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Journey (Blog)

My Word of the Year is: Reframe

Words are spells. Try reframing your thoughts.

Before starting meditation class, our teacher asked us to share a word that encapsulates what we are trying to call into being this year. 

 
I told the class that my word was "reframe." My mind often wanders toward negative thoughts when bad, sad or troublesome things happen, and I decided that I needed to change the way I think. This wasn't the first time I had divulged such information about myself and I was reminded of a quote the teacher had shared with the class before, about our words being spells. "Our words," she repeated, "are the spells that we make." The things we tell ourselves or say to ourselves, whether they be negative or positive, become "spells" that make our thoughts become our reality.

 
I've noticed that several people have decided upon a word of the year or theme instead of resolutions and goals. Some call it a nudge word — a word that nudges you toward making a positive change whenever the word comes to mind. At first my word was love — as in doing what I love, then joy — doing whatever brings me joy, including things I love. But then I thought about how I spent so much time during 2022 feeling dread and there were many things that I had to do that made me feel dread — doctor's appointments, taking the subway to the doctor's appointment, writing and sending out queries for my novel and much more. 

 
I could've been cute and decided upon the word me, switching out the three in 2023 to twenty twenty-me. But I finally landed with the word "reframe." The germination of that word started with "rejection," a word I've read a lot on Twitter, as fellow writers and I went through the querying process. Then someone tweeted about reframing the word and seeing it as a "pass."  I agree that getting a pass is much easier to stomach than a rejection. When you pass on something, you skip or decline, or decide to not take part in something—in this case, an agent taking a pass on my novel, because either it's not a fit, or passing on an opportunity (me being the opportunity—see how I reframed that?) Rejection on the other hand, is dismissing or refusing a proposal or idea. It makes you feel, well, rejected. 

 
I thought about what had taken away some of my joy, which, a lot of times, happened to be the way I thought about things. Several of my meditation teachers have discussed how things from our past have influenced how we think about ourselves and what we feel we need to be or to accomplish in life. It influences how we react, how we deal with people and process our traumas and experiences.  So, as one teacher said, we need to retrain our brains. I don't really care for the word "retrain" because once again you are programming your thoughts. When you reframe, you take a notion or experience and decide to think differently (hopefully in an optimistic way) about situations, people and things—and yourself.

 
So when I feel down, or stuck, I think, "How can I reframe this?" When I feel that I can't seem to write and start to berate myself, I have to reframe the thought that perhaps I don't have writer's block, maybe I just need to take a break, read a novel for inspiration, take a walk or do something to calm my mind. The nudge word or word of the year reflects how you want to live in 2023. After all, it worked a few years ago when changing my mindset helped me as I went through cancer treatment. Instead of thinking of chemotherapy as a toxin, I thought of it as a method for healing. 

 
To reframe means I can change the negative words I tend to use on myself and about my life or experiences, reframing them into something positive. 

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Attitude is Everything

A healthy attitude can get you through chemotherapy and the grueling process of querying a novel.

 

Last month I celebrated a milestone — my five-year cancer-free date. I was diagnosed with triple negative breast cancer (TNBC) in September 2016 and started chemotherapy that October. Chemo lasted through March 2017, followed by radiation treatments. My final radiation treatment was at the end of April 2017. According to my oncologist, five years is the amount of time specified for being in the clear. I know that doesn't necessarily mean the cancer won't come back, but it's probable that the chemotherapy and radiation did its job and that recurrence is very small.

 

So for five years I've been trying not to focus on this, focusing instead on living, especially healthy living, which, as a bit of a sugar and junk food fiend has been difficult. All the while, that throbbing question mark was in my head.

 

One thing that troubled me while I was waiting to hit the desired five-year cancer-free mark, was that with TNBC, chemo seems to be the only surefire treatment. There were no follow-up pills or shots to make me feel like I was still doing something to prevent the cancer from returning. That's good and bad. I hate taking medications. They seem to always cause another health issue, but my mind kept drifting to thoughts of going through the whole treatment process again. It didn't help that a port was kept in my chest for two years, just in case.

 

To keep myself distracted, I started a novel through National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo), an annual creative writing event in which writers attempt to write a 50,000-word novel during the month of November. The novel I worked on was actually created from outtake scenes that didn't work in a novel I started with Nano the year before. I didn't want to write about anything heavy. (It so happens a character in the original novel died from breast cancer—not exactly what I wanted to think about at the time.) I used the out-of-place, humorous scenes to build a new story. I was in the second month of chemo as I toiled to meet the 1,667 words a day, fighting the exhaustion the chemo drugs caused. It was the first time I worked on a novel to the bitter (or, rather, satisfying) end.

 

In addition to having a work-in-progress to take my mind off of cancer, I think my real saving grace was attitude. I couldn't afford to feel sorry for myself. With that in mind, I tried to be careful about who I shared this experience with. Some people can be such downers. I remember one well-meaning person told me about how a friend of hers lost both breasts to cancer (it wasn't true, it turns out—but what a thing to tell me.) So for the most part, I kept my diagnosis to myself and didn't join any cancer support groups until after chemo was over. It was a good decision for me because the triple negative group I eventually joined might have terrified me. So many of their experiences were dreadful, while I sailed through. I believe going in with an ignorance-is-bliss attitude turned out to be the right thing for me. Even though I had researched my cancer and knew what could/would happen, keeping a positive mindset definitely helped me. I had very few side effects. Every morning I did a visualization meditation from You Tube that helped me view the chemo drugs as something to help heal my cells, instead of something toxic. It also helped that my oncologist started me out slow and eased me into treatment. I continued with meditation, continued eating well, and maintained my yoga and meditation practice.

 

Getting cancer can be frightening because it reminds you of your mortality, and that life is short. Yes, it made me realize my time on earth, at least at this level, is finite, but it has helped me focus on what is important, how I spend my time, and who I spend my time with. It's made me appreciate things that I have, the people in my life, and to focus on gratitude. I'm here. I made it through. And now I'm using that same attitude with the querying process. I went through the exhausting process of rewrites and editing. I completed the novel. And now I'm waiting for another great milestone. 

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Shake It Off

An infectious disease expert called the handshake a bioweapon. Sure, it needs to go, but it will be a hard habit to shake.

 

During a business event being held inside a small hotel ballroom, I notice a man who has yet to join one of the clusters of attendees engaged in conversation. Just as he hones in on a group across the room, he suddenly sneezes into his hand. I can see that he has no tissue or handkerchief handy and is trying to decide where to wipe his damp palm. For an instant, it looks like he might wipe it on his suit jacket. He thinks better of this, though. He stealthily moves his hand to the side and flutters it a bit to air dry.
 
A woman blocks my view and introduces herself. We speak for a moment, we exchange cards and as we survey the room, she spots a colleague and tells me that she has someone she wants me to meet.
 
She walks me over to the man I'd been observing and introduces us.
 
I don't know what to do. I know what is about to transpire. He extends his hand, that hand, to shake mine. Shall I tell him that I just saw him sneeze into that hand? No. That would be ill-mannered. So I shake his hand. It's probably a flimsy handshake on my part, not the firm-yet-not-too-strong, confident etiquette-approved handshake. All I can think about are the microbes that have been transferred to my right hand. While this incident is not quite as bad as the time a man sneezed on me, sending spittle all over my eyeglasses and my face as I sat on a seat inside a subway car, it is bad enough to make everything I've learned about proper networking practices fade from my brain.
 
I try to listen to the conversation, nod, smile, feign interest, but all I can think about are germs. Finally, I can't take it any more. I excuse myself and swiftly head for the nearest bathroom, avoiding eye contact with anyone who might stop me to chat. All I want is a sink, soap and faucet with hot water. I scrub my hands. More than 20 seconds, I'm sure. Then I grab a paper towel to open the bathroom door and try to figure out how I can avoid further contact. This happened about ten years ago and because of the coronavirus pandemic, my aversion to the act of handshaking has been validated.
 
I have never been comfortable with this centuries-old custom. I was never taught how to execute the proper handshake. I don't remember actually shaking anyone's hand until I embarked on the job hunt after college. For a time I thought it was strictly in the male domain, which would have been just fine with me. The business handshake was as appealing to me as a woman's freedom to openly smoke in public. Freedom to do what you please, just like a man, yes, but was Virginia Slims really a victory? One action gives you cancer (smoking), the other, viruses and diseases like Covid-19. The coronavirus pandemic is giving people cause to rethink many habitual practices, including the handshake.
 
Recently, Sunny Hostin, co-host on The View, pronounced "I personally am not shaking hands anymore. That's over for me," she said resolutely. "No need to shake hands," and I agree. The custom is ingrained in our society as a greeting, a final gesture to seal the deal, in celebration, and as a representation of honesty and trustworthiness. Still, it needs to go, but it's going to be a hard habit to shake.
 
Although the handshake has become an indelible part of social graces, its beginnings seem rooted in distrust and apprehension. During ancient times, holding arms out with the palms exposed was to show that no weapons were being held. The forearm shake, which on the surface appears warm and even affectionate, came about in Roman times, when men had the practice of carrying concealed daggers. The grasp of the forearm was to insure that the individual had nothing up his sleeve.
 
The modern handshake is often credited to 17th century Quakers who considered the clasping of hands a more egalitarian greeting than bowing, tipping a hat or curtsying. Not everyone found this to be a respectable approach, however. France in the late 1800s considered le shake-hands a vulgar English invention. Before the mid-19th century the handshake could be considered an improper gesture, one only to be used between friends.
 
By the 1900s the handshake was commonplace as a formal greeting, finding its way into the etiquette books, with strict guidelines for proper handshaking technique. The handshake in the 19th century was used to seal business transactions, mostly between men. The practice later became widespread between both men and women in business settings.
 
It also became a way to prejudge an individual based on whether one has a firm grip on the situation: either you are the one in control, the subordinate, or are equals.
 
There are numerous handshaking styles that provide as many results, ones that make good, or bad, impressions, as well as those that help you get the upper hand. In one how-to article, in which the recipient of the handshake is called an "opponent," you learn that extending the palm face down shows dominance and the upward facing palm is more submissive. Don't allow the other's person's thumb to be on top, because it will look like you are assuming the other person is in control. If a "power player" presents their hand to you with the palm down, instructs another article, you should respond with your palm in the up position then place your left hand over his and straighten the shake. This double-handed handshake is also called the "politician's handshake." It gives the impression of being trustworthy and honest, but be careful who you use this with, or the receiver might feel suspicious about your intentions.
 
Whew. That's a lot to grasp.
 
A handshake to avoid is the vice grip, an overly eager grip that can shrink your hand two sizes. This, and an even more excruciating form, which a Westside Toastmasters article referred to as the "knuckle cruncher," is done by one who has an "overly aggressive attitude to compensate for ineffectiveness in other areas of their life." Does anyone come to mind?
 
What happens during international business travel? Though the handshake has become as widespread and commonplace as the English language, it is not customary everywhere. While the firm handshake is de rigueur in the United States, in Japan and China, a weak handshake is preferred.
 
The handshake may be a residual aspect of our evolution from primitive to modern human beings. A 2015 study demonstrated that the handshake might be much more instinctual, and a biological impulse, akin to olfactory sampling found in other mammals. It was found that these "chemo signals" between humans occur through the shaking of hands. The participants in the study were filmed, and it was revealed that after shaking hands they brought their hands near their nose. It was noted that "Subjects greeted with a handshake significantly increased touching their faces with their right hand." This action is similar to dogs sniffing each other in greeting and communicating through chemical signals in their body odor. Of course, this is problematic during a time when health officials have been instructing humans to stop touching their faces.
 
The gradual relinquishment of the handshake had already been in progress, especially during cold and flu season. At the National Publicity Summit where authors and entrepreneurs present topics and expert sources to journalists, handlers covertly inform the presenters whether or not a journalist being pitched is agreeable to a handshake.
 
Avoiding handshaking is an important practice, suggested by health professionals for quite a while now, to help reduce the possibility of pandemics. 
 
"As a society, just forget about shaking hands, we don't need to shake hands," Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of National Institute on Allergy and Infectious Diseases told CNN. "We've gotta break that custom, because as a matter of fact that is really one of the major ways you can transmit a respiratory-borne illness."
 
"When you extend your hand, you're extending a bioweapon," said Gregory Poland, infectious disease expert at the Mayo Clinic, during an interview with the BBC, adding that it is an "outmoded custom and it has no place in culture that believes in germ theory."
 
Yet bouts with the Spanish flu, SARS and Ebola, haven't shaken off the handshake.
 
Donald Trump, a professed germaphobe, told Stone Phillips in a 1999 interview "I'm not a big fan of the handshake. I think it's barbaric. I mean they have medical reports all the time. Shaking hands you catch colds, you catch the flu, you catch this. You catch all sorts of things. Who knows what you don't catch?"
 
You catch the novel coronavirus.
 
Still, President Trump, who has become known for his cringe-worthy handshakes that have been linked to a struggle for dominance, and Vice President Pence, even after precautions such avoiding handshakes were advised, continued to shake hands.
 
British Prime Minister Boris Johnson also insisted that he would continue to shake hands, even shaking hands with those he encountered during a visit to a hospital where Covid-19 patients were being treated. A month later he was in the ICU with Covid-19.
 
Clearly we also need a vaccination for stupidity.
 
Lately a variety of alternatives to the handshake have been suggested: the elbow bump, fist bump, Namaste bow, and Vulcan greeting among them. Some are a joke of course, while others may be problematic for being too familiar, too casual, or too spiritual. I prefer clasping your own hands in front of you, as a greeting, departure or to express agreement.
 
I can understand a desire to hold onto the more cordial expression of the handshake. I love watching "soul handshakes" between the brothers, although I've never been able to do one, and I picture an old photo that captures the moment when my father and his older brother, who lived several miles apart, greeting one another with a handshake that symbolized strength, respect and brotherly love. But in the business world, what is more rude—refusing to shake hands or shaking hands and then immediately spraying on hand sanitizer?
 
Can we agree that the handshake become a thing of the past? And, let's not shake on it.

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Why You Should Always Get a Second Opinion

Photo: Public Domain/Vital Works/Pixabay.com

I was walking toward Centre Street in Chinatown, when I heard an ambulance. The sound was getting louder and louder as it inched its way through Manhattan traffic. Of course it’s not an unusual sound to hear in Manhattan, but today it seemed to unnerve me.

Today I was on the way to see an oncologist, the first one of two medical professionals for whom I had received referrals, to discuss possible cancer treatment.

My sister and I arrived at the building and noticed that the ambulance we heard moments ago had pulled up outside. Two emergency medical technicians entered behind us and commandeered an elevator that sluggishly dragged its way down to the ground floor.

Is this a sign?

Moments later, the elevator had returned and we finally headed up to the doctor’s office. I was instantly discouraged. It was a clinic, an environment I was all too familiar with—where you find the poor, the elderly and the recently unemployed like me, with disinterested employees scarcely acknowledging patients as they enter. Uncomfortable plastic chairs faced a television transmitting a Chinese soap opera. To the side, women were seated behind a long counter their eyes trained on computer screens. In back of them were rows of over-stuffed files of medical information positioned on top of file cabinets — all of which made me wonder in what decade did this office exist?

I informed one of the women at the counter that I had an appointment and she handed me a clipboard with a form attached to it to fill out. Once completed, I settled in for what was probably going to be a very long wait.

Inside another room I could see the EMTs from before getting ready to place an elderly patient onto a stretcher. My attention returned to the waiting area when a woman two rows in front of us coughed without covering her mouth. My sister, a teacher now blissfully retired, spent years teaching adolescents to cough inside their elbows to prevent the transmission of germs, grinned at the expression of revulsion on my face. I’m thinking about the fact that chemotherapy weakens ones’ immune system. I grimaced, sighed and tried to read AM New York.

An hour or so later, an alarm sounded. No one moved. No one seemed to be paying attention to the loud, piercing sound, shrill enough to make one’s ears bleed. Finally someone deciphered the mumbling announcement and discovered that there actually was a fire two floors below. A man ushered us down a second flight of stairs because the main stairwell was already crowded.

Yes, this is a sign.

Eventually the crowd outside the building was allowed back inside to much confusion because the decrepit elevators were not yet operational. People were slowly trying to walk back to upper floors while others, including elderly and infirm using walkers, were still on their way down.

I finally got a break and sprinted all the way up to the fifth floor only to find out that the doctor had not returned and that they had no idea when or if he’d be back. Moments later I was finally sent in, only to find out that I was seeing a different doctor than planned. It was alarming that this doctor was not the physician recommended by my surgeon, but someone taking on his new clients. That was the first mistake—not informing me of this. My surgeon specifically recommended someone who would treat me at New York Presbyterian and that was affiliated with Weill Cornell, a hospital and medical facility that I had grown to trust. I had a bad feeling about this young doctor from the moment he told me that all of the doctor’s new patients were being given to him, because, the other doctor, he enlightened me, was “old” and didn’t want to take on new patients.

I had a list of questions, but felt like an idiot for even asking them. He bluntly answered the questions that I managed to ask, as if he relished giving out bad news. I relayed what little information I had been told by the surgical oncologist. “Oh, that’s bad.” He said and proceeded to basically tell me that I would have to be given the worse (i.e. aggressive) kind of chemotherapy. I had visions of myself frail, bald and excruciatingly sick. As if he had read my suddenly terrified mind, he blurted, “You’re going to lose all that beautiful hair.”

“Yes, chemo can cause cancer” he said at another point, as if I had asked the most unintelligent question in the world, mentioning leukemia and rattling off other cancers that could occur without explaining why in hell one would do chemo to kill cancer only to get cancer. He finished with the necessity of radiation treatment and that radiation could cause lung and thyroid cancer.

Okay, so he was insufferably honest. Great way to prepare a patient for chemo and radiation therapy.

After a grating examination of my breast and the surgical area (at least he said my surgeon did a good job) he ordered blood work, chemo meds and set up an appointment for a surgical procedure to have an implanted port placed inside my chest. A port is a small medical appliance implanted under the skin. It’s often described as an artificial vein through which chemo drugs can be injected and blood samples drawn with less discomfort than through needles. I can’t remember the doctor’s exact reasoning for using the port at the time, but I had visions of my veins and flesh disintegrating.

My head was spinning. I was given very little time to absorb the frightening information I was hearing. All I knew was that deep inside I thought that a doctor should not order chemo meds and surgery before a patient has agreed to be taken under his care. This feeling was confirmed by the nurse who apparently questioned, in Chinese, whether it was wise to order the chemo drugs if he was not sure I’d actually be his patient, but he waved this off.

I also learned that the chemotherapy would be done at this clinic. Would I want to have chemotherapy in such a disorganized building, where at least one nurse was having a difficult time understanding me, and I her? I asked if I would need to be driven to chemotherapy or if I could take the subway and the doctor told me that I would have to wear a mask (and I’m putting his words mildly here) because my immune system would be compromised. My writer’s imagination had me wrapped in cellophane for a year.

During the consultation, he excused himself to take a call. Judging from what I could hear, he apparently had come up with a plan of treatment for the person on the other end. “What will happen if you don’t do the treatment?” I heard him repeat. “Well, you’re going to die.”

I…was…through.

After the visit and using the restroom in that horrible building, I told my sister, “At least I won’t have to worry about my dreadlocks when I go into a public bathroom,” as there is an art to making sure your locks don’t fall into the toilet or touch a nasty, germ-contaminated floor.

“Well," my sister said, "At least you still have a sense of humor.”

That night my sister stayed up binge watching Grey’s Anatomy to decompress. That wouldn’t have been my choice - considering.

I managed to fall asleep, but in the morning, for the first time since my breast cancer diagnosis, I cried. Read More 
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Staying Calm with Cancer

Photo: Gerrie Summers
Fighting With Feelings

A month before I had a second surgery to have lymph nodes removed, I had a nightmare in which I was talking to an angry, mean man about a form I had filled out. Apparently I had filled it out incorrectly. He was fussing with me and I blurted out something about being distracted because I’d been diagnosed with breast cancer. He didn’t care. He continued to fuss with me and then without another word put a woman on the phone. I think she was better. I can’t remember the dream from here, except that I was taken away to someplace — to an operating room for surgery perhaps?

I woke up feeling anxious, with a nagging sense of dread. This feeling would come and go. I was trying to edit my thoughts, deleting all the morose and gloomy ones that were coming to my mind and replacing them with I am healthy. I’ll be fine. It didn’t help that in the evening, I was having a difficult time getting to sleep and staying asleep because my mind was being flooded with negative thoughts. I’d wake up due to several notions and scenes playing out in my brain. Had it spread? Chemo. Radiation. Hair loss. Will my hair fall out? Will it come back one day?

I was about to see the surgeon about the pathology report. At this time he didn’t know whether the cancer had spread to the lymph nodes. Furthermore the lab had found something on the right breast, and I would need to go in for a biopsy before the surgery, adding to the anxiety I was feeling. (Fortunately, whatever the ultrasound detected was nothing for concern.)

Still, I was relatively fine. In fact, at times I thought something was wrong with me. I hadn’t cried. I hadn’t cursed God. I might have said, “Why me?” But mostly I was just numb.

I Am Healthy. I’ll Be Fine.

During the break between surgeries, I had gone on with my usual routine. I went to an event where an intuitive (yes, really) shared an unsolicited comment that my body was healthy. Naturally thinking that she was a quack, I told her about the breast cancer diagnosis, but she didn’t back down. She insisted that she didn’t detect any illness in me. Since she had informed me that my late father was beside me and watching over me (and proved it in kind of freakish way that made me a believer)—who was I to debate her? The tumor had been removed. Later, the second surgery to remove tissue and lymph nodes showed that no further cancer was detected nor had it spread.

A little over two weeks after surgery, I paid a visit to my primary care physician and something dawned on me. I had been thinking something was wrong with me because I had been, for the most part, positive and not falling apart over the diagnosis of breast cancer. When my doctor asked me how I was feeling physically and emotionally, with an expression of concern, and I think, dismay sweeping across his face, I said “It might sound crazy, but I’m kind of calm about it.” He seemed relieved and admitted that he would have been “like this” indicating shaky hands. I gathered that he has had patients whose reactions weren’t as composed. I’ve known for a long time how emotions can negatively affect your health. I was taking the let’s-wait-and-see-how-this-goes approach.

I won’t lie, there were days after the surgery that I hated waking up. I would feel discomfort in the breast area and I was unable to look forward to the day. I felt like I had pins and needles in my arm. The underarm area was so numb, I couldn’t feel myself putting on deodorant and at times it felt like someone had a tight grip on my upper arm. There were very brief moments when I wondered why I should continue setting up lofty goals for the future, like those 15 or so novel ideas, and then I’d snap out of it.

As all of these uncomfortable sensations and pains worked toward bringing me down, calls to check up on me, a beautiful bouquet of flowers from a friend, comforting letters, cards and gestures, plus loving and caring messages on Facebook, would all work to bring my spirits back up.

Friends and family were amazed by how well I was taking this. I wasn’t acting, though. With just a few moments of woe, I was amazingly calm.

But that was not going to last. Read More 
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The Diagnosis You Don’t Want to Hear: It’s Breast Cancer

I Missed One Mammogram

For several years, I had been very good at getting mammograms and ultrasounds on a regular basis. In the midst of health insurance confusion, I missed a mammogram — just one.

I was off insurance for six months before going in for a mammogram. I have fibrocystic breast disease that can make it difficult to exam and spot abnormalities. As usual the imaging service sent me a note suggesting that an ultrasound be done due to my dense breast tissue. An ultrasound is usually ordered but this needs a referral from the primary care physician or gynecologist. During the time off insurance, I hadn’t paid a visit to the GYN, who was the one that made sure I always had both a mammogram and ultrasound.

Then I felt a lump similar to one I had in the other breast several years ago, that had been removed and turned out to be benign. I mentioned the new lump to my primary care doctor. He examined the area and I mentioned that I had not had the usual ultrasound. He didn’t order an ultrasound, but later handed me a note scribbled on a piece of paper and told me to find an oncologist that was part of my insurance plan. I sent him an email with a list of names and numbers, heard nothing back, and got busy with daily life.

I was becoming increasingly concerned about that doctor. Let’s just say that he was approaching retirement age and seemed to be forgetting which tests he had ordered and what prescription drugs I was on. What made matters worse, he kept files the old-fashioned way - with notes scribbled on the inside of a folder that held pages of my medical reports. When he couldn’t find the last mammogram results among the jumble of papers, I knew he needed to be replaced. I decided to find a new doctor, periodically examining the breast and noticing no change.

Several months had passed and it was time to renew my health insurance plan. I made a mistake when enrolling on the health insurance marketplace and ended up without a plan again, this time at least for only three months. In the meantime, I finally found a new doctor who fortunately accepted my new plan, and instantly sent me in for an ultrasound and made a referral for me to see a surgical oncologist. Upon physical examination, the oncologist thought that the lump was probably benign. It felt like a marble and was mobile just like the other lump I had discovered in the right breast. I was cautiously optimistic.

Typically a biopsy would have been done, but just like the lump found in the right breast, it was prominent enough to remove. I had a cruise and a family reunion coming up and asked if the surgery could wait. Since it would take time to get approval for the surgery anyway, the doctor said it was fine and surgery was scheduled to happen the next month, the week following the reunion.

Meanwhile life went on — in a downward spiral. Back in April I had lost one of my outlets that provided a major source of my income, in May found out that a friend was a lot sicker than she first revealed. In July I had surgery to remove the lump. Two days after my surgery I found out my friend had died from ovarian cancer. Five days later, the surgeon called. Hearing his voice on the phone, I knew it couldn’t be good news. The pathology report showed that the tumor had malignant cells. I was told to set up an appointment and the surgeon suggested that I bring someone with me.

Deer in the Headlights

The next day my sister and I were in the doctor’s office. At some point the doctor stopped talking and glanced at the notepad and pen in my hand. I’m the type who might jot down notes during a simple phone conversation with a friend. And here I was with notepad and pen, and hadn’t jotted down a single word. He was speaking and I was just staring at him, nodding my head. That, he said, is why he wanted me to bring someone with me. My sister was beside me, diligently writing down everything he said.

“So this is a malignant tumor?” He knew what I was really asking. He nodded. “It’s cancer.”

That day was the first time I uttered the words breast cancer. As if malignant cells or malignant tumor made it any less dire or frightening. The doctor explained that I would need further surgery to remove tissue that had surrounded the tumor and lymph nodes to make sure the cancer had not spread. In addition, my ultrasound had found something on the right breast as well. I was sent in for a biopsy. Luckily nothing was found.

The second surgery was done the following month. All of the tumor was taken out, the cancer had not spread to the lymph nodes, but he said I would still need chemotherapy and radiation treatment. I was confused. If all of the cancer was gone, why would I need chemo? The surgeon explained that they wanted to make sure that no microscopic cancer cells had escaped and were circulating somewhere in my body.

Another Cautionary Tale

I was beating myself up for not going in for a mammogram and ultrasound sooner, insurance or not. But I’m not alone when it comes to waiting. After telling certain family and friends about my diagnosis, I’d hear “I’ve been meaning to get a mammogram” or “I’d better go in for a mammogram,” but the next time I spoke with them, they still hadn’t set up appointments.

We put things off to our own detriment. My late friend, who had a distrust for doctors, prescription drugs and the medical industry as a whole, held off seeing a doctor even when the stomach issues she was having worsened and she began losing weight. It was only after she collapsed and was forced to go into the emergency room that the malady was checked out. She nearly died that day. Still, it was too late and I miss her dearly. I don’t want to have to lose another loved one before their time.

You know how they say, if you see something, say something? When it comes to your health, when you feel something, do something.  Read More 
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