So my docs office called me on Saturday morning. Yes you read that right Saturday morning. At 8:30 to give me the results of a bone scan. Now anyone who knows me knows that if you call me that early and I answer chances are I wont have a clue of what we talked about. I am more of a night owl, or insomniac, whichever you want to call it. So she mentioned something about osteopenia and the scan I had a while ago.
So I fall back to sleep and when I wake up I am thinking osteopenia? What the hell is that? Sounds like some country in Europe, between Luxemborg and Lithuania, I was never really good at geography so I guess it could have been.
Of course I look up osteopenia. I am a internet junkie, of course I am going to look it up. It is defined on Web MD as: Osteopenia refers to bone mineral density BMD that is lower than normal peak BMD but not low enough to be classified as osteoporosis.
So let me get this straight. I finished up the shitty part of my treatment in mid 2008. I get a bone scan and find out that I have another side effect.
FUCK.
While I know that this was a possibility, once again going back to the "menu" of side effects that the docs give you while you are going through treatment I didn't expect it. I expected to be finished. Done with side effects. I still have lingering neuropathy that shows up every once and a while like an unwanted house guest and sometimes stays like one too.
Getting another side effect is like getting punched in the face without expecting it. Except, with that the black eye you may get will go away. Osteopenia however stays with you. Yes I will take more pills (oh goody just what I wanted to do spend more fucking money on meds and take more fucking pills) and do weight bearing exercises (walking, which I find extremely boring and tedious, and no there will be no running, not with these knees) to help offset the osteopenia.
Sometimes I wonder why my body hates me so much. I have been pretty good to it, (well we wont talk about those college days, that is just to be expected, and what happens in the dorms stays in the dorms) It attacks me with cancer (overproduction of cells) My immune system attacks me (hypothyroidism) I have vitamin d deficiency, I have no clue how I got that besides I am not outside enough? My mind attacks me with depression.
It is very frustrating to think you are out of the woods only to look up and see more trees.
Like I always say:
Cancer, its the gift that keeps on giving.
Mel is the co~host/producer of The Vic McCarty Show. Listen live 10am-noon eastern time on wmktthetalkstation.com
Check out my podcast The Cancer Warrior on Empoweradio.com. Available on demand and also available on itunes.
Showing posts with label young adult cancer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label young adult cancer. Show all posts
Tuesday, July 6, 2010
Monday, June 28, 2010
They are just words, right?
I am online alot. Some would say I am a social media junkie. It is the wave of the future. During these times online I read blogs, articles, facebook posts, tweets about cancer. I am an advocate and I try to keep up on the latest news and goings on to keep readers of my blog and my facebook pages informed. Something I started doing a while ago. Anytime I found an interesting article or news piece I would post it, figuring it may be of interest to someone, especially since most people don't pour over medical info like I do.
I read other survivors blogs, not just breast cancer survivors, but other cancer survivors too. Different cancer, same battle as I like to think. We are all in the same fight.
Words. They help, they heal. They convey feelings. In a prior post I blogged about my feelings of "cured" vs "cancer free."
Another word that just drives me crazy when it comes to people describing their battle is suffer (for the Vic McCarty show we actually had an author who had that in the title of his book!)
I believe in a positive mindset. The way you look at something can change your outlook, your perception of how it is going. When I began to talk about cancer on the radio and people asked me if I suffer from cancer I would angrily say no (I am not a cancer victim either, but that is an older blog that I wrote some time ago) I am a fighter, I am a survivor, I am not a sufferer. Yes cancer has attacked my body, attacked my mind, depression is something I never thought I would have and yes it has even attacked my spirit. But through all of that I can honestly say I didn't suffer. I prevailed. I triumphed. Its all in the way you look at things. Some days I would get so tired I could barely make it through a 3 hour workday. Some days I couldn't eat, couldn't sleep, was disgusted at the lack of hair I had from the chemo making it fall out. The radiation machine freaked me out so much I had to crank up music on the ipod so I wouldn't hear the noise of the machine or the sound of my breathing, thinking am I breathing too hard that this will radiate my lungs (one of the side effects they tell you you may have.)
Through all of that I still don't say I suffered.
I believe in positive thinking.
I fought.
I battled.
I didn't suffer
I am a Warrior.
Mel is the producer/co-host of The Vic McCarty Show. Listen Live Monday~Friday 10am-noon eastern time on wmktthetalkstation.com also available as a podcast.
Check out my podcast The Cancer Warrior on Empoweradio.com. Also available on itunes.
Wednesday, June 23, 2010
Sun Safety, Sunscreens & Cancer
By Keith I. Block, M.D.,
Author of Life Over Cancer: The Block Center Program for Integrative Cancer Treatment
On one hand, we've all been warned of the dangers that lurk behind those healthy-looking tans; most notably, an increased risk of skin cancer and premature wrinkles. On the other hand, there is also reasonable evidence that sun exposure does not induce melanoma, the deadliest form of skin cancer. In fact, there are several studies that demonstrate sun exposure can actually protect us from cancer! To be specific, the exposure to UVB sun radiation has been shown to reduce the risk of 19 major types of cancer through the production of vitamin D!
So what's a bikini to do?!
I think it's important we all try to get 20 minutes of unprotected sun-to-skin exposure every day. This is essential for meeting our most basic needs for Vitamin D. Once this is taken care of, I recommend both physical protection; i.e., hats, clothing and umbrellas, as well as chemical protection, sunscreens. However, it must be mentioned that many sunscreens on the market today have come under fire not only due to inaccurate labeling -- a product states it has an SPF (Sun Protection Factor) of 50 and it's actually a 4 -- but many have been found to contain a host of controversial chemicals that include potential carcinogens, cancer promoters, free radical generators, and hormone disruptors. In addition, the use of sunscreen is known to reduce the production of Vitamin D in the body.
Tip: Try and get 20 minutes of unprotected sun exposure daily.
Recently, The Environmental Working Group (www.ewg.org), a non-profit organization with the mission of using the power of public information to protect public health and the environment, came out with a fairly disconcerting report about sunscreens. EWG researchers recommended only 39 of 500 (that's only 8 percent!) beach and sport sunscreens for this season. The reason? As the word got out that the higher the SPF the better, there was a surge among manufacturers misrepresenting that their products contained an SPF over 50. Additionally, there have been new disclosures addressing potentially hazardous ingredients. In particular, recent government data has linked the common sunscreen ingredient vitamin A to accelerated development of skin tumors and lesions.
According to EWG, the best sunscreen is a hat and a shirt. No worries about chemicals that will be absorbed through the skin, and no question about their effectiveness. But if you choose to wear a "teenie weenie yellow polka dotted bikini," or any clothing that provides only partial skin coverage, EWG suggests using sunscreens that provide broad-spectrum (UVA and UVB-sunburn) protection, as well as those that contain fewer hazardous chemicals. For a list of their recommendations, go to: http://www.ewg.org/
Tip: Make every effort to avoid burning your skin. There is sufficient data to know that sun burns cause serious, long-term damage.
In an effort to make a wise decision regarding which sunscreen to purchase, many consumers look for The Skin Cancer Foundation's "seal of approval." However, this shouldn't be the sole criteria you use to make a purchasing decision. According to the EWG, The Skin Cancer Foundation (SCF) lends its logo to hundreds of sun protection products that have not necessarily been thoroughly scrutinized.
My Advice:
Get 20 minutes of unprotected sun exposure daily. Even on cloudy days, you can still get up to 80% UV rays and boost your production of vitamin D.
Make every effort to avoid sunburns. Be particularly cautious during mid-day sun exposure or near water where reflections can increase exposure and risk of burns. This can lead to skin damage and injury. Extensive research demonstrates that sunburns -- and particularly repeated burns -- cause serious, long-term damage.
Cover up! The use of hats, shirts and umbrellas offer safe and effective protection from the sun.
Buyer beware. Before purchasing a sunscreen, consult with a website such as www.ewg.org to ensure you are purchasing a product that is both safe and effective.
© 2010 Keith I. Block, M.D., author of Life Over Cancer: The Block Center Program for Integrative Cancer Treatment
Author Bio:
Keith I. Block, M.D. is Director of Integrative Medical Education at the University of Illinois College of Medicine; Medical Director of the Block Center for Integrative Cancer Treatment in Evanston, Illinois; and founder and Scientific Director of the nonprofit Institute for Integrative Cancer Research and Education. He is also editor in chief of the peer-reviewed professional journal Integrative Cancer Therapies and a member of the National Cancer Institute's Physician Data Query Complementary and Alternative Medicine (CAM) Editorial Board.
For more information, please visit www.lifeovercancer.com and www.blockmd.com. Become a fan of Life Over Cancer and the Block Center for Integrative Cancer Treatment on Facebook.
Saturday, June 19, 2010
Help save the life of Mandi Schwartz, a Yale Hockey player battling Leukemia
For more information about Mandi visit http://www.becomemandishero.org
YOU can help save her life
Friday, June 18, 2010
The Race
I went to my first NASCAR race recently, one of the perks of where I work. I got pit passes, got up close to the drivers pit crew, saw all the prep they do during the race and when the car comes into pit row (ok so if I get the names of things wrong sorry, I play hockey, watching NASCAR to me reminds me of when I lived by the 101 freeway in the San Fernando Valley)
I am always thinking of my next blog, or podcast, what inspiring survivor I can get on the podcast, what I should write next. I was uploading my race photos to facebook and I thought this kind of reminds me of treatment.
The race was my cancer experience. While I was in the race, time stands still, moves slow. For others it is just another day, minutes are regular minutes hours are hours days are days.
The noise of the race was deafening. That reminds me of when the doc first tells you "It's cancer" Suddenly words run together, people are talking but it doesn't make sense. You can hear your own heartbeat in the sound of the race.
The docs, nurses medical staff are your pit crew. All of the pit crew around the car reminded me of surgery, you are almost out of it, there are people around that you don't know and they are all checking on you.
"Checking under the hood" as I like to call it when they do a breast exam. The adding of the oil, like a blood draw, well you get the analogies. Although I do think a blood draw would be less upsetting to me if the needles made that whirr sound like the pneumatic drill does in the race.
Your caregiver is your pit boss. Making sure everything goes smoothly. Not that that is entirely possible. No one can foresee nausea, insomnia or any of the other lovely side effects that go along with cancer, but if it wasn't for your pit boss, your race would be more difficult
Everyones race experience is different. Some go through treatment with little side effects, no major crashes to speak of. Others have their cars in pit row the whole time of the race. I have to say I was somewhere in between.
Once the treatment is over, some people think the race is over, but there could be more races, meaning, complications, more surgeries, recurrance, depression, entirely new cancers. Different races, different tracks.
We are all just looking to cross the finish line. Doesn't matter if we get the checkered flag. Just matters that that we finish the race, that we beat cancer.
I am looking forward to the time when no one will have to race.
Mel is the co-host/producer of The Vic McCarty Show. Listen live Monday~Friday 10am-Noon on wmktthetalkstation.com. Also available as a podcast.
Check out my podcast The Cancer Warrior on Empoweradio.com
Thursday, June 10, 2010
How Cancer Survivors Can Stay Positive
Another guest blogger. Enjoy.
It’s a dreaded disease whose very name is enough to paralyze people with fear simply because survival rates are very low. So if you’re a cancer survivor, you know you’re among the select few who have beaten this horrific disease that literally eats away at your body. Death comes quickly to some who are afflicted with cancer; to others, it comes after a long and painful struggle to survive. But to those who actually become cancer-free after coping with the rigors of chemotherapy and other forms of treatment, the news comes as more of a relief than something to be elated about. This is more because cancer is notorious for returning with a vengeance, even years after you’ve been cleared of the disease.
I’ve seen both sides of the coin – I lost an uncle to colorectal cancer nine months after it was diagnosed, and I saw my grandmother beat breast cancer and live for another 20 years before she died of natural causes. So I know how fickle cancer can be – it steals life in one breath and also allows you to beat death if you’re lucky enough.
The key to surviving cancer is luck – you need to be lucky enough to detect and diagnose it in the early stages, you need luck with finding the right and most aggressive form of treatment, and most of all, you must get lucky in being able to rid your body of every last cancerous cell. Once you achieve all this, you can start to look to a positive future, one that is untainted by cancer.
The problem with cancer is that it can come back with a vengeance, so you need to do your best to stay positive in the years following your successful treatment of the disease, and the best way to do this is to:
• Focus on all that is positive with your life: You may or may not suffer a relapse, but it’s not wise to spend your life worrying about one. Focus on the fact that you’re healthy now and that you have been given the gift of life a second time. Look forward to living life fully and doing all that you want to do. And be grateful for all that you have rather than regretting the time you’ve lost to battling the disease.
• Join a support group: You may still be overwhelmed by the intensity of your experience, and if family members and friends do not seem to understand your emotional turbulence, find a support group of survivors like yourself who are more in tune with your condition. When you’re able to give vent to your feelings and listen to the stories of other survivors, you feel positive and uplifted.
• Follow up on your medical checks: You may be cancer-free, but it’s best to continue to monitor your condition and ensure that the disease does not return. The earlier you spot any signs of cancer, the sooner it is to get rid of it. Also, you feel more confident when you get yourself checked and find that you’re still free of the disease.
About the guest blogger:
This guest post is contributed by Kathy Wilson, who writes on the topic of X-Ray Technician Schools . She welcomes your comments at her email id: kathywilson1983@gmail.com
Monday, May 17, 2010
Cure or Cancer Free?
I got into a heated debate, well lets say argument with a friend of mine about doctors using the word cure. Once again, I have to say this is my personal opinion, which will, I am sure piss some people off. I get stubborn that way. I have my own beliefs. I am not saying they are right, they are just mine. Like I was telling my friend. This is only my opinion, you don't have to like it, and if everyone had the same opinion as me the world would be a pretty boring place.
I hate it when doctors use the word cure when describing cancer. Let's be honest. There is no cure, not for one tiny little variant strain of any cancer. I wish to God there was. I wish all oncologists would be put out of business, but that is not the case.
My friend asked me why it bothered me so much, Here is why: THERE IS NO CURE FOR CANCER. For me, my definition, cure means there is 100% chance that your cancer will not return. No doctor can say that, because, well once again, no cure.
After I argued with my friend, I googled cure for cancer, just to see what I would come up with. Couldn't find anything listed. Now I hoped against all hopes that I was wrong, that I would see something on oncolink or something posted from the New England Journal of Medicine.
Nothing.
I am cancer free, that is what the surgeon told me when he removed the cancerous tumor from my body. If I was cured, then I would have assumed there would have been no need for the months of chemo, radiation and targeted gene therapy afterwards.
But I went through all that, and I still take tamoxifen, and I will until 2012. I still get blood tests and scans, and have appointments, and I still worry a little every time, because I am not cured, but because I am cancer free.
I will advocate, I will blog, I will keep on doing my podcast.
Until there's a cure.
Mel is the producer of The Vic McCarty Show. Listen Live Monday~Friday 10am-noon eastern standard time on wmktthetalkstation.com
Check out my podcast The Cancer Warrior on Empoweradio.com available on demand and on itunes
Monday, May 10, 2010
Decisions, Decisions
Another guest blogger
this blog took me ages 2 write down.. i was already thinkin a few weeks ago that i should finally write a new one again but i just didnt found the right words. but finally, finally i found a really good reason n the right words as well...like some of u may know have i been in a emotional desaster lately.. i've been through a lot of ups n downs and i honestly have 2 say that it wasnt that easy 2 handle like it seemed.. first i was much more than happy that i was finally done with all this cancer crap.. got some good news that i was almost done with chemo.. i mean 2 more chemos 2 go isnt that bad.. so last monday i started chemo again.. i wa supposed 2 stay in hopital for 4 days this time.. i know what u might think now.. "well doesnt sound that much this time so it cant b that bad.." but peeps u have 2 know that the more shorter it was this time the more harder have been my chemodrugs.. it was really pushin me down this time but somehow i always found a way back up after everydays at least 8 hour session..
side effects like nausea hit me up really bad.. tuesday night i thought i would die.. i didnt even sleep cuz i needed 2 throw up nearly every 30 minutes.. after the 15th time throwin up i simply stoped counting.. my stomach started hurting really bad n one time again my heart become really weak.. maybe the second reason why i couldnt sleep.. i really think that its another reason cuz i was simply scared that i would almost pass away again, like i almost did 3 times before as i got my monstersession how i call them.. i've absolutly no clue why my heart isnt able 2 take all the drugs wich suddenly should help me 2 get better even if i have 2 go through hell before.. anyways that wasnt the only thing wich got more and more worse 4 me in the last week...
it also got more hard 4 me 2 breathe.. first i thought "that isnt that bad christina, maybe u r just exhausted from fighting.." well truely understandable that i thought that first cuz i really have been through hell over and over again the last weeks and month.. but my docs have become really worried and so they did some tests ( x-rays, bloodtests, CTscans n all that stuff ) i felt really uncomfortable cuz i didnt know what they thought it would be.. i just could read in their faces that it couldnt be something good.. i was so worried.. and i was allowed 2 be worried cuz of that.. well they did the test on wednesday n i got the results of that on friday.. they told me that my lung got attact with another sarcoma.. i truely dont wanted believe what ive just been told n so i asked if they r kidding me.. but sadly they havent been kidding me :S they said that they r goin 2 add 4 more chemos and that it might be fixed then.. i thought fine.. doesnt sound that bad.. 4 more chemos thats nearly nothing after everything i already faced in the past and so i was just happy that it wasnt "that bad" ...
cuz they had some trouble in the laboratoy i couldnt get the results of me blood test on friday.. and so i got them yesterday.. i went to my doc really happy cuz i thought everythign is goin on well.. drugs r workin n i was suppsed 2 go home.. but i've learned that u shouldnt be to optimisic when u r about 2 get the results of ur bloodtest -.-'
as soon i went into the room i formally could feel that somthing isn't right.. there was just something in the air.. so i sat down n asked the doc "whats wrong?? why r u looking so upset??" the room was filled with silence.. after arround 2 min ( wich seemed like 2 ages to me ) he finally looked up to me n started telling me that my medicatons stoped working for a reason they didnt found out until now.. ( u need 2 know that it was already the second time where they stoped working n we already changed them a couple of weeks ago ) i got a lumb in my throat, my eyes were filled with tears but i tried 2 hold them back as good as i could in that situatioin, i didnt know what 2 say i was just shocked that it happend again... then he continued telling me that they wouldnt have any idea what to do next and so they faced me with the hardest decision a human is ever able 2 be faced with...
i've been told that i would have 2 opportunities.. number 1 would be: stop the treatment and gettin rid of all the suffering and being able 2 enjoy the last 6 month i would have untill i'm gone... number 2 would be: continue the treatment getting much more chemo and another round of different drugs wich they are normally not usin for leukemia patients cuz its a really rough medication.. wich still doesnt mean that i'll make it though.... so i've been faced with dying happy within 6 month or dyin full of pain and even more suffering within 2 years... i've been so shocked that i couldnt say the tiniest word anymore.. my eyes started burnin cuz there were already overfilled with tears.. i just wanted 2 get outta the room.. so i just got up n went out.. my doc asked me what i wanna do n i just said i need a bit time 2 think about everything..
and well here i am now.. sitting alone at home cuddling my doc n asking god if its fair or not.. well i really dont have any idea what 2 do.. cuz a 21 year old woman shouldnt worry about how long she will b on earth, she shouldnt have 2 pick #1 or #2 (doesnt matter wich # i'm goin 2 pick cuz my life will totally change again) its not the right time for a 21 year old 2 worry about stuff like that!! normally i should worry about whom i'm goin 2 date or what i'm goin 2 wear or how i'm goin 2 do my hair but not about how long she wanna stay n wich way might be the right way.. i'm sitting here in tears right now cuz i just wanna wake up outta this nightmare.. dont know but somehow its like a slap right into my face cuz it's like i've been fightin so long for nothing.. it seems like it have been a waste of time... just the fact that i'm goin 2 die doesnt matter wich option i'm goin 2 take is truely killin me.. there's so much stuff popin up in my head.. so many what if questions but most of all i'm worryin what others r thinkin about the decision i'm goin 2 take.. i´m scared that they r goin 2 blame me for "givin up", scared that i´m goin 2 break so much hearts out there, scared that i'm goin 2 lose more loved ones and friends like i already did at the beginnin of this journey...
on the one hand i really wanna fight until the bitter end but on the other hand i dont want 2 suffer that much anymore... its just a freakishly weird feeling wich is overcomin me since a couple of hours... and the fact that i'm facin a decision like that alone without any support of my family doesnt really make it easier.. cuz this is exactly one of those moments where u just wanna have ur mom around.. but i know that that will never happen cuz she just doesnt care..
anyways i just hope that i'm goin 2 take the right decision.. cuz like i already said i dont wanna dissapoint someone with the decision i'm goin 2 choose.....
decision over decision n it seems like there wont be an end so far...
"when i would have 3 wishes, the the only one would be NO MORE CANCER!!!!!" - by my own
about the blogger:
christina is a 21 year old cancer fighter who got diagnosed with ALL leukemia in december 2009. she's fighting the fight of her life all by her own without any support of her family or friends...
u can follow her journey here : http://justchristinah.jimdo.com/
http://just-christinah.livejournal.com/
http://twitter.com/justchristinah
Friday, May 7, 2010
Advocate..
Another guest blogger
When this whole thing started, meaning, form the moment I was told, "You have cancer." (and actually, those weren't the words, they weren't even speaking directly to me. They were telling my mom, and said, "She has cancer." and I just happened to be laying in the hospital bed next to her, drugged up from a 9 hour spinal fusion surgery, and overheard them. Either way, same impact.) and for quite some time after being diagnosed, any kind of cancer campaigning really rubbed me the wrong way. Pink ribbons made me angry. And I'll admit, even now, pink buckets of KFC for cancer just seems inane. Part of that is my opinions about the fast food industry, but something about the way cancer awareness is presented to the public, is a bit euphemistic, to the point of being cutesy.
But I'm experiencing, both with myself and through meeting cancer survivors, that once people reach a certain comfort level in their own situations, that there's almost a natural progression towards advocacy and awareness, and just wanting to help.
But I'm experiencing, both with myself and through meeting cancer survivors, that once people reach a certain comfort level in their own situations, that there's almost a natural progression towards advocacy and awareness, and just wanting to help.
My biggest topic, I want to advocate, and actually bring change to, is early detection. And not just to the public, but to the medical industry, as well. Here's a little background on me: I'm 29 now, I was diagnosed 2 years ago at 27. There is no history of breast cancer on my mother's side, my father's sister died of breast cancer at 50. I was 24 at the time, so breast cancer didn't seem like an immediate concern then, though looking back, I probably already had it. Plus, doctor's tell me that paternal genetics don't really factor in, anyway. Well, ok then.
But I wasn't a complete dullard. I had been doing self exams in the shower from the time I was a teenager. My mom had this model her obgyn gave her of this little squishy plastic breast with some, what I can only assume were, marbles embedded in it. It hung in the shower, and I felt it, and felt my own, and aside from it not even feeling like a real breast, I never felt anything even remotely close to this doughy, plasticine-like, marble filled maquette in my own breasts. Granted, I was just a teenager at this point, but I continued self exams throughout my 20's, and was told a variety of different methods for examining, and what to look for. I was told, "Lumpy, like oatmeal, was ok lumpy." Well, what kind of oatmeal are we talking about here?? I like my oatmeal lumpy. I was told not to dig around in the breast, that abnormalities would be felt with a flat hand. I was told pain is an indicator, but that premenstrual pain and firming was totally normal. And I was told that every woman has one breast that's larger than the other.
Here's what I did find: one breast was bigger than the other, and before my periods, it would get firm and painful, and the nipple seemed kind of anchored to the interior of the breast, where the other did not. I told my obgyn, who did an exam, and told me to lay off the caffeine. This was probably 6 months before I was diagnosed with Stage IV breast cancer. At that point my main concern was all the other pain I was having. Back pain, chest pain, trouble breathing. I went to several other specialists to address all these other pains, no one really came up with anything. Muscle spasm, was one guess, pneumonia, was another. One of the specialists even did a breast exam. He told me it was most likely Costochondritis, an infection of the ribcage, and it would go away. The night before I woke up unable to walk, with no feeling in my legs, and went to the hospital to learn I had a broken back caused by the metastasis, I remember standing in front the mirror looking at my body, and wondering why I was in so much pain. My whole chest seemed misshapen, and there were dark veins running in the direction of my left breast. Once I was diagnosed the oncologist even said that my tumor is not easy to locate. It was large, and flat, and just kind of blended in. Looking back, that firmness I felt around my periods was probably the closest I ever was to detecting it before it metastasized. But I did mention that to my doctor's, and was told it was pretty normal, just stop drinking coffee. So I don't know what else I could have done to catch it any earlier.
I recently reconnected with a friend and told her my story. She is 32, and said that she has similar symptoms with her breasts, pain, firmness, size difference, even chest pain. I don't want to make anyone paranoid, or turn them into a hypochondriac, so I just told her to see her doctor. She did... they told her to stop drinking coffee. Hearing those words again, made me shudder. I understand it would be unlikely, for a friend of mine to have the the exact same condition, but because I have it, there's no way I can sit here and say it's not a very REAL possibility. Because it is REAL for me. And the sad truth is that cancer IS almost that common.
So my dilemma is, what do I do with this? How can my story help? Especially since my story consists of me having next to no symptoms until it was already advanced! I don't know how that's supposed to help anyone? But I do feel the first step is putting my story out there, and seeing what comes from that.
Here's what I did find: one breast was bigger than the other, and before my periods, it would get firm and painful, and the nipple seemed kind of anchored to the interior of the breast, where the other did not. I told my obgyn, who did an exam, and told me to lay off the caffeine. This was probably 6 months before I was diagnosed with Stage IV breast cancer. At that point my main concern was all the other pain I was having. Back pain, chest pain, trouble breathing. I went to several other specialists to address all these other pains, no one really came up with anything. Muscle spasm, was one guess, pneumonia, was another. One of the specialists even did a breast exam. He told me it was most likely Costochondritis, an infection of the ribcage, and it would go away. The night before I woke up unable to walk, with no feeling in my legs, and went to the hospital to learn I had a broken back caused by the metastasis, I remember standing in front the mirror looking at my body, and wondering why I was in so much pain. My whole chest seemed misshapen, and there were dark veins running in the direction of my left breast. Once I was diagnosed the oncologist even said that my tumor is not easy to locate. It was large, and flat, and just kind of blended in. Looking back, that firmness I felt around my periods was probably the closest I ever was to detecting it before it metastasized. But I did mention that to my doctor's, and was told it was pretty normal, just stop drinking coffee. So I don't know what else I could have done to catch it any earlier.
I recently reconnected with a friend and told her my story. She is 32, and said that she has similar symptoms with her breasts, pain, firmness, size difference, even chest pain. I don't want to make anyone paranoid, or turn them into a hypochondriac, so I just told her to see her doctor. She did... they told her to stop drinking coffee. Hearing those words again, made me shudder. I understand it would be unlikely, for a friend of mine to have the the exact same condition, but because I have it, there's no way I can sit here and say it's not a very REAL possibility. Because it is REAL for me. And the sad truth is that cancer IS almost that common.
So my dilemma is, what do I do with this? How can my story help? Especially since my story consists of me having next to no symptoms until it was already advanced! I don't know how that's supposed to help anyone? But I do feel the first step is putting my story out there, and seeing what comes from that.
I understand the medical industry is not going to start doing mammograms on every 25 year old, with no maternal family history of cancer, who's breasts hurt occasionally. But maybe if people weren't only specifically looking for perfectly round marbles, or extra lumpy oatmeal, or knew that zombie veins on their chest might mean more than just poor circulation, and if doctors exams were a little less generic, and their patients concerns weren't dismissed due to age.... then maybe, someone, anyone, might not find themselves where I am now. And that would be something.
About the guest blogger:
Kourtney Logan Lampedecchio was diagnosed with stage IV HER2/neu positive breast cancer at the age of 27. Upon discovery it had already metastasized to her spine, deteriorating the T3, 4, and 5 vertebrae, requiring a spinal fusion surgery. Recently, 12 brain metastasis where discovered, and she just finished a course of radiation to treat those. Through it all, Kourtney continues to pursue her passions of spending time with her horse and dog, friends and family, who are her support system, and without them would be lost. She is also continuing to pursue her professional and academic goals of becoming a scenic designer for theatre, by working freelance in the Sacramento, CA area, and attending graduate school in the fall at UC Davis, where she is also currently undergoing treatment. She is now 29, and lives with her family in Placerville, CA.
You can check out her blog at http://www.kourtneylogan.blogspot.com/
Thursday, March 18, 2010
Parenting and cancer
Another guest blogger
I got a lot of advice when I was first diagnosed with cancer. One suggestion I heard often was to let things go and take care of myself. My job, my projects, my chores would wait.
But, I wondered, what about my children? They will not or cannot wait. This is their childhood. They need me now. How is that supposed to work?
Even before my treatment began, the conundrum of simultaneously letting go and parenting came up. A few days before I started chemotherapy, my children came down with the swine flu. At the advice of an oncological social worker, we had not yet told them about my diagnosis or upcoming treatment. We were waiting until the last possible moment so as not to make them anxious. Then my youngest contracted a fever and what the pediatrician confirmed to be unmistakable H1N1 symptoms. We could no longer wait to sit them down and have The Talk. We explained my diagnosis and why I was going to quarantine myself at somebody else’s house. This was not an easy conversation and we all shed many tears. A shadow hung over our discussion. Almost exactly two years earlier, my step-brother, their uncle, had died from cancer, so the disease was very real and scary to them. The worst part of this conversation was that I did not get to hug them after we broke the news. It was the beginning of me having to deny my strongest maternal instincts in the interest of my own wellbeing and survival.
One by one, the three children got the virus. I stayed at an acquaintance’s house for the next ten days. A kind family with a spare room had heard of our difficult situation and offered to take me in. We had only lived here for four months prior to my diagnosis, so we had not yet made close friends. A high school chum, whom I hadn’t seen in twenty years, was moved by our situation and with only a couple of days’ notice, she flew out to help. She stayed with me and this wonderful family, accompanying me at my first chemo and my port placement surgery. Amazingly, this motley bunch of virtual strangers-turned-friends managed to support me with love and compassion as I started my cancer treatment. This wild journey, it seemed, would not just involve chaos and heartbreak; it would be cushioned by miraculous generosity and love.
When I returned home, my son, who was two years old, clung to me. His insecurity seemed amplified by my strange reemergence. In my ten-day absence, I had already been transformed. My usual peppy energy level had sunk notably and my appearance had altered. Although my doctor had told me it would take several weeks for my hair to fall out, my sensitivity to the drugs was high. My hair began to fall out after one week. After a clump came out in my brush and made me cry, my husband came by the house where I was staying to shear my curly locks.
My son wanted to be with me and I with him. I felt guilty for my limitations. I had to figure out how to parent from my bed. We read together and we talked. We developed a repertoire of games I can play with my low energy while resting. He has become so accustomed to them after my four months of treatment that on the days when I have been up and about, he sometimes becomes indignant: “But I want to go snuggle in your bed!”
Even when I am weakened, nauseous, and fatigued, I cannot stop being my children’s mother. I cannot stop loving them, caring about them, fretting about them, working to support their emerging and precious selves. But, as I said, my instincts are often denied. I really have had to let so many things go. I can no longer look after my daydreamy eldest’s organization of her schoolwork. I have consulted with her teacher, and we are lowering our original goals on that issue for this year and are focusing on her learning. She may not get every assignment turned in but she is engaging in and understanding the curriculum. I have given up trying to reorganize my middle child’s bureau drawers. I can’t participate or volunteer at the kids’ school. Even if I had the energy, it is a virus swamp and no place for the immunocompromised. The things I normally manage, that are part of my normal rhythm as a mother, have to fall by the wayside.
Although my parenting has been restricted, I can still check in with my children. Thankfully, they tell me what is on their mind. It pains me that I can’t engage with their concerns and fully protect them from the horror of what is happening to me. They see me and know that I suffer. I fantasize about having a superpower that would allow me to freeze time for them so that I could go off and get better without them having to witness the pain of treatment. In this daydream, I would return as basically my same self and we could resume our family life without this nightmarish interruption.
Early on, we bought them a book about a mother with cancer, a story told at a level that even my youngest could understand. He asked us to read it repeatedly for the first couple of months of my treatment. Two months later, when the book had lost its hold on him, he turned to me with a serious look on his face and said, almost accusing, “In the book, Sammy’s mother gets better faster than you.” My heart broke for what felt like the millionth time. A ten-minute story is so much easier to sit through than a year and a half of treatment. I wish, like him, we could just turn the page and make the time pass.
My middle child, the one who has been told repeatedly in her seven years of life that she looks just like me, expressed the most distress about my hair loss. The changes in my appearance that threatened my own identity also seemed to threaten hers. She did not want me to show my bald head in front of her friends. She urged me to get a wig. When she learned about my surgery, she asked if I would look like a man without breasts. My eldest, who is almost ten, confided her fears about her own body: she was afraid to get breasts because they might get cancer too.
But even snuggling and talking have their limits. The treatment makes me hypersensitive at times, making noise or multiple simultaneous conversations difficult to tolerate. My children are learning to have more slow and measured conversations with me, but, of course, this is not natural. The cognitive impairment of chemotherapy makes me an unreliable listener. “Mommy, don’t you remember?” is a phrase I have heard that more in the last four months than in my prior ten years of motherhood, as I, in defiance of my usual acute memory, once again forget a friend’s name, a birthday party, or a project that somebody wanted to do.
An undeniable anxiety pervades our household, bringing our reactivity up in a multitude of circumstances. Our capacity is down, so my husband and I work to push things back to make space for the kids’ needs and concerns. We worked out with the girls’ school that they do not receive homework one night a week while we attend a family support group. In general, we have abandoned some of our usual focus on their schoolwork. The vulnerability of our situation makes our emotions raw. When my son wandered off for ten minutes at the science museum, our imaginations could believe the worst-case scenario more vividly than we normally would. We know too well that the bad stuff in life is not just what happens to other people.
What, I often wonder, is my goal as I parent through this time? How am I to help the children make sense of this experience? The best I can come up with is that it is my obligation to listen and be as honest and hopeful as I can. I learned, in the twenty months my brother was fighting this disease, that there is always something to hope for no matter what course the cancer takes. With my brother, I started by hoping for a cure and ended with the wish, once it was inevitable, that his death be peaceful and that he leave this world feeling the power of the love he had created while he was in it.
So this is an opportunity to teach them, in a vivid way, the importance of love, generosity, and hope. I have marveled with them at the kindness of the people who took me in and cared for me when our family had its initial crisis. I try to help them see the weight that is lifted as people bring us meals or visit and help with chores. I hope that, with our guidance, they can see how these acts of lovingkindness are fundamental to a community and that they will be eager to give to others when the opportunity arises. I hope they see that my appearance can change, but the love that I have for them never does. My love for them endures even in these circumstances, even when I am being beaten down by chemo side effects and the drugs that are meant to alleviate them. I hope that they learn about the importance of us sticking together as a family, as they watch their dad push himself to the limits to keep everyone going. I hope they learn how to live life with joy, because only if you have been in a difficult place filled with grief do you learn the gift that is health and normalcy to the point where it can bring you true contentment and happiness.
Lani Horn is a wife, mother of three, and a professor. She was diagnosed with breast cancer in October 2009. You can read her blog at chemobabe.com.
Mel is the producer/co~host of The Vic McCarty Show. Listen live Monday-Friday 10am eastern time on wmktthetalkstation.com.
Check out my podcast The Cancer Warrior on Empoweradio.com available on demand now and available on Itunes.
Monday, March 8, 2010
On the fence
Today I found out a friend of mine has cancer. He has been keeping it a secret for some time. I don't see him that much and all he said was that he was going in for some minor surgery. He didn't tell me, I heard it from a mutual friend.
It reminded me of when I was diagnosed. I wanted to keep it a secret at first, it was so hard to believe that it could happen to me. I had two jobs at the time so I told one boss, then the other, then most of my co~workers. Telling the story over and over again was so hard at the beginning. I actually told one of my supervisors to tell the other employees at my job. I couldn't keep telling the story over and over again. It was right after diagnosis, before any treatments or surgeries, and it was like cutting open a fresh wound every time I would say I have cancer.
I know my friend wants his privacy. I know its hard when its fresh and new. You never think it could happen to you. My friend is active, works out, and it is a total shock when you are diagnosed, when you hear those words.
I want to go to my friend and give him a hug, tell him I am here for him. Give him support and tell him I am here for him and introduce him to the cancer community that I am a part of.
But he hasn't told me.
I will respect his wishes and wait until he tells me.
I am used to being on his side of the fence. Being the fighter, ready for battle, taking on cancer, dealing with all the shit that comes with it. Not being on the other side of the fence.
Being on either side of the fence sucks.
Mel is the producer/co~host of The Vic McCarty Show. Listen live Monday~Friday 10am~Noon eastern standard time on wmktthetalkstation.com
Check out my podcast available on demand now on Empoweradio.com. Also available on Itunes
Thursday, March 4, 2010
Spare Me The Stronger Part -Even Though It’s True
Another Guest blog. Enjoy
My ( ex) hairdresser said the dreaded words. “ Well, you know. . this will only make you stronger! **wink,wink** “ My usual retort used to be “Really? I thought life was hard enough without a bout of cancer to toughen you up. “ But I didn’t have the energy that day. I just smiled and thought “Just cut my hair lady - this is the last time I’ll be in your chair for a solid year.” That was almost 3 years ago now and still I wonder what my children really thought of my cancer. We tried to keep life pretty normal, but we weren’t hiding anything either. They knew about the surgeries and chemotherapy etc. Yet, it is truly hard to tell how it impacted them until something else sneaks up. Like when my daughter’s boyfriend had to go to the ER for a twisted ankle. I assured her that her beloved was to be a.o.k and then it came out. “Yeah, like the time you went in for the lung biopsy and they collapsed your lung! Things happen to people Mom, things happen and they are not o.k.“
I’m going out on a limb here and give you a fat cliche. “It made our family stronger.“ Actually let me rephrase. Cancer didn’t make us stronger - the way we chose to support each other made us stronger. My kids and my husband got to see me in a different light. It gave me the chance to be vulnerable and them a chance to step up to the plate. I cried in front of them - I let my daughter stay in the hospital with me because she needed to. It was her way of dealing with the crisis. They had the chance to see me as a person and not just someone nagging about homework and curfews. Did they grow up faster because of it? Yes. But is that a bad thing? Isn’t it better for our kids to learn that life happens - it’s how you choose to deal with it that makes the difference?
Teen #2 came home from school the other day and told me about a girl who was very troubled, using drugs etc. and said “ I think she has a bad home life.“ That’s when Teen #1 stepped in to remind him “We had a bad home life for awhile too Brandon. When mom was sick we could have starting messing up- but we didn’t. It’s choice. She has the choice.”
It was a choice to share my experience with my family. I could have kept it all to myself pretending to be strong and shelter them from life, but in doing so I would have robbed them from their experience. This is an excerpt my daughter wrote for her a scholarship essay:
I felt so sad reading this - knowing she was hurting so bad inside . And in the next breathe, I was so grateful I let her see ‘me'. I realized my experience made her a better person and yes, we are ‘stronger’.
Angella Hamilton
Founder of Inner Tough Girls
http://www.ourlifeaftercancer. org
http://www.ourlifeaftercancer.
Friday, February 26, 2010
Light of Day
I post on several other cancer survivors facebook pages, some are finishing up treatment, some are just starting. It always makes me reflect upon my own battle. I know I have written about this before, but a few friends of mine are just finishing chemo and radiation.
One of my friends (chemobabe) likened treatment to a pit, a giant chasm, that is difficult to traverse, that when you are in it, it is hard to see the light of day.That is a great analogy. When you are going through chemo or surgery or radiation it is hard, and it is hard to even see the light of day. It seems like it is a tiny spec of light in a giant dark pit. When you are surrounded by the darkness it is hard to even imagine you will see that light, that you will ever be done, let alone get close to it, but day by day you get closer and closer, maybe an inch here or there every day.
Many of my new friends on Facebook are just starting, and they are hoping to see the light of day. I have to tell you this. When you are in the chasm it seems like you will never get out.
I know that feeling.
That was 2 years ago. Now I can barely remember what it was like. Only when I read other survivors comments does it take me back to those moments. I am glad it is a fading distant memory.
Leaving you with lyrics from Bruce Springsteen's "Light of Day"
Well I'm a little down under, but I'm feeling O.K.
I got a little lost along the way
Just around the corner to the light of day.
Mel is the producer/co~host of The Vic McCarty Show. Listen live Monday~Friday 10-noon eastern standard time on wmktthetalkstation.com
Check out my podcast The Cancer Warrior on Empoweradio.com available on demand now and also available on itunes.
One of my friends (chemobabe) likened treatment to a pit, a giant chasm, that is difficult to traverse, that when you are in it, it is hard to see the light of day.That is a great analogy. When you are going through chemo or surgery or radiation it is hard, and it is hard to even see the light of day. It seems like it is a tiny spec of light in a giant dark pit. When you are surrounded by the darkness it is hard to even imagine you will see that light, that you will ever be done, let alone get close to it, but day by day you get closer and closer, maybe an inch here or there every day.
Many of my new friends on Facebook are just starting, and they are hoping to see the light of day. I have to tell you this. When you are in the chasm it seems like you will never get out.
I know that feeling.
That was 2 years ago. Now I can barely remember what it was like. Only when I read other survivors comments does it take me back to those moments. I am glad it is a fading distant memory.
Leaving you with lyrics from Bruce Springsteen's "Light of Day"
Well I'm a little down under, but I'm feeling O.K.
I got a little lost along the way
Just around the corner to the light of day.
Mel is the producer/co~host of The Vic McCarty Show. Listen live Monday~Friday 10-noon eastern standard time on wmktthetalkstation.com
Check out my podcast The Cancer Warrior on Empoweradio.com available on demand now and also available on itunes.
Monday, February 22, 2010
Celebration list or a list of moments
I was recently talking to a friend of mine, and fellow warrior about how I hate the term Bucket List. First of all I watched the movie during my treatment, got it as a screener from a group I belong to. Sometimes they don't tell you what the movies are about. Again I think holy shit another freakin movie about cancer, can't get away from it.
The Bucket list. I know its supposed to make you think of all great things to do before you die or kick the bucket. Now I get what they were going for, in the basic sense, Jack Nicholson, Morgan Freeman, add a bit of cancer and hilarity ensues right? Two guys from the opposite end of the spectrum coming together at the end of their life and creating a list of things they want to do before they die.
Why focus on the negative part? Like I said before I was lamenting about this to a fellow warrior and she said don't call it a bucket list just a list of moments.
I like that
I will call it my celebration list.
I, like many survivors, have faced my own mortality, and at any age that is difficult and scary, so I don't want to focus on things to do before I die, I want to focus on things to do while I am still here, alive and kicking
My celebration list, which isn't really written down, it is, like my friend said, a list of moments.
I know no one here gets out alive, but we all want to be a little scrappy while we are here, so lets not focus on the die part, bucket, kick the bucket etc. (if director of The Bucket List Rob Reiner were here I would call him a meathead like his nemesis Archie Bunker did in the tv series All in the family)
Mel is the producer of The Vic McCarty Show. Listen live Monday~Friday 10am-noon eastern standard time on wmktthetalkstation.com
Check out my podcast The Cancer Warrior on Empoweradio.com. Available on demand now and also available on itunes.
Saturday, February 20, 2010
MELATHON
Another guest blogger. Enjoy
Mel was diagnosed with invasive ductal carcinoma breast cancer on 9/18/07. Because of her employment, she was and is still not eligible for full health care coverage. Mel was only able to get some very basic coverage at her own expense. The result, she owes the hospital and doctors over $20,000. She has only been able to make small payments against this large debt. Now, the wolves are at her door, calling, process serving letters etc, wanting it all now. The only way she will be able to do this now, is to declare bankruptcy! We were working in the radio station this past Friday. She told me a process server came by this week with papers, she started to cry. She said, "My docs, they will not get a penny if I go bankrupt, my doctors have become my friends, they saved my life, how can I do that to them?"
Mel has turned her life over to helping people cope with cancer issues. Those of us friends and co-workers who know Mel, know that she is a tireless advocate for cancer awareness and never complains about her personal situation. She is always fun and upbeat and likes to bring joy into peoples lives, because she has her life back. As one of her friends, it is my hope, that all of us together can chip in to help her out now. It is impossible for her to raise this kind of money in a short time.
We were thinking about doing a local fundraiser for her in the Spring, but now there is no more time.
As one of her friends, I'm begging you to forgo those pizzas this month....or that elegant dinner for two you were planning, No gift is too big or to small. Please help our friend Mel Majoros, who has helped so many. Please be as generous as you can. $20,000 plus is a lot of money to one person, but not to the hundreds of us who care about Mel. We can do it!
Please send your gift to: Mel Majoros
Po Box 148
Petoskey, MI 49770
Please make sure that your check is made payable to: "Mel Majoros"
Do not include the words cancer appeal or fund in the payable line. However, you can put that in your memo section if you wish.
Also, if it is easier for you to Paypal your gift,
you can send it to: thecancerwarrior@gmail.com, or click on the paypal link at the top of this blog
Feel free to repost this on your personal Facebook page or blog with your own personal appeal.
Brian E. Brachel is the Chief Engineer for MacDonald Garber Broadcasting and the General Manager of Baraga Broadcasting, Catholic Radio for Northern Michigan. You can contact him at
Brian.Brachel@106khq.com
Mel is the producer/co-host of The Vic McCarty Show. Listen Live 10am-noon Monday-Friday eastern time on wmktthetalkstation.com
Check out my podcast The Cancer Warrior on Empoweradio.com. Available on demand now and also available on itunes.
Friday, February 12, 2010
FRED
If you are a frequent reader of my blog you know I had an pelvic ultrasound, which included a transvaginal ultrasound , as well as a uterine biopsy. That is where the doctor found Fred, a uterine polyp. Fred was biopsied. I am happy to report the results were that Fred was benign. Fred is very small and doesn't need to be removed. Fred gave me a few nights of worry, I will admit that. I still don't know how doctors and techs have any kind of clue of what they are looking at on scans and ultrasounds, that is why they get the big bucks I suppose. So I am still lucky. I am still in remission, and I have to constantly remind myself not to stress myself out about things that I have no control over, like these kinds of medical issues, financial issues, of which I have many, like most cancer patients I have lots of medical bills. I am lucky though, I have great insurance, it doesn't cover everything, but as my fiance said last night, it could be worse, there are lots of people who owe more than I do, and that is true. I have always said I would rather be broke than dead. The collection people keep calling, and I am working on getting a second job, and paying my doctors back is very important to me, after all they did save my life. But like I said, I am alive, I am in remission. I am able to blog here and do my podcast to help other survivors. I am lucky. Sometimes it takes something like Fred to remind me of that.
Mel is the producer/co-host of the Vic McCarty show. Listen live Monday-Friday 10am-noon eastern standard time on wmktthetalkstation.com
Check out my podcast The Cancer Warrior on Empoweradio.com available on demand now and also available on itunes
Thursday, February 11, 2010
Bowling for Breastcancer.org live event
Click on the link on February 11th from 6pm to 10pm for a live feed.
For more info on this great event go to my podcast The Cancer Warrior on Empoweradio.com
available on demand now.
Saturday, January 16, 2010
Can't Find Your Words? Say Chemo Brain.
Another guest blogger
By Idelle Davidson
You know it's just on the tip of your tongue. It's a word that has a "ka" sound in the beginning and a "tah" sound somewhere at the end. And you can almost see it, but then darn, it's gone. Perhaps later, when you're rushing to slap dinner on the table, that stupid word, so maddeningly elusive just hours before will pop right into your head, as if it were all just some silly misunderstanding between you and your brain.
I'm guessing that if you've had chemo and have experienced the fog that often follows, then you know what I'm talking about, right? It's not that you can't comprehend language, it's that you can't retrieve it. It's like the arcade game where you maneuver levers to grab a prize. You just can't get the prongs low enough or tight enough around that plastic key chain before it slips away.
In a 2006 study of the side effects experienced by 26 women undergoing chemotherapy for breast cancer, language (including fluency, verbal repetition, reading, and writing to dictation) was the most severely affected cognitive function, followed by memory. (Source: F. Downie, Psycho-Oncology 15 -2006: 921-930). That's not entirely surprising considering that chemotherapy not only may affect language but the speed in which we process information.
One woman I interviewed for "Your Brain After Chemo" had this to say: "It is painful when people look at me with confusion while I am trying to talk. I know that I'm not making sense, and I don't know how else to talk. When it happens I die a million deaths and feel very dumb."
Have you experienced word retrieval problems during or following chemotherapy? Have you found ways to compensate? If so, please share what has worked for you.
Bio: Idelle Davidson is an award-winning journalist, a cancer survivor, and co-author (with Dr. Dan Silverman at UCLA) of YOUR BRAIN AFTER CHEMO: A PRACTICAL GUIDE TO LIFTING THE FOG AND GETTING BACK YOUR FOCUS (available in bookstores and on Amazon.com). http://www.amazon.com/Your- Brain-after-Chemo-Practical/ dp/0738212598].
Mel is the producer/co-host of The Vic McCarty Show. Listen Live Monday-Friday 10am-noon eastern time on wmktthetalkstation.com
Tuesday, December 29, 2009
The Chart
I have been talking to a lot of survivors for my podcast The Cancer Warrior on Empoweradio.com. It has made me think of a lot of things that have happened to me. I remember when I was diagnosed I actually thought to myself "Well they must have someone else's chart." Yeah right. I live in a town of about 8 thousand people. My last name is Majoros. I am the only Majoros in the phone book. Pretty sure it was my diagnosis, unfortunately. I recall being really pissed at my doctor for not telling me what kind of breast cancer I had (the ultrasound tech told me which I guess is a real no-no) at that time my chart was only a couple of pages. She showed me that she didn't have the info, flipping between the 5 pages in my chart. Now its the size of a small book, the Gutenberg Bible of me. Whenever I go to the doctor I look at my chart and wish it was much smaller, and that chart is only for 2 years.
I was talking to another breast cancer survivor about her treatment, which was similar to mine, and we were discussing our side effects and medications. Its kind of funny to think about it like we were discussing parts of a recipe, ok if you add zofran to your benadryl whisk lightly with herceptin, sleep for an hour, then repeat every three weeks you will feel better!! We talked about hair loss, which I am still in awe of people who will go out in public with a bald head. Those who know me know I am not that shy, but when it came to that I was.
We were talking about how taboo it used to be to even say the word cancer, it was spoken of in hushed tones. Like you would say the whole sentence, then whisper the word cancer, as if to even speak it would bring it out like Beetlejuice.
Now many of my survivor friends shout it from the rooftops, well the modern version of it anyway, with blogs and podcasts and facebook posts and tweets. We know what its like. We want everyone to know about it. We don't want anyone else to get it. I personally don't want to welcome another person to the club no one wants to join.
Someone I respect called me a brave woman. I still don't understand why. I was told I had cancer. I am kind of stubborn, I don't back down from a fight. If you play hockey against you know it doesn't matter if you are five foot six or six foot five, if you have the puck, and I want it I will go after it, I may not get it the first time, but dammit you will see me, you will hear me and you will remember me.
Mel is the producer/cohost of The Vic McCarty Show Monday -Friday 10am-noon eastern time. Listen live on wmktthetalkstation.com
Check out my podcast The Cancer Warrior on Empoweradio. Available on demand now.
Monday, December 21, 2009
Win great Save the Tatas gear
Save the Tatas. I have written about them before. I have had the founder Julia Field Fikse on The Vic McCarty show. They have always been great with giveaways. Now I want to pass on the giveaways to you. I have the t-shirts, sweatshirt, and hoodie seen here as well as the magnets, bumper stickers and two key chains. All you have to do to get one is email me at thecancerwarrior@gmail.com You will have to pay for shipping, but that is a pretty good deal for a sweatshirt, t shirt or sticker. I will post winners here on my blog.
Mel is the producer/co-host of The Vic McCarty Show. Listen live Monday-Friday 10am-noon on www.wmktthetalkstation.com
Check out my podcast The Cancer Warrior on Empoweradio.com available on demand now.
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