Do you think that's a way to cope? My mom honestly doesn't talk about it much. Not that I think she should DWELL on it or anything, but I guess I'm more of a blabberer about things that really get me, whether it's something that bothers me or excites me, or I find very amusing. I MUST share it. But she has sort of kept most of this to herself.
My grandmother (mom's mom) had trouble facing her colon cancer, and just got severely depressed. Then she finally got to a point where she could function, as long as no one talked about the "C" word. So I wonder if my mom's reaction to her breast cancer is a little bit similar to that, and so I'm kind of afraid to bring it up.![]()
Yeah, there are lots of ways of coping with it. But I also think that older ladies grew up in a time when breast cancer just wasn't talked about. We've discussed that on the Komen board a few times and the general concensus is that older ladies don't feel it very appropriate to talk about their breasts. Not to mention that many of them also grew up in a time when any type of cancer was basically a death sentence. So when they do talk abou it they are a lot more afraid of it then younger people are.
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Right! If I am gonna GO, I wanna go out with some STYLE!! Not that starving on the toilet would have much style.. I need to think of something better.
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Didn't you ever do that project in English in high school where you had to write your own obituary?
The antibiotics helped him and I think he may have just had a small flu bug.
ummmm... NO. I was pretty much stoned in high school. All of it. I did engish in night school... Where we got graded on watching Sherlock Holmes movies.
Totally.... dude.

, then laughed and said, "I am sure I can find something to do, sweetheart. Don't you worry about me."
Death is a natural part of life. We talk about our lives, natually we must talk about the end of life.