Very Sad :(

My Mom had breast cancer when I was 15 and another kind of breast cancer when I was almost 20. I've never seen anyone fight so hard. She has my utmost respect for beating this as does anyone else with the will to fight the cancer and survive the treatments. She's 10 years all clear now. God be with you.
 
Jeaucamom wrote:
It is an ongoing nightmare. I am healthy now, and I know the stress of the fear of recurrance is a risk factor in and of itself, but when the reality of cancer smacks you in the face in the grocery store, it is hard to walk away from.

May I suggest something? It may be hard at first, but, try to focus on the healthy parts of your body, give thanks for that, really FEEL the gratitude for your health. Spend a few moments each day doing this--maybe before you fall asleep at night or during a nice soak in the tub. What we focus our minds on tends to become reality.

My 2nd suggestion is to go to www.emofree.com and find a therapist to get you started in Energy Tapping to address your fear. Some therapists do phone sessions. You can download the learning manual at the website and teach yourself, but I'm sensing that you will benefit from learning "what to say" under the guidance of an EFT therapist.

Some good books to read:
The Genie in Your Genes: Epigenetic Medicine and The New Biology of Intention by Dawson Church
and
Energy Medicine by Donna Eden, David Feinstein, & Carolyn Myss

PM me if you have more questions or just want to "talk"​
 
Thanks everyone, I knew I could count on you folks to lift my spirits.
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I believe deeply in the mind-body connection and believe it is part of healing to "know" and speak your wellness. And spiritually, Satan's first battleground is always the mind. And I certainly crumbled under his attack last night. Geesh, you would think after all these years I would learn??!! I am feeling much stronger this morning and able to embrace this day. I was reminded this morning of all the "Fear nots" in the Bible (that is an AWESOME word study for all you believers out there) and the fact that we have not been given a spirit of fear, but of power and love and a sound mind. (2Tim) Don't we have an awesome God???

Please help me in intensely praying for V. especially over the next 18 days while she is at this retreat.

Again thanks everyone, it is SUCH a comfort to have you all to turn to.
 
Jeaucamom-

I completely understand.

I was dx at 34 (in 2000). I had aggressive BC w/no family history. I had a couple of other friends -young women also, dx at the same time- that I went through treatment with and they all recurred within a year. After a while I was the only one still here. My daughter was young, I NEEDED to stay around to see her grow up. For a long long time I worried about it every day. I was terrified of recurrence. Every little pain or strange symptom freaked me out. I was really uncertain I'd be around for very long. I tried so hard to de-stress and be positive: yoga helped somewhat......

I just want to say that it does get better. Every now and again I get scared again, but oftentimes I can go a whole week or even month without thinking about BC. I plan for the future now, believing I will see it.

Hang in there. Passing your 5-year mark (are you measuring from dx or treatment completion? My doc said dx, which is great because that landmark was 6 mos earlier!) may help a lot. I had a big celebration and honestly did breathe easier afterwards.

Another thing, I don't know what type BC you had, but I learned something great from my oncologist last year: the type I had was estrogen & progestrin negative..... and new research shows that while recurrence in the first 5 years is greater with that type, recurrence AFTER 5 years is far, far less. So if yours was ER/PR NEG, good news for you too, since you are getting close to your 5-yr.

I am sure that you already know all this, but try to focus on the moment. Enjoy every minute and every day and live it fully. Focus on the wonderful things in your life and be thankful for them. When my dear friend died I witnessed the last months of her life spent kicking and fighting rather than enjoying her twin babies... and I vowed to try to always appreciate every moment. It's just, well, you never know when you're going to get hit by a bus, you know? When I'd get all wrapped up in my recurrence fears I would try to focus on the moment. (I also did all I could to put fears to rest, i.e. getting tests and biopsies all the time to quell my fears. Luckily my doc understood that I needed to for peace of mind!)

Another thing that helped me was to try to do things to be as healthy as possible. (I'm a bit of a control freak, and feeling I was being PROACTIVE helped.) The really sucky thing about BC is that you don't know why you got it. It's not like you smoked or worked in an asbestos plant and then got lung cancer, and can then avoid cigarettes or asbestos! I did a lot of research on things implicated in BC, and have really restructured my life to avoid those things personally, and especially to keep my daughter as far from them as is reasonable, since she's at much higher risk having had her mom dx at a young age..... So, we don't take our clothes to the dry cleaner any longer. We use absolutely NO perticides and herbicides on our property, and we avoid any lawns with those little application flags on them. We eat almost entirely organic foods, much of which we're now growing ourselves, and especially avoid ANYTHING with added hormones and pesticide/herbicide residue. It has taken a restructuring of our eating habits, for sure. Since we can't afford to eat large amounts of organic meats, we now eat much smaller portions of meat and more veggies, which of course is healthier BC-wise, anyway. Anyway--- these things helped me to move forward....

Hugs to you, hon. I really understand what you are going through. If you ever want to talk, don't hesitate to email me directly and we can talk on the phone.

Love-
Stacey
 
Thank you Stacey. I was only 37 when I was diagnosed in 2004, newly remarried 5 months earlier and had 3 young kids at home. My mom died of cancer 2 weeks after my 20th birthday and I did not want that legacy passed down to my kids. From many mistakes in my treatment, I was nearly killed from the chemo. And I have PTSD from all the needles and injections. For the first 3 years I had every test known to man every 6 months because mine was VERY aggressive too. I had gone from nothing to a 4 cm tumor in 3.5 months. And I had thyroid cancer too unbeknownst to me. Then last year, I just couldn't do it anymore. I haven't seen an oncologist in a year. I just needed some time off from being a cancer patient. March is when I was diagnosed, so this year I will be seeing my doc and doing my usual round of test. And next year I will be celebrating in the biggest way I can conceivably afford.

And I am really excited about what your onc. said. I was ER/PR negative and Her2nu negative, BRCA1/2 negative and Cowdin Syndrome negative. But I did grow up in Marin County which is the BC capital of the world for unknown reasons. I will really be looking into all the reasearch about that kind of recurrance, that brings a lot of peace to my mind.

I haven't been very good.... ok..... I have been down right horrible about making the lifestyle changes I should be making. There is some immature rebellious part of me that thinks if I make all these changes, it will still be controlling me. As if living in fear everyday is not letting this demon control me. I really need to start making healthier choices. Thanks for encouragement.

All this mumbo jumbo is one of the reasons I am taking the plunge and moving to my dream home this week. It is a dream to live on acreage and have all the animals so that is what I am doing. Life is too short!!
 
Quote:
If you ever need anyone to talk to, just email me. I know I don't have the same kind of cancer, but the battle is all the same.
 

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