For those who have been NED for a long time. What did you change?

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Helen321
Helen321 Member Posts: 1,459 Member

Did you exercise?  Diet better?  Change nothing?  I'm curious.

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  • toyfox
    toyfox Member Posts: 158 Member
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    The changes we have made

    Mu husband has been ned going on 4 years

    We have made the changes listed below

    Diet - We eat Organic raw/cooked vegetables, fruits, whole grains
    occasional organic meat or fish. We juice fresh vegetables 
    every morning
    Food based vitamins, vitamin d3, garlic and turmeric 
    No sugar or processed food
    Exercise - We spend time at the YMCA
    Use the treadmill, pool, sauna and other exercise equipment.
    Just go on long walks.
    We use cleaning and personal care products
    without harsh chemicals.

  • JanJan63
    JanJan63 Member Posts: 2,478 Member
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    toyfox said:

    The changes we have made

    Mu husband has been ned going on 4 years

    We have made the changes listed below

    Diet - We eat Organic raw/cooked vegetables, fruits, whole grains
    occasional organic meat or fish. We juice fresh vegetables 
    every morning
    Food based vitamins, vitamin d3, garlic and turmeric 
    No sugar or processed food
    Exercise - We spend time at the YMCA
    Use the treadmill, pool, sauna and other exercise equipment.
    Just go on long walks.
    We use cleaning and personal care products
    without harsh chemicals.

    I did a major look up of what

    I did a major look up of what people have done and the number one thing is a positive attitude. I know that sounds corny but that's what they say. Every list of suggestions mentions it. I'm not sure it can make someone life longer but I bet it can reduce the life of someone who is miserable.

  • neons356
    neons356 Member Posts: 57 Member
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    some on this site will most likely cringe

    But I really haven't changed my eating habits. Ive been cancer free for just over 20 years now, so personally I don't feel that diet has made a difference in my survival, nor in my getting colon cancer in the firdt place.

                       Carl

  • annalexandria
    annalexandria Member Posts: 2,571 Member
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    I hate to admit it

    but I am probably less healthy in my behavior than I was before I got cancer.  I can't eat too many fruits and veggies without my digestive system going nuts, and I can't exercise anywhere near as much because of my joint problems.

    I guess I drink less, because I don't host many parties these days..

    oh, I'm fatter than I was before.  Yay?  Boo?  I'm not sure.  But I've been NED for almost three years, after a pretty nasty stage 4 dx, so I'm ok with it all.  I admire those who use their cancer dx to get motivated to run marathons or something!

  • JanJan63
    JanJan63 Member Posts: 2,478 Member
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    I hate to admit it

    but I am probably less healthy in my behavior than I was before I got cancer.  I can't eat too many fruits and veggies without my digestive system going nuts, and I can't exercise anywhere near as much because of my joint problems.

    I guess I drink less, because I don't host many parties these days..

    oh, I'm fatter than I was before.  Yay?  Boo?  I'm not sure.  But I've been NED for almost three years, after a pretty nasty stage 4 dx, so I'm ok with it all.  I admire those who use their cancer dx to get motivated to run marathons or something!

    One nurse told me that

    One nurse told me that colorectal is the number one cancer they see in people who already live a very healthy lifestyle. The ones that run ten miles a day and eat very well or are vegans. She said they're the hardest to deal with because they're so angry and resentful.

    When I fiorst saw my surgeon I remember my husband asking him about my Pepsi drinking. I drink two cans a day, every day. My husband drinks two cans of Coke a day but whatever. I'm not a drinker and have never done drugs, I eat pretty well but could eat better and I'm fairly active but not an exercise nut. My surgeon said to him "do you think Pepsi gave her cancer? Because it didn't."

    I've read about consuming less sugar based on the fact that cancer cells thrive on sugar. So does everything else and it's almost impossible to remove it from your diet. I know there's a place in Mexico that treats people beased on that theory by giving them a totally sugar free diet and actually removing their blood and cleaning it, like they do in dialysis. The two people I know that tried that are both passed away. After emptying their pocketbooks.

    I am trying to eat a bit better, more veggies and fruit, less red meat. And I'm trying to walk more, I was always too busy for that before. But I'm not planning to make any big changes. The problem is that we get better or we don't. Even something as specific as chemo has different outcomes. So one person drinks green drinks every day and becomes a vegan and does triathlons and their cancer never recurs so they swear it's because of all of that but it probably wouldn't have come back anyway. Another person makes no changes at all and gets the same results. Someone else makes no changes and doesn't survive and it's thought it's because they didn't do this or that.

    Colorectal cancer is the number one cancer that's completely random. I have IBS so I knew I had a higher chance than people who don't but other than that it's a complete crap shoot so I feel that trying to fend it off with diet or other things is fairly pointless. I will keep my positive attitude because that's who I am. I will not be a cancer victim or even a cancer warrior because both make me feel minimized by it. I just want to be me, not the woman who is brave and tough like so many people tell me. I'm not brave or tough, I just did what I had to do. But it will NOT define me. I have a friend who wallows in telling people she's beaten cancer and having people fawn all over her. No thanks.

    One other thing I will do, however, is try to boost my immunity and I haven't come up with a plan for that yet, besides the positive attitude. Because they say we have the chance to develop cancer a few times during our lives but our immune system kills the cells. I'd like to do that, have my oen body deal with it rather than wait for poison to do it.

    Sorry this is so long. I had chemo yesterday and am having a severe cold sensitivity reaction today so I'm cranky about cancer. But the worst is that it looks like my brother, who is battling esophageal cancer, isn't going to make it. Ironically, it's not the cancer that's going to kill him. He has two hernias he's never had fixed and they've caused a blockage in his intestine and he's too sick for surgery. He has COPD from years of smoking and they don't think he'd survive it. For the record, his doctors think his cancer came from years of using antacids for acid reflux.

  • Momof2plusteentwins
    Momof2plusteentwins Member Posts: 509 Member
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    No diet change

    Embarassed

    I eat the same as I did before cancer, not healthy and fast food.  I like to walk but dont do that often either.  2 1/2 years NED.  Yes, like you AA I am more fluffy. 

  • maglets
    maglets Member Posts: 2,576 Member
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    No diet change

    Embarassed

    I eat the same as I did before cancer, not healthy and fast food.  I like to walk but dont do that often either.  2 1/2 years NED.  Yes, like you AA I am more fluffy. 

    fluffy

    Hahah I love that...."fluffy"...yup me too.....several pounds heavier since chemo and surgery.  Just over 5 years NED for me after serious stageIV threat.  Nope I have not changed a thing.  I made up my mind during the fight that cancer was not going to rule my life.  I have always eaten really well.....fresh fruit, veg, very little red meat and No prepared food, or take-out.  At almost most 70 years of age I go to the Y at least 3 or 4 times a week and I still enjoy a glass of wine.

    I try not to dwell on why I got cancer in the first place.....It just not make sense to me that eating this or that is really going to change my outcome so I pretty much go on as I did before. Laughing.......like AA no marathons for me but I surely do admire all the folks who do.......

    mags

  • JanJan63
    JanJan63 Member Posts: 2,478 Member
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    maglets said:

    fluffy

    Hahah I love that...."fluffy"...yup me too.....several pounds heavier since chemo and surgery.  Just over 5 years NED for me after serious stageIV threat.  Nope I have not changed a thing.  I made up my mind during the fight that cancer was not going to rule my life.  I have always eaten really well.....fresh fruit, veg, very little red meat and No prepared food, or take-out.  At almost most 70 years of age I go to the Y at least 3 or 4 times a week and I still enjoy a glass of wine.

    I try not to dwell on why I got cancer in the first place.....It just not make sense to me that eating this or that is really going to change my outcome so I pretty much go on as I did before. Laughing.......like AA no marathons for me but I surely do admire all the folks who do.......

    mags

    I should add that I've never

    I should add that I've never been a fast food eater and rarely ever eat processed foods. I don't like them plus the IBS wouldn't do well with it. I also don't eat things like pastries or doughnuts or chocolate bars other than occasionally, I never have.

  • toyfox
    toyfox Member Posts: 158 Member
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    It's nice that so many

    It's nice that so many are doing well without changing their diet or
    lifestyle. Since I have watched two of my kids die, one from cancer.
    I will do anything I can do whether it works or not to keep from
    loosing another loved one. Chemo affected my husbands heart and
    he developed a blood clot in his liver so it was so hard wondering if
     I would loose him two. His onc told us that healthy eating and exercise
    was helpful in preventing a recurrence.

  • Annabelle41415
    Annabelle41415 Member Posts: 6,742 Member
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    Diet

    All three of my doctors said it wasn't anything in my diet that caused it.  Guess it was more heridity than anything but my Aunt who had it didn't get it until 74 and she was the only one we know of.  Mine was diagnosed at 50.  My eating was relatively healthy but I'd still eat fast food, candy, junk, beer, but tons of vegetables everyday and very little fried food.  Only ate steak about 2-3 times a month, but now it gives me constipation but still eat it.  My diet hasn't changed at all.  Always did the treadmill and walking outside if possible.  My diet hasn't been an issue so I've left it the same.  I'll enjoy every pleasure I'm craving but with ice cream I'll only take about 3-4 bits and that's it, but that's how I've always done it.  A little bit of sweet is enough but I'll do it often.  Hope you find a happy medium without having to give up your loved foods.  I've always commended people that would give up everything that was one thing I'd never do.  Love food and living too much to restrict everything in my life.  While others swear by it, there are people on this board that have been vegan, vegetarian, and limited meat eaters and still got colon cancer.  May your heart and mind guide you in the right decision for you because we all travel a different one, but don't ever regret what you decide because you must still live your life to satisfy you and what you want, not what maybe science tells you "what it could possibly be."  Eat that steak, have that beer, eat a birthday cake, eat eggs, pancakes, chips (yummy), just be aware that you don't consume 5,000 calories of those things all in one day.  Be smart and enjoy.  That's what I've done everyday from diagnosis.  I'll live life to make me happy while being alive because if you have to give up pleasures, it's kind of not worth eating again. Laughing 

  • ron50
    ron50 Member Posts: 1,723 Member
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    What has changed

       Well for the first 48 years of my life most everything I got and thought was serious was nothing. For the past sixteen years everthing i get is out to get me. The longer I go the more temporary I feel. Ron.

  • Randy33
    Randy33 Member Posts: 69 Member
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    Almost Six Years NED

    I was Stage 4 and have been NED for almost 6 years. I had mets to the liver and lymph nodes. I had 10 rounds of Folfox + Avastin and my mets disappeared. I developed the following program to prevent recurrence.

    1. Exercise 3 hrs/day

    2. Mediterranian diet. Avoid sugar, refined grains, red meat. Eat lots of fruit, vegatables, green tea, and tumeric.

    3. Supplements- aspirin, fish oil, resveratrol, grape seed extract, multivitamin, vit. D3, curcumin, and Co-Q10.

    4. Avoid stress

    5. Prayer

    6. Visualize my anti-bodies attacking my cancer cell.

    I plan to continue this program indefinitly. Two added benefits are that I don't get sick and I don't get fat.

  • Helen321
    Helen321 Member Posts: 1,459 Member
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    JanJan63 said:

    One nurse told me that

    One nurse told me that colorectal is the number one cancer they see in people who already live a very healthy lifestyle. The ones that run ten miles a day and eat very well or are vegans. She said they're the hardest to deal with because they're so angry and resentful.

    When I fiorst saw my surgeon I remember my husband asking him about my Pepsi drinking. I drink two cans a day, every day. My husband drinks two cans of Coke a day but whatever. I'm not a drinker and have never done drugs, I eat pretty well but could eat better and I'm fairly active but not an exercise nut. My surgeon said to him "do you think Pepsi gave her cancer? Because it didn't."

    I've read about consuming less sugar based on the fact that cancer cells thrive on sugar. So does everything else and it's almost impossible to remove it from your diet. I know there's a place in Mexico that treats people beased on that theory by giving them a totally sugar free diet and actually removing their blood and cleaning it, like they do in dialysis. The two people I know that tried that are both passed away. After emptying their pocketbooks.

    I am trying to eat a bit better, more veggies and fruit, less red meat. And I'm trying to walk more, I was always too busy for that before. But I'm not planning to make any big changes. The problem is that we get better or we don't. Even something as specific as chemo has different outcomes. So one person drinks green drinks every day and becomes a vegan and does triathlons and their cancer never recurs so they swear it's because of all of that but it probably wouldn't have come back anyway. Another person makes no changes at all and gets the same results. Someone else makes no changes and doesn't survive and it's thought it's because they didn't do this or that.

    Colorectal cancer is the number one cancer that's completely random. I have IBS so I knew I had a higher chance than people who don't but other than that it's a complete crap shoot so I feel that trying to fend it off with diet or other things is fairly pointless. I will keep my positive attitude because that's who I am. I will not be a cancer victim or even a cancer warrior because both make me feel minimized by it. I just want to be me, not the woman who is brave and tough like so many people tell me. I'm not brave or tough, I just did what I had to do. But it will NOT define me. I have a friend who wallows in telling people she's beaten cancer and having people fawn all over her. No thanks.

    One other thing I will do, however, is try to boost my immunity and I haven't come up with a plan for that yet, besides the positive attitude. Because they say we have the chance to develop cancer a few times during our lives but our immune system kills the cells. I'd like to do that, have my oen body deal with it rather than wait for poison to do it.

    Sorry this is so long. I had chemo yesterday and am having a severe cold sensitivity reaction today so I'm cranky about cancer. But the worst is that it looks like my brother, who is battling esophageal cancer, isn't going to make it. Ironically, it's not the cancer that's going to kill him. He has two hernias he's never had fixed and they've caused a blockage in his intestine and he's too sick for surgery. He has COPD from years of smoking and they don't think he'd survive it. For the record, his doctors think his cancer came from years of using antacids for acid reflux.

    Actually your post was the

    Actually your post was the perfect length and exactly what I was wondering, what other people were thinking about the whole thing.  I've watched three people die, one who changed everything to an extreme, one who changed food and one who exercised.  I haven't really heard too many middle grounders and I was wondering if there were any who survived.  There seems to be no formula. 

  • Helen321
    Helen321 Member Posts: 1,459 Member
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    Randy33 said:

    Almost Six Years NED

    I was Stage 4 and have been NED for almost 6 years. I had mets to the liver and lymph nodes. I had 10 rounds of Folfox + Avastin and my mets disappeared. I developed the following program to prevent recurrence.

    1. Exercise 3 hrs/day

    2. Mediterranian diet. Avoid sugar, refined grains, red meat. Eat lots of fruit, vegatables, green tea, and tumeric.

    3. Supplements- aspirin, fish oil, resveratrol, grape seed extract, multivitamin, vit. D3, curcumin, and Co-Q10.

    4. Avoid stress

    5. Prayer

    6. Visualize my anti-bodies attacking my cancer cell.

    I plan to continue this program indefinitly. Two added benefits are that I don't get sick and I don't get fat.

    Really nice Randy33, sounds like you've mastered balance.

  • Helen321
    Helen321 Member Posts: 1,459 Member
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    Diet

    All three of my doctors said it wasn't anything in my diet that caused it.  Guess it was more heridity than anything but my Aunt who had it didn't get it until 74 and she was the only one we know of.  Mine was diagnosed at 50.  My eating was relatively healthy but I'd still eat fast food, candy, junk, beer, but tons of vegetables everyday and very little fried food.  Only ate steak about 2-3 times a month, but now it gives me constipation but still eat it.  My diet hasn't changed at all.  Always did the treadmill and walking outside if possible.  My diet hasn't been an issue so I've left it the same.  I'll enjoy every pleasure I'm craving but with ice cream I'll only take about 3-4 bits and that's it, but that's how I've always done it.  A little bit of sweet is enough but I'll do it often.  Hope you find a happy medium without having to give up your loved foods.  I've always commended people that would give up everything that was one thing I'd never do.  Love food and living too much to restrict everything in my life.  While others swear by it, there are people on this board that have been vegan, vegetarian, and limited meat eaters and still got colon cancer.  May your heart and mind guide you in the right decision for you because we all travel a different one, but don't ever regret what you decide because you must still live your life to satisfy you and what you want, not what maybe science tells you "what it could possibly be."  Eat that steak, have that beer, eat a birthday cake, eat eggs, pancakes, chips (yummy), just be aware that you don't consume 5,000 calories of those things all in one day.  Be smart and enjoy.  That's what I've done everyday from diagnosis.  I'll live life to make me happy while being alive because if you have to give up pleasures, it's kind of not worth eating again. Laughing 

    Your diet sounds like my old

    Your diet sounds like my old one minus the beer and I would eat sweets all day instead of food if life let me.  I'm a candy/junk food addict.  Although I grew up on the healthiest diet ever, as soon as I got my first job I started to eat candy like crazy.  I still ate healthy foods but there was always candy, cookies or chips daily.  I've improved my diet vastly but there are days where I just want a Twinkie.  My diet caused a big hoopla in my family recently since my sister can't seem to let go of what I said while I was sick which was "this family eats nothing but junk constantly" which is true.   We weren't allowed very much as kids so I think we all overcompensate.   My sister took it to heart as a personal insult.  Now every time I so much as eat one doughnut, oh look who's talking I thought we all ate junk food?!?!!  Aren't doughnuts junk food?!?!?  I gave up massive amounts of junk food with my improved diet and sometimes I just want a doughnut so I have one, that doesn't mean I want to be criticized when I do.   It's just starting to get under my skin and I almost lost it recently.  I wanted to just say shut up and stop being a jerk about things but I kept my cool and said I only eat this every few weeks, my point was that this family eats junk daily and we need to come up with some alternatives especially when we go out to eat or at parties.  We have enough dessert at parties to feed a small nation, none of it healthy.   Recently though I fell off the wagon and binged an entire box of twinkies, two pans of brownies and some other not so fine choices. That was right before I posted this question, I was feeling a little unaccomplished.  I recognize my addiction and am doing pretty well most days beating it.  I am now back to sunflower seeds, raisins and almonds and I'm not cringing every time I see a banana since I took a break, at some point I was eating them daily to help with cramping, they became something I was starting to hate.  I pop grape tomatoes and cucumbers as a daily snack.  I haven't been to the vending machine for chips and have no desire to go to it.   I'm also eating caramel apples since they only come out once a year for a month and I figure it's better than straight caramels and they won't be available after this week.  Cancer or not I think the addiction I had was unhealthy so I wanted to change it.  At this point though, my sister is on my nerves and I'm looking for balance.  She is now the food police and I want it to stop, my comment wasn't personal, it was coming from a place of desperation when I said it.  I'm trying to figure food out.  That's why I asked because I notice people are saying that they are healthy all around but then when you friend them on Facebook you see them sitting at a table at a party eating cake and snacks (no judgements, I was just surprised since it wasn't my definition of healthy eating) so I was wondering what "eating healthy" meant to each person or how everyone truly viewed food.  My one friend who really did eat healthy still didn't make it.  The friend who was sitting at the table exercised daily and ate some junk and didn't make it.  Some of my vegetarian friends who exercise have gotten cancer.  I only know one person who became vegan after diagnosis but has always exercised (hers was Uterine or Ovarian, I forget which) and she still had a recurrence.  I'm glad there are people who are NED who do eat some junk, that's what I was wondering.

    I am definitely slightly "fluffy".  lol  Love that phrase.  I used to be an exerciseholic then I got overwhelmed by life for a few years so I stopped.  I'd love to become that person again.  I've tried but I am not the same person mentally anymore.  I have to push myself to exercise.  It's not addictive anymore, it's a chore.  I also sit at a job for 8-12 hours a day pretty stationary.

    I can see why people turn to food when the chemo stops working, you have to keep trying something until something works and food is hope. I am trying to get on a similar path to prevention since I had one reccurence before I did the drastic step.  Thanks for the input.  It makes me stop thinking that if the cancer comes back it was the box of Twinkies (and the brownies and the rest, oh my!).  I mean it could very well be or it could very well not be.  For now, I'm done with boxes of twinkies.  I am focused and making some permanent life changes just for general health.  I'm finding that raisins are a great sugar fix.  I'm proud that I got to this point and I'm enjoying my trailmix.  I'm going to have to have a talk with my sister when we're not eating about the place I was in when I said that and how I feel about improving for general living without being fanatics.  If I go for a doughnut every other month then I go for a doughnut.  Finding some balance, even at parties, would be nice.  I'll be the one bringing the fruit platter or the healthier alternative snack.

  • Annabelle41415
    Annabelle41415 Member Posts: 6,742 Member
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    Helen321 said:

    Your diet sounds like my old

    Your diet sounds like my old one minus the beer and I would eat sweets all day instead of food if life let me.  I'm a candy/junk food addict.  Although I grew up on the healthiest diet ever, as soon as I got my first job I started to eat candy like crazy.  I still ate healthy foods but there was always candy, cookies or chips daily.  I've improved my diet vastly but there are days where I just want a Twinkie.  My diet caused a big hoopla in my family recently since my sister can't seem to let go of what I said while I was sick which was "this family eats nothing but junk constantly" which is true.   We weren't allowed very much as kids so I think we all overcompensate.   My sister took it to heart as a personal insult.  Now every time I so much as eat one doughnut, oh look who's talking I thought we all ate junk food?!?!!  Aren't doughnuts junk food?!?!?  I gave up massive amounts of junk food with my improved diet and sometimes I just want a doughnut so I have one, that doesn't mean I want to be criticized when I do.   It's just starting to get under my skin and I almost lost it recently.  I wanted to just say shut up and stop being a jerk about things but I kept my cool and said I only eat this every few weeks, my point was that this family eats junk daily and we need to come up with some alternatives especially when we go out to eat or at parties.  We have enough dessert at parties to feed a small nation, none of it healthy.   Recently though I fell off the wagon and binged an entire box of twinkies, two pans of brownies and some other not so fine choices. That was right before I posted this question, I was feeling a little unaccomplished.  I recognize my addiction and am doing pretty well most days beating it.  I am now back to sunflower seeds, raisins and almonds and I'm not cringing every time I see a banana since I took a break, at some point I was eating them daily to help with cramping, they became something I was starting to hate.  I pop grape tomatoes and cucumbers as a daily snack.  I haven't been to the vending machine for chips and have no desire to go to it.   I'm also eating caramel apples since they only come out once a year for a month and I figure it's better than straight caramels and they won't be available after this week.  Cancer or not I think the addiction I had was unhealthy so I wanted to change it.  At this point though, my sister is on my nerves and I'm looking for balance.  She is now the food police and I want it to stop, my comment wasn't personal, it was coming from a place of desperation when I said it.  I'm trying to figure food out.  That's why I asked because I notice people are saying that they are healthy all around but then when you friend them on Facebook you see them sitting at a table at a party eating cake and snacks (no judgements, I was just surprised since it wasn't my definition of healthy eating) so I was wondering what "eating healthy" meant to each person or how everyone truly viewed food.  My one friend who really did eat healthy still didn't make it.  The friend who was sitting at the table exercised daily and ate some junk and didn't make it.  Some of my vegetarian friends who exercise have gotten cancer.  I only know one person who became vegan after diagnosis but has always exercised (hers was Uterine or Ovarian, I forget which) and she still had a recurrence.  I'm glad there are people who are NED who do eat some junk, that's what I was wondering.

    I am definitely slightly "fluffy".  lol  Love that phrase.  I used to be an exerciseholic then I got overwhelmed by life for a few years so I stopped.  I'd love to become that person again.  I've tried but I am not the same person mentally anymore.  I have to push myself to exercise.  It's not addictive anymore, it's a chore.  I also sit at a job for 8-12 hours a day pretty stationary.

    I can see why people turn to food when the chemo stops working, you have to keep trying something until something works and food is hope. I am trying to get on a similar path to prevention since I had one reccurence before I did the drastic step.  Thanks for the input.  It makes me stop thinking that if the cancer comes back it was the box of Twinkies (and the brownies and the rest, oh my!).  I mean it could very well be or it could very well not be.  For now, I'm done with boxes of twinkies.  I am focused and making some permanent life changes just for general health.  I'm finding that raisins are a great sugar fix.  I'm proud that I got to this point and I'm enjoying my trailmix.  I'm going to have to have a talk with my sister when we're not eating about the place I was in when I said that and how I feel about improving for general living without being fanatics.  If I go for a doughnut every other month then I go for a doughnut.  Finding some balance, even at parties, would be nice.  I'll be the one bringing the fruit platter or the healthier alternative snack.

    Diet

    After reading your response to mine and reading what I previously wrote I wanted to clarify that by eating junk, fast food, candy etc. was something I did and still do, but not very often, although I do have about 4 chips a day (my big weakness).  A small bag of M&M's could last me three weeks as I'd only have 3 every couple days.  I was never a sweet eater and maybe having only ice cream maybe 5-6 times a year.  I just meant I never restricted myself if I wanted those things because I'd really rarely eat them anyway.  My diet is healthier than most people I know.  I'm a big vegetable eater preferring a tomato over a cookie.  I'm glad you don't eat the boxes of twinkies anymore as I'm sure that you only did it out of frustration at times.  It's hard when you have a food police person always harping on you.  It's like an x-smoker to a smoker and telling them how dirty it is.  It's like you mind your own business and I'll mind mine.  I'm sure your sister means well but tell her that you appreciate her concern but would appreciate she keeps her commets to herself.  I'm always watching my weight as well so when I put on a pound or two I'm immediately on the treadmill more often.  Glad you are eating heathlier as you will feel better as well.

    Kim

  • Helen321
    Helen321 Member Posts: 1,459 Member
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    Diet

    After reading your response to mine and reading what I previously wrote I wanted to clarify that by eating junk, fast food, candy etc. was something I did and still do, but not very often, although I do have about 4 chips a day (my big weakness).  A small bag of M&M's could last me three weeks as I'd only have 3 every couple days.  I was never a sweet eater and maybe having only ice cream maybe 5-6 times a year.  I just meant I never restricted myself if I wanted those things because I'd really rarely eat them anyway.  My diet is healthier than most people I know.  I'm a big vegetable eater preferring a tomato over a cookie.  I'm glad you don't eat the boxes of twinkies anymore as I'm sure that you only did it out of frustration at times.  It's hard when you have a food police person always harping on you.  It's like an x-smoker to a smoker and telling them how dirty it is.  It's like you mind your own business and I'll mind mine.  I'm sure your sister means well but tell her that you appreciate her concern but would appreciate she keeps her commets to herself.  I'm always watching my weight as well so when I put on a pound or two I'm immediately on the treadmill more often.  Glad you are eating heathlier as you will feel better as well.

    Kim

    Oh no no frustration, it's an

    Oh no no frustration, it's an actual sugar addiction. My name is Helen and I have an addiction to sugar-filled junkfood. It has been 5 days since I have eaten garbage. I'm back to raisins for my sweet fix. I looked it up, I can have up to half a cup a day.  I am also eating grapes. It's a hard addiction to beat.

  • Trubrit
    Trubrit Member Posts: 5,796 Member
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    Helen321 said:

    Your diet sounds like my old

    Your diet sounds like my old one minus the beer and I would eat sweets all day instead of food if life let me.  I'm a candy/junk food addict.  Although I grew up on the healthiest diet ever, as soon as I got my first job I started to eat candy like crazy.  I still ate healthy foods but there was always candy, cookies or chips daily.  I've improved my diet vastly but there are days where I just want a Twinkie.  My diet caused a big hoopla in my family recently since my sister can't seem to let go of what I said while I was sick which was "this family eats nothing but junk constantly" which is true.   We weren't allowed very much as kids so I think we all overcompensate.   My sister took it to heart as a personal insult.  Now every time I so much as eat one doughnut, oh look who's talking I thought we all ate junk food?!?!!  Aren't doughnuts junk food?!?!?  I gave up massive amounts of junk food with my improved diet and sometimes I just want a doughnut so I have one, that doesn't mean I want to be criticized when I do.   It's just starting to get under my skin and I almost lost it recently.  I wanted to just say shut up and stop being a jerk about things but I kept my cool and said I only eat this every few weeks, my point was that this family eats junk daily and we need to come up with some alternatives especially when we go out to eat or at parties.  We have enough dessert at parties to feed a small nation, none of it healthy.   Recently though I fell off the wagon and binged an entire box of twinkies, two pans of brownies and some other not so fine choices. That was right before I posted this question, I was feeling a little unaccomplished.  I recognize my addiction and am doing pretty well most days beating it.  I am now back to sunflower seeds, raisins and almonds and I'm not cringing every time I see a banana since I took a break, at some point I was eating them daily to help with cramping, they became something I was starting to hate.  I pop grape tomatoes and cucumbers as a daily snack.  I haven't been to the vending machine for chips and have no desire to go to it.   I'm also eating caramel apples since they only come out once a year for a month and I figure it's better than straight caramels and they won't be available after this week.  Cancer or not I think the addiction I had was unhealthy so I wanted to change it.  At this point though, my sister is on my nerves and I'm looking for balance.  She is now the food police and I want it to stop, my comment wasn't personal, it was coming from a place of desperation when I said it.  I'm trying to figure food out.  That's why I asked because I notice people are saying that they are healthy all around but then when you friend them on Facebook you see them sitting at a table at a party eating cake and snacks (no judgements, I was just surprised since it wasn't my definition of healthy eating) so I was wondering what "eating healthy" meant to each person or how everyone truly viewed food.  My one friend who really did eat healthy still didn't make it.  The friend who was sitting at the table exercised daily and ate some junk and didn't make it.  Some of my vegetarian friends who exercise have gotten cancer.  I only know one person who became vegan after diagnosis but has always exercised (hers was Uterine or Ovarian, I forget which) and she still had a recurrence.  I'm glad there are people who are NED who do eat some junk, that's what I was wondering.

    I am definitely slightly "fluffy".  lol  Love that phrase.  I used to be an exerciseholic then I got overwhelmed by life for a few years so I stopped.  I'd love to become that person again.  I've tried but I am not the same person mentally anymore.  I have to push myself to exercise.  It's not addictive anymore, it's a chore.  I also sit at a job for 8-12 hours a day pretty stationary.

    I can see why people turn to food when the chemo stops working, you have to keep trying something until something works and food is hope. I am trying to get on a similar path to prevention since I had one reccurence before I did the drastic step.  Thanks for the input.  It makes me stop thinking that if the cancer comes back it was the box of Twinkies (and the brownies and the rest, oh my!).  I mean it could very well be or it could very well not be.  For now, I'm done with boxes of twinkies.  I am focused and making some permanent life changes just for general health.  I'm finding that raisins are a great sugar fix.  I'm proud that I got to this point and I'm enjoying my trailmix.  I'm going to have to have a talk with my sister when we're not eating about the place I was in when I said that and how I feel about improving for general living without being fanatics.  If I go for a doughnut every other month then I go for a doughnut.  Finding some balance, even at parties, would be nice.  I'll be the one bringing the fruit platter or the healthier alternative snack.

    Have fun at fun times

    Enjoy life.

    Eat healthy, and then have your treats. Thanksgiving, Christmas, Birthdays, Anniversaries, holidays (vacation). There is nothing wrong with enjoying your treat days.  I try to keep Thursday's as a treat day, but it doesn't always work. I guess you could say, it's a work in progress.

    I've  just spent five weeks in England, and every day was a treat day.  Time for me to get back to normal(ish).

    Don't beat yourself up.

    Sue - Trubrit

     

  • thingy45
    thingy45 Member Posts: 632 Member
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    Helen321 said:

    Really nice Randy33, sounds like you've mastered balance.

    I saw a naturopath

    after my colon resection I refused chemo and radiation. I had just lost my second husband and living longer was far from my mind. I just wanted one more summer.

    i saw a naturopath and followed her advice. Only chicken,turkey, salmon. No refined sugars, just raw honey. I take vitaminD, CLR pils, Omega 3 and vitamin E.

    juicing daily, lots of fiber. Lots of lemon water and or Apple cider vinegar in water. I do cheat !!!!!

    i feel great, try to walk, but a deteriorating spine keeps me from excersising much. I walk with cane or walker.

    going on 5 years NED, am stage 3. I bake my own fiber rich bread and stay away from nuts, raisins, corn, peas etc. they can stay behind in the ridges of the scars in the colon when my colon was respected and can cause new nodules which can become cancers.

    it works for me so far. CEA stays around 1.1. After 3 years NED here in Canada they leave you on your own . No mor colonoscopies or CT scans. Frightening , only blood test every 3 month , it has been a good marker for me.