Emotional Issues

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Do you feel like you are "wasting" your second chance at life?

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  • MarineE5
    MarineE5 Member Posts: 1,030 Member
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    Simple answer

    My simple answer to your question is NO!!! I am not wasting my second chance. Each morning I say to myself " Can I be a better person then I was yesterday " and I try to do it. I can be by doing simple things like not letting little things bother me that did in the past. I do things that I want to do each day verses things that I have to do each day. I'm not putting off chores, just rearranging them to the days that I am up to doing them and want to do them.

    If I can contribute to some questions about a new patient's journey through Head and Neck cancer and calm their fears for a short time, I have helped and that is paying it forward because a neighbor did it for me when I first heard those words " You have cancer " and my world was turned upside down...

    I am in a good place in my life, sure I look over my shoulder each day, but briefly and move on.

    My Best to You and Everyone Here
  • RushFan
    RushFan Member Posts: 224
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    No
    I do not. I'm about 13 months post treatment. I think about C everyday, but I am more focused the positives...and want to do more!

    I'm back to work full time, spending more time with my wife & children, working out, reading more, serving more at church, traveling this summer to Utah for a reunion, Alabama for vacation, California to hang out with my college room mate and best friend, playing some golf, getting my yard back in order, etc.

    Best to you, and all here,
    Chuck.
  • Hondo
    Hondo Member Posts: 6,636 Member
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    Never
    Second chance I am on my third and I am just as productive as ever. You have to live life as positive and as joyful as possible making ever moment count. Why because there is someone that needs you.

    All the best to you
    Hondo
  • luv4lacrosse
    luv4lacrosse Member Posts: 1,410 Member
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    I AM NOT
    I am not wasting away or allowing my cancer to rule my life. I have days where I do not feel lke doing much, or may feel tired, but those days were present long before cancer. Some things in my life are not the same as they were before, IE: eating and my powerlifting at the gym. I accept the things that are harder to change, and know that in time it will improve. I feel very fortunate to have a full time job that I love and have been able to return to, I am back in the gym 3-5 days a week working on getting back to where I was before cancer, my eating seems to improve every week as long as I push myself.

    Overall, I feel pretty good, and take the good with the bad and just try to process the bad in a positive manner.

    Best!!

    Mike
  • soccerfreaks
    soccerfreaks Member Posts: 2,788 Member
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    "Wasted days and wasted nights"
    It is not unusual to have 'emotional issues', hairbow, it is not so unusual to feel that you are not taking advantage of what you refer to as a second chance. As you recognize, cancer costs us beyond physical damage; it inflicts damage on our psyches as well, some of us at least.

    If you think about it, before you received your diagnosis, even if you had close family members involved in the struggle, it is likely that the diagnosis sounded like a death sentence to you, both emotionally and rationally. After all, most of what we hear about cancer is about famous people dying from it; most of what we hear about cancer is that this friend or that, this co-worker or that, has passed away because of cancer.

    It is not so often that we hear about people surviving, striving, thriving.

    So, when we get the news, all of the factors associated with grief, the depression, the anxiety, the fear, the denial, the acceptance (and even something I refer to as a sense of entitlement) come to the fore, since, after all, we are in a sense grieving for ourselves. This is not pretend. It is for real.

    Given the second chance you refer to, we can be disappointed in ourselves for not taking advantage of it in a way that we think we should. Perhaps it is a physical problem... we can't get out like we used to, or we don't want to eat in public, or we feel like everyone will notice we have lopsided breasts, everyone will comment on our baldness.

    Some of these physical issues intertwine with our 'emotional' ones. We probably give more weight to our self-perceived problems than others do. Still, it keeps us, some of us, from doing what we feel we should be doing to celebrate this 'second chance'. And maybe it is not physical at all. Maybe it is anxiety, maybe it is depression of a milder or stronger form. There are any number of reasons why we might not feel we are taking advantage, there are any number of reasons why we believe we cannot take advantage, there are any number of reasons why we truly cannot take advantage.

    Me, I do not consider it a second chance. I consider it a first chance. I consider it a slap in the face by mortality, something that most people never get. We are awakened to the very real notion that we will not be here forever and that we should celebrate each and every day.

    MarineE5's response to your post is excellent, in my opinion, especially because he suggests that he reminds himself -- he is proactive on a daily basis -- that he needs to do some good with his day.
    No one said it would be easy. No one said it would be 'fair'. It is what it is, and it is what we make of it. Again, as MarineE5 points out, we can choose to make it what we want it to be. You and I, both, all of us, we can choose to make it what we want it to be.

    In parting let me add, Hairbrow, that it really makes little sense to go through all that you have gone through without having hope, without having humor, without celebrating your days and your nights and your loved ones. You have EARNED it.

    Take care,

    Joe
  • sweetblood22
    sweetblood22 Member Posts: 3,228
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    "Wasted days and wasted nights"
    It is not unusual to have 'emotional issues', hairbow, it is not so unusual to feel that you are not taking advantage of what you refer to as a second chance. As you recognize, cancer costs us beyond physical damage; it inflicts damage on our psyches as well, some of us at least.

    If you think about it, before you received your diagnosis, even if you had close family members involved in the struggle, it is likely that the diagnosis sounded like a death sentence to you, both emotionally and rationally. After all, most of what we hear about cancer is about famous people dying from it; most of what we hear about cancer is that this friend or that, this co-worker or that, has passed away because of cancer.

    It is not so often that we hear about people surviving, striving, thriving.

    So, when we get the news, all of the factors associated with grief, the depression, the anxiety, the fear, the denial, the acceptance (and even something I refer to as a sense of entitlement) come to the fore, since, after all, we are in a sense grieving for ourselves. This is not pretend. It is for real.

    Given the second chance you refer to, we can be disappointed in ourselves for not taking advantage of it in a way that we think we should. Perhaps it is a physical problem... we can't get out like we used to, or we don't want to eat in public, or we feel like everyone will notice we have lopsided breasts, everyone will comment on our baldness.

    Some of these physical issues intertwine with our 'emotional' ones. We probably give more weight to our self-perceived problems than others do. Still, it keeps us, some of us, from doing what we feel we should be doing to celebrate this 'second chance'. And maybe it is not physical at all. Maybe it is anxiety, maybe it is depression of a milder or stronger form. There are any number of reasons why we might not feel we are taking advantage, there are any number of reasons why we believe we cannot take advantage, there are any number of reasons why we truly cannot take advantage.

    Me, I do not consider it a second chance. I consider it a first chance. I consider it a slap in the face by mortality, something that most people never get. We are awakened to the very real notion that we will not be here forever and that we should celebrate each and every day.

    MarineE5's response to your post is excellent, in my opinion, especially because he suggests that he reminds himself -- he is proactive on a daily basis -- that he needs to do some good with his day.
    No one said it would be easy. No one said it would be 'fair'. It is what it is, and it is what we make of it. Again, as MarineE5 points out, we can choose to make it what we want it to be. You and I, both, all of us, we can choose to make it what we want it to be.

    In parting let me add, Hairbrow, that it really makes little sense to go through all that you have gone through without having hope, without having humor, without celebrating your days and your nights and your loved ones. You have EARNED it.

    Take care,

    Joe

    Nope.
    If anything I was somewhat wasting my first time around. Maybe wasting would be too strong a word, because I have been living with a serious illness for almost 20 years, and watching my brother pass away after a bone marrow transplant, made me realize I needed to live like I only had one shot at life. Which I do. I am even more appreciative of some of the automatic things that I took for granted. Like swallowing, eating, and being able to sing in church or choir. Automatic things I never even thought about that we do and bring us pleasure. Some of these things I can do, not as well, and I will never sing in concert again, but I can at lease blurt out a measure or two- before my mouth is so dry my lips stick to my teeth, while driving in the car on the way to the park with the dog, or grocery shopping.

    I can take the challenge of trying new foods and sometimes enjoying them again. Rekindled my love of cooking and it's been a challenge to learn to cook again in a whole new way. I can take short walks with my dog, taking time to smell the beautiful flowers. Taking pictures of interesting things. I can take an art class, try and take a belly dance class, try my best at yoga, and spend my days doing things I want to do. No. Don't feel like I'm wasting one day.
  • hawk711
    hawk711 Member Posts: 566
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    Nope.
    If anything I was somewhat wasting my first time around. Maybe wasting would be too strong a word, because I have been living with a serious illness for almost 20 years, and watching my brother pass away after a bone marrow transplant, made me realize I needed to live like I only had one shot at life. Which I do. I am even more appreciative of some of the automatic things that I took for granted. Like swallowing, eating, and being able to sing in church or choir. Automatic things I never even thought about that we do and bring us pleasure. Some of these things I can do, not as well, and I will never sing in concert again, but I can at lease blurt out a measure or two- before my mouth is so dry my lips stick to my teeth, while driving in the car on the way to the park with the dog, or grocery shopping.

    I can take the challenge of trying new foods and sometimes enjoying them again. Rekindled my love of cooking and it's been a challenge to learn to cook again in a whole new way. I can take short walks with my dog, taking time to smell the beautiful flowers. Taking pictures of interesting things. I can take an art class, try and take a belly dance class, try my best at yoga, and spend my days doing things I want to do. No. Don't feel like I'm wasting one day.

    No, but it's a good question
    I'm glad you asked the question. I have the feeling that the other shoe is going to drop on me and all the crap will come back. I am switching jobs in a few weeks and I'm doing it because I am trying to live my life the second time around. My new employer knows about my "C" and my treatment and they say they want to hire me for the "long term". It made me feel good that others see me long term, so I need to see myself "long term"....
    I am thankful for everyday and my relationship with my wife is better now than ever. Don't get me wrong, I could use a little more saliva, just a little please! But I am accepting the new normal and hoping for 30+ years of future. I wish that for all of us, except those under 50, where I wish you another 50+ years of life!!!LOL
    All the best,
    Steve