A belated Happy New Year!! No good excuse for not updating sooner. Life just got in the way!!
Our family had a wonderful Christmas. My Mom was able to come up for a few days and I was able to pick her up and take her home!! Enjoyed a low key welcome to 2012 and am anxious to discover what this new year holds for our family.
I have completed treatments 10 and 11, which means that the treatment I have next week will be THE LAST!!! Can I get an AMEN??? I like my approach to this cancer and my treatments. My philosophy has been to only know what I have to. I didn't want to see the Big Picture. If I had known there would be 12 chemo treatments that would be given over six months, I would have been overwhelmed!! I never asked my prognosis or wanted to wait around for my lab results like many of the other patients. My point of view is that, if there is a problem, someone will let me know and give me what I need to fix it. I can't see putting my little bit of energy into worrying about my "counts." I need my energy to focus on getting stronger and on thinking about all the positives in my life. That is just who I am.
My head and heart are multitasking these days as I near the end of this chemo journey. I am amazed at how quickly the time has gone; how supportive my family and friends have been; and how strong I have been through the highs and lows. At the same time I am anxious to have the tests done that will emphatically prove that the cancer "has left this body." I am nervous about what happens next. Will I need to have any radiation? Will I still need surgery? This journey is not complete and there are still questions to be answered. Still, I take one day at a time, rejoice in all the blessings in my life, and am determined to not whine so much. However, I must be honest that the next two weeks will be the roughest yet and I ask your prayers to give me strength to endure.
Before I close, I want to share about a friend of mine from work. Mary was a co-worker who was diagnosed with colon cancer just a few weeks before me last summer. I had worked with Mary for over sixteen years at Calhoun. She was a good friend and someone on whom I could count to help me with any financial aid problems I had. Mary lost her battle with cancer on Christmas Day. When I got the news, it was like someone kicked me in the stomach. Why weren't her treatments as successful as mine? So many questions and so few answers. I was able to speak with her only a few times after our diagnoses when both of us were able to be back at work at the same times. We shared a bond that I would not recommend to anyone. She was the one who gave me the idea about using a purse to hold my pump instead of the fanny pack I hated. One day, she told me that she wished she had my positive attitude. I told her that I was born that way and couldn't be any other way. I hope that in some measure I shared my attitude with her.
This has been a difficult journey to this point [I won't lie to you] and now the path ahead is a little uncertain. All I know is I will keep on keeping on. Thanks for listening.
Sandra
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