The official blog of Pablo Wegesend (aka Pablo the Mad Tiger Warrior)
Nothing written here is an official opinion of any of my employers, teachers, friends or relatives of the past, present or future
Just myself, written only on my personal free time! (wish I could have more free time to blog some more)
Contact madtigerwarrior@yahoo.com
Tuesday, April 15, 2025
pancreatic cancer and tumors in my liver
Saturday, April 05, 2025
Health journey of March 2025
Surgery
This surgery was to connect my stomach to a different part of the small intestine.
The current opening to the small intestine is too narrow for food to go down normally. Because of that, I'm more likely to vomit (or feel like vomiting).
To do this, the surgeons have to cut open my abdomen.
Luckily, I was put to sleep during this procedure.
The surgery was initially scheduled for 03/10/2025 but was delayed to the following day (03/11/2025) due to the multiple patients needing their own surgery.
Obviously, one of the most painful part of getting up after the surgery is dealing with the pain of the incision of the abdomen. Can't do a sit up.
But the most irritating part is the tube they put in the throat before the surgery and was to remain there after the surgery. The tube was to clear out the contents of the stomach. Having it in remain in my throat made it hard to talk and was just irritating. I was so happy when they FINALLY decided to take it out.
I was reliant on IV for my nutrients for most of the time at the hospital. They then decided to have me on a liquid diet. However, I got diarrhea attacks that came without warning and needed help to clean myself afterwards. So the doctors had me switch to a low-fiber diet to ease my digestive system's post-surgery transition.
I also had to rely on a walker to walk around, and had physical therapists come by to check on how well I could move around.
When I was finally discharged from the hospital (03/18/2025), I still needed my walker to move around. This lasted for the following 2 weeks.
Post-surgery recovery at parent's home
The mattress in my apartment was low on the ground and would've been difficult to get up from, especially I just had surgery in the abdominal area.
So I had to stay in my parent's home (which had a spare bed with a bed frame under it) for the following 2 weeks.
It was nice to get home-cooked meals from them. It was also time to re-introduce ourselves to each other being that it's been decades since I've lived with them.
That being said, once a new bed-frame was installed my mattress in my apartment and now that my ability to walk around unassisted has increased, I was happy to move back to my apartment again.
Reduced vomiting and reduced appetite
Good news is that so far, I onlyv vomited twice since the surgery. Compare to multiple times nearly daily the last few months.
The bad news is that I have still have a reduced appetite. I can hardly finish everything on my plate. My parents want me to eat more, but my stomach could only take in so much. The days of big eating are over.
Swelling and blood clots
While I was still in my parent's home for recovery, I noticed swelling in my right arm and right foot. I went to the urgent care doctors who suggested getting an ultra-sound for possible blood clots. Blood clots were found and now I have to take blood thinning medication. The bad news is that medication I'm currently taking requires injections and I'm not a big fan of getting poked by needles. Depending on future blood tests showing improvement, I could eventually be transitioned to taking blood thinning pills instead.
Physical therapy
Friday, March 07, 2025
coming soon: surgery
This coming Monday, I'm scheduled to have surgery on my digestive system. The plan is connect my stomach to a different part of the small intestine.
The current opening to the small intestine is too narrow for food to go down normally. Because of that, I'm more likely to vomit (or feel like vomiting).
If all goes well, my vomiting should be reduced and my appetite should increase.
Recovery time varies, so I can't tell you how long I'll be in the hospital, or when I'll be ready to blog about the surgery itself.
Pray for me and wish me luck!
Saturday, March 01, 2025
Health issues of February 2025
The month of February started with the usual bouts of nausea that I've been experiencing the last few months.
Then on February 6th, a big meatball sized stool came out after a few days of not pooping. I felt another that was about to come out, but it didn't. For days. Yes, another round of constipation.
I had to spend Super Bowl Sunday still dealing with the constipation, though I was able to watch the entire halftime show uninterrupted.
On February 12, I had a previously scheduled appointment for a pre-surgery consultation. The planned surgery (which isn't yet scheduled) deals with my digestive system. While there, I mentioned my current constipation, and the doctor suggested one of those over-the-counter enemas or suppositories. I bought a box of suppositories.
I tried it first time on the day I bought it.
Then I tried it again the following day (02/13/2025) circa 5pm. About an hour later, I could feel the pieces of the stuck poop down going down into the toilet. And more wet stools. So now, constipation had turned into a diarrhea that lasted throughout the night. No pause until the following day. And even then, I had occasional diarrhea to the point where I took Imodium AD to finally end it all.
So from that point on, I took Miralax (a powder stool softener) daily to ensure smooth, daily (or almost daily stools) along with some high-fiber whole-grain food.
No constipation for the rest of the month.
There has also been reduced vomiting. But I'm not ready to declare victory, because everytime I feel like declaring victory, it all comes back.
But I do feel an increased energy now that I'm able to take a walk around the block. Not ready for long-distance walks yet. Baby steps. Can't rush the process/
For March, I have another pre-surgery consultation session. I'll let you know how that goes when the time is right
Wednesday, February 19, 2025
Defund Elon Musk
President Donald Dump has hired Elon Musk to find parts of the government's budget to cut spending!
Some of those proposed cuts includes spending to help poor people in foreign countries (is USAID), and it won't take long before those cuts come to Medicaid and SNAP!
But Elon Musk makes TONS of money off the government via contracts with his companies (ie SpaceX, Tesla, etc).
Instead of cutting off money to help the poor, why not cut off money that benefits Elon Musk!
IF the Democrats had REAL courage, they would propose a bill to END ALL subsidies/contracts/etc to companies owned by Elon Musk!
In other words, a Defund Elon Musk Act (DEMA)!
It's time for bold action and show Elon Musk that somebody is not afraid to stand up to him!
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DEFUND ELON MUSK |
Friday, January 31, 2025
Health issues of January 2025
I know, it's been a while since I last wrote a blog post.
Again, it's my health issues related to my digestive system that got in the way!
Here are my previous blog posts documenting my recent health issues
https://pablowegesend.blogspot.com/2024/10/my-experience-with-jaundice-and.html
https://pablowegesend.blogspot.com/2024/10/coming-home-from-hospital-and-road-to.html
https://pablowegesend.blogspot.com/2024/11/more-health-drama-in-late-october.html
https://pablowegesend.blogspot.com/2024/11/nausea-drama-for-early-november.html
https://pablowegesend.blogspot.com/2024/11/wish-me-luck-this-black-friday.html
Wednesday, January 08, 2025
Enough with the fireworks already
New Year's in Hawaii began with a preventable tragedy caused by careless fools who consider popping tons of fireworks all at once a "tradition"
“The truth is that people had traumatic injuries so badly that brain material was across the sidewalk from the ferocity of this explosion, and we want people to hear that because that is what is really possible with these explosive fireworks,” he said. “Some of the deceased had injuries that were that tragic, that traumatic. We’re talking about the worst possible war zone injuries that took their lives.
“And in the next couple of days, it’s highly likely that some of the people that didn’t even look that bad will die because their lungs were burned out,” Green added. “And that’s what you happen to see when explosions happen right in front of you.”Most of the 20-plus patients transported to hospitals were critically injured with burns over much of their bodies, according to Dr. Jim Ireland, Honolulu Emergency Services Department director. Three children were among those transported, including a 3-year-old boy with extensive burns, according to EMS.Ireland said an additional 10 to 15 people suffered what were considered “minor” injuries and did not necessarily require ambulance transport to the hospital.“We did not actually transport a lot of patients with minor injuries, but I remember a 12-year-old girl with burns on her leg and some shrapnel,” Ireland said.
My comment on Facebook was this

A 3-year-old boy has died from injuries received at the New Year's Eve fireworks explosion in Oʻahu's Salt Lake-Āliamanu neighborhood. He is the fourth fatality so far, according to local officials.
The Honolulu Department of the Medical Examiner identified the boy as Cassius Ramos-Benigno. The cause and manner of death were both listed as pending on Monday.
The explosion also left three women dead and dozens injured, including children.
"That 3-year-old was in an ambulance when I got there about 15 minutes after the event happened. So I didn't see that 3-year-old, but our teams took care of him, teams with EMS and the Honolulu Fire Department, and got him to Kapiʻolani and did everything they could for that boy," said Dr. Jim Ireland, director of the Honolulu Emergency Service Department.
A deadly New Year’s Eve fireworks explosion at a Salt Lake home inundated HawaiÊ»i’s only burn center with the largest volume of patients from a single event in the unit’s 42-year history.
Six of the most critically injured survivors will fly on a military aircraft Saturday to Arizona for specialized treatment to help absorb some of the load, according to the governor’s office.
Honolulu’s Straub Benioff Medical Center has four beds to serve severe skin and tissue damage in burn patients from across the North Pacific, including Guam and Micronesia. In an emergency, the unit’s capacity can surge, absorbing beds from the ICU to handle upward of 20 patients with injuries from heat, electricity, radiation, infection, disease or chemicals.
But its capacity buckled on Wednesday, when a fireworks blast at a Salt Lake home just after midnight left three people dead and seriously injured more than 20. A fourth person died in a fireworks-related incident in Kalihi on New Year’s Day.
and then there's this
Hilton Raethel, chief executive of the Healthcare Association of HawaiÊ»i, described the New Year’s event as extraordinary because so many were badly burned in one incident.
“We can handle a bunch of heart attacks, we can handle a bunch of broken bones, we can handle a bunch of strokes, we can handle a lot of things all at once and really surge the capacity,” he said Friday. “We can handle a pandemic because it builds over time and we have time to plan. But this event was even worse than even the Maui wildfires.”
Usually in wildfires (and most fire incidents) more people die from smoke inhalation than actually get burned by the fire. That could also be true in this incident.
But the fact that MORE PEOPLE got burned in this recent fireworks incident than the 2023 Maui wildfires SAYS A LOT!
- So many people in close proximity to the fireworks popping all at once
- once fireworks explode, you have ZERO CONTROL over where it lands
- innocent bystanders can get hit
- nearby homes can get burned to ashes
- all this because some fools think it's "tradition" to put others in danger to celebrate the New Year