NHL Large T Cell Survivor of 2 1/2 years, looking for encouragement
Comments
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Hello,
Please don't feel
Hello,
Please don't feel alone...you are never alone. I am not sure abt your spiritual life, but have you thought of praying when time are hard? I have been fighting NHL large t cell lymphoma (anaplastic) since 2008. At times it feels no one is there to listen to our thoughts or wipe away our tears..even if we have a wonderful family. I know that the Lord will carry the weight when its too much for us...and He is all I..we....need. Take one day at a time and focus on the small things in life that make you smile. I'm here for you,
Natalie0 -
Thank you so much for responding.natalie14 said:Hello,
Please don't feel
Hello,
Please don't feel alone...you are never alone. I am not sure abt your spiritual life, but have you thought of praying when time are hard? I have been fighting NHL large t cell lymphoma (anaplastic) since 2008. At times it feels no one is there to listen to our thoughts or wipe away our tears..even if we have a wonderful family. I know that the Lord will carry the weight when its too much for us...and He is all I..we....need. Take one day at a time and focus on the small things in life that make you smile. I'm here for you,
Natalie
I didn't think anyone would see my post. Thank you for understanding and your kind words. I am a born again believer and I do pray. I was diagnosed in 2008 and treated in 2009 sounds like the same diagnosis. I hope you are doing well. I am not sure what is going on with me, maybe stress, everyone around me knowing my concerns think it is stress. I've lost two jobs, my car and I have a lot of responsibility. It is nice to have someone to talk to. Thank you for reaching out to me in my time of need. I can't tell you how much it means to me. Joanna0 -
Help is availableHope4best said:Thank you so much for responding.
I didn't think anyone would see my post. Thank you for understanding and your kind words. I am a born again believer and I do pray. I was diagnosed in 2008 and treated in 2009 sounds like the same diagnosis. I hope you are doing well. I am not sure what is going on with me, maybe stress, everyone around me knowing my concerns think it is stress. I've lost two jobs, my car and I have a lot of responsibility. It is nice to have someone to talk to. Thank you for reaching out to me in my time of need. I can't tell you how much it means to me. Joanna
I am certain that there are a number of options for you. As mentioned in the other thread, your city, county, township, parish (depending on where you are), state of even the US government offer some level of medical assistance. If you were having a relapse, you would probably have multiple nodes swollen, and possibly the "B" symptoms of night sweats, spiking fevers and weight loss. As it is, you are under so much life stress that it alone can produce the symptoms that you have. Until you find work, you need medical coverage. I would start calling and visiting government offices until you find one that will help you - even temporarily. The sooner, the better, just in case. You can Google your particular variety of T-cell lymphoma for symptoms of relapse, as each variety of lymphoma seems to act differently.
On the faith side of things, when my T-cell lymphoma was raging, I abandoned my life to God. I let go of any claim that I had to my life, since I did not give life to myself, and I was not the one to call it home. I gave it to Him, being at peace should He decide to call me home. And, once I let go of it, everything changed. He was waiting for me to let go and trust Him. Once I did, He gave my life back to me. I am not saying that it is easy to do, but it gave me peace within myself. As it is, I would rather be in the next life than this one, but my work here is not finished yet - of that I am certain.
Now is the time to pour your heart into your faith, and trust God for each breath you take, since we do not take even one breath without His approval. Ask for strength and it will be given you. May peace be with you.0 -
Having faithpo18guy said:Help is available
I am certain that there are a number of options for you. As mentioned in the other thread, your city, county, township, parish (depending on where you are), state of even the US government offer some level of medical assistance. If you were having a relapse, you would probably have multiple nodes swollen, and possibly the "B" symptoms of night sweats, spiking fevers and weight loss. As it is, you are under so much life stress that it alone can produce the symptoms that you have. Until you find work, you need medical coverage. I would start calling and visiting government offices until you find one that will help you - even temporarily. The sooner, the better, just in case. You can Google your particular variety of T-cell lymphoma for symptoms of relapse, as each variety of lymphoma seems to act differently.
On the faith side of things, when my T-cell lymphoma was raging, I abandoned my life to God. I let go of any claim that I had to my life, since I did not give life to myself, and I was not the one to call it home. I gave it to Him, being at peace should He decide to call me home. And, once I let go of it, everything changed. He was waiting for me to let go and trust Him. Once I did, He gave my life back to me. I am not saying that it is easy to do, but it gave me peace within myself. As it is, I would rather be in the next life than this one, but my work here is not finished yet - of that I am certain.
Now is the time to pour your heart into your faith, and trust God for each breath you take, since we do not take even one breath without His approval. Ask for strength and it will be given you. May peace be with you.
Hello,
I was totally moved by your post. Especially your last 2 paragraphs.
God Bless you. Love Maggie0 -
Hi Natalienatalie14 said:Hello,
Please don't feel
Hello,
Please don't feel alone...you are never alone. I am not sure abt your spiritual life, but have you thought of praying when time are hard? I have been fighting NHL large t cell lymphoma (anaplastic) since 2008. At times it feels no one is there to listen to our thoughts or wipe away our tears..even if we have a wonderful family. I know that the Lord will carry the weight when its too much for us...and He is all I..we....need. Take one day at a time and focus on the small things in life that make you smile. I'm here for you,
Natalie
My daughter who is 18 just diagnosed with ALCL stageII. I was wondering what stage of the disease your were diagnosed with in 2008? And did you have any replase? Did it respond to chemo pretty good? My daughter was on top of the world and had so much dreams and potentials, but it seems every dream was crashed.0 -
How are you doing Natalie? Inatalie14 said:Hello,
Please don't feel
Hello,
Please don't feel alone...you are never alone. I am not sure abt your spiritual life, but have you thought of praying when time are hard? I have been fighting NHL large t cell lymphoma (anaplastic) since 2008. At times it feels no one is there to listen to our thoughts or wipe away our tears..even if we have a wonderful family. I know that the Lord will carry the weight when its too much for us...and He is all I..we....need. Take one day at a time and focus on the small things in life that make you smile. I'm here for you,
Natalie
How are you doing Natalie? I was diagnosed with ALCL ALK positive back in Oct 2011. I started my 6 rounds of CHOP Nov 22 and finished March 8th. All my Lymph Nodes have been back to normal since my second chemo. Doctors told me my cancer was gone. Had my post chemo PET scan the end of March and it came back positive lighting up in the left side of my groin where everything started. They did another ct scan and still no swollen Lymph Nodes. They told me it was inflammation and I probably did the PET scan too soon after chemo (3 weeks after). I go in for another PET scan tomorrow and I nervous to say the least. I see you have been fighting ALCL for the past 4 years? Are you doing ok now? I live in Southern California with my beautiful wife and awesome 8yr old twin boys. I see you have a beautiful daughter. I hope you are doing ok.0 -
Trials
Praying for you,
max0 -
Hi Cure100,cure100 said:Hi Natalie
My daughter who is 18 just diagnosed with ALCL stageII. I was wondering what stage of the disease your were diagnosed with in 2008? And did you have any replase? Did it respond to chemo pretty good? My daughter was on top of the world and had so much dreams and potentials, but it seems every dream was crashed.
I just wantedHi Cure100,
I just wanted to reach out to you because I had a similar situation to your daughter. I had ALK+ ALCL stage 2A diagnosed in 2002. I was 17, almost 18. I have been in remission until this March (13 years after diagnosis). I just wanted to let you know that I had a really long remission, and they are treating it now almost as if it's a new disease. I'm doing CHOP and radiation. Last time I did a pediatric combination chemo regimen that lasted a year, but this time, I'm doing standard CHOP, although there isn't really a standard given such a late recurrence. I hope you're daughter is doing great. If you have time to update me on her status, I would really appreciate it. I almost never meet people who have the same cancer as me. Thanks!
-cassie
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