Author: Bev
Normality is a variable concept. Once you've had news that shatters your sense of 'normal' you have to learn to adapt and find that 'new normal', or else your sense of self will be obliterated. This is a common thing that seems to happen to us ladies when we've been given the news that we have cancer.
Initially you are caught up in what seems to be a whirlwind as you are sent for various tests and have to attend many appointments. Generally most of us were fit and healthy individuals who had little contact with health professionals – yet all these hospital visits strangely become our 'new normal'. In fact it was spending so much time in hospital that made me want to work as a nurse again...but that's just me. I think most of my friends hated being there!!
When you get your treatment plan your 'new normal' shifts yet again. You live in three weekly/weekly) cycles when the poisonous chemotherapy drugs are pumped into your body; you submit yourself to the hands of the surgical team who – you hope – will remove the offender from your body; and you allow intense beams of radiation to fry the damaged parts...all in the hope that this will kill the perpetrator and prevent it from ever coming back.
After all the so called 'active' treatment is finished you may find yourself taking other drugs to help keep the cancer from returning. Or you may still be a frequent user of the health services due to side effects of the treatment. This is now your 'new normal'.
It's often hardest once all the treatment is completed and everyone thinks that you're all better. You start to look less ill, your hair grows back and it seems it's all in the past. I so wish that was the case. For me the after effects from treatment are quite mild compared to others. I wake up every morning with numb hands (which makes turning the alarm clock off interesting when you can't feel the button!). I have less energy than I did BC (before cancer), although I have more good days in between, and I'm hoping this will continue to improve. My brain seems to still be lagging behind. I have paper all over the house with lists and reminders on it...and I often get halfway through a conversation when I forget what I'm talking about, or forget the name for something. 'Chemo Brain' is recognised by the medical profession.
But despite all this, I would do it all over again in a heartbeat. The alternative is a much less attractive proposition. This is my 'normal' now. Trying to adapt to this new life I have and all that goes with it.
What I am most envious of from my 'old' life is that I didn't have the worries and anxieties. If I hurt somewhere it was just 'normal'...maybe it was a pulled muscle from overdoing it, or I'd slept at an odd angle and it made my neck hurt.
Now my first thought is cancer. I seem to have a 'fast track' pass to the hospital...anything you have reason to see a doctor about – they'll be looking for cancer too. I don't think it helps that you will never get a bit of paper saying that you're all cured, it won't ever come back. It’s a little bit like a time bomb waiting to go off. My hip aches...it's spread to my bones. I have a headache...it's in my brain. I'm not alone in this either. I'm sure between the lot of us my beautiful tribe have convinced ourselves that we have got cancers and illnesses that probably don't even exist! Having cancer not only affects your body, but it messes with your head big time. 'Normal' people don't think like this do they? I certainly never used to think like this BC and I'm sure most of them didn't either. This is the 'new' normal we are trying to live with.
Of course, we don't all spend our days sitting worrying about this. We do try and carry on and fit in (when we can) with everyone else's normal...going to work, looking after the children, having holidays, going to parties etc.
We celebrate things that other people would think odd. Say if somebody went for a bone scan and results came back showing they have arthritis...we’d cheer those results. It's not cancer – yay! BC this would have seemed rather strange.
Sadly, for some of my friends their 'new' normal is the one none of us wants. They have stage 4 cancer. Metastatic cancer. Secondaries. That means it is incurable. Medical advances mean that there is a chance that the cancer can be stabilised with medication and they may live for a long time...but that 'terminal' word is always hanging over them. Their clock ticks a little bit faster and a little bit louder.
This week our tribe were all rocked to the core upon learning that one of us had been given this very news. Obviously we are all devastated that another of our friends has to undergo further treatment. Sadly it is not an uncommon occurrence in this new world we inhabit. At this time we aren't sure of the extent of the spread or what plan is to be put in place. We are all anxiously waiting to hear.
Nowhere else have I witnessed such an outpouring of sadness and love and heartfelt wishes that flowed upon hearing the news. The total togetherness was absolute. I think it true to say 'if one bleeds, we all bleed'. That is very much our mentality. However after the shockwaves diminished, we set about doing what we do best, rallying round and offering our unconditional support both practically and emotionally.
Whilst it is fair to say that what we can actually do is limited, what we can offer is limitless. Our 'normal' has shifted once again to encompass this new news. Our energies are now spent on buoying each other up, helping those who are drowning a little to stay afloat, and loving each other that little bit harder. We can't allow ourselves to be dragged down...we have to help each other ride out the storm, wherever it may take us and them. We have to keep OUR normal and not borrow theirs. That helps nobody.
In an ideal world my 'normal' would be just like everyone else's, and I would have little knowledge of what I know now. But then I suppose everyone has their own demons. And without this constantly changing 'new normal' I seem to live in, I wouldn't have my tribe. And whilst I wish that I hadn't had to meet them I am so very glad that I did. They can make what others see as abnormal seem all right. I would be totally lost without them.
Showing posts with label Living with breast cancer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Living with breast cancer. Show all posts
Thursday, 28 January 2016
Monday, 12 October 2015
Breast cancer awareness month: Cancerversary
Author: Harriet
This post is from Harriet's blog "Breathless Bird" at https://harryhatd.wordpress.com/.
So here I am. I have been meaning to do this blog malarkey for a while. In true Harriet fashion I have thrown myself headlong into writing this without reading the instructions, so if anyone but me ever gets to read this it’ll be a miracle.
Tomorrow it will be a year since I went for a routine chest X-ray after feeling a bit under the weather with a horrible, sick making pain in my left shoulder and a bit of a sharp pain in my chest. It’s fair to say things went t*ts up from the moment I had a message from the G.P that same day asking me to call him ASAP. Those of you reading who have experienced serious illness will know that this type of message is never going to lead to a happy ending. A friend of mine on my support group describes perfectly that when she gets bad news it is always accompanied with ‘a good dose of side head’. Well, you could virtually hear the damn side head in the message.
Basically, a rather large tumour on my left lung had taken its opportunity to say hi. We have no idea how long it had been there, but probably a long time. Contrary to popular belief, following treatment for primary breast cancer, you do not have follow up scans unless you present with symptoms. I was 13 years post treatment for primary breast cancer and until this point had been really well.
Scans revealed that my visitor had taken up residence in both the upper and lower lobes of my left lung. A very keen eyed Radiologist also spotted something (else) untoward on the first CT and after a lot of discussion, many needles being inserted into my neck, one massive needle going into my chest and into my lung (awake and unsedated – brave soldier points please) and pathologists doing their stuff, it was agreed that I had 2 separate cancers: oestrogen receptive metastatic breast cancer (my lady hormones are murderers) and papillary thyroid cancer.
When you live in the cancer world there is virtually a whole other language that you become aware of. Two words I have learned are ‘cancerversary’, when you acknowledge the anniversary of diagnosis, end of treatment or whatever you want to mark, and ‘scanxiety’ which occurs as you await scan results…something that could easily replace many forms of torture.
So, on my cancerversary I am trying to get my head round the last year. And I can’t. I don’t think I ever will. The harsh truth of my situation is that I have been diagnosed with an incurable disease that will shorten my life. I have been ridiculously lucky for someone with secondary cancer, in that I have been able to have surgical intervention to remove the cancer we know is there, but it is expected I will relapse. We desperately hope that will be a very long time away, but we also know that it might not be. Our lives are lived from scan to scan, experiencing…..you guessed it…scanxiety!
It is utterly impossible to fully articulate the past year. I have thus far tried to do it to a certain extent in a number of Facebook posts to which I have always had wonderful supportive responses. I find that it helps hugely to talk about my cancer, and frequently make massively inappropriate jokes about it (I’m allowed see). I could write a huge amount each day about how I feel, and believe me somedays it would be VERY interesting reading. But in summary, the last year has seen the following that is quantifiable:
6 chest X-rays
5 CT scans
1 PET scan (a specialist scan on which active cancer ‘lights up’)
1 MRI scan, during which I couldn’t stop thinking about Madonna falling offstage at the Brits, which isn’t good when you can’t smile or laugh
1 PICC line in my arm for 4 months
6 courses of chemotherapy
1 full head of hair disappearing
40 odd headscarves (became an obsession)
144 pre and post chemo steroids
1 beachball face and steroid related bloating
18 days throughout chemo of acting like a Yorkshire terrier on speed due to the steroids
2 weeks after each chemo wanting to rip my own skin off
12 bottles of tonic water as normal water was revolting during chemo
7 nights in 3 different hospitals
2 general anaesthetics
1 lung removed (well, they left me a teeny bit)
1 thyroid removed
28 lymph nodes removed from the left side of my neck
14 nodes with thyroid cancer in them
1 node with breast cancer in it (damn you sneaky bugger)
2 post surgery drains
2 catheters (sorry)
1 morphine pump
1 gangsta neck scar
2 suspected blood clots
2 A and E visits
1 personal care plan produced with GP including a ‘do you wish to be resuscitated’ conversation
1 chest infection
5 hormone implant injections and 5 months of hormone tablets, both of which I will be on forever or until they stop working for me as a form of treatment
2 painful feet, ankles and legs due to hormone treatment, resulting in reduced mobility
1 paralysed vocal chord (now finally on the mend)
12 reflexology treatments at my cancer centre
5 psychology appointments at my cancer centre
1 TV Appearance
1 London Marathon (obviously not me)
£8,500 raised for Maggie’s Centres by runners of said marathon
365 days of unrelenting thinking about cancer.
What can’t be demonstrated using numbers, or even understood, is:
How breathtakingly cruel life seems at times
How it feels as a mother to find out you have incurable cancer
How it feels as a husband to be told your wife and mother of your child has incurable cancer
How it feels as a parent to hear that your child has incurable cancer
How it feels as a brother to be told your sister has incurable cancer
How it feels as a friend to hear this terrible news.
The emotional impact that a diagnosis of this nature has upon a family.
That my body and mind are beyond exhausted.
But what we also know is that:
I receive world class treatment from the National Health Service; York and Leeds Hospitals and especially Harrogate Hospital. The people looking after me are nothing short of incredible in the way they care. I am ridiculously lucky.
I have an absolutely brilliant oncologist who listens to me but also tells me things straight. He is patient and kind and we are so grateful for this.
I have a wonderful employer.
Kindness knows no bounds. We are surprised daily with gestures and messages of support and love.
My physical and virtual support networks are incredible. I feel so loved family and friends and also by a group of women who have also been diagnosed with incurable breast cancer, and can say ‘me too’.
The Scandal box set is addictive.
We REALLY need a holiday.
My husband is the best. He really is.
I plan on having many many more cancerversaries.
This post is from Harriet's blog "Breathless Bird" at https://harryhatd.wordpress.com/.
So here I am. I have been meaning to do this blog malarkey for a while. In true Harriet fashion I have thrown myself headlong into writing this without reading the instructions, so if anyone but me ever gets to read this it’ll be a miracle.
Tomorrow it will be a year since I went for a routine chest X-ray after feeling a bit under the weather with a horrible, sick making pain in my left shoulder and a bit of a sharp pain in my chest. It’s fair to say things went t*ts up from the moment I had a message from the G.P that same day asking me to call him ASAP. Those of you reading who have experienced serious illness will know that this type of message is never going to lead to a happy ending. A friend of mine on my support group describes perfectly that when she gets bad news it is always accompanied with ‘a good dose of side head’. Well, you could virtually hear the damn side head in the message.
Basically, a rather large tumour on my left lung had taken its opportunity to say hi. We have no idea how long it had been there, but probably a long time. Contrary to popular belief, following treatment for primary breast cancer, you do not have follow up scans unless you present with symptoms. I was 13 years post treatment for primary breast cancer and until this point had been really well.
Scans revealed that my visitor had taken up residence in both the upper and lower lobes of my left lung. A very keen eyed Radiologist also spotted something (else) untoward on the first CT and after a lot of discussion, many needles being inserted into my neck, one massive needle going into my chest and into my lung (awake and unsedated – brave soldier points please) and pathologists doing their stuff, it was agreed that I had 2 separate cancers: oestrogen receptive metastatic breast cancer (my lady hormones are murderers) and papillary thyroid cancer.
When you live in the cancer world there is virtually a whole other language that you become aware of. Two words I have learned are ‘cancerversary’, when you acknowledge the anniversary of diagnosis, end of treatment or whatever you want to mark, and ‘scanxiety’ which occurs as you await scan results…something that could easily replace many forms of torture.
So, on my cancerversary I am trying to get my head round the last year. And I can’t. I don’t think I ever will. The harsh truth of my situation is that I have been diagnosed with an incurable disease that will shorten my life. I have been ridiculously lucky for someone with secondary cancer, in that I have been able to have surgical intervention to remove the cancer we know is there, but it is expected I will relapse. We desperately hope that will be a very long time away, but we also know that it might not be. Our lives are lived from scan to scan, experiencing…..you guessed it…scanxiety!
It is utterly impossible to fully articulate the past year. I have thus far tried to do it to a certain extent in a number of Facebook posts to which I have always had wonderful supportive responses. I find that it helps hugely to talk about my cancer, and frequently make massively inappropriate jokes about it (I’m allowed see). I could write a huge amount each day about how I feel, and believe me somedays it would be VERY interesting reading. But in summary, the last year has seen the following that is quantifiable:
6 chest X-rays
5 CT scans
1 PET scan (a specialist scan on which active cancer ‘lights up’)
1 MRI scan, during which I couldn’t stop thinking about Madonna falling offstage at the Brits, which isn’t good when you can’t smile or laugh
1 PICC line in my arm for 4 months
6 courses of chemotherapy
1 full head of hair disappearing
40 odd headscarves (became an obsession)
144 pre and post chemo steroids
1 beachball face and steroid related bloating
18 days throughout chemo of acting like a Yorkshire terrier on speed due to the steroids
2 weeks after each chemo wanting to rip my own skin off
12 bottles of tonic water as normal water was revolting during chemo
7 nights in 3 different hospitals
2 general anaesthetics
1 lung removed (well, they left me a teeny bit)
1 thyroid removed
28 lymph nodes removed from the left side of my neck
14 nodes with thyroid cancer in them
1 node with breast cancer in it (damn you sneaky bugger)
2 post surgery drains
2 catheters (sorry)
1 morphine pump
1 gangsta neck scar
2 suspected blood clots
2 A and E visits
1 personal care plan produced with GP including a ‘do you wish to be resuscitated’ conversation
1 chest infection
5 hormone implant injections and 5 months of hormone tablets, both of which I will be on forever or until they stop working for me as a form of treatment
2 painful feet, ankles and legs due to hormone treatment, resulting in reduced mobility
1 paralysed vocal chord (now finally on the mend)
12 reflexology treatments at my cancer centre
5 psychology appointments at my cancer centre
1 TV Appearance
1 London Marathon (obviously not me)
£8,500 raised for Maggie’s Centres by runners of said marathon
365 days of unrelenting thinking about cancer.
What can’t be demonstrated using numbers, or even understood, is:
How breathtakingly cruel life seems at times
How it feels as a mother to find out you have incurable cancer
How it feels as a husband to be told your wife and mother of your child has incurable cancer
How it feels as a parent to hear that your child has incurable cancer
How it feels as a brother to be told your sister has incurable cancer
How it feels as a friend to hear this terrible news.
The emotional impact that a diagnosis of this nature has upon a family.
That my body and mind are beyond exhausted.
But what we also know is that:
I receive world class treatment from the National Health Service; York and Leeds Hospitals and especially Harrogate Hospital. The people looking after me are nothing short of incredible in the way they care. I am ridiculously lucky.
I have an absolutely brilliant oncologist who listens to me but also tells me things straight. He is patient and kind and we are so grateful for this.
I have a wonderful employer.
Kindness knows no bounds. We are surprised daily with gestures and messages of support and love.
My physical and virtual support networks are incredible. I feel so loved family and friends and also by a group of women who have also been diagnosed with incurable breast cancer, and can say ‘me too’.
The Scandal box set is addictive.
We REALLY need a holiday.
My husband is the best. He really is.
I plan on having many many more cancerversaries.
Breast cancer awareness month: Living together but no longer in a relationship
Author: Heather L
Next February, me and cancer will mark our ten year anniversary. I feel ok to admit that the relationship has been drifting and we’re not thinking about each other all the time like we used to. But the cancer announced that it was metastatic seven years ago, meaning that it’s never going to completely move out. Yes we’re living in the same house filled with memories that we’ve collected together over the past ten years, but those memories are less important to me now than they used to be.
When cancer first moved in, me and it - ‘us’ - was all I could think about. Then two years later, after we had been through so much together, I thought about moving on. It was a struggle, as when you live together you start to absorb each other’s moods. Cancer was defined by fear so I became defined by fear. Then we tried to break up, but it didn’t happen. A crisis point in our relationship meant we needed to work through a few things in order to move forward. There was only one thing for it. We would need to have more treatment together; A LOT more treatment together. That was a hard stage in our relationship, but both me and cancer are less angry for it. In fact cancer now stays at home most of the time and sits around in its dressing gown watching daytime TV, barely nodding to acknowledge me even when we’re in the same room.
What I’m really saying is that we’ve come to the point where I need to feel brave and leave cancer to sit on the sofa all day preoccupied by its friends anastrazole, zoladex and ibandronic acid while I go out and, dare I even whisper it, chase some non-cancer related ambitions. I’ve spent so much time on my relationship with cancer that I now want other things. But I’ve discovered that past relationships can sometimes make establishing new ones difficult. At what stage do I mention cancer and what we went through together? How will someone new feel if I tell them that I’m still co-habiting with my ex? But cancer and I, we barely talk, so co-habiting with your ex is surely socially acceptable in this day and age. Right?
Next February, me and cancer will mark our ten year anniversary. I feel ok to admit that the relationship has been drifting and we’re not thinking about each other all the time like we used to. But the cancer announced that it was metastatic seven years ago, meaning that it’s never going to completely move out. Yes we’re living in the same house filled with memories that we’ve collected together over the past ten years, but those memories are less important to me now than they used to be.
When cancer first moved in, me and it - ‘us’ - was all I could think about. Then two years later, after we had been through so much together, I thought about moving on. It was a struggle, as when you live together you start to absorb each other’s moods. Cancer was defined by fear so I became defined by fear. Then we tried to break up, but it didn’t happen. A crisis point in our relationship meant we needed to work through a few things in order to move forward. There was only one thing for it. We would need to have more treatment together; A LOT more treatment together. That was a hard stage in our relationship, but both me and cancer are less angry for it. In fact cancer now stays at home most of the time and sits around in its dressing gown watching daytime TV, barely nodding to acknowledge me even when we’re in the same room.
What I’m really saying is that we’ve come to the point where I need to feel brave and leave cancer to sit on the sofa all day preoccupied by its friends anastrazole, zoladex and ibandronic acid while I go out and, dare I even whisper it, chase some non-cancer related ambitions. I’ve spent so much time on my relationship with cancer that I now want other things. But I’ve discovered that past relationships can sometimes make establishing new ones difficult. At what stage do I mention cancer and what we went through together? How will someone new feel if I tell them that I’m still co-habiting with my ex? But cancer and I, we barely talk, so co-habiting with your ex is surely socially acceptable in this day and age. Right?
Monday, 5 October 2015
Breast cancer awareness month: Cancer car crash
Author: Emma
I'm 16 months on from my initial secondary breast cancer diagnosis and as I sit here, pondering over what to write, I can't help but look back at my life since cancer and think what a car crash it has been.
In the months leading up to my illness I was happy. I'd found a lump at the end of 2013 but had it checked and got the all clear. We really enjoyed that Christmas!!
My life was going in the right direction. My partner of 3 years and I had got engaged, we'd talked about having a baby - a brother or sister for my brood of three from a previous relationship. He is in the army and was deployed to Afghanistan at the end of January 2014. He was on a 6 month tour.
I found another lump, underneath the original one, and went back to the breast clinic at the end of April to get it checked. I didn't think anymore of it.
Then on the 2nd of May I was rushed into hospital. I'd started haemorrhaging at home.
It was a Friday morning and I was getting the children ready for school. I have never been so scared. I thought I was dying. I called an ambulance and my mum and that was the start of 3 weeks in hospital. Later that evening I was told I had breast cancer. WTF!!
I had numerous CT and MRI scans over the weekend. I was still bleeding heavily and losing clots the size of mini footballs. I was alone and scared. I missed the kids. Then, out of the blue on the Monday, my partner walked in. He'd been flown home on special licence. I instantly felt safe. He was allowed to stay at the hospital with me - we had a private room. I had lots of visitors and the staff at the hospital became great friends.
Then we received another blow on the Wednesday. I was told the cancer had broken away and got into my bones. I had secondary breast cancer. The kind you can't get rid of. The kind that people call terminal. I'm not sure where it came from but I found an inner strength and I was ready for the fight. I was not, in any circumstances, leaving my children or my loved ones any time soon.
My partner and I set about planning our wedding. We arranged everything from our hospital room and got married 11 weeks later in Windsor. It was the best day off my life.
While in hospital I had 12 blood transfusions and 3 platelet ones. The reason I was bleeding so heavily is because the cancer was attacking my platelets - they're what make the blood clot.
I was discharged after 3 weeks and started chemo just a week later. I had 18 weekly sessions and ended up back in hospital twice due to complications.
I lost my hair, my eyebrows and my eyelashes.
I also lost my new husband.
My diagnosis proved too much for him. I was holding all this shit together, trying to be as normal as possible for the children but I wasn't getting any support from him. He went out for hours in the evenings while I was laid up on the sofa having just had chemo. He either withdrew into himself or was angry at the world. He took the not being able to have children together really badly. He said some nasty things. I had no more to give so I decided to end the marriage. I was doing everything for myself and the kids anyway and as horrible as it sounds, it was like having one less child to deal with.
So that's why I refer to the past 16 months as a car crash. I was diagnosed with secondary breast cancer at the age of 35. It stole my chances of being a mum again. It completely trashed my marriage. And still now, it feels like I'm walking through the wreckage. My 16 year old daughter sees what cancer is doing to me - the days I'm shattered and can't walk up the stairs. I try to hide everything from her but she's not stupid. I get in the shower just to have a good cry. She has struggled recently with her mood and has had some counselling to try and help. I feel guilty that our lives have turned into this nightmare. I'd give anything to be normal again.
By Emma x
I'm 16 months on from my initial secondary breast cancer diagnosis and as I sit here, pondering over what to write, I can't help but look back at my life since cancer and think what a car crash it has been.
In the months leading up to my illness I was happy. I'd found a lump at the end of 2013 but had it checked and got the all clear. We really enjoyed that Christmas!!
My life was going in the right direction. My partner of 3 years and I had got engaged, we'd talked about having a baby - a brother or sister for my brood of three from a previous relationship. He is in the army and was deployed to Afghanistan at the end of January 2014. He was on a 6 month tour.
I found another lump, underneath the original one, and went back to the breast clinic at the end of April to get it checked. I didn't think anymore of it.
Then on the 2nd of May I was rushed into hospital. I'd started haemorrhaging at home.
It was a Friday morning and I was getting the children ready for school. I have never been so scared. I thought I was dying. I called an ambulance and my mum and that was the start of 3 weeks in hospital. Later that evening I was told I had breast cancer. WTF!!
I had numerous CT and MRI scans over the weekend. I was still bleeding heavily and losing clots the size of mini footballs. I was alone and scared. I missed the kids. Then, out of the blue on the Monday, my partner walked in. He'd been flown home on special licence. I instantly felt safe. He was allowed to stay at the hospital with me - we had a private room. I had lots of visitors and the staff at the hospital became great friends.
Then we received another blow on the Wednesday. I was told the cancer had broken away and got into my bones. I had secondary breast cancer. The kind you can't get rid of. The kind that people call terminal. I'm not sure where it came from but I found an inner strength and I was ready for the fight. I was not, in any circumstances, leaving my children or my loved ones any time soon.
My partner and I set about planning our wedding. We arranged everything from our hospital room and got married 11 weeks later in Windsor. It was the best day off my life.
While in hospital I had 12 blood transfusions and 3 platelet ones. The reason I was bleeding so heavily is because the cancer was attacking my platelets - they're what make the blood clot.
I was discharged after 3 weeks and started chemo just a week later. I had 18 weekly sessions and ended up back in hospital twice due to complications.
I lost my hair, my eyebrows and my eyelashes.
I also lost my new husband.
My diagnosis proved too much for him. I was holding all this shit together, trying to be as normal as possible for the children but I wasn't getting any support from him. He went out for hours in the evenings while I was laid up on the sofa having just had chemo. He either withdrew into himself or was angry at the world. He took the not being able to have children together really badly. He said some nasty things. I had no more to give so I decided to end the marriage. I was doing everything for myself and the kids anyway and as horrible as it sounds, it was like having one less child to deal with.
So that's why I refer to the past 16 months as a car crash. I was diagnosed with secondary breast cancer at the age of 35. It stole my chances of being a mum again. It completely trashed my marriage. And still now, it feels like I'm walking through the wreckage. My 16 year old daughter sees what cancer is doing to me - the days I'm shattered and can't walk up the stairs. I try to hide everything from her but she's not stupid. I get in the shower just to have a good cry. She has struggled recently with her mood and has had some counselling to try and help. I feel guilty that our lives have turned into this nightmare. I'd give anything to be normal again.
By Emma x
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Write for the blog! This blog is one of a series being shared on the Young Women's Breast Cancer Blog UK during October, breast cancer awareness month, but the blog is here year round. If you are a young woman in the UK who has/had a breast cancer diagnosis and you would like to be a part of this blog, please have a read of the additional information here.
Check your breasts
Breast cancer can happen to any of us - regardless of age. Information about how to check your breasts can be found on the Coppafeel and Breast Cancer Now websites.
Further information and support:
Younger Breast Cancer Network UK - an online chat and support group for women under the age of 45 in the UK who have had a breast cancer diagnosis.
Baldly Beautiful - a YouTube channel with make up demonstrations, created by Mac makeup artist Andrea Pellegrini who went through chemo herself in 2014.
Take A Moment - This is a group for women (all ages) who have/had breast cancer who want to explore, reflect on and express their feelings and experiences through photography. This is a link to the public page - to join the group, send them a message.
The Osborne Trust - Providing children of parents with cancer the opportunity to access time out recreational activities whilst their parents undergo operations and treatments
Jen's Friends - Free heart-shaped pillows for women (and men) with Breast Cancer. Designed to provide comfort and protection after a Mastectomy operation.
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Thursday, 10 September 2015
Me and secondary breast cancer - 7 years on
Author: Heather L
Today is the day.
Seven years since Mark and I sat in that consulting room at the hospital that is still all too familiar and was told that my breast cancer had spread to my liver and bones.
Seven years later I have forgotten what it's like to live without cancer.
Me and the cancer, it's like we've discovered the art of being in the same room at a party while studiously ignoring each other, although I don't think either of us can help the odd furtive glance in the other's direction every once in a while. I guess what I'm trying to say in a roundabout way is that while the shitty days have been beyond shitty, the good days mean so much more because of it, and I've discovered an equilibrium between those two extremes: I have found a way to live with cancer and be ok.
Seven years ago today I was pushed to the lowest ebb possible and found a way to become strong again because I didn't have a choice. But I was lucky that all the operations, IV chemotherapy and countless pills I have had access to on the NHS over the past 7 years have put me into remission.
Its not ok to take vital cancer drugs away from people when they're at their lowest most vulnerable point if there's the chance that drug will allow them to become strong again, whether that's for seven months, or seven years. Please, please, please don't think that the announced cuts to the cancer drugs fund are ok, because the NHS simply doesn't have the money to pay exorbitant prices set by the pharmaceutical companies. Its not about delaying the inevitability of death from cancer. Its about allowing cancer patients at their lowest point, like I was seven years ago, to become strong again. The government and the NHS need to find a solution where people with cancer aren't left in fear, not knowing which drugs will be available to treat them. And that's on top of trying to cope with living with cancer! I'm not writing this to ask you to act by signing a petition or donating money. If you've read the news about the cuts and thought, "well those hard choices need to be made because our NHS cant fund everything", I simply want to try and change your mind.
Today is the day.
Seven years since Mark and I sat in that consulting room at the hospital that is still all too familiar and was told that my breast cancer had spread to my liver and bones.
Seven years later I have forgotten what it's like to live without cancer.
Me and the cancer, it's like we've discovered the art of being in the same room at a party while studiously ignoring each other, although I don't think either of us can help the odd furtive glance in the other's direction every once in a while. I guess what I'm trying to say in a roundabout way is that while the shitty days have been beyond shitty, the good days mean so much more because of it, and I've discovered an equilibrium between those two extremes: I have found a way to live with cancer and be ok.
Seven years ago today I was pushed to the lowest ebb possible and found a way to become strong again because I didn't have a choice. But I was lucky that all the operations, IV chemotherapy and countless pills I have had access to on the NHS over the past 7 years have put me into remission.
Its not ok to take vital cancer drugs away from people when they're at their lowest most vulnerable point if there's the chance that drug will allow them to become strong again, whether that's for seven months, or seven years. Please, please, please don't think that the announced cuts to the cancer drugs fund are ok, because the NHS simply doesn't have the money to pay exorbitant prices set by the pharmaceutical companies. Its not about delaying the inevitability of death from cancer. Its about allowing cancer patients at their lowest point, like I was seven years ago, to become strong again. The government and the NHS need to find a solution where people with cancer aren't left in fear, not knowing which drugs will be available to treat them. And that's on top of trying to cope with living with cancer! I'm not writing this to ask you to act by signing a petition or donating money. If you've read the news about the cuts and thought, "well those hard choices need to be made because our NHS cant fund everything", I simply want to try and change your mind.
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(Note from Sarah: This is a news article from 4 September 2015 which gives some context to the last part of Heather's post. Cancer Drugs Fund cuts 23 treatments)
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