All or nothing? Google

It’s interesting. Since my own diagnosis, my view of cancer and has changed. I think many of us have thought of cancer as an “all or nothing” disease for a long time. We are either cured or we aren’t. We survive or we don’t survive. Our cancer is either gone or it’s there. The only good outcome is that our cancer is gone and we move on with our lives intact cancer-free.

We feel having cancer means we are on a path to death, and having no detectable cancer means we might have a chance of staying alive. All or nothing.

But I a woman when I was in who had been receiving weekly for 4 years. She was not cured and she was not dying. She had a that could not be removed surgically, but the had not grown or spread or threatened her life in 4 years. She tolerated well, and aside from living 4 hours of her life weekly in the oncology room, her life was pretty much normal.

I’ve since been in contact with 2 long term patients who have never really been cancer free. They have been eight years and with appendix cancer recurrences. And in the meantime, between treatment, they have valiantly lived their lives. . . Lives that aren’t just about cancer. They have survived in of cancer. Raised kids, pursued careers, lived lives…with appendix cancer.

I got to thinking about that. I was in for about 4 hours once a week for many months after I was diagnosed. Not bad, but not how I would have chosen to use my time under other . But I’m a nurse. For years I’ve seen dialysis patients. Patients who live their lives hooked up to dialysis IV pumps for as long as we are hooked up to pumps….but three days a week…for years. And they live long and in of that. Their lives are altered, but they still live. They still contemplate a future; they tolerate dialysis as they await a possible transplant and a new normal life.

I have now been exposed to many scientists involved in cancer research. They are so close to so many breakthroughs. There may come a day in our lifetime when there is a cancer cure…if we just wait and stay in treatment. Just like dialysis patients remain in treatment while they await a kidney transplant. The day when they can live without being in treatment.

That day that may come for us. The day cancer is defeated.

I want to be here to celebrate that day.

Related posts

Henüz yorum yok.
Rss Feed Tweeter button Facebook button Technorati button Reddit button Myspace button Linkedin button Webonews button Delicious button Digg button Flickr button