Recurrence

Options
3boysmom39
3boysmom39 Member Posts: 54

not really a question, just...do any of you just know it will come back? I feel it will, I'm not fatalistic, just have always known somewhere deep down I will fight this battle again someday..

Comments

  • bevin
    bevin Member Posts: 1,902
    edited April 2015


    I don't have any answers for you but know that others will be along soon to offer input. hope you are well.

  • Alibeths
    Alibeths Member Posts: 656
    edited April 2015

    I am. 😡2 years later. Stage one!!!!

  • 3boysmom39
    3boysmom39 Member Posts: 54
    edited April 2015

    so sorry Alibeths...I hope u kick it to the curb again...can't imagine how scary and frustrating it must be. Take care of yourself. How did u find it the second time?

  • kittysister
    kittysister Member Posts: 212
    edited May 2015

    I hate to hear that, Ali. Hope you will post more later on what was decided. Hang in there.

  • 7of9
    7of9 Member Posts: 833
    edited September 2016

    3 boys....I hope you are still doing well and waiting...and waiting for it to never come back. I had that same feeling and mine came back after 3.5 years. Light at the end of the tunnel (if you can imagine with lymph nodes 10/14) is that the dummies didn't do rads on me first time. No signs/clear scans everywhere else. Radiation, more chemo, hysterectomy with ooph and arimdex hopefully puts and end to this. Hopefully. Now my left armpit is so screwed up I can't tell what's scar tissue, capsular contracture and what is more "bad stuff". So attivan and lots of exercise and vacation planning keeps me positive. Love my 7 year old to pieces. Hope your boys are well and keep your days/thoughts full. hugs

  • KathyL624
    KathyL624 Member Posts: 217
    edited September 2016

    7 of 9..if you had a double mastectomy the first time, isn't it normal NOT to do rads? Were you offered chemo?

  • mustlovepoodles
    mustlovepoodles Member Posts: 2,825
    edited September 2016

    I am also not a fatalist, but I do have this sort of subtle undercurrent of dread going on in the back of my head. I have two gene mutations which both cause BC and other cancers. My family history is really terrible ,something like 19 cancers in the first and second generations including both sides of the tree. My genetics counselor thinks I got a mutation from both lines. Lucky me.

    So, while I am doing all I can to rid myself of this BC demon, I also understand how high my risk is. Just in my own family (parents & sibs), there are 5 of the 7 of us who have had cancer. I have two sisters who had uterine cancer, and one of those had breast cancer, too. My grandmother had both uterine and breast cancer, as well. At this point I have had chemo and a BMX, and I'm scheduled for a full hysterectomy next month. All in the name of fighting cancer. Foo.

    Maybe I'm just down in the dumps. My cousin's wife just went into hospice this week with a very aggressive stage 4 BC. She's been fighting it only a year and she will not last another month. Knowing that her cancer was different from mine does not particularly comfort me.

  • pupmom
    pupmom Member Posts: 5,068
    edited September 2016

    What is the point of worrying? Choose to be happy as long as you can. None of us are getting out of here alive.

  • mustlovepoodles
    mustlovepoodles Member Posts: 2,825
    edited September 2016

    I wouldn't say that I sit around worrying about recurrence. Maybe it's just because this is all still rather fresh for me--I was diagnosed July 2015. It's been a rough ride and it's not even close to being over, so breast cancer is pretty much right there in front of me most of the time. Perhaps, when I have 2-3 years behind me I'll be less inclined to think about it. But right now, those thoughts intrude several times a week. Not to the point that I can't work or enjoy my life. But the intrusive thoughts are there.

  • pupmom
    pupmom Member Posts: 5,068
    edited September 2016

    Mustlovepoodles, I understand. Been there, done that. Just offering some advice I got at the beginning, and finally was able to incorporate into my mind. You're going through a trauma, but there is light at the end of the tunnel. (((Hugs)))

  • NancyHB
    NancyHB Member Posts: 1,512
    edited September 2016

    It's impossible not worry in the early days following a diagnosis - it's completely natural when we've already been so blindsided by a diagnosis that none of us (with rare exception) ever expected to receive. Yorkiemom gives wise advice - worrying doesn't change what will - or likely, will not - happen in the future...but that's always easier said than done, I know.

    I worried like crazy the first year, but as time went by my worry lessened, and I actively started to chose to let go of my fear and move forward living my life. I spent too much energy on "what ifs" and not enough on "what is".

    Four years later I had a local recurrence - surprise!! Even with all the worry I'd had, I still wasn't prepared for this new diagnosis. All that worry - it did me no good, it changed nothing, it was wasted energy. Surprisingly, I no longer worry about nor fear a recurrence - not local, not regional, not metastatic. It will happen, or it won't. I can't change that. All I can do is be present in this moment, live it and love it for all that it is. I like to think this local recurrence was a wake-up call to me to get out there and live today instead of worrying about tomorrow.

  • LeslieMemsicMD
    LeslieMemsicMD Member Posts: 29
    edited October 2016

    Cancer is hideous for so many reasons, not the least of which is because with the diagnosis we lose our innocence.  We are reminded that we are vulnerable and mortal. Every ache and pain is not so easily ignored as before the diagnosis. And yet if we allow the fear and anxiety to overwhelm us, we cannot live our life to the fullest -however long it is. We need to find a way to put cancer on the back burner and find joy and wonder and surprise and love in our daily lives. We can use the fear to reprioritize, redirect goals and better appreciate our loved ones. The anxiety gets better with time - we get busy with all the hoopla of daily life and start noticing that we are OK. Really. Therapy can help. Normal mammograms really help. A hug to all of you warriors who are working through the fear as you raise your families, support your partners, provide for your friends and families. You are all heroes to me.

  • bbear
    bbear Member Posts: 2
    edited February 2017

    yes I have always felt this too! I am actually at peace with it. I am a glass half full kinda girl, and from the first day after the diagnosis I knew I would be fighting this battle again.

  • songbird68
    songbird68 Member Posts: 190
    edited April 2017

    Hi, I had cognitive behavior therapy to help me cope with my fears - not saying anyone else should have this, just saying. Anyway, I was saying how I couldn't move on from thinking it would come back. The therapist asked me what I would do if it did. I said I'd get a big motorbike to ride. She said what's stopping you and I said I didn't have a licence, or recurrence. She said treatments for returning cancer might mean I wouldn't be able to ride a bike.

    Now I have my licence, that motorbike - and I'm still NED!!

    Take care xxx

Categories