NHAnn said:Send me good vibes tomorrow - 10:30 am is my first radiation treatment! thanks and hugs and best wishes to all...
Sending Prayers and Pixie Dust your way this morning. And a great big hug. You can beat this, I know you can.

NHAnn said:Send me good vibes tomorrow - 10:30 am is my first radiation treatment! thanks and hugs and best wishes to all...
Personally, I think at some point you should get a baseline mammogram but I don't know that you need to have it done immediately. Sometimes even with baseline mamms they find things and you have to go through a very stressful process of additional testing, doctor's visits and sometimes biopsies. Can you imagine adding that mix to the stress of your life right now? However, if it's going to worry you not to have it done right now then you could, or you could have a clinical (breast) exam done to be sure nothing is out of the ordinary.Cheshire Val said:Side question: I'm 30 and have never had a mammogram. Would you guys recommend my getting one since all of this is going on? The doctor told my 33 year old cousin to go right away for a baseline.
CheshireVal said:Thanks again everyone for your kind words.
My aunt had a PET scan done on Monday-- the results are mixed good/bad news. The spots on her lungs that showed up on her original CT scan are "cold," so they can't say for sure whether it's cancer or not (cancer usually shows up as a hot spot, apparently). They don't want to do a biopsy because they're afraid it will collapse her lung, which would delay her chemo.
They *did* find that the cancer has spread to her spine, but that apparently is a better scenario than the lungs. Though, she asked her doctor if he thought she had at least a year left and he said he didn't know.I can't imagine what it feels like to hear that news, but I guess that doctors can't make any guarantees on anything, no matter what the illness, so I'm hoping she doesn't get too discouraged.
Side question: I'm 30 and have never had a mammogram. Would you guys recommend my getting one since all of this is going on? The doctor told my 33 year old cousin to go right away for a baseline.
Love it!!Snappy said:Good morning, this is God
I will be handling all your problems today
I will not need your help. . . so, have a good day.
snappy said:Good morning, this is God
I will be handling all your problems today
I will not need your help. . . so, have a good day.
I also had a mastectomy, thinking that would be the end of it. Otherwise, I might have chosen lumpectomy and radiation. My reasoning at the time was that I would think I was still sick during the months of radiation, and with the mastectomy I would feel that I was "well" as soon as the surgery healed. Well, out of 21 lymph nodes that they took, one had a tiny bit of cancer, so they told me I should do chemo. I spent about 24 hours "kicking" myself, thinking that I had made the "wrong" choice.MerryPoppins said:I dodged the radiation and the chemo since I had a mastectomy. Just taking Tamoxifen. I count myself among the lucky that we caught my cancer so early. I had lots of options.
JoannaOhio said:I also had a mastectomy, thinking that would be the end of it. Otherwise, I might have chosen lumpectomy and radiation. My reasoning at the time was that I would think I was still sick during the months of radiation, and with the mastectomy I would feel that I was "well" as soon as the surgery healed. Well, out of 21 lymph nodes that they took, one had a tiny bit of cancer, so they told me I should do chemo. I spent about 24 hours "kicking" myself, thinking that I had made the "wrong" choice.
I know that not everybody believes that we experience obstacles in our lives for a "reason" - but I do believe that my going through chemo - and talking and writing about it - was a very important process for me. I also did not have reconstructive surgery, and have walked through this world for the past 11 years as a one-breasted woman - no prosthesis or attempts to disguise the fact - though I normally wear loose fitting dresses that hang from the shoulders anyway, and my remaining breast is so saggy as to be almost invisible under my clothes. (I had stopped wearing a bra years before the surgery, and I wasn't about to start wearing one again, in order to hold a prosthesis.)
I am certainly not advocating that this would be the "right" choice for anyone else, but I definitely feel that it was "right" for me. If that tiny bit of cancer hadn't shown up in that one little lymph node, then I wouldn't have been put on chemo - and maybe another tiny bit of cancer would have escaped to recur somewhere else in my body. Eight months of chemo was definitely no picnic, but it left me feeling pretty darned secure that my body had been cleansed of all cancer cells.
Tinkertude said:AAAAAAaaHHHHHHHHH I like this place. It feels very comfy!![]()
When I wrote about my experience 11 years ago, I didn't even have a computer. I typed it up on a very primitive word processor. Then I got the pages printed and copied, and handed them out for free when I went to women's festivals as a craftswoman. I also got a lot of very positive feedback from other survivors. Laurabelle, is your blog available for us to read? PM me if you don't want to post it here.laurabelle said:I started blogging about my cancer journey a year ago, I just couldn't do any writing at the time of treatment, and it has helped me tremendously, and others who have read it say it's helped them too, by seeing someone else in their cancer shoes...
JoannaOhio said:When I wrote about my experience 11 years ago, I didn't even have a computer. I typed it up on a very primitive word processor. Then I got the pages printed and copied, and handed them out for free when I went to women's festivals as a craftswoman. I also got a lot of very positive feedback from other survivors. Laurabelle, is your blog available for us to read? PM me if you don't want to post it here.
Thanks, Joanna
EEEEK AACCKK! NOT what I want to think about, going for my second treatment today LOL!!!snappy said:Did y'all hear the news this morning that even low does of radiation increase of getting cancer during your liftetime, especially leukemia?
What I try to tell myself is that is has to be put in God's hands, that God guides the hands of the doctors.
MerryPoppins said:Snappy it scares me, but not as much as not getting the tests the doctor needs. Hopefully someday they'll have better screening methods. Sometimes to fix one thing they mess up something else. But I don't dwell on it. After all, if I've kicked cancer once I could do it again, right? I prefer to remain positive, wearing my rose-colored glasses.![]()
I know what you mean by being able to do it again, if necessary. For me, just knowing what is involved gives power, the unknown is always your worst enemy.
My friend in Mexico has a son that broke a bone. He went in for an x-ray and eventually ended up at MD Anderson in Houston with leukemia. It was a rare form and the doctor suspected x-ray. They went back and checked and the machine was faulty. No telling how many people were x-rayed there and got sick.I don't know if they took the hospital to court or not. I'm sure they are more careful in the US because no doubt there would be a court case. The good news is that the son is now an intern. He's all grown up and wants to help make other people well. He is doing great and at the time of his diagnosis no one had had that kind of leukemia and survived. They get better at treatment every day.
NHAnn said:EEEEK AACCKK! NOT what I want to think about, going for my second treatment today LOL!!!![]()
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I'm going to think about this instead:![]()
have a good day ladies!!![]()
snappy said:Did y'all hear the news this morning that even low does of radiation increase of getting cancer during your liftetime, especially leukemia?
I guess most of us have had cat scans, x rays, since diagnosis. Not to mention a whole bunch of mammos.
I have had 2 cat scans of the abdomen/chest area, one full body bone scan, and at least 25 x rays, since last April, 2004. Do y'all worry about this?
I think after 18-24 months my doc is going to reduce my visits to once a year, not sure if I will have to continue with the chest x rays. They saw something on one rib in the bone scan, most likely nothing since it was considered unlikely to have a met to just this one area. I guess they are just watching it.