu Community College and on to the Manoa Campus. At that time, we followed my mother’s lead and created an endowed scholarship fund in College of Social Sciences by initially contributing just enough to establish the fund, which provides scholarships to students in the UH Women’s Studies Program. We’ve added to it modestly over the past several years, with the plan that it will eventually be boosted with a larger infusion of cash from our estates.

Using funds my mother inherited as a beneficiary of the estate of George Galbraith, she had previously established two different scholarship funds to benefit University of Hawaii community college students, one in her name and one in her mother’s name.

And we are just wrapping up the process of setting up the Chesney Lind Scholarship Endowment at Whitman College, where we both graduated in the Class of ’69. This will be the first scholarship intended to benefit Whitman students from Hawaii. We took advantage of an offer of matching funds to establish an endowment they expect to generate nearly $10,000 a year for scholarship aid.

Now we’ll take a breath and hope these scholarships will make a difference in the lives of future students at both institutions!

Feline Friday returns!

The cats are back this week after being absent last week due to my last round of medical commuting between Honolulu and San Francisco!

There is healing power in cats, although it’s a power likely shared by animal companions of all kinds.

Being home sharing time with them adds a needed layer of stress relief!

This time I was surprised to realize that Kiko was most excited by our return, edging out Kinikini, who has been the longtime leader in this category.

Kiko was first at the door when we arrived from the airport, and then it seemed like every time I sat down at the dining table for more than 30 seconds, a black and white cat would mysteriously appear in my lap, waiting to receive pets and begin the drooling routine. She doesn’t really announce herself, she just appears.

No, that isn’t quite accurate. Sometimes her sudden appearances are preceded by a few seconds of zoomies as she streaks around the room, leaps wildly on the table, and then slips past my left arm directly onto my lap. Most of the time I’m barely aware of the process as it is underway, and only recreate it in my mind as the drooling begins.

In any case, suffice it to say that the cats are happy that we’re home, and we’re equally happy to see each of them!

Feline Friday • May 24, 2026

Surgery “coming soon”

I received word about 7 a.m. this morning that I am now scheduled for surgery at the University of Californa San Francisco Moore/Baker Hospital in Mission Bay the morning of May 11.

Surgery will be done by Dr. Mohammed Adam and Carlos Covera, both experienced surgeons at dealing with biliary tract issues such as mine. I don’t think I could be in better hands.

This is major sugery. As I understand, it will involve removing the cancerous bile duct, “resectioning” my liver (cutting out a section, as yet to be determined)and then rebuilding an artificial duct to get bile where it it needs to go.

I will likely be in the hospital at least a week, then released for rest and recovery. But it’s unlikely I’ll be able to fly back to Hawaii for a couple of months.

We’re still working on our travel and lodging logistics, but have great family support.

I’ve haven’t spent that long without access to my computer in, well, forever! Digital withdrawal? I travel with my iPad, which is easier to carry and fine for routine things, but I might try to find some way to take my laptop with me.

And my special thanks to all of you who have shared your feelings and support here and on Facebook. Everyone tells me that a positive outlook is essential going forward, and you’ve all been part of supporting me in that process.

Below, patient artwork displayed in the ground floor of the UCSF Precision Cancer building.

Facing an uncertain future

What  I have been diagnosed with is a rare and aggressive type of cancer.

Selfie outside the Precision Cancer building at the UCSF Mission Bay campus

It has scared the crap out of me, and I am just starting to call it out by name in order to face it directly. 

Cholangiocarcinoma. AKA Biliary Tract carcinoma. Or just bile duct cancer.  Its specific location earns another label, a Klatskin tumor.

It’s a nasty cancer. The general prognosis is dismal. 

But it looks like I could be among the few who are candidates for “curative” surgery, the only way to beat this thing. Tests done this past week at the University of California San Francisco Precision Cancer Building in San Francisco’s Mission Bay appear to have found no evidence the cancer has spread beyond the original location. That would seem to make a surgical approach in my case more viable.

i’m awaiting the “official” assessment of the surgical oncology option, which I expect to get soon.

Ths is, of course, only a very short version of what has been happening over the past seven weeks as the process of diagnosing and devising a treatment plan has been underway, initially in Hawaii and then in San Francisco.

The selfie was taken early Monday morning, April 13, as I waited for the building at UCSF to open so that I could check in for another CT Scan. I was probably looking more beaten up by the end of the week.

Please keep those positive vibes coming!