Yeah, I’m still numb. Have zero sensation from my breast through my belly where they took my fat to use as filler. I’m still sunburned from the radiation and still quite fatigued. I was supposed to have a follow up phone appointment from my oncologist which he canceled and changed to a face-to-face and wants me to meet him at the chemotherapy unit. Scares the hell out of me, because one evening during radiation, it took a lot longer than normal. When I asked why, they said my oncologist had asked for detailed scans of the left side. It just doesn’t end. There’s always some strange ball of worry rattling around like a ping pong ball.
Ugh, my cancer buddy’s story was not fun. Hers kept going from being early, neat and tidy to more complex. No journey is fun, is it?
If they do want to talk to you about doing chemo, let me know. Hopefully I can provide reassurance and not scaremongering.
My buddy went from noticing one boob “turned” when she had her hands pulling her hair into a ponytail while looking in a mirror. Her mother had breast cancer, so she called straight away. Nothing showed on a mammogram but they did an ultrasound. Biopsied, it was cancer, so they booked her in for surgery. She was told she wouldn’t need chemo, just surgery and radiation. She opted for a double mastectomy due to family history.
Surgery day came, they removed lymph nodes first as her surgery was 6 hours. Before they finished the surgery, a lymph node had cancer present, so they removed all of her lymph nodes. They removed the non-cancerous breast and found cancer - a DIFFERENT TYPE OF CANCER. So two breasts, two different cancers, and lymph nodes.
She is having 6 rounds of chemo also. Three of one type, 3 of the chemo I get. Then she’ll have radiation and finally reconstructive surgery. She started in May. And they didn’t quite get the margins they wanted, so there’s that too.
Very different journey to mine, but her punches just kept coming. Whereas mine was diagnosed from the fluid and we knew it was bad from the start, just needed to learn what, if any, treatments were available. Thankfully my cancer type is very treatable. We will know next week if I’m responding and if so, how well.