2012 sisters
Comments
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Lifie, about icing the fingers, my clinic doesn't do it, I think they said it was a trend in the 90's but was found not to work. But they do ice the mouth during Adriamycin. Anyway I will call the nurse line Monday and let them know the numbness is getting worse. I hope they'll do a dosage adjustment or something and I will ask about icing again. It would truly bother me to develop permanent issues in fingertips.
Cowgirl, I hear you about the anger/acceptance cycle. I had a couple weeks of real peace, then I went back into the turmoil. I think grief isn't a linear process, it's circular, and we'll inevitably keep revisting the stages. Hopefully they'll be less over time. That's what I'm counting on at least. So sorry you lost your mom, and having that prominent holiday as a reminder can't be easy. Many years after losing my mom I tried to stop remembering the anniversary of her death and tried instead to remember her on her birthday.
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So, I've had my head shaved (to the scalp) for 2 weeks now and I still have plenty of stubble but also noticeable bare spots. I've been wiping it with a wet rag to get the rest if it off (since it won't grow) but it's not getting the all of it. So I decided to take duct tape to it! It got so much more but I ran out of tape. Lol.
Hope all of you in Sandys path are hunkering down ok. Been through hurricanes all my life so I'm thinking of you all!!! -
On another note, am I the only one that constantly thinks of cancer being elsewhere in my body and I don't know about it? How will I ever know if I have ovarian, kidney, liver, etc cancer?!?!? I only had one lump that made me demand a MRI and that lump was high grade DCIS. It was another mass that had no lump and was against my chest muscle that wa full blown cancer. I would have never known it was there had I not investigated the DCIS lump. The waiting to have symptoms theory is really bothersome to me.
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Ann, here at the Cancer Agency in Victoria, BC, icing of the hands is standard procedure for Taxol and Taxotere, both of whom are notorious for causing neuropathy. I am just sorry I did not ice my toes too, because it definitely worked for my fingers. Hope you can work something out. Here patients are supplied with iced mittens for their hands, and some people bring big frozen bags of peas from Costco to dig their toes into.
Cowgirl, you will get your mojo back eventually. So sorry to hear about your mom. Halloween is always going to be hard for you; maybe remember her on her birthday instead like somebody else suggested here. My mom is in a care facility. She has a slow growing brain tumour which is taking her away from us little by little. I will see her in December, but she is not recognizing my siblings any more. She's not going to know me at all, because my appearance has totally changed from a dark bob to very short, snow white hair. It is so hard that she is going like this, because my dad had Alzheimers, and we also lost him long before he passed away. Such is life, and we have to come to grips with these things, but it is not easy.
Tazzy, that wall that fell down sounds a little weird. Maybe it is better at detecting tremors than us humans? LOL. I still cannot believe that the quake was felt in Edmonton, but we felt nothing on the island just a couple of hundred kms south. Does not make sense to me, but hey, I'm no expert either.
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MrsCich, I have exactly the same problem with waiting for symptoms, and I often wonder if there were some escapee cancer cells that were not caught by chemo or radiation. I raised this concern with my onc on Friday. He told me that I had been so positive all this time, that I had to stick with that, and that my prognosis was excellent. As far as catching mets in other organs, he said that I am now in the hands of my family dr, and that I should get a mammogram once a year. This did not sound very reassuring to me at all to say the least. My take is that you should not have to wait until something is wrong, but that scans and tests should be done from time to time to see if everything is still okay. I mean, we did have cancer, did we not?
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Mrscich. Try a lint roller... The tape ones. That's what I used. It worked really well. ;-)
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Dear ANN, thank you for the great advice. I love that, but never even thought about it! And yes, I agree with you 100%. Grief is circular. And with this stinking disease, there's always something that tries to pull us into turmoil. I try real hard to put on a happy face but there are some days you just want to scream.
MRSCICH, I can just see you with your duct tape and I busted up laughing.. It reminded me of the time I tried to wax my legs with the stuff. I also wonder how to be proactive to keep this sneaky devil from coming back. I just have not had much time to think about it yet. I would think CT/PET scans and bone scans would be in order but I hear a lot of MO s don't routinely order them. I'd love go hear from our other sisters on this topic.
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Liefie, I agree! I want a pet scan or something. Every ache and pain I know I will be fretting for the rest of my life.
Juneau, I'm gonna try the lint roller! -
Deaf LIEFIE,
Thank you for your kind suggestion too. Same idea that MRSCICH had and it's a good one. I am also sorry you are going thru this with your mom. I completely understand as my mom had Alzheimer's and it was heartbreaking. She lived in California and was stubborn until the end. I tried to get her to move in with me in AZ or move into assisted living, but she viewed that as charity and would have no part of it. She wanted to stay in her own home and do everything herself. Well of course I had to arrange in-home care, but I still worried my butt off. She was a tough old bird who lived to 94 and I miss her dearly.
Night all. Sweet dreams.
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Lifelie/Mrscich. I too hate that no one is saying i will get scans or something. I am so frightened of recurrence as I just don't think I would be able to go through chemo again. It was just too hard emotionally and physically. I can't just go on with life like I did when I had my appendix taken out... I feel like a different person now; well I guess I AM a different person. Facing my mortality, I can't even put into words how different I feel; I just AM...and I HATE IT! I am trying to get my footing as this new person. Progress is slow.
Hugs to you all...and thanks for listening. -
Juneau, yes, we are changed. All I can say to you is that as you get further away from it, it gets much better. I am back to living my life as I had before cancer, and it feels so good. It was like a storm that devastated life as I knew it, but it has blown over, I have picked up most of the pieces, and life goes on. I will never again take my health or life for granted, and I am so grateful for the second chance. It could have been so different. Take care; hopefully Sandy will be tamed by the time she reaches you. Best wishes!
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My ONC said that I will receive a CT chest/abdomen/pelvis once a year for the next 5 years, unless I have a new issue. I will have blood work every 3 mos for the next 5 years.
My GYN was going to put me on a new schedule for paps from every year to every 3 yrs. When the diagnosis came down she nixed that idea so its back to every year. What a bummer.
My PCP who's never had a 35 yr old woman diagnosed with BC before is now telling all his female patients that they need to get a baseline at 35. My PCP has called my GYN to find out why she wanted me to and if that was her common practice.
I really lucked out with all my drs. How many of you have female PS? I thought about going to a female PS but then changed my mind because I figured a male PS is going to give me the shape and size that I want and they will look amazing. I can say that what I have as far as TE placements look awesome. I had a patient tell me that she wished she had my perky boobs and that she knew they couldn't be fake. I really loved that. Made me smile and LOVE my PS that much more. -
Those of you who didn't have a PET/CT scan - did you ask for one? I don't recall if I asked or not - but I got one before my surgery. It felt kind of like standard operating procedure in working with my breast surgeon. Gave me a lot of peace of mind (although I do still get those niggling thoughts about a cell escaping and my chemo not attacking it). Maybe try asking if you haven't already?
Had my papmered chef party today and it was so very nice to see lots of my friends and family. My long time friends who I grew up with not only came from Jersey in the midst of storm preparations, but they brought their moms - who I haven't seen in years. And one of them is a 20 year BC survivor. It was sooooo nice to hug her and chat with her a bit about treatment. Turns out she had AC 20 years ago. Guess some things haven't changed much.
Hope you are all feeling well enough and get a good night of sleep. Stay safe all you ladies in Sandy's path. Preparing for the worst here on LI and hoping for the best. Hugs!!!
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Stay safe all in Sandy's path - thinking of you all. Please check in when you can and let us know you are safe.
Ramols: your party sounds wonderful and so brave of people to head out.
chrisrenee - happy someone made you smile about your boobies.
juneau: hang in there honey - I was speaking with a 3 year survivor and even she said she didn't feel or think she'd ever stop thinking about bc, but she has and she said she only thinks of it now when she has her yearly check ups. You will get there.
Hello to everyone I missed - thinking of you all.
I am part of blind clinical trial (denosumab). Through research they are hoping this drug which is used for osteoporosis can stop mets to bones, of which I have been told I have a (or had) a high chance of my cancer returning to my bones. I will have blood work every 3 months (and the trial (or placebo) injection), a MRI/CT/Bone scan every year. Its why I agreed to the trial - that is for the next 10 years. Well I have the injection for five years and the scans for 10. How could I say no?
hugs and sweet dreams to you all xxxx
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Tazzy how wonderful that you can make plans for the next TEN years.
Charlotte
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Tazzy that is great. I worked for a company that monitors studies for drug studies and I learned how important it is to have these studies and how it could take up to TWENTY years to get a drug on the market! It's the studies that might eradicate this awful disease one day.
Off to radiation before Sandy hits. Have a wonderful minimal SE happy day everyone! -
Good morning
I'm feeling a little like I got hit from behind yesterday. From feeling not too bad post Taxotere/Herceptin to pretty severe diarrhea and vomiting yesterday, I hadn't anticipated that. Thought the first few days would be the worst. This a.m. I'm nauseated slightly but taking Maxeran. Headachey and blah. Going to get up for a shower now and some Tylenol.
Thinking of all in Sandy's path.
I will look for something to smile about today, hope everyone else can also
Take care -
Websister - sorry to hear you're feeling so icky. That really stinks - especially when you're not expecting it. While I've fortunately been spared nausea from my first taxol/herceptin - day three snuck up on me and whamed me with unexpected exhaustion and a nasty headache. Drove me away from my desk and into bed for most of the day and left me pretty bummed out for a bit. Hopefully you'll start feeling better today. Rest up and take good care of yourself! They'll be a ray of sunshine to smile about at some point...
Stay safe everyone! Sitting at my home office desk looking out the window watching our big giant trees blow something fierce in the wind. Likely gonna head downstairs to safe tree distance in a bit...
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This is my youngest, 4, she wanted to look like mommy!
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This is when I let my girls have fun with shaving my head.
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Mrscich- I love your pictures! What a wonderful way to get them involved with everything going on. If momma is comfortable then the kiddos will be. If I knew how to upload pics on here I would post some of my kiddos. Hope you are doing well today.
christy
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Ramols - thanks, glad you were heading downstairs
MrsCich - you gave me something to smile about todayLoved the pictures!
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MrsCich... your pictures are wonderful. Certainly a smile for today.
websister: hope you feel better soon.
ramols - stay safe, downstairs is a good place to be.
chrisrenee - sometimes you can just copy and paste pictures here. Other times my pics only work if I have them on my desktop or photobucket. click the little tree on the toolbar above and put them on that way.
Stay safe !!
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Morning all,
Hope things are going well. I see a few of you are struggling today so I hope this will cheer you up. I've been laughing my head off the last half hour by looking at YouTube. Laughing is my new fitness routine.
If you Google Jeanne Robertson on YouTube you can see snippets of her comedic speeches. There are quite a few clips to keep you entertained for a while. The woman is hysterical.
Enjoy and have a great day.
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Websister, so sorry that you feel so blah. That's exactly how Taxotere made me feel. It was a feeling that I cannot describe. I wanted to climb out of my body and run away from myself. Could not concentrate to read, had no interest in TV or laptop, had no energy to do anything, and just sat or lay around praying that it would pass soon. Mercifully it did every time after a few days. I was prescribed anti-nausea meds that I took for three days, starting on the day of infusion. Never had diarrhea or vomiting. Maybe it can work for you too.
MrsCich, what a lovely, darling little girl you have, and what a fun way to make this bad thing easier for them. You must be a great parent.
DigCowgirl, good for you to find something funny to laugh about - humour is the best medicine for every ache we have.
Ramols, you be safe now. I'm following Sandy on the Internet, and thinking and praying for all of you who live there.
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liefie... you said it perfectly "climb out of your body and run away from yourself". That is exactly it. But yes, like all SE's they pass.
Digitalcow: thanks for the suggestion on laughs... I will check them out.
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websister & ramols, sorry the SE's are hitting you hard lately. I'm getting the idea that Day 3 seems to be the kicker on Taxol or Taxotere.
Everyone, I found this touching and inspiring article & video in my facebook feed today about a young woman with cancer. I really related to her attitude. I also immediately thought "I can't wait to have that much hair again!" on seeing her picture :-)
http://well.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/10/25/life-interrupted-changed-by-cancer/
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Digital, I love Jeanne Robinson. Thanks for reminding me, I haven't watched anything of hers in a long time.
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Ann - thank you for posting that link. Incredibly inspiring and uplifting. How that rings true for whatever cancer journey we are facing or have faced.
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My hair is falling out. 10 days after my first chemo. So I chopped my hair into a boy cut today. I'll shave later this week. My husband hasnt seen my hair yet. Nor does he know I did it today...he may have a stroke when he gets home.
MrsCich You are not the only one. I am relying on the chemo and rads to kill the cancer I know to be left in my body, let alone any that may be floating around. Ugh.
CrisRenee I have a femle PS. She is wonderful. I looked at several PS when I was contemplating implants about a year ago. I chose a male to do them when I could afford it. Once the cancer and boob removal came I looked at a few PS who do a lot of reconstruction. One was a male and one was female. I talked to the male first, he was negative. He spoke of the risks as if it was more of a probability than a possibility. Said he didnt think he could make me any bigger than I was before (which was depressing), and made me feel bad about wanting to look good. I asked questions about scars and size etc. He said, "I think you have more important things to worry about than that right now". WTF? Can you believe a COSMETIC SURGEON said that? smh
So then the female cam in and was the total opposite. I chose her on the spot.
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