To clarify about how long before you felt relief:
My stress level, knowing this thing has been diagnosed, has been a battle. I'm curious about after a DMX, do you truly feel it's gone.
I'm getting a goldilocks reconstruction, so my 'breast mounds' will not be totally flat. I know you still have to hear about nodes etc, but once the original thing is out, does your nervous system accept that as truth?
I have similar sentiments as maxaroni described. After my lumpectomy, which was before chemo due to my gall bladder emergency, I had initial relief that the cancer in my breast had been removed, the margins were clear, and my sentinel lymph nodes were negative. It did not remove the worry from my psyche. For months, through my chemo treatments, I really struggled with wanting a double mastectomy vs just the lumpectomy. I was getting advice from many people who advocated for both sides. I was weighing family history of cancer as well as my genetic testing which noted a variance of unknown significance of the ATM gene. I had conversations with all of the medical professionals in my life as I was looking for someone to give me a definitive answer but found it doesn't exist. I wanted a double mastectomy to make sure I didn't get breast cancer again but it was the words spoken to me from both my oncologist and my breast surgeon/specialist that made me reevaluate my decision. They both told me that a double mastectomy does not erase my chance of getting a recurrence of breast cancer nor does it remove the chance of getting cancer somewhere else in my body. They both said that it is impossible to remove all breast tissue. Even with a double mastectomy, there will still be breast tissue/cells attached to the chest wall where cancer can occur. They both said that the highest risk is when breast cancer metastasizes elsewhere in the body.
After processing that information, I decided not to have a double mastectomy at this time. For me, I wanted to let my body heal from the lumpectomy, chemo and radiation and trust that my medical team will monitor me closely. If I get another occurrence of breast cancer, I will most likely choose mastectomy at that time and decide on reconstruction. The decisions of surgery are personal to every woman with breast cancer and there is no right or wrong. It needs to be a decision that brings you peace of mind.
I have learned to accept that cancer will always be a part of my life whether it is active or not. Every blood test, mammogram, MRI, aching pain, weird sensation, etc. gives me a mini freak-out until I get the all-clear. As time passes, it gets easier but it's still there.
I hope that helps and doesn't confuse you more. It's just MY experience. YOUR experience is yours. We all live different lives but have a common thread of cancer that threatens our well-being.
