MIDDLE-AGED WOMEN 40-60ish

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  • elimar86861
    elimar86861 Member Posts: 7,416
    edited July 2011

    jenn3,  I think you are probably right about your daughter.  She does not want to acknowledge that you are different now, she wants you to do everything the same as before as part of her own denial.  Poor thing, it's a defense mechanism because she is having a hard time dealing with it.

    I've also read about where the kids pull away and don't want you to do anything for them, become ultra independent.  Like they are rehearsing for the day you will no longer be there.  You are right about family members being in pain too.

  • barbe1958
    barbe1958 Member Posts: 19,757
    edited July 2011

    My parents are both gone, my Dad having died of lung cancer just 3 years before I was diagnosed with breast cancer. I didn't want to upset everyone, so I really down played my situation. To my kids too!!! Everyone took it all in stride and took their signals off me. I think I should have played my hand a little harder and gotten some compassion....sigh. To eveyone else, it's over.

  • elimar86861
    elimar86861 Member Posts: 7,416
    edited July 2011

    There is only one acknowledgement I can think of that my kids make regarding my B/C now.  I they drive me in their cars somewhere, I say, "Put the air on."  First they say, "It's not that hot with the windows down."  Then I remind them that the Tamox. makes me uncomfortable in the heat and they reluctantly switch the air on.  <<Winning?>>

  • YaYa5
    YaYa5 Member Posts: 667
    edited July 2011

    oh, thank you so much, everyone!!  it's good to know i'm not alone in that part of this journey either. my daughter's pregnancy is effecting her, i'm sure, but come on.  this is her second child and she makes a point about how hard it is for her and even said once, 'you picked a great time to get cancer' because i might not be able to help her when she has the baby.  she might be scared about the cancer, but she could at least display a little compassion/respect.  ugh.  maybe i'm just expecting too much.

  • LovesChristmas-Barb
    LovesChristmas-Barb Member Posts: 706
    edited July 2011

    My daughter is 24 and an ICU nurse and she just plain doesn't want to talk about it because I know it scares her to death. She sees so many children dying of cancer and knows how difficult it can be. My teenage boys, I think, are just embarassed to talk about it with me plus they're afraid too. My almost 19 year old son is at that stage of pulling away and it's been difficult but I know that part of it is that he just doesn't want to think about the possibility of me being gone.

    I must admit that the comment your daughter made about picking a great time to get cancer would bother me too but I guess it just shows how much even our young adult children still depend on us for support and they're afraid we won't be there for them.

  • Raj20
    Raj20 Member Posts: 1,112
    edited July 2011

    Hi ! Barb58 !  very sad to  know about the views of your children on  Cancer. You know my children  have openly accepted me with BC. I got  full support  to fight with BC during  the entire period of my treatment... they act as my backbone..that is why  I could easily  past  6 years  till now  without having  any worry for my future.  though I knew  dead is inevitable for each and everyone  .. so tell them not to worry and scared  with Cancer.. as  these days medical sciences  are   advance tremendously with    invention of new medicins, new technic  of treatment  so & so...   so  we should be proud to be one under trial  with the desease. No matter  what  we struggle .. I feel good  to undergo these experiences in my life if I am not wrong.

  • Raj20
    Raj20 Member Posts: 1,112
    edited July 2011
    This is for  all of you !  Have a good day !
  • janinnj
    janinnj Member Posts: 89
    edited July 2011

    mjb- hope the fluid does not return.

    Three weeks post chemo and the facial hair has not returned.  My brother used to call me Frito Bandito when he was feeling mean because I had a fuzzy upper lip until I started waxing.

    I had my sim for rads today will start treatment on Monday.

    YaYa- Wonderful about all your scans coming out clear.  I have 2 daughters and they reacted very differently.  My oldest (32) waited with my husbad through surgery went to several Docotrs appointments with me when her schedule allowed.  She calls almost everyday to check on me.  The youngewr one (27) calls when she needs something and doesn't ask how I am but, I think she is happy when I tell her how things anyway.  I know it hurts when the ones you expect support from don't show it.  My DH really tries to be there for me but he just never seems to know what I need and I guess I expect him to be able to read my mind after all these years.

  • Paula66
    Paula66 Member Posts: 1,728
    edited July 2011

    YAYA  Im sorry that this is gong on.  I sometimes think people are scared and dont know what to say or do.  My son wouldnt talk much to me about it.  The day of my surgry he didnt want to go.  He did give me a hug that will last a life time.  He stayed at a freinds house while I was in the hospital.  She did tell me you could see he was scared for me.  When I came home they all rallid around me with so much love.   Yaya, I think this is something that will have to take time! 

    mbj I hope it all works out for youl

  • marlegal
    marlegal Member Posts: 2,264
    edited July 2011

    I'm probably 7 or 8 pages back at this point and wish I could say I'd read back, but I know me ... I won't. Caught on the subject at hand ... I was so lucky that hub (jsut the two of us at home) did a 360 during tx and was wonderful. Our girls reacted in diff ways (26 and 27, both on their own), the one that got me was my sister. She sucked at support! We're very close and whenever I'd try to share my fears with her - the only one I'd do that with - she'd give me about 10 seconds and then ask "Are you always going to do this?" So I stopped totally. Then she called me a few weeks later and admitted that she jsut couldn't bear the thought of losing me and that if she let me talk about it, it might be real, etc. etc. If a 56 yr old woman couldn't deal, how can we expect our young children to?  On the other hand, maybe if we stopped treating it as "C A N C E R" and tried to act like it was "just" a heart attack, or maybe a disk surgery, or any of those other things that also have the potential to kill, but are treated in the mainstream as commonplace, people might react differently.  I mean, you don't hear about someone "surviving" an angioplasty. Why not?

    Sorry, didn't mean to go off, but that really is how I feel sometimes .. I wish the person who started the whole "cancer survivor" thing could tell me why they used that phrase! I j

  • marlegal
    marlegal Member Posts: 2,264
    edited July 2011

    P.S.  Please - to those who, like me at times, wear the survivor banner proudly, don't take offense at my prior post!!!

  • cindyjane
    cindyjane Member Posts: 3
    edited July 2011

    Thank you all for the encouraging words.....I have days I've had it with numb fingers and toes and chemo brain which has me in a fog.  Today, I joined a fitness club hoping that will help me in feeling better.  I know I will enjoy this group and knowing I'm not alone with my feelings is helpful in my recovery.  Thanks again and my God bless you in your time of need.

  • cindyjane
    cindyjane Member Posts: 3
    edited July 2011

    Thank you all for the encouraging words.....I have days I've had it with numb fingers and toes and chemo brain which has me in a fog.  Today, I joined a fitness club hoping that will help me in feeling better.  I know I will enjoy this group and knowing I'm not alone with my feelings is helpful in my recovery.  Thanks again and my God bless you in your time of need.

  • cmbear
    cmbear Member Posts: 1,086
    edited July 2011

    I have two teenage sons. My 19 year old is like a brick wall "Mom, that's really too much info for me" ----and he wants to go in the medical profession. I love my son but he has the empathy of a rock(learned that from DH)---told him he might consider law school instead. My 15 year old is oblivious to the world--if it doesn't have a video game about it, he's not interested. He is great for giving hugs, he seems to know when I am at my worst and comes and gives me a very gentle hug. Two totally different kids.

    Lynniea--how did your doctor visit go? Thinking of you!

  • elimar86861
    elimar86861 Member Posts: 7,416
    edited July 2011
    cmblastic, You have started my day off right...ROFL.  Love how you directed #1 son to law school.  And do you mean to tell me there isn't a video game about cancer yet?  Well, that's an oversight and potential goldmine, dontcha think?
  • janinnj
    janinnj Member Posts: 89
    edited July 2011

    Okay a video game about cancer.  The villains would be side effects, infections, etc.  The heros surgery, chemo and rads, but how do we portray these ugly thing as heros?

  • jo1955
    jo1955 Member Posts: 8,543
    edited July 2011

    Okay Miiddies - Here is the weekend mystery pic.  Thought I would get an early start as I may not be on here much tomorrow.

     

  • BarbaraA
    BarbaraA Member Posts: 7,378
    edited July 2011
  • Sherryc
    Sherryc Member Posts: 5,938
    edited July 2011

    a piece of thread

  • elimar86861
    elimar86861 Member Posts: 7,416
    edited July 2011

    That is a really hard one!  Is it a chicken butt?  Dryer lint?

  • sheila888
    sheila888 Member Posts: 25,634
    edited July 2011
  • leisaparis
    leisaparis Member Posts: 587
    edited July 2011

    hamster hair ????

  • Teka
    Teka Member Posts: 10,052
    edited February 2012
  • shells43
    shells43 Member Posts: 1,022
    edited July 2011
  • carollynn79
    carollynn79 Member Posts: 654
    edited July 2011
  • reesie
    reesie Member Posts: 2,078
    edited July 2011
  • heartnsoul76
    heartnsoul76 Member Posts: 1,648
    edited July 2011
  • Hipline
    Hipline Member Posts: 195
    edited July 2011

    Wish it was ice cream!

  • lynniea
    lynniea Member Posts: 611
    edited July 2011

     Hi ladies great news the cancer is gone put three small dots showed up in MRI the Dr seems to think it is nothing.  I have surgury on the 27 of July.  God took care of the cancer and he sure can take care of the three small dot's.

  • Paula66
    Paula66 Member Posts: 1,728
    edited July 2011

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