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(Me under the rad machine at RAH – unflattering and blurry – taken by the radiologist)
It’s been just over 8 months since the first surgery and I finally finished active treatment yesterday! Wooohoooo!!!!
It has been a very long 8 months (nearly 9 since diagnosis) – 2 surgeries either side of Christmas, 6 months of chemotherapy that left me just surviving, and now 3 weeks of radiotherapy which was pretty easy. I’ve had to recover from the surgeries, deal with the side effects of chemo and trot myself in to the City every day for rads plus all of the myriad appointments that come along with it – regular physio to deal with the cording, scans and blood tests, ECG to make sure the chemo wasn’t messing with my heart, rehab exercise to regain strength… It’s like being in a dim tunnel and not being able to look either side; just move forward and hope there’s light at the end. I still have some of the side effects from chemo (numbness in my toes, indigestion and oedema) and my skin will keep reacting to the radiation for up to 3 weeks but I’m hoping it won’t be too bad. I still get tired but the radiation will have contributed to that. And I know the anxiety will get me when it is time to have checkups – scanxiety, they call it – and probably in between… I doubt that will ever leave me.
A few days ago, I went back through this blog and I realised what a valuable record this is for me. I have never been a diary writer but I am very glad that I started this. Some things had receded into vague memories while others were as fresh and traumatic as when they were happening. It was interesting (and affirming in that I hadn’t imagined it), how my mood, confidence and positivity had altered during the course of treatment. I wondered beforehand if I had really felt so okay as I remembered feeling after surgery as it seems like it must have been another person, but the blog entries confirm it, as they confirm the emotions I was experiencing at different times. And, of course, we lost Dave’s Dad during the early days of me having chemo. Reading that entry now it seems a little like it wasn’t a big deal, but, of course, it was – I wasn’t being callous, just reluctant at the time to write too much as it seemed like an intrusion into the family’s grief. For all that it was his time and he was suffering, it was very hard and he is very much missed. I just wish that his death could have been quicker and gentler. The other thing that going through the blog highlighted (and it’s not something I have forgotten) is how much support I have received from my family and friends, from neighbours and colleagues – from well-wishes to gifts and food – it has all helped cushion me from the harsh edges of this experience. And the women I have met on the BCNA network who are also going through this, some who have become online friends, and who have not only given me real support but have sent me hats and scarves and even a wig.
I’m not kidding myself that this is by any means over and I know that I will come down off this high, but I feel like I have gotten through something huge and made it out the other side, more or less intact. I know that I have changed and I don’t yet quite know what those changes are going to mean. I feel a subtle shift inside. I do know that I cannot, and will not, allow myself to get as stressed by things that I have no power to change. At the moment, that is my only real goal. I only have this life and, while I’m not planning to go out and change the world, I need to focus on enjoying my time.
But enough of this – I am done! (Okay, I’ve got 5-10 years of hormone therapy and lot’s more appointments, but let’s not go there now.) I left the hospital to go out into an unseasonal August Adelaide day of 26oC – the sun was shining and I could not get the smile off my face. I don’t think I’ve smiled like that for months. Got home and sat outside (suitably covered against the risk of sunburn on the radiated area) and ate a chocolate cream doughnut for lunch! Time to get on with life!





