Postcard from the edge...of eleven years out...
There are three drawers in my house, all in different rooms, that I avoid whenever possible. The first is the mandatory kitchen junk drawer which contains instruction pamphlets for appliances I haven't owned in years, every vet prescription for animals long since buried in the back yard, chop sticks from a Chinese takeout a mile from home, random strings, coupons for food dated April 2003, an impressive number of wine corks, rotten rubber bands that snap when you use em, assorted and sordid barbecue skewers,-- and the rubble is piled so high it catches on the drawer on top of it.
The second drawer that is a total disgrace is one of the drawers in my night stand where the leftover expired pain medication from the 17 surgeries I had after diagnosis reside, many vials of dry eye stuff tried out during a taxotear outbreak that are dangerously outdated, some odd brown sticky stuff in one corner of the bottom that I hope is spilled coffee, 4 pairs of reading glasses in stages of disintegration, and, inexplicably, a petrified pizza crust.
But the frightening drawer is the bottom one of my computer desk, hard to get to since the shelf with the computer obscures it and it's way down at the bottom, never sees lamplight. Here is where those registers reside that always come with your new checkbook order and are obsolete now thanks to on line banking, and years of photos and newspaper clippings from when my kids scored soccer goals in third grade that I have tossed in there, saving for a photo album for my kids one day at Christmas before they turn 40. Worst of all I have known for some time, underneath everything, my path reports reside.Since I had a surgical biopsy initially, then two lumpectomies without clean margins and then a mastectomy, there are a number (4) of path reports. Some years ago when I created my statistics for the bottom of my posts here, I grabbed the final path report on my mastectomy and recorded the 5 cm etc. mentioned in that report, then stuffed the crumpled paper back under the checkbook bones. Recently I took the whole collection out, thinking I would understand the mystery of those path reports better now, and hoping by reading them in the light of day they would stop that throbbing they do in the corner of my drawer. Welp, I soon realized yesterday I need to add together the various chunks of my tumor from the four times it was excised, and when I did it came out to over 9 cm. Too, I reread the part about the Ki-67, the part that said 75%. I got out one of my pairs of the disintegrating reading glasses to make sure it didn't say 7.5% Nope, it didn't, there was not a trace of a decimal in that sucker. So that is a big mother Ki-67, a bad prognostic feature. Glad I did not appreciate that 11 years ago.
When I read here about somebody with a "worse" bc than mine (whatever that really means), it gives me hope even when my rational brain knows it is irrelevant since we are all different, and one person surviving a bad aggressive nasty tumor does not mean you will. However, despite this dichotomy of thought, I pass this brave foray on to you, that I have taken on my path reports and will be soon amending my statistics at the bottom of my posts.That I dodged a big one and hope you do too. That I have broken most of the rules for having a favorable outcome. That I still feel well. That I still have days when I wig out about all of this.Love to all, Weesa
Comments
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Congrats on 11 years!!! Love your post!!! -
So happy for you Weeza! Do you write a blog? If you don't, you should! This is another of your posts that is going into my favorites! Continued bullet dodging to you and the rest of us!
Kelli -
Weesa, I loved reading your post (if for no other reason than to learn that I'm not the only one who hasn't cleaned her junk drawer for a decade). Your BC story is an inspiration for all of us - thank you for sharing. Congratulations! -
inspirational...funny.. and very easy to relate to.
thank you -
Weeza
Congratulations on 11 years! Your post is so inspiring!
(((The Mods))) -
Weesa- What a wonderful contemplation on your 11-year survival. Clever, funny, relatable, and inspiring.
Congrats on 11 years and toasting you for the next 11!! -
Weesa - Woohoo on being 11 years out from diagnosis!!! Here's to a favorable outcome for many, many, many years to come. Thanks for coming back each year. Posts like this give us all hope! -
Love, love, love all your wonderfully inspiring and funny posts, Weesa. I've honestly never seen any of the movies, but why does Bridget Jones Diary come to mind? I'm sure she was not nearly as funny and inspirational in that "dodged a bullet" way that you are! Please keep us laughing, keep us inspired, and keep dodging, baby!
Love
Spunky -
I read your postcard from 10yrs out the last time and when I saw this it was the first thread I opened...love love love your posts! I agree, blogging is for you!
congrats wessa! and thank you for all the hope you give us newbies
wishing you years and years of junk collecting -
Love it!! My vote is a blog too..you have an amazing talent for writing! You also have a huge heart as shown by you coming back to encourage all of us...thank you so very much. You will never know how many dark and frightening moments your words have helped easier. We all love having a sister that is further ahead and "calls back" to us....to lets us know this journey holds hope! -
Yay Weesa!! I loved seeing your post!! It made me smile and brought tears to my eyes at the same time.
So happy that you continue to be well.
We look forward to many more postcards from the edge!!
Hugs,
Lexi -
So happy for you Weeza! Congratulations! loved your posting. Touch wood for many many years of healthy and happy life for you, me and all the ladies on the board. Shout out Hurray!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! -
I too have one of those draws where my pathology report quietly lurks. I cannot re read that terrifying chapter of my life.
Maybe one day! Loved your post and congratulations on 11 years! -
Weesa....thanks again for a fun and edifying post. I agree that a good slouchfest beats cleaning out a junk drawer any day. I would join you right now, but it's 7 AM.....a trifle early.
Under my bed was that bad earlier this year....not sure why I finally tackled it.
Anyway thanks for the update, and yes I will toast you the next time I am at the wine bar! - Claire -
Thanks for stopping by. -
Weesa, Woman you definitely have a gift with words. You should write book! As Lexi ssiad it so good to all be well together! -
Wessa ...thanks so much ........I have happy tears in my eye ......Thanks so much for sharing ...Love reading positive story . -
Weesa....
You rock!!! I can only hope that I can continue to follow close behind you in your good fortune.
You give us all hope which is a beautiful thing!
Jacqueline -
Hi weesa! I love that you are checking in with us. The emotion and wisdom within your words really resonated with me, all while I was inwardly chuckling at the list of the drawer contents. I've got very similar contents, right down to the deteriorating rubber bands. Our histories really do reside in our junk! Sort of an archeological find. Your post really was fantastic. I'm so happy for you. May we continue to be healthy and share the good news when we can. Hugs to you! G. -
Weesa you kick ass!
I have "buried" my obsessive logs from my initial treatment days (anyone else have a binder with multiple business card holders for the docs in it?) and rarely take the time to look back at all the scary statistics. And that's what we all have to remember. We ARE NOT a statistic.
Don't get me wrong, you all know from my past rants, I get on the woe is me train and freak out about the what ifs. DAMN it , it's PTSD and until someone professional agrees with me I'm gonna shout it from the roof tops. How else is someone who has had their bodies invaded,mutilated the way we have and had to endure the magnitude of poisons (tx's) we've had to? I am happy for those of you who can go on an push it behind you. I do it every day. But it's still there.
11 years is A-M-AZING Weesa, and I feel blessed to have you and all of you ladies (and menin my life. If it wasn't for this crappy disease I wouldn't have met you all now would I?
Love,
Sharon -
My gosh, Weesa - has it really been a YEAR since your 10-year postcard?! I opened this new postcard up with complete delight today and was not disappointed. Strangely enough, just last Sunday I felt the need to rummage through my treatment folder from 7 years ago and found the clumsily handwritten list of medications with dates and times for each. I was able to re-tell my story by paging through it, and was once again flabbergasted by what I was able to endure - and survive.
All my best wishes go out to you...a true master of words!
Julie
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Hi Julie....gave you a wave last July as I cycled through Kelso on my way to Portland! Lovely to see everyone who is thriving on the other end. - Claire -
Hello there
you had me at the drawer!
I had a friend who made me start a "binder"! It's lonely being a stage 3 person. i have passed both my 6 years anniversaries on both treatment and diagnosis as I know I know weirdly this classification "matters" but as many of us don't feel "good " or at at ease anyway! but at last my binder is in the basement. take care and love to all -
tuffgirl - Hugs to you and congratulations on the 6 year milestones. G. -
Great post! Do you write for a living? If not, you should. Write a book, and I promise to buy it. Congratulations.
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