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Showing posts with label cancer diagnosis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cancer diagnosis. Show all posts

Thursday, November 29, 2012

Another Year Around the Sun







Today is my 48th birthday.  I had to keep doing the math because I sure don’t feel like I’m that old.  When I look back at my life all I can remember doing was being a wife and a mom.  Right after high school I got married and started my family.  I didn’t have a career until after my kids were grown and I was separated after 14 years of marriage. All knew how to be was a mother.



Well, 2 years ago (2 years after my cancer diagnosis) my adult son moved out on his own.  He had finished college, had an excellent job and it was time for him to leave the nest.  To me, it was too early.  I had just finished my cancer treatments and was starting to feel more like myself; But still...it was too early, for me.  He was the baby, the last one at home.  I was single.  Who was I going to take of?  Who was going to take care of me?  If all I knew how to be was a mom, then what was I going to do with him gone?  I couldn’t hold him back, I knew I was in for a tough time.  I had to let him go, because it was the right thing to do.  Now all that I had left, was myself.  What did I like to do before I was a mom?  Well, that would be impossible to revisit since it definitely was more than 26 years!  So then the question had to be:  What do I want to do with my life...now?



When we face transition challenges, we struggle to find aspects of what we used to enjoy or how we used to be because it is our anchor.  It reminds us that even though this big change is happening, I’m still the same person on the inside.  So we begin by shedding the layers of who we’re not, and reach deeper into ourselves to find the person we were before (before being a mom, before having cancer) and because it’s familiar, that’s what we strive to become (again). It serves as a comfort for a person facing a transition in life.  When there is a change and the outcome is unknown, it can produce tremendous anxiety.  Some stay trapped, because if it’s all you knew how to be, what else is there?  What’s left of you when the kids are gone, or when the cancer is gone?  Well, it’s you that’s left.  Everything you had become was a result of growth.  Now, is just another time to grow.


Today I'm 48 and 4 years Cancer Free
Well, today’s my birthday, and I’m still cancer free and I still have an empty nest.  It’s been a series of adjustments, but I’m moving forward, learning and growing every day.  Someday’s are tougher, someday’s are bliss.  The way I look at it, as each day goes by, the farther I get away from the past.  The past is what I was, I am not that person anymore.  Everything changes, it’s inevitable.  Nothing ever stays the same, it’s just not possible.  Just move on, don’t look back, you’re not going that way.







Tuesday, November 27, 2012

A New Normal


A New Normal

It’s been 4 years since I was diagnosed with breast cancer.  I was a single mother at the time, struggling with bills and supporting my son as he started college.  I was working three jobs and dealing with some other family issues.  It wasn’t the right time for me to get cancer.  But then again, there’s never a good time to get cancer.

After my surgery, chemo, radiation, I was placed on Tamoxifen every day and Zoladex injections every 3 months.  I lost my hair, eyebrows, eyelashes and my self-esteem was at its lowest.  I had a negative self-image; I battled insomnia, bone pain and depression for years following my diagnosis and treatments.  Looking back I can remember those challenges, the memory of that time is with me every day.  Once you get cancer, you never stop thinking about it.  It has become a driving force in my recovery and my transition into a new normal.

When I finished chemo and radiation, I was excited to get back to my old life. Well, what I considered normal, at the time.  But the truth is, you can’t.  What was  “normal” before, no longer exists.  It’s locked away in the past, along with the cancer. All the things you use to do before cancer shut you down, is gone.  You have to make better choices now and find a way to experience the life you have, at this very moment; and not reach back to try and start where you left off.  This is a new time for you.  One where you will learn more about yourself than you ever knew existed.  Because now you know how it felt to lose yourself and become a prisoner to the cancer.  You will soon learn to value your second chance at life.  Though you may feel like the same person on the inside.  You are not. You have to accept that in order to find the “you” you are, now, after the cancer. This is called, the new normal.

The new normal is what you decide it to be.  Starting to eat healthier, take vitamins, exercise and practice gratitude are some ways to begin your transition.  Your body has been poisoned, your muscles have begun to atrophy; it’s up to you to take back control of your own body.  Remember it takes 28 days for something to become a habit.  Why not make it one that will  improve your mind, body and soul?  Work on yourself from the inside out.  If you truly want to take your life back and start enjoying your second chance, you have to start with your body and mind. Remember, you are not the same person.  You are a new person.  Believe that, and you are ready to join me on my journey to find the new normal.



Wednesday, December 22, 2010

July 14, 2008: Scars


Scars





July 14, 2008
Current mood:worried
I had my surgery the first of this month. I guess that was the easy part of this new challenge in my life. Everything has happened so fast, my head still spins when I think about how little time has passed since I was diagnosed with breast cancer. June 10th...

I have a couple new scars to add to my heart shaped one: A crescent moon on one breast and an ugly 2 inch scar under my arm where they took out the lymph nodes. That one hurt the most. For the first few days after the surgery I was drugged up because it was hard for me to move around without being in pain. It was hard to breathe, I couldn't sit up. Thank God for my mom, she stayed to take care of me. And most importantly, fed me my pills.

Now it's 2 weeks since my surgery and my stitches are gone and I'm feeling a little more like myself, I know I still have chemo and radiation coming up, but knowing the cancer is out makes me feel a little lighter.

When I look in the mirror now, I still look like the same person, feel the same, but I can see the scars. When I see them, I remember the pain, I feel my fear return and my scars remind me....I have a long road ahead of me. I don't know what I can do to make this easier, I just know that I have to. And this will be very hard for me to do.

I see my oncologist next week...I'm gonna lose my hair!

June 18, 2008: Denial

cancer surgery
June 18, 2008
Current mood:worried






I'm having a bad day today.  I met my surgeon, we ran some more tests...we've decided to have the surgery in a couple weeks.  I'm scared.  I will have to have chemo along with radiation.....I've decide that I'm in the "denial" stage and really want to be a trainwreck right now...but I'm going to keep it together.  Please pray for me.

The Day I Found Out I Had Cancer




It’s Cancer- June 10, 2008 The Day I found Out I Had Cancer

June 11, 2008












I finally had a dreaded mammogram a couple weeks ago and I'm very glad that I did.  After a week I was called back in to have an ultrasound done at which time my doctor decided to do a biopsy.  The following week was hell but nothing could have prepared me for what I was told yesterday in the doctor's office.

I have breast cancer.  It has started in a lobule in my left breast where it has nested and begun to spread.  I'm very lucky it was caught early and they are very positive about my recovery.  While my head spins with so many questions and regrets, I can't really recall anything else the doctor said after that.  Something about scheduling surgery, radiation...i don't know it all swirled around my head, not getting to my brain.

The first thing I did was break down and cry.  I called my family...whoa is me...then I cried some more.  I smoked a lot and decided to do a shot of jack.  To calm the nerves...really...so I could figure out what to do next.  What I decided to do was call a friend, go to the bar and watch the Laker game.  Yeah.  That'll get my mind off it for awhile.  And it did.  But I can't remember who won the game and I still don't know where to go from here.

Well, now that it has settled in a bit and have decided to find out more about this....I'm going to read the book they gave me and get my questions together for my surgical consult on Tuesday.  Back at work today my team rallied their support and now I have so many resources.  Now I feel a little more settled, at least in the knowing that others have made it, and I can too.  I just need to keep positive and keep strong.  This is going to be a long fight. 


Now...how do I tell the kids?



Fun times...before
Before diagnosis...ohhh my hair