It Just Keeps Going

I had an aggressive form of Uterine cancer. I had a total hysterectomy, six rounds of chemo (Paxlitaxel and Carboplatin), and three rounds of brachytherapy, and I'm a little more than a year out from those things. It was the hardest thing I have ever endured---and I've been through some serious stuff, but I know my ordeal was relatively easy compared to other peoples. I have to say though, it's been a bumpy recovery. My bowels have not been the same (they made mention of possible damage from radiation) and I've just not felt great since, I was hospitalized back in December for a week and a half. I have some good days of course, but there have definitely been some issues. I'm facing a number of things in the next few weeks, my anxiety about a return of cancer is growing. There's been a spot on my left breast they've been investigating for a year now and now I am to have a breast biopsy in about three weeks, they say nothing looks "suspicious" and they "want to be sure", but they keep calling to make sure I have it scheduled---and I do. I have nodules on my very large thyroid and they want to biopsy that. I am also to have a colonoscopy on the 29th of this month and I'm not thrilled about it. (It doesn't help that it's scheduled the day after my birthday) Now there's a new pain in my right side and it's getting worse, so my mind went right to cancer. I spoke to my Oncologist about it and I'll be moving my appointment up, because of course, now she's concerned. 

My family does their best to support me, but they have their own fears about my health. People who have been through it understand that fear of cancer returning though, so that's why I came here to this forum This anxiety has been more than I bargained for. I confess, I am having quite a hard time. It feels like my body just keeps going wrong. I am tired of worrying about it. How do you deal with that kind of anxiety? The frustration?

I guess the upside is there was nothing 'suspicious' a few months ago, and yet. .. new pain brings new anxiety. I sure would appreciate encourgement, offers of hope, cheers, "huzzahs" or whatever you've got. Someone once told me "once you've had cancer, you're part of the family." I am hoping that's the case here. I tried the Chat Room here, but, they seem pretty established with each other there, kind of hard to keep up with.

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Comments

  • Wannabeatit
    Wannabeatit Member Posts: 100 Member
    I totally understand what you

    I totally understand what you are going through. All I can say is that I think we all feel the same at some time or other and it is something that is very normal. I wish we could just get over these feelings but it’s almost like we are in a high state of awarenes. We don’t allow ourselves to let our guard down. Maybe that is a good thing in a way but it does put our nerves on edge. What I have experienced is that it does pass and we can have periods of time where things just go back to normal and oh that feels so good.

  • zsazsa1
    zsazsa1 Member Posts: 565 Member
    Yes, everyone of us

    Yes, everyone of us understands that constant fear of recurrence.  I went to see a psychologist to talk about my anxiety about recurrence - but it doesn't really help.  After all, it's a very rational fear!  Hopefully all your tests will come out okay, and you'll be temporarily reassured.

    One thing that has helped me somewhat is thinking about all the little abdominal/pelvic pains I've had that have been there for a few days or even weeks, and then gone away.  That makes me hope that new ones will, too, since the ones in the past haven't been recurrences.

  • EZLiving66
    EZLiving66 Member Posts: 1,482 Member
    Welcome to our board and yes,

    Welcome to our board and yes, we totally understand what you're going through. Every little ache and pain causes us to fear the cancer is back. I too have an aggressive form of uterine cancer - UPSC, Stage II. I only made it through three chemos and my oncologist said he'd save radiation if it came back. I fully expect it will at some point but try to live each day in the moment. Please let us know how things are going!

    Love,

    Eldri

  • Wannabeatit
    Wannabeatit Member Posts: 100 Member
    Another thing I try to

    Another thing I try to convince myself of is “It isn’t until it is”

  • Armywife
    Armywife Member Posts: 451 Member
    Normal!

    Isn't it funny?  Some days all I can think about is cancer, and how soon it's coming back.  Other days the whole thing feels like it was a bad dream and didn't even really happen.  My husband is convinced I am healed.  I want so much for that to be true because I want to be here for my elderly parents and to see my almost 30-year-old daughter married someday and to be a grandma.   But with Stage IVB endometroid, LVSI, positive pelvic wash, it's really hard to believe that I'm not just on borrowed time.  Makes me scared to have to go through treatment again.  Makes me wish I wouldn't waste so much time day to day, just scrolling through social media, but be more intentional about LIVING.  I wish I had answers for you.  I, too, have pain in my right side, but my most recent CT in October showed no evidence of disease.  Lately I've been feeling crampy down low in my pelvis, but my most recent physical exam last week showed no evidence of disease there.  My gyn/onc says that scar tissue can often feel a little funny.  Hoping you will be able to relax a bit, but we sure understand that's harder than it sounds.

  • DragonLadyHere
    DragonLadyHere Member Posts: 29
    Thank you all so much! YES,

    Thank you all so much! YES, you've all helped me to feel a little better just by knowing how I feel. That just does wonders for me. I very much appreciate your responses here. Laughing I'll try to figure out how to reply on this forum to you all, but I'm relatively new to these discussions boards, I've only posted a couple things I think.

  • DragonLadyHere
    DragonLadyHere Member Posts: 29

    I totally understand what you

    I totally understand what you are going through. All I can say is that I think we all feel the same at some time or other and it is something that is very normal. I wish we could just get over these feelings but it’s almost like we are in a high state of awarenes. We don’t allow ourselves to let our guard down. Maybe that is a good thing in a way but it does put our nerves on edge. What I have experienced is that it does pass and we can have periods of time where things just go back to normal and oh that feels so good.

    Yes, those 'normal times'

    Yes, those 'normal times' definitely feel so good. Just felt like I haven't had enough of them lately I guess.

  • DragonLadyHere
    DragonLadyHere Member Posts: 29
    edited April 2019 #9
    zsazsa1 said:

    Yes, everyone of us

    Yes, everyone of us understands that constant fear of recurrence.  I went to see a psychologist to talk about my anxiety about recurrence - but it doesn't really help.  After all, it's a very rational fear!  Hopefully all your tests will come out okay, and you'll be temporarily reassured.

    One thing that has helped me somewhat is thinking about all the little abdominal/pelvic pains I've had that have been there for a few days or even weeks, and then gone away.  That makes me hope that new ones will, too, since the ones in the past haven't been recurrences.

    Yeah, I have a psychiatrist

    Yeah, I have a psychiatrist too, and he's been great, but. .. still, he can only do so much. After talking to him, I tend to feel less crazy, lol. I am hoping these pains resolve, but they've been going for awhile. It's better some days, and not others. At least they know about them and are investigating. There's that. I am glad so many people understand so much here, but sad about the reason: Cancer.

  • DragonLadyHere
    DragonLadyHere Member Posts: 29

    Welcome to our board and yes,

    Welcome to our board and yes, we totally understand what you're going through. Every little ache and pain causes us to fear the cancer is back. I too have an aggressive form of uterine cancer - UPSC, Stage II. I only made it through three chemos and my oncologist said he'd save radiation if it came back. I fully expect it will at some point but try to live each day in the moment. Please let us know how things are going!

    Love,

    Eldri

    Thank you. I will! Yes, chemo

    Thank you. I will! Yes, chemo is very rough. I found the radiation rather awkward, lol.

  • DragonLadyHere
    DragonLadyHere Member Posts: 29

    Another thing I try to

    Another thing I try to convince myself of is “It isn’t until it is”

    Yes, sometimes I can swing

    Yes, sometimes I can swing that, but some days. .. not so much. When I posted my comments here, that was one of those times where I couldn't.

     

  • DragonLadyHere
    DragonLadyHere Member Posts: 29
    Armywife said:

    Normal!

    Isn't it funny?  Some days all I can think about is cancer, and how soon it's coming back.  Other days the whole thing feels like it was a bad dream and didn't even really happen.  My husband is convinced I am healed.  I want so much for that to be true because I want to be here for my elderly parents and to see my almost 30-year-old daughter married someday and to be a grandma.   But with Stage IVB endometroid, LVSI, positive pelvic wash, it's really hard to believe that I'm not just on borrowed time.  Makes me scared to have to go through treatment again.  Makes me wish I wouldn't waste so much time day to day, just scrolling through social media, but be more intentional about LIVING.  I wish I had answers for you.  I, too, have pain in my right side, but my most recent CT in October showed no evidence of disease.  Lately I've been feeling crampy down low in my pelvis, but my most recent physical exam last week showed no evidence of disease there.  My gyn/onc says that scar tissue can often feel a little funny.  Hoping you will be able to relax a bit, but we sure understand that's harder than it sounds.

    You described it EXACTLY,

    You described it EXACTLY, Armywife! EXACTLY. I'm sure your pain must be just as unsettling to you as mine is. I guess technically, we're all on borrowed time, just feels like the cancer experience brings one a little closer to that edge than most. I was an Army wife too, and my hubby fervently wants me to be okay too.

  • janaes
    janaes Member Posts: 799 Member
    Yep as all the others have

    Yep as all the others have said. You are normal. I hope you have a very happy birthday. I know its hard. I started chemo the day after my birthday. I didnt want it on my birthday. So the day before i went out to dinner with family. It was better than on my birthday but it was still hard. I tried. Yea family tried to get that, but they dont. Mine esspecially didnt get it after treatment. They wanted to move on and wanted me to also. I couldnt so i came here and they understood. It does get easier the further you get out but it is something that is a part of me. 

    I just had my first colonoscopy a few weeks ago. It scared me too but it turned out not to be as bad as i thought. Just remember to take things a day at a time and if you have a bad day or moment know tthat its normal.

    Best of luck as you go forward.

  • DragonLadyHere
    DragonLadyHere Member Posts: 29
    janaes said:

    Yep as all the others have

    Yep as all the others have said. You are normal. I hope you have a very happy birthday. I know its hard. I started chemo the day after my birthday. I didnt want it on my birthday. So the day before i went out to dinner with family. It was better than on my birthday but it was still hard. I tried. Yea family tried to get that, but they dont. Mine esspecially didnt get it after treatment. They wanted to move on and wanted me to also. I couldnt so i came here and they understood. It does get easier the further you get out but it is something that is a part of me. 

    I just had my first colonoscopy a few weeks ago. It scared me too but it turned out not to be as bad as i thought. Just remember to take things a day at a time and if you have a bad day or moment know tthat its normal.

    Best of luck as you go forward.

    Thank you, Janaes. Yeah, some

    Thank you, Janaes. Yeah, some days are hard. I guess that's how I found myself here. Like your family, mine want me to be okay, but it's been a bumpy road. Sometimes, I don't feel okay. I started chemo on Halloween day, lol. I have my colonoscopy in a week. I haven't had one in awhile. I just want to get it done with I guess. Very undignifying procedure, lol.

  • janaes
    janaes Member Posts: 799 Member
    Thats a very goos word to

    Thats a very goos word to discribe a colonoscapy (undignifying).

  • BluebirdOne
    BluebirdOne Member Posts: 654 Member
    Brachytherapy was much more undignified than

    a colonoscopy.  By the time they insert the thingamajig,  you are asleep. With Brachy at the teaching hospital I had any number people looking at my hoohaw with the other thingamajig tube sticking in it and observing much of the process except the actual radiation. Talk about undignified! I just kept telling myself "they aren't looking at my bald head and face and I would probably never see them again." Of course, they were all very respectful, but Jeez Louise, talk about embarrassing 

  • BluebirdOne
    BluebirdOne Member Posts: 654 Member
    Nothing about this is normal

    Dragon Lady, 

    I think most if not all of us have felt exactly how you feel. Not normal but nothing about the entire cancer experience is normal. From biopsy to surgery to staging to chemo to radiation to survivorship. The first three months after dx, I was a blubbering, fragile, depressed mess, with incontinence, diarrhea, constipation, and neuropathy. Add in the crushing bone pain, nausea, occasional vomiting, and baldness, I was in a constant state of terror I was never going to feel better again. The physical distress passed only to have the emotional duress explode as I had to tell family and friends my dx. Now as I approach my first 6 month scan I have back pain, from right to left. Everyday I find myself weepy or totally breaking down, with a few good days. My poor husband has to live with this crazed person. I know this is anxiety due to the scan coming up, but I cannot control my overwhelming sense of doom. So this is not normal but it is now normal for me. The knowledge I have gained from the women on this site has been invaluable, and I know how lucky I am to have found them. This helps me to cope and when I think back to how distressed I was when first diagnosed, I know that I am coping much better but there are a lot of peaks and very low points. My biggest coping mechanism is to remember that other than to get treatment and live a healthy lifestyle, there isn't much I can do about preventing recurrence. We are here for you. 

    Xoxo

    Denise

  • SF73
    SF73 Member Posts: 317 Member
    You guys are definitely not

    You guys are definitely not alone in feeling this way. I am amazed at my body's ability to make up problems near surveillance visits. 10 days to every visit with my oncologist, I convince myself that I am recurring. It is like clockwork. My poor husband has to experience all these lows with me. 

  • TeddyandBears_Mom
    TeddyandBears_Mom Member Posts: 1,811 Member

    Brachytherapy was much more undignified than

    a colonoscopy.  By the time they insert the thingamajig,  you are asleep. With Brachy at the teaching hospital I had any number people looking at my hoohaw with the other thingamajig tube sticking in it and observing much of the process except the actual radiation. Talk about undignified! I just kept telling myself "they aren't looking at my bald head and face and I would probably never see them again." Of course, they were all very respectful, but Jeez Louise, talk about embarrassing 

    Denise, you made me laugh

    Denise, you made me laugh this morning! And, I couldn't agree with you more!!!! Great description.  

    The entire team where I got my Brachy done were men.... uhm.... Embarassed

    Love and Hugs,

    Cindi

  • Forherself
    Forherself Member Posts: 961 Member
    Have you been tested for Lynch syndrome?

    I was just wondering after reading your posts.   And I wanted to mention that there is a good article on Post Traumatic Stress Disorder. on the Mayo Clinic website.   https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/post-traumatic-stress-disorder/symptoms-causes/syc-20355967 

    At the end it mentions that life threatening illness can cause it.  it is good to just be aware that yes, you have a good reason to feel upset.  And feel your feelings.  I realized I had some symptoms of PTSD after my surgery.   I could not sleep in the same bed that I recovered in.  I just relived all those emotions as soon as I went to bed.  It helped to move to a different room for awhile.   I think it's a good article to read. 

  • BluebirdOne
    BluebirdOne Member Posts: 654 Member

    Denise, you made me laugh

    Denise, you made me laugh this morning! And, I couldn't agree with you more!!!! Great description.  

    The entire team where I got my Brachy done were men.... uhm.... Embarassed

    Love and Hugs,

    Cindi

    Two men who were concerned about the radiation

    Levels, two female med students who seemed more embarrassed than me and looked like 5th graders, one female radiation doc, two female technicians who were wonderful and I think I imagined a large gorilla who walked by as well, but maybe was real. I just kept thinking they wouldn't recognize both my face and nether regions until I remembered I had two more sessions!