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Hi Sandi,
I know this seems
Hi Sandi,
I know this seems like more than you can handle. It is devastating when it happens to you or a loved one. I've had it and so has my Mom. Please know that there are a lot of advances in cancer treatment and I believe we will find a cure before too long. Try and stay positive(I know easy for me to say). Waiting is so hard but once the diagnosis is firm the treatment will begin. I dont know why God gives us diseases like cancer but keep your faith. Mark 11:22. Keep us informed.
Robin0 -
same boat
my husband too has it pretty bad and like you i can;t lose him but trust the docs and god we will get threw this, it will be hard but we have to for our husbands
michelle0 -
Your husband's diagnosis
Sandi, I am so sorry you and your husband are having to deal with this; you are in my prayers. As Robin said, once all the information is in, the doctors will be able to firm up a method of attack, then you will have something to focus your energies on. I was initially diagnosed in 2004, and over the years there have been good and there have been bad days. What i can say for sure is that for the most part, the good days make the bad days worth it. Keep a strong faith that your journey isn't over and that you are not alone in this fight. Keep us informed, ok? Mary0 -
Mark 11:22rmap59 said:Hi Sandi,
I know this seems
Hi Sandi,
I know this seems like more than you can handle. It is devastating when it happens to you or a loved one. I've had it and so has my Mom. Please know that there are a lot of advances in cancer treatment and I believe we will find a cure before too long. Try and stay positive(I know easy for me to say). Waiting is so hard but once the diagnosis is firm the treatment will begin. I dont know why God gives us diseases like cancer but keep your faith. Mark 11:22. Keep us informed.
Robin
I so needed to read that again, today has been a low day with chemo tomarrow. Thanks0 -
Stage 4 diagnoises
Sandi, I'm so sorry to hear about your husband and I understand how scarry this is as I was in the same boat 8plus months ago. I had a tumor in colon thus a colonoscopy was performed and I also had nodes,liver (more than 10 nodules) and lungs (70nodules) affected. Today I am going thru chemo and feel sure I am going to get a cure. I have low days and scarry days to and I have educated myself with info on all the websites I could find. Information from other patients has been wonderful for making me not feel so alone. Stay strong and know we are here for you anytime you need us!! Everyone here is wonderful. Peace be with you!!0 -
NEVER GIVE UP
Hi, Sandi -
I am sorry to hear about the challenges you and your husband find yourselves facing. The first thing I would tell you is to breathe. As my wife, usakat, and I found out recently, not all cancer diagnoses are conclusive. She was just diagnosed with a very rare and extremely aggressive form of stomach cancer and her doc actually called me back from a military deployment to Africa and Eastern Europe to be with her when she had surgery to remover her stomach. Within three weeks, however, her diagnosis had changed to "woops... not cancer. Glad we didn't take out your stomach. We sure would have felt silly."
I'm not saying that the test results you have received are not correct, I am saying that test results are the beginning of the process. Work with the doctors to REALLY evaluate the results and map out a plan of action. One thing I would note is that scar tissue - which is common in the lungs - is sometimes seen as possible cancer. I have had a spot on my liver and my kidney for years. It hasn't grown - ergo it isn't cancer. A PeT scan can confirm a lot of that.
Even if it is cancer, there are plenty of treatment options from thoractomy to liver resection to RFA. There are a LOT of stage 4 survivors here on this site who are living proof that you can't count folks out of the game just because they develop mets.
I am sure that all of this challenging information is overwhelming right now. I don't envy your situation, but I can tell you it doesn't mean you're going to lose your husband. Your attitude will have a significant impact on his attitude. If you are positive, you will help him be positive. And, attitude is 80% of your recovery from cancer.
Stay positive, focused, and take these pieces of info for what they are - facts you and your doctors need to use in developing a plan to kill the cancer. Not a death sentence - unless you're a cancer cell.
Keeping you both in my thoughts and prayers.
- SpongeBob0
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