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 Primary. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Primary. Show all posts
Thursday, 28 January 2016
Thursday, 7 January 2016
I don't believe
Author: Eve
Today was Boxing Day , two years ago I celebrated it with a pint or two of FEC-T, for those of you reading who don't know what this is, in a nutshell it's a pink chemo drug that beats the complete shit out of you..... so much so even typing the words brings an involuntary retch to my throat.
Fast forward two years on, the festive season is ending and I suppose we all reflect, I know I have and I have had a few epiphanies....
My babies are growing fast, I suspect this is the last year Santa will be left mince pies and it makes me sad, they are starting to have their own opinions, their own thoughts and believe in their own way of thinking which as a mother of girls is a tough one. I don't believe in Santa is the one line I won't want to hear next year but I hope with all my heart I will be here to hear it.
The mothers from my group who never made it are constantly in my thoughts. Their babies are 'celebrating' Christmas without their mumma. My heart aches with sadness when I think of them all. A cruel roll of a dice that made them unlucky. There are at least 9 children I know who have lost their mum to breast cancer. To know you are leaving your children must be the worst pain imaginable.
And so I have to replace those thoughts, put something in their place that means I don't burst into tears because my eldest rolls her eyes at Santa, I am there to see it, to feel it, to breathe it in and to wrap my arms around her still, which despite her protests at my display of over excited Elf emotion I do.
Having girls you worry about weather they will go through what you have? I have told them to have mastectomies, I figure prevention is the biggest weapon I have and boy am I going to bloody use it for them.
Back to my epiphanies... brought on by the emotions of Christmas and the cruel blows delivered to the online ladies going through treatment.....
Little girls are fed bull shit, I have decided, and I have also decided that I for one will not be filling my daughters heads with such bollocks.... The following apply and I will write it in a book if they want me to.
I do not believe in the following .....
Things happen for a reason
(What a load of crap! Like you are meant to get illness and sorrow)
Just wait, karma will deliver
(Again, bull steaming shit, no it doesn't, no one gets what they deserve, the rich get richer, the bad prosper and the good get taken advantage of and the sweetest, gentlest people have some terrible 'karma' delivered)
You are only given what you can handle
(Load of ...... You handle what you are given and put your gloves on and punch, you didn't receive it because you were stronger than Thelma the class shy girl)
Good things come to those that wait
(ha ha, yeah right, excuse me while I run in front of you cus if I don't get it for myself, it just ain't gunna happen, sit there if you want but I'm off )
I could go on but you probably think I am a bitter old hag, I know I am not. As a mother of girls I will bring them up with an inner strength, a mental strength that gives them power, power to make their bubble happy, to find true friendships and real love, the type that is not contaminated with fairy tale cliches that somehow justify suffering and pain and other people treating them like doormats. The only way to do this is to lead by example, to show them , for all the ladies that desperately wanted to but can't, I will .
And Santa will still get his mince pie even if my girls laugh at me, just because I can.
X
Today was Boxing Day , two years ago I celebrated it with a pint or two of FEC-T, for those of you reading who don't know what this is, in a nutshell it's a pink chemo drug that beats the complete shit out of you..... so much so even typing the words brings an involuntary retch to my throat.
Fast forward two years on, the festive season is ending and I suppose we all reflect, I know I have and I have had a few epiphanies....
My babies are growing fast, I suspect this is the last year Santa will be left mince pies and it makes me sad, they are starting to have their own opinions, their own thoughts and believe in their own way of thinking which as a mother of girls is a tough one. I don't believe in Santa is the one line I won't want to hear next year but I hope with all my heart I will be here to hear it.
The mothers from my group who never made it are constantly in my thoughts. Their babies are 'celebrating' Christmas without their mumma. My heart aches with sadness when I think of them all. A cruel roll of a dice that made them unlucky. There are at least 9 children I know who have lost their mum to breast cancer. To know you are leaving your children must be the worst pain imaginable.
And so I have to replace those thoughts, put something in their place that means I don't burst into tears because my eldest rolls her eyes at Santa, I am there to see it, to feel it, to breathe it in and to wrap my arms around her still, which despite her protests at my display of over excited Elf emotion I do.
Having girls you worry about weather they will go through what you have? I have told them to have mastectomies, I figure prevention is the biggest weapon I have and boy am I going to bloody use it for them.
Back to my epiphanies... brought on by the emotions of Christmas and the cruel blows delivered to the online ladies going through treatment.....
Little girls are fed bull shit, I have decided, and I have also decided that I for one will not be filling my daughters heads with such bollocks.... The following apply and I will write it in a book if they want me to.
I do not believe in the following .....
Things happen for a reason
(What a load of crap! Like you are meant to get illness and sorrow)
Just wait, karma will deliver
(Again, bull steaming shit, no it doesn't, no one gets what they deserve, the rich get richer, the bad prosper and the good get taken advantage of and the sweetest, gentlest people have some terrible 'karma' delivered)
You are only given what you can handle
(Load of ...... You handle what you are given and put your gloves on and punch, you didn't receive it because you were stronger than Thelma the class shy girl)
Good things come to those that wait
(ha ha, yeah right, excuse me while I run in front of you cus if I don't get it for myself, it just ain't gunna happen, sit there if you want but I'm off )
I could go on but you probably think I am a bitter old hag, I know I am not. As a mother of girls I will bring them up with an inner strength, a mental strength that gives them power, power to make their bubble happy, to find true friendships and real love, the type that is not contaminated with fairy tale cliches that somehow justify suffering and pain and other people treating them like doormats. The only way to do this is to lead by example, to show them , for all the ladies that desperately wanted to but can't, I will .
And Santa will still get his mince pie even if my girls laugh at me, just because I can.
X
Saturday, 28 November 2015
Friends
Author: Bev
The Oxford English Dictionary says that a friend is 'a person that you know well and like'. Since being diagnosed with breast cancer in October 2014 I'd like to challenge that definition...my friends are so much more.
When you get your diagnosis your world shifts on its axis. Nothing is the same as it was before. Everything is different. You are not the same person you once were.
Now don't get me wrong - those I classed as my friends before cancer are definitely still my friends now...the support offered to me and my family during the last year has come from old and new friends. It often surprised me who withdrew a little and who stepped up to the mark to make that difference. Maybe it shouldn't have done. I understand that being around me may have made people realise their own mortality, and that this is often something people shy away from. I don't blame anyone for trying to preserve their own sense of being. I can't say that I would have done the same were the roles reversed, but I love all my friends for their differences and if everyone acted the same all the time the world would be a much duller place. There is great beauty in our differences and I would never expect anyone to be someone they weren't on my behalf.
During the period between my diagnosis and the beginning of my treatment I refused to Google...I was pretty au fait with all the medical jargon having trained as a nurse and midwife (although I think my poor husband was undergoing a mammoth learning curve!). I trusted that my doctors knew what they were doing and would plan what was best for me. However, a lady on a Facebook group pointed me towards the Younger Breast Cancer Network UK. It was a couple of weeks before I felt ready to sign up...but I'm oh so glad I did. I'm sure my Macmillan breast care nurses had their lives made easier as well as I learnt most of what I know from lovely ladies on YBCN!
Sitting in the breast clinic I felt so very young...everyone else there seemed at least 20 years older than me. Here (online), all the ladies were under 45...I'd found my new friends who would sustain me through the next year. There were ladies who had just been diagnosed, ladies undergoing chemotherapy or radiotherapy or surgery, and ladies who had finished all their treatment and were just there to offer advice and support.
There was a group of ladies who all had similar time frames to me, and there was always someone online 24 hours a day 7 days a week. And we told it how it was...you know – all the things the medical professionals don't tell you. All the things that make you sit at home thinking 'is it just me?' And when you're not able to get out and about because you've just had surgery or are recovering from your latest chemo session, these ladies are all there. Nothing was out of bounds and there was lots of tears and lots of laughter.
There was one lady in particular who I chatted to quite a lot. She was diagnosed a couple of days after me and we had all our treatments within a couple of days of each other. We were 'chemo twins'. Once we'd finished our active treatment we celebrated together, and finally met in person to share a few drinks and hugs in September this year at a Breast Cancer Care Younger Women Together event.
Our bodies were still recovering from all the harsh treatments, but we could start planning the future. In fact, my friend wrote a poem about that very subject on this blog.
Over the last few weeks my friend was told the cancer had spread to her lungs. It was now incurable, but with drugs she may be able to extend her life. She was taken into hospital a couple of weeks ago. I sent her regular messages and sometimes she replied, sometimes she didn't...but I just wanted her to know I was thinking of her.
Last week she was moved to a hospice. Now these places aren't always doom and gloom. They are a much more homely place to be stuck in than a hospital, and their medical teams are second to none. They help people to live with illnesses – they are not just places to go into and never come out.
I made a box up and posted it to her. It was not much, but it was just full of things that I hoped would make her smile and know that she was being thought about. I don't know if she ever got to see my box. Not that it matters in the grand scheme of things – she knew she was loved.
My last message from her was Tuesday. She knew that her time was limited. I was so saddened on Sunday when I received a message saying that she had passed away on Saturday evening. Everything seemed to happen so very fast. In fact, I drunk a lot of wine and had a bit of a meltdown...something I'd not really done since my diagnosis. Life is so unfair and cancer is so cruel. Two more children left without a wonderful Mother.
She is not the first friend I have lost but she was my closest. Love you lady - you will be in my heart always.
My first instinct was to tell all my friends (we now have our own little group away from YBCN where we talk about everything and anything) – they were her friends too. To know that even in this I wasn't alone helped immensely.
You know when you say or do something and then stop and think that it's just you – nobody else can possibly feel like this / do this? Well this bunch of ladies just get it. They've all been through what I've been through. Yes everyone has very different experiences and we're all individuals. But I have told them things that nobody else knows...and vice versa. When we meet up in person – which I have done already with some of them, and am so looking forward to doing in a couple of weeks when we have a mass meet up to celebrate Christmas and remember our friends no longer here – there is none of the awkwardness of meeting new people.
Because we know each other. We know so much about each other.
I'm sure that I would never had crossed paths with many of these amazing ladies had I not had cancer. We are all so very different, but also all the same. So in a way I am grateful to cancer for forcing me down a different path to that which I had planned. Now my plans have changed. I plan on living life to the full, spending time with my family and making many new memories. I plan on doing it with the lovely friends we have all lost along the way at the forefront of my mind...it is wrong to waste your life when there are those who are no longer here and tried so very hard to stay.
Chatting to my new friends is a daily occurrence. Distance is irrelevant online. And when we discuss things there is no need for explanations. I am my new me. I don't need to pretend to be someone else, or pretend to be the person I was before cancer. I'm the same person I was but very, very different. I love all my 'new' friends and having them at the end of my fingertips is invaluable. I don't feel different because I've had cancer. There is none of the sympathetic head tilts or gentle questioning or avoidance of subjects that often come from friends after a cancer diagnosis. I think a lot of it is down to not wanting to upset the person. But with these ladies we have no subject that can't be discussed. All of us has stood face to face with our own mortality and I really wouldn't wish that on anyone of my 'other' friends. I hope against hope that none of them ever have to cross the line I have crossed.
We laugh a lot. I've learnt lots of new (rude!) words. We cry sometimes. We love deeply always. With these ladies I am just me. I am home. I cannot imagine being without them. I love them fiercely.
I have found my tribe.
The Oxford English Dictionary says that a friend is 'a person that you know well and like'. Since being diagnosed with breast cancer in October 2014 I'd like to challenge that definition...my friends are so much more.
When you get your diagnosis your world shifts on its axis. Nothing is the same as it was before. Everything is different. You are not the same person you once were.
Now don't get me wrong - those I classed as my friends before cancer are definitely still my friends now...the support offered to me and my family during the last year has come from old and new friends. It often surprised me who withdrew a little and who stepped up to the mark to make that difference. Maybe it shouldn't have done. I understand that being around me may have made people realise their own mortality, and that this is often something people shy away from. I don't blame anyone for trying to preserve their own sense of being. I can't say that I would have done the same were the roles reversed, but I love all my friends for their differences and if everyone acted the same all the time the world would be a much duller place. There is great beauty in our differences and I would never expect anyone to be someone they weren't on my behalf.
During the period between my diagnosis and the beginning of my treatment I refused to Google...I was pretty au fait with all the medical jargon having trained as a nurse and midwife (although I think my poor husband was undergoing a mammoth learning curve!). I trusted that my doctors knew what they were doing and would plan what was best for me. However, a lady on a Facebook group pointed me towards the Younger Breast Cancer Network UK. It was a couple of weeks before I felt ready to sign up...but I'm oh so glad I did. I'm sure my Macmillan breast care nurses had their lives made easier as well as I learnt most of what I know from lovely ladies on YBCN!
Sitting in the breast clinic I felt so very young...everyone else there seemed at least 20 years older than me. Here (online), all the ladies were under 45...I'd found my new friends who would sustain me through the next year. There were ladies who had just been diagnosed, ladies undergoing chemotherapy or radiotherapy or surgery, and ladies who had finished all their treatment and were just there to offer advice and support.
There was a group of ladies who all had similar time frames to me, and there was always someone online 24 hours a day 7 days a week. And we told it how it was...you know – all the things the medical professionals don't tell you. All the things that make you sit at home thinking 'is it just me?' And when you're not able to get out and about because you've just had surgery or are recovering from your latest chemo session, these ladies are all there. Nothing was out of bounds and there was lots of tears and lots of laughter.
There was one lady in particular who I chatted to quite a lot. She was diagnosed a couple of days after me and we had all our treatments within a couple of days of each other. We were 'chemo twins'. Once we'd finished our active treatment we celebrated together, and finally met in person to share a few drinks and hugs in September this year at a Breast Cancer Care Younger Women Together event.
Our bodies were still recovering from all the harsh treatments, but we could start planning the future. In fact, my friend wrote a poem about that very subject on this blog.
Over the last few weeks my friend was told the cancer had spread to her lungs. It was now incurable, but with drugs she may be able to extend her life. She was taken into hospital a couple of weeks ago. I sent her regular messages and sometimes she replied, sometimes she didn't...but I just wanted her to know I was thinking of her.
Last week she was moved to a hospice. Now these places aren't always doom and gloom. They are a much more homely place to be stuck in than a hospital, and their medical teams are second to none. They help people to live with illnesses – they are not just places to go into and never come out.
I made a box up and posted it to her. It was not much, but it was just full of things that I hoped would make her smile and know that she was being thought about. I don't know if she ever got to see my box. Not that it matters in the grand scheme of things – she knew she was loved.
My last message from her was Tuesday. She knew that her time was limited. I was so saddened on Sunday when I received a message saying that she had passed away on Saturday evening. Everything seemed to happen so very fast. In fact, I drunk a lot of wine and had a bit of a meltdown...something I'd not really done since my diagnosis. Life is so unfair and cancer is so cruel. Two more children left without a wonderful Mother.
She is not the first friend I have lost but she was my closest. Love you lady - you will be in my heart always.
My first instinct was to tell all my friends (we now have our own little group away from YBCN where we talk about everything and anything) – they were her friends too. To know that even in this I wasn't alone helped immensely.
You know when you say or do something and then stop and think that it's just you – nobody else can possibly feel like this / do this? Well this bunch of ladies just get it. They've all been through what I've been through. Yes everyone has very different experiences and we're all individuals. But I have told them things that nobody else knows...and vice versa. When we meet up in person – which I have done already with some of them, and am so looking forward to doing in a couple of weeks when we have a mass meet up to celebrate Christmas and remember our friends no longer here – there is none of the awkwardness of meeting new people.
Because we know each other. We know so much about each other.
I'm sure that I would never had crossed paths with many of these amazing ladies had I not had cancer. We are all so very different, but also all the same. So in a way I am grateful to cancer for forcing me down a different path to that which I had planned. Now my plans have changed. I plan on living life to the full, spending time with my family and making many new memories. I plan on doing it with the lovely friends we have all lost along the way at the forefront of my mind...it is wrong to waste your life when there are those who are no longer here and tried so very hard to stay.
Chatting to my new friends is a daily occurrence. Distance is irrelevant online. And when we discuss things there is no need for explanations. I am my new me. I don't need to pretend to be someone else, or pretend to be the person I was before cancer. I'm the same person I was but very, very different. I love all my 'new' friends and having them at the end of my fingertips is invaluable. I don't feel different because I've had cancer. There is none of the sympathetic head tilts or gentle questioning or avoidance of subjects that often come from friends after a cancer diagnosis. I think a lot of it is down to not wanting to upset the person. But with these ladies we have no subject that can't be discussed. All of us has stood face to face with our own mortality and I really wouldn't wish that on anyone of my 'other' friends. I hope against hope that none of them ever have to cross the line I have crossed.
We laugh a lot. I've learnt lots of new (rude!) words. We cry sometimes. We love deeply always. With these ladies I am just me. I am home. I cannot imagine being without them. I love them fiercely.
I have found my tribe.
Tuesday, 24 November 2015
Happiness and Love
Author: Anonymous
BD - ( that's what I call it now , before diagnosis) I would liken myself to Dave the minion. I would walk around in complete ignorance of the world really ......funny because now I think I'm more like the Dalai Lama but with more clothes and less tolerance. How does he not swear, I must fucking work on that one ...
I love deeper, I mean REALLY love deeper, I tell my daughters hourly I love them, if they sneeze "Bless you sweetie, mumma loves you." They usually roll their eyes and say "tell me something I don't know", then wipe the snot on my sofa ...... but I do it anyway, "Mumma love you but don't wipe your snot on my sofa" ........you get me?
I'm kinder, I look at people and I will try to help. Be it small like giving the Big Issue guy a Greggs pasty and his dog a chewy (they usually swap cus there's more meat in the chewy) I no longer walk by. I don't do it for thanks - no point most people have no manners, I do it because it nurtures my soul.
I am more sensitive, since diagnosis I have noticed how people abandon you, who knows why? Maybe they think they can catch it? Maybe they think they need to protect themselves from the pain of possibly losing you? Maybe it was my nutty phase that made me difficult to be around from being poisoned, burned and butchered, who knows? That's about as much thought as I am going to give that one, see below ......
I forgive quicker, hurt me (boy have I been hurt since diagnosis) and yes I will react like the black widow but I will also walk away with no resentment, I am clearly wasting my time and emotions on you so I am off. Turrah!
My senses seem to be heightened, I smell the leaves I feel the sun on my face, I stroke jumpers in shops! Food tastes different to how it used to and I have an inner leprechaun that freaks completly if it sees a beautiful rainbow, nature is truly beautiful you just have to stop and look.
I pray more, I have my Catholic faith, it's personal to me, I am not overly strict in my practice of it but I don't judge you if you do not have one, challenging my belief will not change mine, mine gives me peace it gives me a inner calm at the most challenging of moments. I do not see badness as a punishment from God, it just is, life is very unfair. I have never quite understood why faith causes such arguments it is so sad, or why you would want to deny me my faith and the comfort it gives me, then marry and baptise your children, (which is a holy sacrament) in a church, those in glass houses and all that.
I constantly think and challenge, why ? Why did that person do that? Why am I doing this? why do my bones ache so much? What was that twinge? Stopping the waterfall of thoughts is frustrating and a daily battle.
What am I trying to say, I don't really know myself , chemo brain never allows me to complete my cycle of thought beyond that of a goldfish, what was I saying again? I think I'm saying enjoy the moment, like so many ladies in my situation and far far worse, enjoy it, find the happiness, give the happiness and never ever, ever, stop loving.
PS I love you girlies ....... well it has been ten minutes! x
I love deeper, I mean REALLY love deeper, I tell my daughters hourly I love them, if they sneeze "Bless you sweetie, mumma loves you." They usually roll their eyes and say "tell me something I don't know", then wipe the snot on my sofa ...... but I do it anyway, "Mumma love you but don't wipe your snot on my sofa" ........you get me?
I'm kinder, I look at people and I will try to help. Be it small like giving the Big Issue guy a Greggs pasty and his dog a chewy (they usually swap cus there's more meat in the chewy) I no longer walk by. I don't do it for thanks - no point most people have no manners, I do it because it nurtures my soul.
I am more sensitive, since diagnosis I have noticed how people abandon you, who knows why? Maybe they think they can catch it? Maybe they think they need to protect themselves from the pain of possibly losing you? Maybe it was my nutty phase that made me difficult to be around from being poisoned, burned and butchered, who knows? That's about as much thought as I am going to give that one, see below ......
I forgive quicker, hurt me (boy have I been hurt since diagnosis) and yes I will react like the black widow but I will also walk away with no resentment, I am clearly wasting my time and emotions on you so I am off. Turrah!
My senses seem to be heightened, I smell the leaves I feel the sun on my face, I stroke jumpers in shops! Food tastes different to how it used to and I have an inner leprechaun that freaks completly if it sees a beautiful rainbow, nature is truly beautiful you just have to stop and look.
I pray more, I have my Catholic faith, it's personal to me, I am not overly strict in my practice of it but I don't judge you if you do not have one, challenging my belief will not change mine, mine gives me peace it gives me a inner calm at the most challenging of moments. I do not see badness as a punishment from God, it just is, life is very unfair. I have never quite understood why faith causes such arguments it is so sad, or why you would want to deny me my faith and the comfort it gives me, then marry and baptise your children, (which is a holy sacrament) in a church, those in glass houses and all that.
I constantly think and challenge, why ? Why did that person do that? Why am I doing this? why do my bones ache so much? What was that twinge? Stopping the waterfall of thoughts is frustrating and a daily battle.
What am I trying to say, I don't really know myself , chemo brain never allows me to complete my cycle of thought beyond that of a goldfish, what was I saying again? I think I'm saying enjoy the moment, like so many ladies in my situation and far far worse, enjoy it, find the happiness, give the happiness and never ever, ever, stop loving.
PS I love you girlies ....... well it has been ten minutes! x
Sunday, 15 November 2015
To the man on the train
Author: Anonymous
The idea for this post came about when I found myself sitting between several people reading an article about the ‘No Less a Woman’ campaign (in which I feature). I imagined myself having a conversation around some of the - upsetting - comments I later saw posted about the article.
Man on the Train
I was sitting next to you on the District Line last Wednesday, reading the Evening Standard over your shoulder. I know it was irritating – sorry. I just couldn’t help myself. I saw my topless photograph on page 11 in the article about ‘No Less a Woman’ - the collaboration by Stella McCartney and Laura Dodsworth to highlight breast cancer awareness. It’s not every day you see a picture of yourself half-naked in the newspaper! I blushed didn’t I? It sounds crazy, but there was this awful split-second before I realised that neither you, nor anyone else in the carriage would know that I was one of the three women in the article because our identities were not revealed.
I noticed that you looked at the images for a long time. It’s okay to be curious. We wanted you to know what mastectomy scars look like; to better understand the impact of breast surgery on women’s bodies. Sadly, not everyone gets to have neat scars and beautifully reconstructed breasts despite the wonderful advances in surgery. Not everyone can have a tattoo over their scar. Radiation treatment, for instance, can cause invisible, but long-term damage to the skin.
It didn’t cross your mind that you were sitting next to one of the women in the feature? You didn’t think I looked like I had breast cancer? It’s hard, but we all need to remember to try not to make assumptions about how people look, sometimes people can be ill, even when they look great.
You can’t understand why I wanted to show my scars? To be honest, I would never have agreed to have a topless photo before I had breast cancer. I took my breasts for granted. I didn’t see them as emblematic of my womanhood and femininity. I was sad to say good-bye to them when I decided to have risk-reducing surgery but when a reconstruction failed, and I got cancer again, I was devastated. Around 1 in 8 women in this country will develop breast cancer and 11, 000 women still die every year. I heard cancer described as ‘sexy.’ I hope these images will help people to understand that cancer is not sexy and they will have a better appreciation of this disease.
I worry that my daughter’s generation will struggle to develop a healthy relationship with their bodies if they are only surrounded by airbrushed images of idealised women. I worry that we are in danger of denying the truth of who we are if we carry on holding such unrealistic expectations, not just about our breasts, but about our bodies and the control we imagine we have over them.
Please don’t call me ‘brave.’ I don’t want you to feel sorry for me. But if you must feel pity, turn that emotion into a verb – do something to help, even if it’s just making a donation to charity.
Were you shocked? If you were, then it gives you some insight into how I felt for a long time. Nudity is something of a taboo in our culture, but to bare an imperfect body, a scarred body, feels like the final taboo, one that I wanted to shatter by showing off my body in all its flawed glory. My scars might be hidden from you, but I see them and they tell the story of my body, of my courage and strength.
http://www.stellamccartney.com/gb/lingerie_section
The idea for this post came about when I found myself sitting between several people reading an article about the ‘No Less a Woman’ campaign (in which I feature). I imagined myself having a conversation around some of the - upsetting - comments I later saw posted about the article.
Man on the Train
I was sitting next to you on the District Line last Wednesday, reading the Evening Standard over your shoulder. I know it was irritating – sorry. I just couldn’t help myself. I saw my topless photograph on page 11 in the article about ‘No Less a Woman’ - the collaboration by Stella McCartney and Laura Dodsworth to highlight breast cancer awareness. It’s not every day you see a picture of yourself half-naked in the newspaper! I blushed didn’t I? It sounds crazy, but there was this awful split-second before I realised that neither you, nor anyone else in the carriage would know that I was one of the three women in the article because our identities were not revealed.
I noticed that you looked at the images for a long time. It’s okay to be curious. We wanted you to know what mastectomy scars look like; to better understand the impact of breast surgery on women’s bodies. Sadly, not everyone gets to have neat scars and beautifully reconstructed breasts despite the wonderful advances in surgery. Not everyone can have a tattoo over their scar. Radiation treatment, for instance, can cause invisible, but long-term damage to the skin.
It didn’t cross your mind that you were sitting next to one of the women in the feature? You didn’t think I looked like I had breast cancer? It’s hard, but we all need to remember to try not to make assumptions about how people look, sometimes people can be ill, even when they look great.
You can’t understand why I wanted to show my scars? To be honest, I would never have agreed to have a topless photo before I had breast cancer. I took my breasts for granted. I didn’t see them as emblematic of my womanhood and femininity. I was sad to say good-bye to them when I decided to have risk-reducing surgery but when a reconstruction failed, and I got cancer again, I was devastated. Around 1 in 8 women in this country will develop breast cancer and 11, 000 women still die every year. I heard cancer described as ‘sexy.’ I hope these images will help people to understand that cancer is not sexy and they will have a better appreciation of this disease.
I worry that my daughter’s generation will struggle to develop a healthy relationship with their bodies if they are only surrounded by airbrushed images of idealised women. I worry that we are in danger of denying the truth of who we are if we carry on holding such unrealistic expectations, not just about our breasts, but about our bodies and the control we imagine we have over them.
Please don’t call me ‘brave.’ I don’t want you to feel sorry for me. But if you must feel pity, turn that emotion into a verb – do something to help, even if it’s just making a donation to charity.
Were you shocked? If you were, then it gives you some insight into how I felt for a long time. Nudity is something of a taboo in our culture, but to bare an imperfect body, a scarred body, feels like the final taboo, one that I wanted to shatter by showing off my body in all its flawed glory. My scars might be hidden from you, but I see them and they tell the story of my body, of my courage and strength.
http://www.stellamccartney.com/gb/lingerie_section
Sunday, 1 November 2015
Clarity
Author: Christina B
On the 2nd December 2014, my washing machine broke down and leaked all over the kitchen floor. Also on that day I was diagnosed with Stage 2 grade three breast cancer. That day when I broke down and cried it was not only for the diagnosis which challenged my mortality I also cried for the water threatening to ruin the kitchen floor and the inconvenience of not having a working washing machine.
9 months on the washing machine is fixed. I am "fixed" too in medical terms. The cancer has been removed and I've had chemotherapy to blast any indignant lurking cells and I've also had a breast reconstructed. These are physical changes and fixes.
My headspace is a tricky one to navigate though. A cancer diagnosis propels you into a dark unknown which forces you to face your own mortality head on. Whilst medical professionals do their job to " fix" you physically your mental health is not really considered unless you proactively request it. At one of my appointments at the breast clinic I asked for details of counselling service as I knew although I was doing a convincing job of coping I was really struggling underneath.
Fast track to my local cancer centre and I was given my own personal counsellor who was someone who I could trust and confide in. Someone who would not give me platitudes. Someone who would not give me head tilts of sympathy, someone's you I could dump all my concerns and worries on and not hold back for fear of how they would cope with information of any sort. Counselling isn't for everyone but it was for me. Breast cancer from my perspective was like a project. A really horrid project I might add. After diagnosis I decided to treat it like that and throw everything I could at it and counselling was one of those "things" I hit it with. Retail therapy was another thing too but that's another story in it's own right.
So 9 months on after diagnosis again I encountered a wet kitchen floor. This time it was a leak from the bathroom, causing a downpour into the kitchen. The damage was much worse and would require extensive work; an insurance job requiring new floors, ceilings and plasterwork. This time however I didn't cry. I didn't think why me or how unlucky I was or how would I cope with this disaster. After going through breast cancer the fact that I had to have the kitchen ceiling re plastered, bathroom floor redone and my sons room carpet ripped up and relaid due to a flood just didn't register on my Richter scale.
Suffice to say I've gained clarity and perspective going through breast cancer. I'm here to sort out the mess and that's what really matters.
On the 2nd December 2014, my washing machine broke down and leaked all over the kitchen floor. Also on that day I was diagnosed with Stage 2 grade three breast cancer. That day when I broke down and cried it was not only for the diagnosis which challenged my mortality I also cried for the water threatening to ruin the kitchen floor and the inconvenience of not having a working washing machine.
9 months on the washing machine is fixed. I am "fixed" too in medical terms. The cancer has been removed and I've had chemotherapy to blast any indignant lurking cells and I've also had a breast reconstructed. These are physical changes and fixes.
My headspace is a tricky one to navigate though. A cancer diagnosis propels you into a dark unknown which forces you to face your own mortality head on. Whilst medical professionals do their job to " fix" you physically your mental health is not really considered unless you proactively request it. At one of my appointments at the breast clinic I asked for details of counselling service as I knew although I was doing a convincing job of coping I was really struggling underneath.
Fast track to my local cancer centre and I was given my own personal counsellor who was someone who I could trust and confide in. Someone who would not give me platitudes. Someone who would not give me head tilts of sympathy, someone's you I could dump all my concerns and worries on and not hold back for fear of how they would cope with information of any sort. Counselling isn't for everyone but it was for me. Breast cancer from my perspective was like a project. A really horrid project I might add. After diagnosis I decided to treat it like that and throw everything I could at it and counselling was one of those "things" I hit it with. Retail therapy was another thing too but that's another story in it's own right.
So 9 months on after diagnosis again I encountered a wet kitchen floor. This time it was a leak from the bathroom, causing a downpour into the kitchen. The damage was much worse and would require extensive work; an insurance job requiring new floors, ceilings and plasterwork. This time however I didn't cry. I didn't think why me or how unlucky I was or how would I cope with this disaster. After going through breast cancer the fact that I had to have the kitchen ceiling re plastered, bathroom floor redone and my sons room carpet ripped up and relaid due to a flood just didn't register on my Richter scale.
Suffice to say I've gained clarity and perspective going through breast cancer. I'm here to sort out the mess and that's what really matters.
Saturday, 31 October 2015
Breast cancer awareness month: Hummingbird
Author: Sarah C
My heart is full. I am joyful. It is two months since my surgery and I am well. I have got through this. I have lived through this. I am in love with this moment. My stomach flutters like the wings of a hummingbird and life pulses through me.
Yesterday I spent all day in meditation. Mindful. Mindful of the fact that this is the end of the acute phase of my cancer journey. My wounds have healed. No fluid, no swelling, just a scar which looks less angry every day. I have accepted the loss of my breast and am slowly coming to terms with the practicalities of what this means. Negotiating changing rooms and swimming pools and conversations with awkward questions.
The hardest part has been having to massage the scar every day. Looking in the mirror at the wound where my breast once was and slowly, gently trying to bring the flesh back to life. The surgeon cuts through the muscles and nerves and the area of the wound becomes numb. With proper care and attention you can coax the nerves back to life but you have to be brave. You have to look at the site where the cancer was, you have to face the trauma of the cutting and the stitching and marvel at the miracle of healing. You have to be kind to yourself, body and mind. You have to take time. You have to accept.
Yesterday in meditation I decided to celebrate this moment. To enjoy the crescendo of this part of the healing process. The body is a miraculous thing. Life is a marvellous journey. I am scared of tomorrow and the tablets I will have to take and the risk of the abnormal cells multiplying and dividing, forming a new army ready to invade like Putin’s people on the borders of the Ukraine. But this is today, this is now. I am well. I stood and I closed my eyes and I said thank you to whoever or whatever has led me here. Whatever has been my guide, my Sherpa on the rocky terrain of illness, I know I have been guided through to this place.
As I closed my eyes a dove swooped down in front of me. It was a big and powerful bird and it quickly disappeared. Then quietly, gently a hummingbird came into sight and stayed, hovering just over my heart in front of my chest. Technicolour and startlingly beautiful, I felt like Mary Poppins without the excruciating Dick Van Dyke and the fluttering of its tiny wings reverberated through my body with a joy and freedom I cannot describe.
Eight years ago at a time of crisis I went to Barbados and made some decisions that changed the path of my life. The decisions took courage and strength and meant breaking with the old ways to find a new happiness. There was a humming bird nesting on the veranda of the house I was staying in. Every time I stepped out on to the veranda the humming bird came out. My heart opened at the sight of it and I found the courage to live a new way, inspired by this tiny bird who could move so fast and yet always stand still, entranced by the energy and the strength of this magical creature. Yesterday the humming bird came back.
Tomorrow I get the tablets which mark the start of the next phase of my cancer journey. The banality of the everyday living with chronic illness, daily poisoning myself with the tablets in the hope it will kill the potential future threat. My own personal war on my own personal terror but for now I just need to hold onto this moment and make sure I keep my humming bird with me as I make my first faltering steps into the future.
Sarah writes at http://livethroughthisblog.wordpress.com/2014/06/20/live-through-this/
My heart is full. I am joyful. It is two months since my surgery and I am well. I have got through this. I have lived through this. I am in love with this moment. My stomach flutters like the wings of a hummingbird and life pulses through me.
Yesterday I spent all day in meditation. Mindful. Mindful of the fact that this is the end of the acute phase of my cancer journey. My wounds have healed. No fluid, no swelling, just a scar which looks less angry every day. I have accepted the loss of my breast and am slowly coming to terms with the practicalities of what this means. Negotiating changing rooms and swimming pools and conversations with awkward questions.
The hardest part has been having to massage the scar every day. Looking in the mirror at the wound where my breast once was and slowly, gently trying to bring the flesh back to life. The surgeon cuts through the muscles and nerves and the area of the wound becomes numb. With proper care and attention you can coax the nerves back to life but you have to be brave. You have to look at the site where the cancer was, you have to face the trauma of the cutting and the stitching and marvel at the miracle of healing. You have to be kind to yourself, body and mind. You have to take time. You have to accept.
Yesterday in meditation I decided to celebrate this moment. To enjoy the crescendo of this part of the healing process. The body is a miraculous thing. Life is a marvellous journey. I am scared of tomorrow and the tablets I will have to take and the risk of the abnormal cells multiplying and dividing, forming a new army ready to invade like Putin’s people on the borders of the Ukraine. But this is today, this is now. I am well. I stood and I closed my eyes and I said thank you to whoever or whatever has led me here. Whatever has been my guide, my Sherpa on the rocky terrain of illness, I know I have been guided through to this place.
As I closed my eyes a dove swooped down in front of me. It was a big and powerful bird and it quickly disappeared. Then quietly, gently a hummingbird came into sight and stayed, hovering just over my heart in front of my chest. Technicolour and startlingly beautiful, I felt like Mary Poppins without the excruciating Dick Van Dyke and the fluttering of its tiny wings reverberated through my body with a joy and freedom I cannot describe.
Eight years ago at a time of crisis I went to Barbados and made some decisions that changed the path of my life. The decisions took courage and strength and meant breaking with the old ways to find a new happiness. There was a humming bird nesting on the veranda of the house I was staying in. Every time I stepped out on to the veranda the humming bird came out. My heart opened at the sight of it and I found the courage to live a new way, inspired by this tiny bird who could move so fast and yet always stand still, entranced by the energy and the strength of this magical creature. Yesterday the humming bird came back.
Tomorrow I get the tablets which mark the start of the next phase of my cancer journey. The banality of the everyday living with chronic illness, daily poisoning myself with the tablets in the hope it will kill the potential future threat. My own personal war on my own personal terror but for now I just need to hold onto this moment and make sure I keep my humming bird with me as I make my first faltering steps into the future.
Sarah writes at http://livethroughthisblog.wordpress.com/2014/06/20/live-through-this/
Friday, 30 October 2015
Breast cancer awareness month: Like losing a little part of me
Author: Laura
It's very hard to put into words how having breast cancer has made me feel.
I feel a little like they cut a little piece of me away when they cut out my lump.
That little piece may have been my tolerance, I have less patience with people's moaning about the things they have the power to change.
That little piece may be part of my identity, sometimes I feel like all people want to ask is how the treatment is going, and I know that they mean well, but sometimes I would like to talk about something else.
That little piece sometimes feels like the friend I was, when people try to protect me from their dramas (because it's nothing compared to what I'm going through?!?) it doesn't matter how big or small the problems you are facing are, a problem shared is a problem halved and all that.... Please talk to me!! You know,sometimes it's nice to know that other people are having a tough time too (not that I want anyone else to have a rubbish time) but then I don't feel so isolated and alone.
That little piece is sometimes my confidence. Chemo steroid weight gain, scars, bloating, baldness, eyelashless, ruined nails, more scars.... I will never look in the mirror and see myself, but now see a new person who I am learning to love. I know my hair will grow and my scars will fade, but right here, right now, it's hard to look at my reflection.
That little piece is sometimes my energy, just making it through the school run, a hospital visit, a few hours work, and I'm completely wiped out!
But, in the little pieces I have lost, I feel there is so much more I have to give, and so much that I have gained.
The strength my family and friends have shown has blown me away.
The support my colleagues have given is phenomenal! Planning nice gifts, collecting well wishes from our clients and saving them for my "bad day" each cycle, creating a box of sunshine (filled with anything yellow and sunny.... Anything from mustard to sand?!? Ha ha)
They say in times of trouble you learn who your friends are, my diagnosis has shown me that people are kinder than I could have imagined and care more than I realised.
It will take a long time to find that little piece of me that I feel I have lost, but with my husband at my side and my friends and family behind me, I know I will get there.
Thank you x
Breast cancer awareness month: Tales of asymmetry, dating and always looking on the bright side...
Author: Alison G
To the left, to the left … All the single ladies, all the single ladies…
Yes, I am a fan of Beyoncé, but these lyrics also have a lot more meaning, which I’d like to share with you in my unique take on life as an asymmetrical woman.
So, there was a film on recently, in it a man takes an earth shatteringly beautiful woman home after picking her up in a club. They get back to his room and he confesses, he was umm exaggerating about the size of his body part. She laughs and says, ‘Don’t worry, let’s be real.’ She then takes out her contact lens, then whips off her wig….he gasps…..next come her boobs, he attempts to leave, and I kid you not, followed by her bottom and lastly leg.
I’m not quite sure what was funny in this after all, as hang on just a few years back this could be me.
Breast cancer can have you feeling like the incredible detachable woman
But obviously you have no sensation, so if someone slams a door on my left boob I look blankly at them, or if someone nudges me by accident and flushes expecting a reprimand…they are surprised that I probably didn’t even notice. Or and if it’s cold my right nipple will respond, and not my left – which is obviously AWOL. I think people are too polite to mention this.
Going through airport customs or being searched to get into a club or concert will have a little doubt – imagine they realise it’s a fake boob and then think I’m a drugs mule, or female impersonator. The ping of an elastic glove can have me running faster that Bolt.
Women joke about finishing work and removing their bras, I can go one up on this, by coming home and whipping my boob off. I never thought at 40 I’d be going to bed with my boob nestled beside me in its only little pillow. Will be my teeth next?
If there is a strong breeze in the office I can whip it off and it becomes a paperweight …or if a conversation with a potential date isn’t going well I take it off and end the night…. OK the last two are fictitious, but what a thought though.
Ending 2012 I felt absolutely repulsive to all, including myself sadly. In public wearing a wig, and being fully dressed I might have the occasional guy smile at me and I’d drop my eyes feeling a fraud. Thinking if you saw me underneath this you’d certainly not give me the same appreciative glance. The toll of the diagnosis and treatment can grind you down, I didn’t want to focus on how bad I looked, or felt, and instead focused on finishing all treatment and getting back in the gym.
Being stripped of all things that you define as making you feel feminine is extremely difficult. Every day we are bombarded with beautiful celebrities and images of ‘perfection’ I can safely say I felt offended by society’s ideal of beauty at this point in my life and had serious eyebrow envy.
Don’t worry it will grow back ………
To the left, to the left … All the single ladies, all the single ladies…
Yes, I am a fan of Beyoncé, but these lyrics also have a lot more meaning, which I’d like to share with you in my unique take on life as an asymmetrical woman.
So, there was a film on recently, in it a man takes an earth shatteringly beautiful woman home after picking her up in a club. They get back to his room and he confesses, he was umm exaggerating about the size of his body part. She laughs and says, ‘Don’t worry, let’s be real.’ She then takes out her contact lens, then whips off her wig….he gasps…..next come her boobs, he attempts to leave, and I kid you not, followed by her bottom and lastly leg.
I’m not quite sure what was funny in this after all, as hang on just a few years back this could be me.
Breast cancer can have you feeling like the incredible detachable woman
Just 4 years ago my body was in symmetry, my body parts could
have lined up two by two, to jump on board Noah’s Ark. Two eyebrows check, two boobs check…
In May 2012, aged 40 and full of life and mischief, my life
was interrupted by a shock diagnosis of an unknown primary tumour that had metastasized
(spread to you and I) to my lymph nodes. The next two weeks were largely spent
in hospital gowns, having every available test, chemical cocktail and
radioactive power being charged through my confused body. Every day I woke up
hoping this was a bad dream and put on a brave face to all those I loved. After
2 weeks it was confirmed as Breast Cancer.
I would say I was fortunate that I had 5 weeks from my diagnosis
until my mastectomy, it gave me time to absorb this information, and actively
search images to see what this would mean. I can’t imagine how difficult it
would feel to be given a diagnosis on Monday and operated on Wednesday. I
needed time to understand just what the heck was happening. So I remain grateful
circumstances enabled this (my surgeon being on holiday).
Have you ever seen a mastectomy image? I hadn’t, so I
educated myself and told myself, ‘You’re going to need to love this new you, as
you might be like it a long time, if not forever’
After being told I had cancer I wasn’t offered immediate
reconstruction, not everyone is, it depends on the type of treatment you need
afterwards, I had a locally advanced cancer which appeared aggressive so they
wanted to whip it off as soon as possible, before blasting me with chemotherapy
and radiotherapy. By the way it is annoying when people say, ‘so and so had
reconstruction immediately, why haven’t you?’ Or ‘so and so had recon and now
has amazing boobs and a flat stomach' – yawnnnnn.
I had time to prepare and cope with being left asymmetrical,
and predictably my humour emerged as a coping strategy. I planned a Bon Voyage
Booby Party, where with good friends we celebrated the imminent departure of my
left boob, playing snap, match the boobs, eating chocolate nipples. Jelly boobs
and all members dressed with fake boobs, the best being the old lady sock boobs
that made passers-by imagine we were a Hen Night. For me laughter is the breast
cure …
I had a blog 2theleft, where I could express my feelings,
and a closed Facebook group for my close friends and family, which was usually
filled with images, and articles. Many might think my humour tasteless, but it
worked for me. We made a playlist….’to the left’ obviously made the list, so
did ‘Gone’ – Nsync, ‘Man I feel like a Woman’. Tasteless and tacky yes, but a
way of helping me and those closest to me to cope with the shock of what had
happened.
You don’t necessary jump up and fully embrace your
asymmetrical look, for some women it can take weeks, months or even years to
accept and embrace this change. For me, I made it my mission to love my
lop-sidedness. I wanted to see the scar as soon as possible, and joked with the
surgeon by turning one side I was 7lb lighter. Not sure she found this as
amusing – she did make me wear a straight jacket for a while! I jest….
I wanted to accept the new me, and considered without my
left breast I could place my hand on the bony landscape where a boob used to
exist and feel my heart beating away, it’s kind of comforting. I mulled that it
perhaps would make me more vulnerable, and open to love. Hmmm we’ll come back
to that.
It’s not easy being asymmetrical, your body wants to
compensate for the shift and balance. Dressing is different, you have to change
the way your dress so that your prosthesis doesn’t fall out, or appear over the
top of your clothing giving away your secret. Initially you have a softie, that
you can squeeze into shape and then after your scar settles you graduate to a
silicon prosthesis that sits inside your bra and feels like a real breast. It
certainly intrigues most people who feel it, it’s like a boob shaped stress
ball. A heavy one.
Perks of asymmetry…
You have Go Go Gadget Boobs, I have a different one to swim,
a different one in the summer – I’m sure I could have a special one for nights
out even with a sequined nipple if I searched the internet. But obviously you have no sensation, so if someone slams a door on my left boob I look blankly at them, or if someone nudges me by accident and flushes expecting a reprimand…they are surprised that I probably didn’t even notice. Or and if it’s cold my right nipple will respond, and not my left – which is obviously AWOL. I think people are too polite to mention this.
Going through airport customs or being searched to get into a club or concert will have a little doubt – imagine they realise it’s a fake boob and then think I’m a drugs mule, or female impersonator. The ping of an elastic glove can have me running faster that Bolt.
Women joke about finishing work and removing their bras, I can go one up on this, by coming home and whipping my boob off. I never thought at 40 I’d be going to bed with my boob nestled beside me in its only little pillow. Will be my teeth next?
If there is a strong breeze in the office I can whip it off and it becomes a paperweight …or if a conversation with a potential date isn’t going well I take it off and end the night…. OK the last two are fictitious, but what a thought though.
The lows…
At first I’d be self-conscious going boob less even around
my kids, but during chemo and radiotherapy I lost that, along with all my hair,
including nasal hair, eyelashes, eyebrows, toe nails and finger nails. I didn’t
lose weight though, no steroids and chemotherapy bloated my body and the scales
went up by 9kg. How’s that even fair?Ending 2012 I felt absolutely repulsive to all, including myself sadly. In public wearing a wig, and being fully dressed I might have the occasional guy smile at me and I’d drop my eyes feeling a fraud. Thinking if you saw me underneath this you’d certainly not give me the same appreciative glance. The toll of the diagnosis and treatment can grind you down, I didn’t want to focus on how bad I looked, or felt, and instead focused on finishing all treatment and getting back in the gym.
Being stripped of all things that you define as making you feel feminine is extremely difficult. Every day we are bombarded with beautiful celebrities and images of ‘perfection’ I can safely say I felt offended by society’s ideal of beauty at this point in my life and had serious eyebrow envy.
Well my boob won’t, unless I am a strange mutation after
all. Hair – yes, but let me tell you
growing back from bald is the longest wait of your life.
The year following active treatment ended my confidence,
that had initially soared for seeing off cancer and having No Evidence of
Disease (NED) dropped as reality took over, feeling uncomfortable with the no
style short style hair, the traitorous eyebrows that never grew back and my
stubby eyelashes, oh and hard to shake Tamoxifen pounds I wanted to hibernate.
Between 2012 and 2014 every woman seemed to have HD
eyebrows, doubly long lashes and waist length hair. I had a pair of eyebrows drawn on with a sharpie
– to stop them rubbing off, and slow growing chemo curls.
Don’t hate, appreciate….
In truth your body is a miracle, just as it can stretch and
accommodate a growing baby, it can defragment from cancer treatment and pull
back together.
It’s not even 3 years since I finished chemo and I have hair
I can flick, and twirl round my fingers, and hide behind again, oh boy that
feels good. To reassure anyone currently in treatment, no product advertised
makes it grow faster or thicker, it just takes time. Obviously my nails grew
back, my eyelashes too, not as full as they were before but that’s a potential
side effect of being thrust into a premature menopause from Tamoxifen.
It’s widely reported that women diagnosed with breast cancer
face high rates of anxiety, depression and decreased self-esteem. Whilst going
through treatment everyone is behind you regarding you a hero for battling the
bad C word. Once the active treatment ends, you are left piecing back together
your life and body parts potentially.
I am always saddened when I read about women who feel they
have been ‘mutilated’ and can’t look at their scars. Women whose partners or
husbands leave them as they too can’t cope with the physical, psychological and
emotional changes that cancer leaves you with.
I was dating prior to my diagnosis, and I haven’t since. Why?
I consider this a process that I’ve been working through, I had to work through
loving me fully and wholly first. Guess also after all I’ve been through this
hasn’t actually been a priority – a) Beat Cancer b) get a boyfriend.
Ok admittedly perhaps I was too fearful to show my
vulnerability and face rejection for exposing my own unique lopsided beauty
before now. It all takes time. For anyone else in the minority, as it certainly
feels that ‘being single during cancer or beyond’ is a minority, when you read
the thousands of threads praising loving husbands, Hang in there. People will tell you that, ‘someone who
really loves you won’t care.’ The person
who probably said that wasn’t single!!
My advice – be your own cheerleader, love yourself and let
your body and confidence repair. Once you start to feel this returning,
opportunities will appear too. I did a search to find threads, blogs and
articles from other single women post breast cancer who had not had
reconstruction and found barely anything. So I guess we have to be the ones to
step out boldly and do this, what have we go to lose? Remember if the date's
going badly, whip out the prosthesis and watch him run.
Wednesday, 28 October 2015
Breast cancer awareness month: I'm not brave
Author: Victoria Yates
Victoria set up the Younger Breast Cancer Network UK - an online chat and support group for young women in the UK under the age of 45 with a breast cancer diagnosis. If you are a woman in the UK who has been diagnosed with breast cancer under the age of 45 please do have a look and consider joining.
Also if you haven't already - check out the YBCN #nottooyoung campaign for Breast Cancer Awareness Month.
I'm not brave
I was just turned 36 the day
They said, I'm sorry chuck,
But the lump that you came in with
Is cancer. Such shit luck.
I wasn't listening anyway,
I was in a different world.
I'd just been hit with a ton of crap
As my formerly nice life unfurled.
And I wasn't very brave you know,
As I sobbed and screamed that day.
Total terror gripped my soul
And I shared it straight away!
None of this stoic, none of this calm,
Shove those "'its what's meant to be'.
I was happy to scowl and to tut all day long
"Why did this happen to me?"
And I wasn't "so brave" because I had treatment
There wasn't a choice to be made ,
I bit off their hand at each chance for my life
And thanked God for each treatment they gave.
I asked them to cut me, to poison, to burn
The cancer right out of my being.
And I whined and I cried and was pissed off to hell
As I struggled with pooing and weeing.
And I struggled with eating, and drinking as well,
As everything tasted like shit,
And I struggled with walking and climbing the stairs
And it even would hurt just to sit.
I struggled with mirrors, and showers and reading
I struggled with watching TV.
I struggled to talk without hurling abuse
But excelled being sorry for me!
So, yes, I continued to get through each day
To tackle the treatment head first
I made sure I did the best that I could
Whilst cancer was doing its worst.
Because I'm a mum, because I'm a daughter,
A friend and a sister and wife,
I must do my best to keep myself well,
I must, cos I've only one life.
And no, I'm not brave and I'm not so inspiring,
I was dealt a crap hand, fair to say,
But if YOU found yourself in that same position
You'd also have done it my way.
You'd also have made the friends that I've made
As together you walk down this road,
And your heart would have broken, again and again
As their time in this world shrank and closed.
So yes, I get angry and yes I get bitter
And yes I get pissed off as hell,
But I also enjoy a life full of moments
To live, and to love. Might as well.
Victoria set up the Younger Breast Cancer Network UK - an online chat and support group for young women in the UK under the age of 45 with a breast cancer diagnosis. If you are a woman in the UK who has been diagnosed with breast cancer under the age of 45 please do have a look and consider joining.
Also if you haven't already - check out the YBCN #nottooyoung campaign for Breast Cancer Awareness Month.
I'm not brave
I was just turned 36 the day
They said, I'm sorry chuck,
But the lump that you came in with
Is cancer. Such shit luck.
I wasn't listening anyway,
I was in a different world.
I'd just been hit with a ton of crap
As my formerly nice life unfurled.
And I wasn't very brave you know,
As I sobbed and screamed that day.
Total terror gripped my soul
And I shared it straight away!
None of this stoic, none of this calm,
Shove those "'its what's meant to be'.
I was happy to scowl and to tut all day long
"Why did this happen to me?"
And I wasn't "so brave" because I had treatment
There wasn't a choice to be made ,
I bit off their hand at each chance for my life
And thanked God for each treatment they gave.
I asked them to cut me, to poison, to burn
The cancer right out of my being.
And I whined and I cried and was pissed off to hell
As I struggled with pooing and weeing.
And I struggled with eating, and drinking as well,
As everything tasted like shit,
And I struggled with walking and climbing the stairs
And it even would hurt just to sit.
I struggled with mirrors, and showers and reading
I struggled with watching TV.
I struggled to talk without hurling abuse
But excelled being sorry for me!
So, yes, I continued to get through each day
To tackle the treatment head first
I made sure I did the best that I could
Whilst cancer was doing its worst.
Because I'm a mum, because I'm a daughter,
A friend and a sister and wife,
I must do my best to keep myself well,
I must, cos I've only one life.
And no, I'm not brave and I'm not so inspiring,
I was dealt a crap hand, fair to say,
But if YOU found yourself in that same position
You'd also have done it my way.
You'd also have made the friends that I've made
As together you walk down this road,
And your heart would have broken, again and again
As their time in this world shrank and closed.
So yes, I get angry and yes I get bitter
And yes I get pissed off as hell,
But I also enjoy a life full of moments
To live, and to love. Might as well.
Breast cancer awareness month: Tea, cake and cancer - life after thebig C
Author: Jenny R
Hour 1 - Tears, lots of tears, a welling up of emotions that I can't pin point. How do I feel? I couldn't tell you. Lost is probably the best answer. Lost, scared, alone. Definitely not elated or jubilant or any of those words you might imagine me using. Like so much in the last six months it feels unreal. Unreal to have finished treatment, unreal to have finished radiotherapy, chemotherapy. Unreal to have lost my hair. Unreal to have been given the diagnosis.
My husband always commented that it rained on hospital days, well today the sun shone, I'd cast off the winter coat in favour of a slightly lighter one and my sunglasses masked my tears. I treated myself to a twix and ate it sitting on a bench in the park looking out at Edinburgh Castle.
Part of me wished I'd brought my allotment key with me, the other part didn't know what to do, so I ate the twix and cried. And then with the sun sheltering behind a wispy cloud I gathered my belongings and retreated to one of my favourite cafes, where I sat and completed a post radiotherapy questionnaire (get all things cancer related out of the way) and tried to unwind over a pot of green tea and a raspberry friand. Let the moving on begin.
Day 2 - Convalescing. That's the word I've taken from yesterday's Where Now course run by my local Maggie's Centre. Being kind to myself, letting my body repair. It's easier said than done. I had lunch with my work colleagues today as one of them is leaving. After just over an hour I'm wiped out and I'm trying to make myself stay in town so I can go to his leaving do later. The sensible, and kind to myself, approach would be to get the bus home, rest for a couple of hours and then go back out. Instead I'm sitting in a cafe with a book I can't concentrate on, earl grey tea and a slice of plum and hazelnut polenta cake which isn't hitting the spot. I find it very hard to acknowledge my tiredness. I think I see it as admitting defeat. Even whilst I sit here drinking my tea, and nibbling on the bits of plum, I'm thinking I should get a leaving card on my way home, I should do this, I should do that. And because I'm so tired, my emotions are close to the surface and I could cry. In fact if I don't go home soon, I will cry.
Month 2 - Having had the opportunity to cry all afternoon I seem to have chosen now when I'm meeting a friend. To start I had another lump which they checked out this morning and its all okay so there's a feeling of relief but also the very clear realisation that I don't trust my own body, that I've lost faith in it and that, honestly, I don't like it. Now I know/knew all of this was true, it’s a big part of what we talk about at Maggie's Centre, but the reality of feeling like this is sinking in.
Hour 1 - Tears, lots of tears, a welling up of emotions that I can't pin point. How do I feel? I couldn't tell you. Lost is probably the best answer. Lost, scared, alone. Definitely not elated or jubilant or any of those words you might imagine me using. Like so much in the last six months it feels unreal. Unreal to have finished treatment, unreal to have finished radiotherapy, chemotherapy. Unreal to have lost my hair. Unreal to have been given the diagnosis.
My husband always commented that it rained on hospital days, well today the sun shone, I'd cast off the winter coat in favour of a slightly lighter one and my sunglasses masked my tears. I treated myself to a twix and ate it sitting on a bench in the park looking out at Edinburgh Castle.
Part of me wished I'd brought my allotment key with me, the other part didn't know what to do, so I ate the twix and cried. And then with the sun sheltering behind a wispy cloud I gathered my belongings and retreated to one of my favourite cafes, where I sat and completed a post radiotherapy questionnaire (get all things cancer related out of the way) and tried to unwind over a pot of green tea and a raspberry friand. Let the moving on begin.
Day 2 - Convalescing. That's the word I've taken from yesterday's Where Now course run by my local Maggie's Centre. Being kind to myself, letting my body repair. It's easier said than done. I had lunch with my work colleagues today as one of them is leaving. After just over an hour I'm wiped out and I'm trying to make myself stay in town so I can go to his leaving do later. The sensible, and kind to myself, approach would be to get the bus home, rest for a couple of hours and then go back out. Instead I'm sitting in a cafe with a book I can't concentrate on, earl grey tea and a slice of plum and hazelnut polenta cake which isn't hitting the spot. I find it very hard to acknowledge my tiredness. I think I see it as admitting defeat. Even whilst I sit here drinking my tea, and nibbling on the bits of plum, I'm thinking I should get a leaving card on my way home, I should do this, I should do that. And because I'm so tired, my emotions are close to the surface and I could cry. In fact if I don't go home soon, I will cry.
Month 2 - Having had the opportunity to cry all afternoon I seem to have chosen now when I'm meeting a friend. To start I had another lump which they checked out this morning and its all okay so there's a feeling of relief but also the very clear realisation that I don't trust my own body, that I've lost faith in it and that, honestly, I don't like it. Now I know/knew all of this was true, it’s a big part of what we talk about at Maggie's Centre, but the reality of feeling like this is sinking in.
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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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Breast cancer awareness month: Motherhood and cancer
Author: Christina B
A breast cancer diagnosis is a shock to the system. Fact. Throw in to that system the fact that you are a single mum, you have no family network for 200 miles and the fact your child's paternal father will only accommodate your son for 1 overnight stay a week.
Tricky... But doable.
Doable.... Every time I logged into the YBCN network (Facebook life saving page for younger women from the UK aged under 45 with breast cancer) I kept hearing everyone say this word. Doable for me equates to when my son hands me his dirty PE kit before bedtime and asks me to have it sorted before the morning for his PE lesson. That's doable.
Doable is on a Sunday night when all the shops are closed and he tells me he's got cooking the following day for school and I have to source 7 ingredients I don't have in my cupboard at Tesco at 7am Monday morning. That's doable.
Breast cancer with my circumstances, I'm yet to be convinced that can be added to the doable list.
Anyway a quick rewind back to the day I was diagnosed and my first thoughts on hearing I had cancer. Firstly I thought that the consultant must have made a mistake as my own doctor had sent me for a mammogram as she was beyond sure that it was "only a cyst". Secondly while my head was trying to process the myriad of information, my son consumed my thoughts, I could see him in my mind so clearly.
He was holding a roll of black bin liners, trying to work out firstly where the perforations were, - not before rolling out about at least 4 conjoined together. In my mind after he had found the perforations and tore one off he was trying and failing to open it up, licking his fingers repeatedly but getting frustrated at the fact that the bag stayed firmly closed.... This daydream was a reality. It happened 2 days before diagnosis after asking my son to change the bin bag and we both laughed at the fact that he was 12 and made such a pigs ear of it.
Fast forward to the consultants room and my mind kept playing this scene on a loop. I was going to die and leave my son without this basic life skill. Never mind all the other life skills that I hadn't got round to teaching him. My mind was an array of confusion and panic, just as the whirl wind of cancer starts to spin, the foundation of motherhood is the first to get shaken. What would happen to my son and who would look after him? I'm supposed to be his care giver. Who would feed him and go to parents evenings? Who would wash his PE kit? Who would make his sandwiches with no butter on? Who would help him with his schoolwork?
My head was spinning. I had to make a choice to either go under with this news or to embrace it and make a damn good plan of a way to get through this curveball because motherhood and cancer do not mix. My 12 year old son grew up overnight when I told him I had breast cancer. You cannot underestimate the strength and resilience of a child until you subject them to a situation that requires both of these characteristics.
A breast cancer diagnosis is a shock to the system. Fact. Throw in to that system the fact that you are a single mum, you have no family network for 200 miles and the fact your child's paternal father will only accommodate your son for 1 overnight stay a week.
Tricky... But doable.
Doable.... Every time I logged into the YBCN network (Facebook life saving page for younger women from the UK aged under 45 with breast cancer) I kept hearing everyone say this word. Doable for me equates to when my son hands me his dirty PE kit before bedtime and asks me to have it sorted before the morning for his PE lesson. That's doable.
Doable is on a Sunday night when all the shops are closed and he tells me he's got cooking the following day for school and I have to source 7 ingredients I don't have in my cupboard at Tesco at 7am Monday morning. That's doable.
Breast cancer with my circumstances, I'm yet to be convinced that can be added to the doable list.
Anyway a quick rewind back to the day I was diagnosed and my first thoughts on hearing I had cancer. Firstly I thought that the consultant must have made a mistake as my own doctor had sent me for a mammogram as she was beyond sure that it was "only a cyst". Secondly while my head was trying to process the myriad of information, my son consumed my thoughts, I could see him in my mind so clearly.
He was holding a roll of black bin liners, trying to work out firstly where the perforations were, - not before rolling out about at least 4 conjoined together. In my mind after he had found the perforations and tore one off he was trying and failing to open it up, licking his fingers repeatedly but getting frustrated at the fact that the bag stayed firmly closed.... This daydream was a reality. It happened 2 days before diagnosis after asking my son to change the bin bag and we both laughed at the fact that he was 12 and made such a pigs ear of it.
Fast forward to the consultants room and my mind kept playing this scene on a loop. I was going to die and leave my son without this basic life skill. Never mind all the other life skills that I hadn't got round to teaching him. My mind was an array of confusion and panic, just as the whirl wind of cancer starts to spin, the foundation of motherhood is the first to get shaken. What would happen to my son and who would look after him? I'm supposed to be his care giver. Who would feed him and go to parents evenings? Who would wash his PE kit? Who would make his sandwiches with no butter on? Who would help him with his schoolwork?
My head was spinning. I had to make a choice to either go under with this news or to embrace it and make a damn good plan of a way to get through this curveball because motherhood and cancer do not mix. My 12 year old son grew up overnight when I told him I had breast cancer. You cannot underestimate the strength and resilience of a child until you subject them to a situation that requires both of these characteristics.
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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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Breast cancer awareness month: Back
Author: Sarah P
I want to go back.
I want to go back.
Back to carefree drinks in the sun.
Back to impromptu days out with my daughter Eva.
Back to holidays in the sun and staying out all night because I could.
Take me back to the place where I could wear anything as long as it was a size 8 and I looked god damned hot.
Back to hair straighteners and wine before nights out.
Back to working confidently and winning pitches for fun. Being respected as a leader in my field.
Back to laughing. Back to kissing the man I thought loved me.
Back to underwired bras and matching underwear.
Back to the time where a new relationship didn’t mean baring my soul and my flat chest before anyone gets the chance to love me again.
Back to not seeing the look of fear and sorrow in my mum's eyes.
Back to a time when I didn’t know what chemotherapy was. Didn’t know the difference between HER2+ and triple negative.
Back to before my veins collapsed from too many needles and the days where I didn’t need painkillers to get through the day.
Back to having 2 perfectly good tits.
Back to before the pitying looks that say “thank god it’s not me”
Back to the days where I didn’t worry that my 7 year old daughter might grow up and inherit the bastard breast cancer.
I want my life back. I’ve lost too much. Every day hangs heavy with the threat of “what if”…….every day I carry the grief of what I have lost but also gratitude that I have a second chance.
Back to having Penny in my life. That hurts the most. She should be here with me. Looking forward and not back. Together.
I want my life back.
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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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