Thank you mods!

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lovinmomma
lovinmomma Member Posts: 1,879

This makes things so clear and you all are wonderful in your responses to our issues!

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  • Moderators
    Moderators Member Posts: 25,912
    edited March 2009

    You're welcomeSmile

  • Mazy1959
    Mazy1959 Member Posts: 1,431
    edited March 2009

    Thank you so much

  • MissyBraddy
    MissyBraddy Member Posts: 87
    edited March 2009

    I like the changes, thanks! :)

    Hugs & Hope! 

  • DianaT
    DianaT Member Posts: 532
    edited March 2009

    I hope this helps everyone! I think it will, thanks!

  • Diana_B
    Diana_B Member Posts: 287
    edited March 2009

    I don't find that it makes things clear.



    That's the problem with subdividing things - it can go on endlessly.



    Having been diagnosed with recurrence - which is an event that has profoundly affected my life - about 16 months ago, I don't know where I should post.



    Are there others like me? I feel out of place in moving on, stage IV, just diagnosed, and hormonal. Hmm...



    Perhaps this is a reflection of the nature of recurrence. Is the recurrence dangerous or a triviality? Constant shifting back and forth.



    I don't have a solution to suggest to the moderators. Maybe people like me just fall between the cracks and we have to make ourselves welcome.

  • 2timer
    2timer Member Posts: 590
    edited March 2009

    I agree with Darya.  Changing the mets and recurrence board to stage 4 only was great but I think the other 2 boards were unnecessary.  But if it is what the majority of posters want, I'm fine with it.

  • ozzie2
    ozzie2 Member Posts: 1,271
    edited March 2009

    You can please some of the people some of the time , but not all of the people all the time...

    hugs

    oz

    Darya you can post on any thread that you like...but the way things are going there will be soooooooo many threads we wont know whats what..

    Me I 'll stick to the stage 4 thread.. 99% of the time...

  • Brendatrue
    Brendatrue Member Posts: 1,830
    edited March 2009

    Darya--I understand your point of view. I was diagnosed with what my onc called "early mets" but "no distant mets" in January. I had a chest wall recurrence (mid sternum), and all the MDs advised me that it was "a regional recurrence but more--early mets." My biopsy revealed invasive cancer in the mass as well as surrounding dermis and lymphatic spaces. I did not know where to post, so I went to the recurrence/mets section, because none of the other sections seemed to fit. I actually tried to post sensibly but occasionally worried that I was not posting in the "right place." I also understand about many women who have been diagnosed with Stage IV not wanting to cope with frantic requests for clarification and trying to focus on very specific (although wide-ranging, for sure) needs and concerns experienced with Stage IV disease.

    I am doing a TC regimen now and trying to decide about RT, which I have had in the past and has been recommended again. When I check out the chemo section, I feel it does not really apply to me, and I am grateful for the chemo thread that someone started on the recurrence/mets (now Stage IV) section. I try to ramble around and find what I need, as well as offer support when I can. It's sometimes energy consuming, to say the least.

    So, all that being said, I guess I will check here and the Stage IV section, in addition to others as I have the energy. I hope that being respectful of others will help me to be received wherever I post, and I hope you realize that someone else understands about "falling through the cracks." And, no, I do not think our concerns are trivial; we have advanced disease and we need all the support we can receive from others who care and understand like no others can.

  • Diana_B
    Diana_B Member Posts: 287
    edited March 2009

    Brenda - it's nice to know I'm not the only one. I don't see a lot of people on here with recurrence, and it seems you and I have a very similar situation, although I am on hormonals - switching from one to the other hoping that something will work longterm.



    I hope you're doing as well as can be expected on the chemo. Do they know yet if the chemo is working? I wish you all the best with that.



    I too was told I had mets - specifically they called it "metastatic but not stage IV". Luckily they can't see anything in my internal mammary nodes anymore - just the axilla.

  • Brendatrue
    Brendatrue Member Posts: 1,830
    edited March 2009

    Darya--I tried AIs after my second diagnosis with breast ca in 2006; I became barely functional, and I am not exaggerating. I have had really severe reactions to bisphosphonates, AIs, and Zometa, and I eventually had to terminate treatment with the AI and was told I should probably never try Zometa again, unless I became "desperate." I have just had 1 round of TC and am scheduled for the second round next Thursday, so it will be a bit of time before I know how well it is working.

    I'm glad your internal mammary nodes are clear. What is your hormonal therapy regimen now? I hope you are tolerating it well, with no difficult to manage side effects (sometimes it is all relative, isn't it?). By the way, thanks for responding; maybe others in similar situations will comment as well.

  • konakat
    konakat Member Posts: 6,085
    edited March 2009

    I am so happy that these new boards have been created.  I worried about potential but not mets people being left out.  As a relatively new metster I will visit here, if there is any encouragement, answers, whatever that I can contribute to help, I will.  If you are diagnosed with mets, I do encourage you to visit the Stage 4 board -- lots of good info.  I think some feathers were ruffled by non-mets people posting (this was unfortunate) -- I hope we can all help each other here and on the other boards.

    Elizabeth

  • Diana_B
    Diana_B Member Posts: 287
    edited March 2009

    Brenda, can you tell me what your reaction to AIs was? It sounds like you've had a rough run of things. I feel I react strongly to a lot of drugs too and that somehow people don't quite believe me.



    First I was on tamox, then zoladex and arimidex, then ooph and arimidex, and now finally aromasin, which I started two weeks ago. Each thing failed after a short time and I'm hoping I get a longer run with aromasin, even though I've been wondering if I can endure this drug. The hardest thing for me is that I can't dance, which is something I've done my whole life. I went to dance class but couldn't concentrate on the steps because my knee pain was so bad. However, I'm taking Spanish lessons which is fun and kind of feels like dancing in speech.



    Elizabeth, thanks for posting here. That's so kind of you! I hope you are doing okay yourself with your new diagnosis.

  • Brendatrue
    Brendatrue Member Posts: 1,830
    edited March 2009

    Darya--I appear to be hypersensitive to meds, and each time I start with a new MD I explain this as best I can. They typically express understanding and later on I realize they just didn't get it. Which in turn means, I usually have a strong/toxic/allergic reaction to something prescribed and hear how sensitive I am to meds. Yeah, I already worked that out!

    Anyway, Arimidex hit me the hardest. I could hardly walk; I had poor balance, my muscles felt weak, and the joint/bone pain was awful. I would hold on to walls to walk with support. I tried to keep walking, since I walk a great deal for exercise and relaxation, and every step seemed unsteady. I love to dance (for fun--nothing professional here!) and I could not dance, because of pain and fear that I would fall. My mood changed so much: first melancholia, then--as I described to the onc--"bone sucking despair." I think he was terrified that I was suicidal, which I was not. My mental status was affected--just could not work out problems as well and memory was mildly impaired. My abdominal girth seemed to grow every day (and I am petite), to the point where I had to keep buying new clothes that just didn't fit right because I was only gaining in the middle; I felt bloated and often tender with abdominal pain. I decided to try Femara--no luck. I offered to try Aromasin, and my onc said he thought I should not try it. During the Arimidex period (more than a year), I received the Zometa to help with bone issues, and I was out of life/work for a week. So, my history with AIs has not been pleasant. All the side effects I experienced resolved after I quit the AIs.

    Believe it or not, I took Evista (which I tolerated well), in spite of the fact that most of the research focused on prevention of initial breast cancer rather than prevention of recurrence. My onc and others I consulted thought SERM treatment would be "adequate"; I was given several reasons for not taking tamoxifen--some of which I don't even remember now (embarassing to admit). Of course, I now have been advised that I should start Tamoxifen after I finish chemo. I try not to second guess past care decisions, but, of course, there are times when I do.

    I hope my above report has not been too detailed! And I hope that you will be able to tolerate "well enough" the aromasin--and have good results with it. I will continue to check in here to see how you are.

     Also, Elizabeth, I appreciate your post. I think some of the posts to the recurrence/mets section could have been construed as insensitive, but not everyone thinks about their impact on others when in distress. I think most of us gain more wisdom and are more aware of our impact on others by going through this cancer experience and connecting with others, but initially it can be very hard for some to look outside themselves. (I am hopeful that most do learn....) I'm glad you are willing to post here! And I hope your care is going well.

  • Brendatrue
    Brendatrue Member Posts: 1,830
    edited March 2009

    Just checking in....Darya, whoever is viewing here. Just had my 2nd TC, followed up with the neulasta, hoping I won't be debilitated for 2 weeks this time. Hoping all are caring for themselves as well as we wish for/support each other.

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