Exercise - Working Back to it After or During Treatment

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  • TarheelMichelle
    TarheelMichelle Member Posts: 871
    edited December 2013

    TwoHobbies, so happy your key story had a happy ending. My DH and son bought me a gadget that helps me track my keys so I'll never lose them. It ties in to an iPhone app. Called Proximo. 

    Gritgirl don't overdo it! (You are inspiring me, however) 

  • MaraUK
    MaraUK Member Posts: 147
    edited December 2013

    oh two hobbies so glad you  found  your keys you had me really worried. I hope you had a great holiday

    Gritgirl does opening presents count as exercise?

    Mara

  • gonegirl
    gonegirl Member Posts: 1,871
    edited December 2013

    mara. The more presents to open, the better. I'm on a yoga break, thank god. I need the rest. :-)

  • TwoHobbies
    TwoHobbies Member Posts: 2,118
    edited December 2013

    Rest days are good and necessary I believe.  I seem to take two or three days off to recover from one of a lot of exercise.  Christmas Eve I walked but Christmas and yesterday I did nothing.  I didn't even get out of my PJs or shower yesterday.  But today I took my dog for a walk and ran the snowblower both.  Now I'll probably be a slack all weekend again. 

  • Warrior_Woman
    Warrior_Woman Member Posts: 1,274
    edited December 2013

    I cannot believe it.  Prior to my BMX a month ago I ran 5 miles a day. For the past month I either sat on my butt or walked on an incline for an hour. My surgeon told me that beginning today I can start running again - with or without a bra depending on my comfort. My plan is to go out on the trail, start walking, break into a short run, see how I feel and do a walk / run of some sort. I'm frankly surprised that she said to get started so soon but my body is eager to get going. If you don't hear back from me, send in the Mounties!  

  • gonegirl
    gonegirl Member Posts: 1,871
    edited December 2013

    warrior woman. Good luck and be gentle with yourself. Tonight is yoga again. Thank god it's a gentle class

  • Claire_in_Seattle
    Claire_in_Seattle Member Posts: 4,570
    edited December 2013

    Warrior woman....you will most likely do just fine.  I cheered a lady on earlier this year as she ran throughout chemo.  She was bummed that she only came in THIRD in her age group when she did a 5k towards the end.  She is not running at the moment, but working up to 10 mile walks with her dogs post exchange surgery.  She is in her late 60s.

    She did all the dog trials over the summer.  Had some not fun days, but she was fine doing them all.  I think her dog caught on so she did splendidly.

    I cycled throughout chemo.  Again, some not fun days.  But I think it really helped.  Let us know how your run went. - Claire

  • Warrior_Woman
    Warrior_Woman Member Posts: 1,274
    edited December 2013

    gritgirl - Thank you  and happy New Year.

    Claire - I always ran with my dog.  We are so well synchronized.  My dog clearly misses it.  I'm going to give it a try alone today and then take her with me next time if I think I can.  

    This is inspiring!

  • MaraUK
    MaraUK Member Posts: 147
    edited December 2013

    Happy New Year gritgirl and everyone 

    Thank you all for helping me get through a difficult first year.

    My new year  resolution will not be more exercise or diet this year.  I just intend to make the most of everyday I have, Thats one thing this year has taught me.

    I will raise a glass at my midnight to all my brave friends.

    Mara x

  • Warrior_Woman
    Warrior_Woman Member Posts: 1,274
    edited December 2013

    I'm not here to brag or anything but guess what?   First run: DISTANCE 5.79mi, DURATION 1:10:46, AVG PACE 12:13. Making a come back and bragging about it!  I hope I don't pay for this later but I felt fine the entire time.

  • gonegirl
    gonegirl Member Posts: 1,871
    edited December 2013

    warrior woman. Good for you.

    Mara. Good to see you. Hope the new year festivities are good.

    I am home for the night. Had a treatment yesterday and worked today. I am exhausted. Maybe a movie tomorrow. Certainly rest.

    One good thing about working today was got my steps in.

    May all of us have a much better 2014

  • Ginger48
    Ginger48 Member Posts: 1,978
    edited January 2014

    Happy New Year!

  • Warrior_Woman
    Warrior_Woman Member Posts: 1,274
    edited January 2014

    Happy New Year with lots of health and fitness everyone! 

  • MaraUK
    MaraUK Member Posts: 147
    edited January 2014

    hi gritgirl

    No getting out here we have continuous high wind and rain. How's the snow storms  your side of the ocean.

    I am busy clearing the loft with dh ready for our move later this year.   Good job its later because I had know idea  how much  stuff we had shoved up there. It fun and sad finding good memories.

    Mara x

  • curveball
    curveball Member Posts: 3,040
    edited January 2014

    The weather is pretty nice here (for January) but I had my first infusion of Zometa on Tuesday and it really flattened me. My temperature went over 101 the next day, so when I called the consulting nurse I was told to go to ER. After about 4 hours they decided I did not have the flu or a raging infection and sent me home again. It was by then after ten at night and I was so pooped I went right to bed and didn't bother to fix any dinner. Yesterday was another low day, and today I feel nearly normal again except weak & wobbly, so my exercise is going to be shopping and laundry and change the sheets, which is about all I'm fit for now. I really feel like any gains I made during the summer and fall have gone right down the tubes since I started the taxol. I had a CT yesterday and will get the results next week. I sure hope I haven't lost my hair and the little stamina I had built up all for nothing.

  • gonegirl
    gonegirl Member Posts: 1,871
    edited January 2014

    oh, curve ball, I am so sorry. Praying for you on the ct. I know how you feel. I've had several cancer crabby days myself. Days like that I do my best to focus on anything I'm grateful for. Today I'm grateful for my anti nausea med.

    Mara. It is very cold here, and snow. Staying inside today. Did join health club with friend. Saturdays we do 20 minutes on treadmill and 20 minutes doing weights. Knocking on wood we do that. I do better if others expect me to show up.

    Hope everyone has a good weekend. And remember. Rolling over in bed counts.

  • TwoHobbies
    TwoHobbies Member Posts: 2,118
    edited January 2014

    Happy New Year, all.   Curveball and Gritgirl I'm sorry you're in sucky chemoland.   My exercise has been shoveling snow and blowing snow as we had constant snow for three days.  Mara, we had 18 inches and already had about 5 or 6 on the ground.  Next we're going into freezing cold where the high is supposed to be -10.   I will not be walking in that! 

  • curveball
    curveball Member Posts: 3,040
    edited January 2014

    Heeeheee TwoHobbies, sucky chemoland sounds like somewhere that should have a ZIP code.  I can just see it on an envelope:

    curveball,
    22 Taxol St,
    Sucky, CH(emoland) 99989.

    Well, I've done most of my "exercise" (shopping and laundry) for today and don't feel too conked out. In fact I think I feel better than when I got up this morning. Maybe I was still running on fumes from not having eaten enough the last couple of days and now that I've topped off the old fuel tank I am back in business, sort of. But I'm not going to push myself. I'll just throw the last load of laundry in the dryer (I am sooooooo glad I can finally do laundry without a long drive before and after), then call my mom to say happy new year and ask her how to clean pillows. After that I'm gonna kick back and watch another of the videos I checked out of the library for New Years.

  • Warrior_Woman
    Warrior_Woman Member Posts: 1,274
    edited January 2014

    I swore to my husband I couldn't shovel because of my surgery but then I went and pushed some around.  It wasn't too bad.  I may be ready to start lifting light weights at the gym.

    GritGirl - I like gyms more than working out at home.  I prefer running outside on trails the most but when the weather isn't right the gym is a good option.  I do get bored there so if I'm not terribly motivated I will bring my Kindle or watch TV.  Years ago I went with friends and it was a social event making it more fun.

    I'm starting chemo shortly and it will be important that I keep moving.  I have made such great progress in my recovery and I refuse to let the chemo kick me back down.

  • RhodyMMM
    RhodyMMM Member Posts: 455
    edited January 2014

    Love the Chemoland address but would add to it for me:

    Rhody,
    12 Taxol St,  Apt. A/C (Adriamycin and Cytoxan)
    Sucky, CH(emoland) 99989.

    I had Adriamycin(red devil) and Cytoxan before the Taxol and thought the red devil was gonna do me in. But the Taxol seems worse..or I guess just different. I am so ready to add some exercise but keep feeling like I have too many setbacks....knee trouble that won't heal since September (I think the chemo won't let it heal...everytime it starts to feel better my blood counts drop and it gets worse again). Myalgias and neuropathy now from the Taxol. No endurance from continued low hemoglobin......whine, whine, whine!

    GritGirl, if rolling over in bed counts as exercise then I am all set for the weekend! Had Decadron with my chemo yesterday so didn't sleep last night. Up since 4 am. Back and forth all night. Thought I was having night sweats but maybe I was sweating from all the exercise!

    I do get a fair amount of upper body exercise....doing the regimen that my physical therapist gives me. Upper body for flexibility post-op, strengthening, and lymphedema prevention. Trying to get some walking in too when the knee is not so bad.

    TwoHobbies.....where are you? Your weather sounds like mine, although we did not get quite as much snow here. Projected high for Tuesday is also sub-zero. But 40's and sunny today and tomorrow so I will try to get out and enjoy while I can!

    Martha

  • TwoHobbies
    TwoHobbies Member Posts: 2,118
    edited January 2014

    And if chemo gets really bad, unfortunately you vacation in Chemohell, which is when you go even farther south of Sucky, Chemoland.  That's where I was much of the summer. 

    Curveball I forgot to mention I had an incident with the fever once too and I never got any kind of sickness.  I think it was my body reacting to the chemo.  Of course they don't know that when you present with the fever.  I had missed one dose of steroid so I wonder if that had anything to do with it. 

    Warriorwoman fantastic that you can get a run in, but if you don't feel like it when you start chemo, well it just is that way sometimes and you have to adjust your expectations. 

    Rhody I'm in Chicago.   Today it is pretty pleasant so I'm going out to walk my dog after lunch.  Tomorrow and Monday are supposed to be extremely cold - like the high will be -10.  Yes minus 10.  So this is my last chance for exercise outside for a few days.   

  • Warrior_Woman
    Warrior_Woman Member Posts: 1,274
    edited January 2014

    TwoHobbies - If it is only taking a walk for 20 minutes a day I will keep moving.  Something happens when I miss too much exercise.  I feel weaker and more vulnerable to illness.  

    I had to cancel a trip to Morocco.  We'd be there now but I got cancer.  Somehow Chemoland is a poor substitute.  I wouldn't want to work for the marketing department and have to design the brochure.  While visiting you can stay at the Hotel California.  

  • curveball
    curveball Member Posts: 3,040
    edited January 2014

    @TwoHobbies, I spent a couple of weeks last winter in Hell, Chemoland. There's a Hell in California and another one in Michigan, not to mention Hell, Grand Cayman Island, so why not Hell, Chemoland? I wouldn't call it a vacation though! I ended up in the hospital with a toxic reaction to one of my meds and actually had to be knocked out and ventilated overnight because my blood oxygen was so low from all the gunk in my lungs. It was definitely no picnic. That started off with a fever too, but it didn't go back down by itself. This time around, they took a chest Xray of me at the ER and said I might have just a touch of pneumonia. I have a sneaking suspicion that vulnerable lungs may run in my family. I've seen the death certificates of a number of my ancestors in the course of genealogical research and quite a number of them on both sides were carried off by tuberculosis.

    Is Zolodex the same thing as Zometa (i.e. zolendronic acid—a bone booster)?

  • TwoHobbies
    TwoHobbies Member Posts: 2,118
    edited January 2014

    Curveball, that did not sound like fun.  I can see why they watch you closely on the fever.  Zoladex is ovary suppression (goserelin).  Since tamoxifen failed me, I have to suppress or remove my ovaries to go on an AI.  Its funny you say that though because when I was getting my first shot, the nurse said I have your Zoladex and I said, oh did my dexa scan come back bad?  I thought it was the bone drug.  Those names are too close. 

    Warrior, that's horrible you had to cancel your vacation.  I had been planning a 20th anniversary trip when I found out.  Luckily I hadn't gotten as far as booking it, and I just took it after treatment.  So hopefully you can pick it up later. 

    Vacation in chemoland/chemohell.  That would be a hard one to market.  Do you have a gourmet restaurant?  Oh, you won't be able to taste it or keep the food down.  Do you have a spa?  No but you can sit in a reclining chemo chair and we'll bring you a heating pad for your painful IV.  Beauty salon?  Oh no dear, you won't have any eyelashes, eyebrows or hair so you won't need that.  Sports?  Getting out of bed will be sport enough.  Beach?  Oh yes you'll  bitch.  Oh you said Beach.  No none of that either.   

  • curveball
    curveball Member Posts: 3,040
    edited January 2014

    I can think of a slogan for our marketing campaign: Chemoland—a trip you'll never forget*!

    Now I am just being silly. I got more minor chores done today, but I think I may have overdone it, so I'm going to be a real slacker tomorrow. Church, a few items to pick up at the grocery on the way home, and that's it. I don't know whether I have chemo fatigue, in which case taking it easy won't really relieve it, or if I'm actually getting over a slight illness or reaction to that new med, in which case it might make matters worse if I keep going in spite of feeling tired.

    *unless you experience cognitive side effects during or after your stay

  • MaraUK
    MaraUK Member Posts: 147
    edited January 2014

    hi gritgirl your snow looks awful.stay save everyone. 

    Curveball can you get out of  the  door. That's one heck of a lot of snow it just keeps raining  here. Really miserable looking forward to a real crisp day so we can go for a walk. 

    Mara x

  • curveball
    curveball Member Posts: 3,040
    edited January 2014

    @MaraUK, I can get out of the door easy-peasy. Actually the climate where I live is rather similar to the southern parts of the UK. It's cool and cloudy in the winter, and rains much more often than it snows. When it does snow, the amount is usually measured in inches rather than feet, except up in the mountains.  In 2008 we did have a crazy storm where it snowed on top of the snow and then snowed some more, with record low temperatures that prevented the snow from melting. But even in 2008, I could get my door open.

  • gonegirl
    gonegirl Member Posts: 1,871
    edited January 2014

    mara. My family lives in the Midwest in the US so they are getting the worst of the winter. In Washington DC we contend more with heat and humidity which I've never gotten used to. In Wisconsin the winters are horrible but the summers beautiful. I miss that. 

    I did get some exercise yesterday. Health club with a friend. Mostly there to use weight machines. Wouldn't be there if not for friend. Used to take aerobics classes but that was years ago. Now I'll concentrate on what is realistic for me, more walking.

  • Sunshower
    Sunshower Member Posts: 43
    edited January 2014

    hi everyone! I've been reading your posts...I wish I loved exercising. I never have. I eat healthy so I don't have issues with weight but getting back to, or for that matter, into an exercise routine after surgery has been really daunting. Fortunately, I live in Florida and out weather has been really nice. I started taking my 20 month old daughter out for a walk around our neighborhood 1-2x/ day. We also have a 2-story home so I have to go up and down several times a day and just got cleared to pick up my 23 lbs toddler. I'm glad that I'm getting back to some activity. Hopefully, I can increase it in the next few weeks and months. Ladies...Keep up your good work as little or as much as you can:)

  • curveball
    curveball Member Posts: 3,040
    edited January 2014

    @Sunshower, I have never been athletic or loved exercise either. When I went looking for a retirement house, I deliberately looked for a one that was located so that I could either walk or bicycle to a lot of the places I would need to go in the course of ordinary life, such as the library, bank, post office, grocery store etc. I am at least willing to consider walking to get to some specific destination and back, but very resistant to the idea of walking or biking just to have done a certain amount of exercise. I have been walking a little, although less recently due to the cold weather and re-injuring my back last month. I haven't ridden my bike in quite a while. The first time out last fall, I was pretty wobbly, and decided not to try cycling again until I either find my helmet as I unpack, or decide I didn't pack it and buy a new one. Before I moved here I lived in a townhouse with the main living area on the second floor and bedroom on the third. I did get some exercise going up & down the stairs! My current house is a one-story, so I no longer get that.

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