My (perhaps controversial) thoughts as a "newbie" to CA.

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  • Trill1943
    Trill1943 Member Posts: 1,677
    edited January 2017

    Hi, any ladies who might drop by here. Am busy with new blocks-- the big 6" ones--and a friend just made me a wonderful gift of an order of 24 more!! She is such a dear friend and I had no idea she'd do this. In any case my tiny blocks are up at the Evergreen Museum, frolicking in their new arrangement there. I miss them and am happy to have new large blocks on their way...

    I hope this finds you all well! I am! And so is Miss Pantaloon--who is now propped on her pillow doing some serious evening grooming beside me.....

  • Trill1943
    Trill1943 Member Posts: 1,677
    edited January 2017

    Here's Miss P doing a brush face-wash....

    image

  • DisneyGirl16
    DisneyGirl16 Member Posts: 121
    edited January 2017

    Hi, Trill and Miss P!

    So glad you are doing well and have lots of blocks to paint. All is well here, too. In my spare time, I have been busy going through old boxes that I haven't opened in years. I am donating and throwing out a bunch of stuff. It feels pretty good to have the energy to get it done. It has been my New Year's resolution many times but I have never seemed to have the motivation or energy to tackle it.

    I have been trying to read the other thread each day but it moves so fast, so I haven't taken time to comment on it. I really appreciate the time everyone else takes to post all of the news stories and such. It keeps me informed of what I've missed while I am at work.

    I hope you won't be affected by this next round of bad weather (ice storms). We are supposed to get some of it on Saturday morning so I plan to stay in that day and stay warm. ☺


  • Trill1943
    Trill1943 Member Posts: 1,677
    edited January 2017

    Hi DisneyGirl! Good to hear from you! That's great that you've found the energy to go through old boxes....I know what you mean about going through stuff and saying Bye to it. . . I call it giving the place a high colonic...

    I'm having my two brothers and their gal friends on Sunday for dinner. We had to cancel last Saturday and here I had all this stuff cooked--turkey, gravy, mashed potatoes, stuffing.....and things all set up to eat. But then we got snow and it was bitterly cold so that got put off till this weekend. We set Saturday again but there's supposed to be a little snow tomorrow followed by "ice pellets" and temp will hover around freezing. So we put off THAT, too. Now we're set for Sunday. The second turkey is thawing out. I sure hope it finally goes on as I AM SICK OF TURKEY! Last night I just said to hell with it and made a salad....

    OK, take care!

    love, t and Miss P

  • Molly50
    Molly50 Member Posts: 3,773
    edited March 2017

    Trill ET al, how are you doing?

  • ChiSandy
    ChiSandy Member Posts: 12,133
    edited March 2017

    Talk about ā€œcontroversial" approaches to IDC. Last night was my monthly bc support group meeting (also attended by fellow BCO member Peaches1). We had a new gal last night whose approach to her treatment pretty much horrified us all. Three years ago she had 3 courses of neoadjuvant chemo and decided ā€œit wasn't for" her. Fair enough. But she has done NOTHING else beyond taking vitamins, baking soda, drinking peroxide and meditating. Period. We asked her what kind of bc she has—she couldn't tell us its hormonal status. She said it was ā€œType 2." She couldn't say if it was Stage II or Grade 2 or both, never mind ductal, lobular or whatever. (She was an intelligent, otherwise articulate, presumably American or Canadian educated woman in her late 60s—early 70s, which made the disconnect so jarring for me).

    Trill, at least you had surgery. (And being triple-neg, antihormonals weren't even on the table for you). She hasn't, and refuses to—not even a lumpectomy. (One could tell, because her intact and unrestrained breasts hung nearly to her waist). She bragged about checking her lump every day and being fascinated with how it changes. After her bad experience with chemo, she ditched her MO here and went to some woo-woo alternative doc. in NY who prescribed (besides vites and the aforementioned substances) ā€œenzymes." But because she's vegan, he let her use ā€œplant enzymes." She also eschews sugar—heck, I'm with her there, nobody needs sugar in their diets—and gluten. But is she celiac? Allergic to wheat? Nope. And then she complained about how all-consuming it is to stick to her regimen. We pressed her as to the name of her NY doctor, but said she saw him only once—and has her ā€œregular guy" draw blood (and snip hair samples) and send them ā€œout" to ā€œa lab." No idea if her current doctor is an allopath or alternative practitioner, nor what he's testing for nor the legitimacy of the lab. (No need to venture a guess, IMHO). Peaches gently mentioned that even the foremost alternative natural onc in the Chicago area realized that alternative medicine is inadequate, and so he became an integrative MO instead. The new gal adamantly said that ā€œintegrative" medicine was not for her—she is ā€œallergic to everything." Our nurse-facilitator sat wide-eyed in silent disbelief. The guest social worker exhibited a level of diplomacy and tact worthy of an ambassador.

    I asked her (knowing the answer I'd get) how and why vitamins, baking soda and peroxide work, and she launched into the usual tirade about drug companies suppressing information and refusing trials for anything that couldn't make them money. I pressed her, saying I wasn't asking about success rates and trial results, but rather the scientific (biological and chemical mechanisms) by how the stuff works, and she answered that since baking soda and peroxide ā€œdissolve the mold and gunk on your bathroom tile" it stands to reason they'd do the same ā€œfor cancer cells in your system." I mentioned that bathroom tile is a hard and inert substance, unlike soft tissue. Again with the ā€œit cleans your bathroom…"

    I gave it one more shot—could she tell me what was the mechanism (whether from her own knowledge or secondhand from her doctor) by which the stuff even supposedly works? She looked at me as if I were demanding a Nobel-level doctoral dissertation and continued to rail against conventional medicine.

    Look, I get it. Cancer is scary. Dr. Google is a quack, even a filterless idiot. When you have nothing to lose, at the advanced part of Stage IV, you're willing to try anything even if it makes no sense whatsoever other than it doesn't make you feel worse. But she still has everything to lose—why squander your chances on junk science (or no science, not even faith-based laying-on-of-hands)? But if you have any disease—cancer, heart, lung, autoimmune, orthopedic, infection, whatever—shouldn't you have a desire to learn all you can about it from reliable sources, so that you have all the right questions ready if some treatment is suggested that doesn't seem to add up (or about which you simply don't understand)?

    I gave as an example a "diet secrets" online video I watched yesterday after clicking a ā€œhealth newsletter" e-mail link (you know the kind, where you have no idea how long it will be, are unable to skip ahead or go back, some cartoon hand draws equally cartoonish illustrations and scribbles words, the first half-hour is consumed by the author's credentials, testimonials, patients' personal stories, and ā€œIn a minute, I'm going to tell you…absolutely free..." but ten minutes later she still hasn't told you squat?) This was supposedly a board-certified bariatrician. She finally began to cut to the chase and reveal that we shouldn't eat artificial sweeteners or HFCS (duh). She said they make us store fat, which is the most simplified explanation of a biological process which not only any med student but any 10th grader has studied to some extent. She then went on to explain that since we never evolved to process this stuff (fair enough), the body doesn't recognize it, and what does the body do to a substance it doesn't recognize? You would logically say ā€œreject it, eject it, yada yada." According to your bio teacher (or a med school anatomy prof), that's right. But according to this supposed ā€œbariatric M.D.," you'd be wrong. According to her, what does your body do with an unfamiliar ingested substance? ā€œIt turns it into fat and stores it."

    AAARGH!!! We all know that's bullshit. We learned about the Krebs cycle, the pancreas, liver, kidneys, stomach, gut, etc. We learned about how sugar not burned nor turned into glycogen for muscle storage gets eventually, through the actions of insulin and then the liver, converted into and stored as fat. Sugar, not ā€œsubstances the body doesn't recognize." As Judge Judy says (translated from Yiddish) ā€œdon't pee on my foot and tell me it's raining."

    The point is, any of us with a high school education (or who passed 10th grade biology) must have the anatomic and scientific knowledge to possess a working bullshit detector. Telling me that baking soda, vitamins and peroxide kills cancer, without being able to explain the process, is the medical equivalent of peeing on my foot.

    Maybe it's just me, but when it's your life at stake, don't you owe it to yourself to have a modicum of intellectual curiosity? (On the way out, another member, frustrated with her letrozole SEs and why her breast MO couldn't give her the same tests and guarantees that her multiple myeloma MO could, asked me incredulously why I ā€œdon't believe in anecdotal evidence." Uh, maybe because it's an oxymoron)?


  • ann_asazi
    ann_asazi Member Posts: 8
    edited March 2017

    I love you, ChiSandy.

  • Falconer
    Falconer Member Posts: 1,192
    edited March 2017

    ChiSandy, I love you too. Yours is a beautiful voice of reason. Your story is why I align with Groucho and say to those who wonder how I get along alone, "I don't want to be part of any group that would have me as a member."
  • ChiSandy
    ChiSandy Member Posts: 12,133
    edited March 2017
  • WenchLori
    WenchLori Member Posts: 1,558
    edited March 2017

    ChiSandy, WOW!it will be a year soon since my diagnosis and I don't think I would have gotten the education I have about BC/IDC if it weren't for you and a few others here. That woman sounds a lot like my sister. She has used all kinds of mixtures to help her with ailments, even tried talking me into some of them. I know that drinking a glass of water with lemon and vinegar will not cleanse cancer cells from your body. My mom still asks me "Why are you putting yourself through all of this surgery, chemo, radiation and then more surgery? It's just not worth it." I tell mom "I'm not 84 as you are and praying for our Lord to take me home. I have many more years to live." Some people just don't get it. Thank you, for keeping us informed and up to date on all the research you do. I don't think I would have gotten through all things BC without you. Your knowledge is priceless!


  • Trill1943
    Trill1943 Member Posts: 1,677
    edited March 2017

    Hi all-- It's so nice to come here and see these posts from you guys!

    Lori, I'm thrilled to have you "back." It makes up for my blues-y time this week over Trump and Co and the bad stuff coming out of DC these days. You sound wonderful! I know your animal buddies are glad to have you up and about, too.

    That spring is just around the corner means we are moving out of dim days and into sunny ones. I delight in the beginning of Daylight Savings Time, too, which is tomorrow. . . (Of course, they are calling for a forty degree drop in the temps tonight--just par for the course in March. I disagree with T.S. Eliot that "April is the cruelest month." For me it's March, which can blow bitter and snowy one day, be balmy the next. Draw on the covers only to cook and have to toss them off twenty minutes later drenched in sweat...)

    Sandy, this latest about this woman at your support group is mind-boggling! I feel for her--she must be so terrified it's blocked rational thinking. That she's done nothing but these (silly) things is scary! I feel sorry for whatever family she has who may, as we are doing here, be horrified at her "remedies." And the feeling of helplessness they must be feeling when trying to break through to her. That she keeps track of her lump--o my god.

    I agree 100% with Lori that you, Sandy, and all of you here, kept me going last year . . . .

    The other day I went up to the Evergreen Museum to collect my 2,700 little blocks at the end of the exhibit there which began back in late November. Can't believe THREE months have passed! They're now stacked in fourteen layers in my living room. I'm pausing with the artwork, staring at a large panel that has underpainting and is just waiting for me to make up my mind and get out the brushes and paints and finish it. And there are twenty 6" blocks waiting my attentions also...

    Miss Panty has had the sniffles for the past month--either that or allergies. She doesn't grab up a Kleenex or a handy roll of toilet paper when the Kleenex run out and blow her noselike I do but just sneezes. She loves climbing on my chest for some cuddling and it's from that perch that she likes to let go a big sneeze, which of course gives me a shower. I'm attaching a shot of her here showing her on top of those old jeans shorts she loves. On these deceptively warm days where it hits the mid-70's I've been putting them on. The other day I learned that dry-rot has set in when the right leg tore straight up to the crotch. I told Panty they're now hers.

    Molly, what are you up to?

    t

    image

  • Trill1943
    Trill1943 Member Posts: 1,677
    edited March 2017

    Here's another shot of Miss Panty. . .

    image

  • ChiSandy
    ChiSandy Member Posts: 12,133
    edited March 2017

    Oh, what an adorable little ball of snuggly you have! (Miss Panty, not the disintegrating denim shorts). We’re having January in March because we had April in February. In Chicago, March comes in like a lion and goes out like a lamb….a rabid lamb…on steroids…with an AK-47.

    Miss Panty most likely has allergies. Because of the warm Feb. we had, the pollen counts have started being done and posted a month early. Tree pollens, which rarely cause problems till late March, have been high for weeks now.

  • Trill1943
    Trill1943 Member Posts: 1,677
    edited March 2017

    Sandy, I gave up on the Kleenex and now just lug around a roll of toilet paper to blow the dripping schnozz. I agree with you it's prolly allergies that Miss P and I are suffering from thanks to these whacko weather fluctuations.

    One of the worst snow storms as a kid happened in 1956 in March. Dumped a couple of feet, which of course knocked down power lines. My dad worked for C & P tel and had to go to Havre de Grace for that week, which left mom home with a darkened house and five delighted kids, one of them my one-year-old sister. We all slept in the living room on mattresses flung on the floor. The fireplace kept us warm and cooked our food. We loved every minute of it. No school of course. We played outside all day. It was so odd and wonderful and creepy to be outside and to see as the day waned that no lights came on inside....it all became dark. Then we'd go in and out would come the oil lamps. We flushed the toilet with melted snow, went out and saw that the sheep had plenty of water and food and knocked the balls of snow off them.

    l recall the exact moment it all changed. After dinner by lamplight I was leafing through one of the volumes of John Stoddard's travel tomes inherited from my grandfathe when suddenly--light! All the lights came on at once. Us kids groaned in disappointment, then went around and over mom's objections turned the lights off again. . .

  • Molly50
    Molly50 Member Posts: 3,773
    edited March 2017

    Miss P is so sassy looking. Trill, I need to buy some of your blocks. They fascinate me. I am getting ready for my exchange surgery. Can't wait to get these expanders out. Lori, I am thrilled to have you back!

  • JBeans
    JBeans Member Posts: 388
    edited March 2017

    Hi everyone! I'm smiling as I read all that has gone on since I last said a hello. Big hello meows to Miss.P. I can't believe in the time I've been out of the loop I've missed the start and end to your blocks at the Evergreen Trill.

    I've gone back to work and life and things have been so busy and so wonderful. My mom has moved to within 5 minutes drive from us to a little row house with and elevator - yes an elevator ! She can live on 2 floors! And I'm so pleased - she seems happier and can manage so much better.

    It's quite chilly out now but the warm weather in February showed me my bees made it through the first part of winter as they came out flying and pooping one warm day - a glorious sight. (Oh my goodness, I nearly spelled that "site" - eeek!)

    Kids are keeping me busy and just as the winter sports of skating and curling are winding down for us all here my mother-in-law has convinced me to sign my eldest up for speed skating this April. She is Dutch so I understand her interest but this goes beyond interest - I think she's developed a nostalgic obsession as she used to skate on long blades.

    And finally - I've taken up crochet. I love it! Years ago my Grandmother told me I didn't have the patience for knitting but if I put my mind to it she was sure I could crochet. As it turns out she was right!

    I do hope you are all well. Would love to get together to chat over coffee. ;-) Here's to it!šŸŗ (Whoops that's a beer) ;-)

    xo all

  • MelissaDallas
    MelissaDallas Member Posts: 7,268
    edited March 2017

    Hi Y'all!


    The heck with kleenex or toilet paper. Those ultra soft and absorbent big microfiber cloths or towels are the bomb for seriously snotty & runny nose and eyes. I put one down over my pillow at night when things are really bad to keep from waking up to a wet pillowcase. Allergies! Our last freeze was January 8th, which is ridiculous, even for North Texas. We are in the running for beating our earliest last freeze by a month. No winter. Everything has already been blooming and budding out for several weeks. There are already leaves on a lot of trees.


    I have been up to zip, except a little sewing. I have started a new, simple & hopefully quick quilt in robin egg blue & white. It looks so cool & summery, and bonus, Woot ran a special on sheets last week, so I bought a new set that matches the blue.


    My dad turned 81 Wednesday. He is not the most outgoing person, but he has been lifelong (since first grade) best friends with two men in their hometown. One died a few years ago after a many years up and down with lymphoma. Two Sundays ago another friend called early in the morning and asked Daddy why the friend's Saturday & Sunday papers hadn't been taken in. Daddy went over & friend was sitting dead in his chair. He probably died Saturday morning and Dad had just been over there Friday afternoon. So, since he is executor and friend left almost everything to Daddy, he filed his will for probate the day after his birthday. When my sister sat down with him and told him happy birthday on Wednesday, he said "won't be many more." He is outliving many of his contemporaries.
  • Trill1943
    Trill1943 Member Posts: 1,677
    edited March 2017

    image

    JBeans, am so glad to hear how well you are doing! Happy for you and your mom that she's found a nice place to live close by. Lucky gal to have 2 floors and an elevator! Spiffy! And how can I get the image out of my head of your bees emerging pooping from the hive? That'll be hard to do. It must have been wonderful to see that they weathered the winter. And happy crocheting!

    Molly, good luck with up-coming surgery--will be thinking of you. And just give me the high sign when you want some blocks--they are all here in abundance. I'm attaching one view of the installation that a good friend took. She she got some dramatic views of them.

    Bye for now!

    me and miss p


  • Trill1943
    Trill1943 Member Posts: 1,677
    edited March 2017

    Hi Melissa--- So good to hear from you....your quilt sounds great.... There's a store called Woot? What a hoot!

    How great your dad's had such a nice long life! Hope we are all so lucky!

    No,I don't know many people who've had a "traditional" winter--except maybe Ruth--out there in North Dakota. Every time the weather station came on this winter and talked about blizzards etc out there her way I thought of her. Well, North Dakota IS North Dakota!

    Isn't it great to be hearing from Lori? I think we have our old gang back. We need Ruth to chime in...and junipercat....i think there are a few "newbies" to the thread--welcome all!!

    Miss Panty waves her paw HI!

  • JuniperCat
    JuniperCat Member Posts: 658
    edited March 2017

    imageHello Trill and Miss Panty! That's a great photo of your blocks!!! Are you still working on your book? Here is a photo of two of my cats, Nico and Angie.



  • ChiSandy
    ChiSandy Member Posts: 12,133
    edited March 2017

    Trill, those blocks are fascinating. Juniper, I love those kitties.

  • JBeans
    JBeans Member Posts: 388
    edited March 2017

    Awww, what sweet cats.

    Maybe we are all emerging from our hibernation and ready to connect again, I know I am. C'mon back when you thaw out Ruth.


  • Molly50
    Molly50 Member Posts: 3,773
    edited March 2017

    Well we had a real winter for the first time in years. Weeks and weeks of rain and cool weather. It was glorious. Now we are in the 80's and I am missing the cool mist. Jbeans, great news that your mom is close by. Melissa, sorry about your dad losing his best friends. That must be hard for him. Juniper, cute kitties!! My DGS is turning 5 the week of my surgery. I can't believe it's been 5 years. That child is the sunshine in my life.

  • Trill1943
    Trill1943 Member Posts: 1,677
    edited March 2017

    JuniperCat-- Love your kitty photos....wonderful....that kitten one is a prize-winner...

    Molly, when is your surgery? My sister lives in LA also and she wrote to say she FINALLY had some real precipitation....she was ecstatic...I think most of the US has been also about it. Such a great thing during this odd winter...we are due for some snow Monday--our first of the year. DST begins tonight.

    Yes, I still work on the blocks but now am working on the larger 6" blocks. They're a different kind of project in that I can focus on detail more....here's shot of some of them....image

  • JuniperCat
    JuniperCat Member Posts: 658
    edited March 2017

    Trill, those larger blocks are beautiful.


  • Trill1943
    Trill1943 Member Posts: 1,677
    edited March 2017

    Thanks, JuniperCat!

  • WenchLori
    WenchLori Member Posts: 1,558
    edited March 2017

    It's great to be here and making our way out of hibernation! I'm loving the pics of Miss Panty, Nico and Angie! Beautiful babies!

    Trill, beautiful blocks and I love mine to pieces! Uummmm I accidentally sat on mine and they are no longer attached to each other but I love them just the same!

    Molly, I may have missed it but when is your exchange surgery? It seems like you've had your expander for some time now. We'll all be in your pocket when the time arrives! Praying early that all goes well! šŸ™šŸ™

    My RO has been able to go under my tissue expanders so I don't need to see my PS to deflate them. Yippee! But it feels like I have a vice grip going across my chest. I've got 7 to 8 more months of my expanders but this to shall pass. I've read stories of women having their expanders for a very, very long time. I hope that's not me! lol

    Hi to everyone I may have missed! I need to go back to taking notes to keep track of everyone! I'm so thrilled to be back! It's like coming home!

    I'm off to spend some time with my DH. He got back this morning from a week long trip to D.C. and he seems to have missed me! I have to admit I've enjoyed the quiet and not being fussed over while he was away...

  • Trill1943
    Trill1943 Member Posts: 1,677
    edited March 2017

    Lori-- So glad to hear you and hubby are reconnecting...wish you a nice time....

    Yes, when you get away from here there's usually lots to catch up on....

    Sorry to hear your blocks got sat on! Ouch for your poor derriere! That must have smarted! If you ever should want to reconnect them, if you go online and google "magic tumbling blocks" you'll find a youtube video for how to connnect them...not hard to do but it does take total attention, which means you can't be chatting with hubby or petting a critter while you do it! LOL!

  • Molly50
    Molly50 Member Posts: 3,773
    edited March 2017

    my exchange surgery is on the 21st. Thanks for being in my pocket. Trill, remind me how to look at and order your blocks?

  • WenchLori
    WenchLori Member Posts: 1,558
    edited March 2017

    Molly, of course I wouldn't have it any other way šŸ˜

    Trill, thank you for directing me where to go so I can fix my poor blocks. They aren't as much fun to play with when they are separated lol


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