What items make you feel better?
Thinking about your treatments and side effects, physically, mentally, etc.
What type of items could someone give you to help make you more comfortable.
Example: I had dry mouth and nausea - fruit flavored hard candy helped. Reading helped me pass the time during chemo and transfusions.
Your feedback is appreciated. No idea is too small to list.
Comments
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feeling better
You're right about that...hard candy definitely has been an item that makes me feel better. It is something I have found late in my own care. I tried jolly ranchers at first, but those had a filmy flavor so I switched to starlight mints right after the holidays. I loved the candy canes and missed them after the stores stopped selling them.
While on temodar and a few months after, I swore by ginger ale. I would take the nausea pill as needed, but the ginger ale helped on the spot or as needed on the go.
I always took temodar right before bedtime to prevent a lot of nausea during the day.0 -
Working outblackngray said:feeling better
You're right about that...hard candy definitely has been an item that makes me feel better. It is something I have found late in my own care. I tried jolly ranchers at first, but those had a filmy flavor so I switched to starlight mints right after the holidays. I loved the candy canes and missed them after the stores stopped selling them.
While on temodar and a few months after, I swore by ginger ale. I would take the nausea pill as needed, but the ginger ale helped on the spot or as needed on the go.
I always took temodar right before bedtime to prevent a lot of nausea during the day.
I made my sister promise to work out through the radiation and the chemo.There are time when she could just walk a mile, sometimes took a nap instead. But most of the time she could run 2.5 miles. She felt so good after running. I kept telling her that exercise is an independent prognostic factor in glioma survival. Radiotherapy and chemo were a piece of cake for her. She could still socialize, work full time. I give exercise a lot of credit. I know it is hard, but beating cancer is hard.
J.0 -
Staying ACTIVEI_Promise said:Working out
I made my sister promise to work out through the radiation and the chemo.There are time when she could just walk a mile, sometimes took a nap instead. But most of the time she could run 2.5 miles. She felt so good after running. I kept telling her that exercise is an independent prognostic factor in glioma survival. Radiotherapy and chemo were a piece of cake for her. She could still socialize, work full time. I give exercise a lot of credit. I know it is hard, but beating cancer is hard.
J.
I agree with staying active. This has to be #1 on the list of surviving any type of cancer for any length of time for any length of treatment, through any battle.
Radiation and chemo is a knock out treatment, it will knock you out. Chemo will knock you out too, but temodar hmmm. I could never work out. I still can't. I find other ways to stay active and socialize, or get out of bed. I find that I feel a lot better when I'm out of bed and showered. Getting out of bed and cleaned up is half the battle but I feel so much better when I am. I don't like having to take all of the pills that I have to take, but once the regimen is done, I feel better. Staying active is #1.0
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