I say yes, you say no, OR People are Strange
Comments
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Sorry girls - the rosemary gravy is a liquid one I buy in a packet - made by Gravox - don't think you have it over there. The blackberry and apple pies are store bought too - made by Nannas.
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Susieq:
No, we don't get that gravy at least not in Canada - guess I'll just make the regular gravy and add rosemary. Thanks,
Sandy
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I'm off to an estate sale, then to see my grandson. Busy weekend. My mother's B/D tomorrow. So if you don't see me around too much, I haven't been banned. hehehehe!
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Hillck - that sounds like a perfect plan. Nothing more heavenly than a room full of puppies.
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Blue............just read your list.................hyserical...........................one funnier then the other.................hugs........................I needed a laugh while trying to decide whether to begin the Femara today, or take my chances..................
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Morning Friends,
Blue .. have fun today, sounds like you have a busy weekend planned. My weekend consists of mowing. Tim is on his way to TX, so I need to amuse myself. Why did I think it was such a good idea to have five acres of land!
Welcome Ang .. I don't cook, but I do love to hear everyone's dinner menu.
Hi Athena!
Hillck .. I think you have the best plans of the day so far. I would love to be in a room full of puppies, surrounding by all that puppy breath!
SusieQ .. dinner sounds great! I've never had lamb before.
That PM thread was kind've fun. I know it got cantankerous, but it was exciting. Guess the mods took Patzee at her request and deleted the entire thread.
Hope everyone has a great day!
hugs to all,
Bren
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Ducky ... it looks like our diagnoses are very similar. I tried Arimidex for one week and quit taking it. I also tried Tamoxifen for six weeks and quit that as well. The SE's of nausea, vomitting and vertigo were too much for me.
I wish you the best in making your decision to take Femara.
hugs,
Bren
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Hi Ducky -- I was in your place re Femara almost 3 years ago, so I sort of know how you're feeling! The very long list of possible side effects is enough to put anyone off. But, since I had an overload of estrogen, I started the drug. Took a few weeks to start feeling the SE's, which consisted mainly of joint aches, especially in my wrists. Oh, and the inevitable spare tire! I'm still a bit creaky, but I joined a health club, kept up my daily walks, changed my diet, upped my intake of VitD3 and I've had good checkups ever since. Will they continue? Nobody knows for sure, but I'll continue Femara for another 2 years.
Of course, everyone is different, and SEs, if they happen to you as they did to Bren, can be overwhelming. But.....you'll never know unless you give Femara a try. Statistics ARE just statistics, but we don't have much else to go by. And, there are some choices if Femara is too tough for you.
Sending you good wishes for a successful relationship with Femara!
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ducky ... I took Femara for 4 years with no problems whatsoever. I did start developing joint problems quickly getting worse during the last 6 months. Smart or not ... only time will tell ... I did quit taking it then and the joint issues went away. Only point being that you might be one of the ones who do just fine on it and you are always in control of whether you keep taking it or not. Really nothing to lose by giving it a try IMO. Good luck with whatever you decide!
If you have some spare time and especially if you like doggies you will find this cute ... and amazing.
http://www.youtube.com/watch_popup?v=EVwlMVYqMu4&vq=medium#t=125
Happy Saturday to everybody!
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Oh Rabbit -- that was just about the funniest thing I've seen all year! Thanks for sharing!
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And I think my dogs are trained because they will sit down for a treat
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Blue....hope you found some fabulous treasures at the estate sell.
Cindy....I can only imagine what would have been said at the water department if you had put that on the memo line.Lol! Puppies! Are you teaching an obedience class?
Bren....I also wish the PM thread was around. It was entertaining. Was it deleted right after the Yiddish posts or did something happen after that?
WhiteRabbit.....Loved the link. I had to share it on my Facebook page. Not sure how they kept the dogs from digging into the bowls and to wait for the food on the fork to eat.
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Belatedly drooling over SusieQ's meal . . . it sounds amazing. Dinner here last night qualified as quick (but delicious): I just seared a tuna steak and had it as a sandwich on a brioche roll (from Trader Joes) with baby lettuce from the garden and lime-cilantro mayo, baked sweet potato wedges on the side. (The lime-cilantro mayo takes maybe a minute to make, just zest and juice a lime into some store-bought mayo and add some chopped cilantro.)
Tonight's extravaganza: canteloupe soup (melon chunks and lime juice pureed in the blender with a little salt, pepper and olive oil), hanger steak, oven "frites" with rosemary, local asparagus, a salad of local greens and strawberry-rhubarb cobbler for dessert. The greens are from an urban farmer who's incredibly sweet and puts together a really unique blend of cultivated and wild greens - including, today, a bonus daylily blossom. (Did anyone else know you could eat those? I sure didn't. He advised me to remove the stamen-thingies and the tough bud at the bottom.)
In addition to doling out flowers and advice, Urban Farmer Man is also, I have to say, very sexy . . . though of course it's the quality of the produce I care about, LOL.
Ducky, on the Femara question . . . will that be the first hormone-suppressing drug you're on, or are you switching from something else? I ask because it doesn't have to be an all or nothing decision. AIs have a slight edge for post-menopausal women, but tamoxifen (which is what I'm on, with no bothersome effects to speak of) is also a pretty damn good drug for ER+.
L
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Trying to pack a bag to head our for DC tomorrow and decided to take a break and catch up.
Everyone who is taking ALs seems to be referring to the 5 year mark we've been lead to believe will end the AL medication. Has anyone recently brought up that 5 year mark with their onc and had a suspicion that he/she might not be sitting on that rock so solid any more? I've taken arimidex for 4 years with the joint, spare tire, sleeplessness and a multitude of other SEs and pretty much just "sucked it up" and plowed on. A few months ago, I had my usual appointment and mentioned that I only had 1 more year to go. After several hemming and hawing grunts he basically said that he was going to keep me on it as long as he could talk me into taking it. He stated that the current study results were over a 5 year period but by the time my 5 years were up that there looked like new data would support the continuation of medication indefinitely (or at least another 5 years). My reaction was mixed, this drug takes the sap out of me but if it's working, it means I may not have that second diagnosis. Just wondered if anyone else had heard anything similar.
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kadeeb: When my onc first Rx'd Femara for me, she told me that the current studies only went up to the 5-yr mark, but suspected that further studies would show advantages to staying on it longer. And if I could cope with the SEs, that's what she would advise...if...There isn't much else in the onc's arsenal to keep away a recurrence, so I understand her saying that. It's totally up to the individual, however. I dislike not getting the benefits of a hormone to which I, as a woman, am entitled! And I also wonder if excess estrogen was really the cause of my BC, or if some family-related misbehaving genes were responsible (my mother with BC, and two sisters with ovarian).Patty: I too wondered how they kept those 2 beautiful canines from consuming the entire contents! Very, very clever video!
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I haven't, Kadeeb, but the thought depresses me. Heck, the thought of switching to an AI from tamoxifen depresses me. My onc hasn't been pushing me to switch - which I think puts me in a minority on this board - and I haven't pushed *to* switch. (One thing I've noticed about my health system is that it's pretty conservative about treatments for early-stage BC. They seem to want to really weigh the evidence before changing protocols. So, no CYP2D6 testing, and a slower timeline for switching chemopausal patients to AIs. I'm personally comfortable with that approach, but realize it would not be right for everyone.) But he has mentioned the possibility of going on an AI after my 5 years of tamoxifen. Blech.
Part of my reaction is emotional - as long as I'm taking that pill every night, I'm still a cancer patient, and dammit, at some point I don't want to be a cancer patient any more! And part of it relates to the SEs (oops, I mistakenly typed SEx just now, shows where my mind is!) of AIs - not just the aches and spare tire, but also bone loss and, yeah, SExual problems.
I would be very, very interested in hearing from others on this.
L
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Rabbit....................Hysterical..............thanks............I really needed that laugh, and I do mean laugh,...............
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I think it has to be decided individually based on our recurrence risk to start with. Risk vs potential benefit.
We also don't know the effects of extreme long term estrogen depletion. We have estrogen for a reason so what else are we messing with when we do without it? Truth is that we are among the first ones to take it so I don't think they have those answers yet.
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Hmm...
I seem to have had one of my posts reported from Alternative/Holistic.
I really don't know which one it was...
My first time-probably not my last.
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Tonight we are having hormone-free beef stew with organic tomatoes, celery, carrots and fingerling potatoes. Heading to our local Italian markey for some divine bread. Then dessert will be cookie dough coconut milk ice cream. I'm making myself hungry!
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Apologies in advance for even worse than usual presentation. writing from phone. on the subject of hormone therapy se.s "don't get me started" as they say. this whole question of hormone therapy is riddled with contradictions, misconceptions and uncertainty....
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Ang7 ... there is a lot of that going on. I got a notice about a report from the PM thread. But it seems to be just single reports. Unless you get a notice that your post has actually been removed it is all a big bunch of nothing. If that happens the mods can fix it. Let them play their silly games IMO.
We do need t-shirts or buttons or something to pass out though ...
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Oh Ang....I'm sorry. Just click your heels three times and say "there's no time like dinner time, there's no time like dinner time..." :-)
I'm completely biased on hormone therapy. I hate it, hate it, hate it, but it does seem to be holding the cancer at bay.
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....it so happens that the data from the famous womens health initiative which made the hrt-breast cancer link and led women to abandon hrt in drovesdid not distinguish between estrogen and progestin in warning against hrt. data showing estrogen-only outcomes was not reported. this data came to light earlier this year -at asco, i believe- showing that the bc risk did NOT pertain to estrogen only....
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Progestin is the culprit?
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lindasa.....I too, have wonder if having an excess amount of estrogen could have been the cause of my BC.
Lewing.....I am on Tamoxifen now, and will be, until I go through menopause. My Onc said at that time he would switch me to another med, can't remember the name of it. Can you please tell me what side effects the Als could cause that you are concerned with. Other than some pretty intense hot flashes from the Tamoxifen I feel fine being on it.
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Athena, I read those reports - and it was the combination ( E&P) that seemed to be the real problem - not the E only.
Kadeeb, re: the 5 yer AI number. I'm nearly at 4 years - go back to my docs at Dana Farber in Boston in August - and, per when I saw them a few months ago, very probably going to continue for more than 5 years seems to be the thinking now. Each case is an individual, but get the sense I will be a long termer on it. Relieved in a strange way, tho don't like the spare tire, tiredness, feel a geater sense of "security" ( stupid word I know, but I also am quite good at denial) taking the stuff.
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Patty, my main concerns about AIs are bone loss (tamoxifen is actually bone protective) and vaginal atrophy/sexual dysfunction. Also the stiffness and achiness that so many women seem to experience while on AIs. Like you, I've had minimal SEs from tamoxifen - hot flashes, sure, but it's hard to say if those are from the tamox or just from menopause generally.
Linda
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Linda, my onco (who is also part of a fairly conservative group) said that she wanted to see me have 2 years of an AI at some point in my treatment. She felt that evidence was strong that there was significant benefit to that (when I use Adjuvant I get a 4% reduction in 10 year recurrance). She didn't care if I did 3 years Tamox and then switched or 5 years Tamox and switched. This summer, after almost 3 years Tamox I hit a wall and just wanted a break from the depression, fatigue, and foggy brain so I agreed to switch (with a month off in between!) I hadn't thought I was having side effects from the Tamox (I just thought is was the whole treatment thing), but all the above did go away! So now I'm 2 weeks into anastrozole. So far so good, but it's still early days. My plan had been to take the 5 years of tamox, then if I hated the AI I would feel ok about not taking it at all. I still have the option of going back to Tamoxifen if this doesn't work out
My personal pet peeve -- saying we are done with "active treatment" when we finish chemo and rads. Taking these damn pills every day is "ACTIVE TREATMENT" I my humble opinion.
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I am at 4 years and have taken 3 different AIs with 3 mons on Tamoxifen but could not deal with break thru bleeding and a D&C at 59. They have all caused joint pain. I am on Femara now and have the joint pain along with bone and muscle pain, fatigue, hot flashes,and .dizziness. Oh and maybe the indigestion is from that too and the tendonitis. I have been on it for 5 months and WILL stop taking it when I see the onc in July. I probably will go back on Aromasin but he's going to have to do some smooth talking to keep me on it for more than another year.
I can not see spending my whole life in pain.
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