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Cancer Was Not a Gift & It Didn’t Make Me a Better Person, An Excerpt – Part 2

Cancer Was Not a Gift & It Didn’t Make Me a Better Person, An Excerpt – Part 2

In my previous post, I shared part 1 of my upcoming new book’s introduction. As promised, here’s part 2. As always, your thoughts are welcome. And it looks like my book is on schedule to be out next week, or very soon after that. Check back here for updates. Now here’s part 2…

Introduction, Part 2

Like many teenagers, I wasn’t entirely happy with my new, emerging shape. I always felt a bit small in the bosom and a few times stuffed my bra with Kleenex for a little oomph. That worked fine until I started going steady and couldn’t fool my boyfriend’s groping hands with Kleenex.

In college I even went so far as to secretly order a “bust enhancing” exercise contraption I discovered in a magazine. The ad promised to significantly increase my measurements if I followed the directions for mere minutes a day. The device was a piece of pink plastic with a tight spring of some sort in the middle. You held the device in front of you and squeezed the two sides together. I stood in my dorm room with the door tightly shut squeezing away, but I never noticed anything happening, except for a growing realization I had been duped.

Shortly after graduating from college, my high school sweetheart David and I got married and I came to accept my body, at least most of the time. I became confident, comfortable and just plain more mature about how I looked at myself. The days of wanting to change my body were over, well, mostly over. Later came three babies and I proudly breastfed all three. Suddenly, my breasts were truly functioning as nature intended and I grew to appreciate them during that special time (except for the sore nipples and painful case of mastitis). After that period, I didn’t think much about breasts. Life was too busy. Years passed and mammograms entered into my now more mature routine. I patted myself on the back for entering this new watchdog phase of breast awareness.

Then one day out of the blue it seemed, my mother was diagnosed with breast cancer and suddenly breasts were back in life’s spotlight, now as potential betrayers and messengers of doom. After her diagnosis and death four years later from the wretched disease, I naively believed I could not be stricken for at least a while. Some reasonable period of time would have to pass. No family could be inflicted with back-to-back cancers. That would be too cruel. There must be quotas on misery allotments. Surely I would be spared, or at least given a fair amount of time to prepare. I was wrong. Cancer sticks to its own protocol, which means it doesn’t follow any. It strikes whenever it damn pleases. My cancer diagnosis came in April 2010 and my personal cancer domino effect was set in motion. It continues to this day.

A few weeks later on an ordinary day in late spring, or early summer, depending on your seasonal vantage point, I said goodbye to my breasts. I miss them. I miss a lot of things about my pre-cancer life. This does not mean I’m trying to rewind my life. I’m not. My life now is good, very good. I have much to be grateful for and I am, but cancer changes everything. It just does. Cancer is a string of losses and I will certainly never be calling it a gift. And just for the record, it didn’t make me a better person either.

So that’s most of my intro. Hopefully it makes you want to read more! 

Thoughts?

Have you ever felt dissatisfied with your breasts or any other body part(s)?

Have you ever tried to make your breasts appear bigger, smaller or non-existent?

If you’ve had a mastectomy or a lumpectomy for any reason, do you miss your old breast(s)?

 

Like it? Share it. Thank you!

 

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Cancer Was Not a Gift

Patti

Friday 18th of December 2015

I guess I'm just an odd one. The first day I met with my oncologist, I told him I was perfectly happy with him cutting off the affected breast....even the other one if there was a possibility of the cancer spreading or recurring there. I just wanted the cancer out of me. My opinion was that it is just a breast, not a leg or an arm or an eye or something that I REALLY need. The breast just hangs there doing nothing. I did end up having a mastectomy. Didn't bother me at all. I agree with Sue, though. The uncertainty of the future is worse than any of the treatments I underwent. Will it come back? Will it be in a few months or a few years? That's the tough part. But I have to move on and live. I'll share a quote I read and like: "Moving on doesn't mean that what you went through was insignificant. It only means that you made peace with it."

Sue

Sunday 6th of December 2015

It's not my breast that I miss, I was lucky (if luck has anything to do with being diagnosed with breast cancer...which of course is not true) to escape with a lumpectomy, radiation, and hormone therapy. What I miss is certainty in my life. Even though my breast cancer was caught early there is the uncertainty of a recurrence happening either during treatment or even years after treatment is finished. There is also the uncertainty of the cancer becoming metastatic even though I am following the the prescribed treatment. I miss my old life without breast cancer.

Lisa Cleaver

Sunday 29th of November 2015

Thanks for the excerpt, the title is great. Thanks for your honesty, and thanks for being brave to share your experience with your mother. There is no one like your mom when you have a question. I am sorry for your loss. She rocked wigs for many years, I just need to know how to do that now. I too lost my mom, she had 4 different diagnosis of cancer, (double mastectomy) but it was stroke and heart attacks that actually took her. My health suffered during her illness. I found out I needed a pace-maker and defib. one year after mom died. It happened to be time for my mammogram, a mass was found. I knew that with my family history, it was cancer. My only sister is also a breast cancer survivor. I am currently dealing with the chemo, hair loss, thrush in my mouth, fatigue, joint aches and complete loss of who I was. I miss Lisa. I want this to make me into something wonderful and better, but I don't know how that happens. I admire you for writing. It is helpful to me and many others.

Nancy

Monday 30th of November 2015

Lisa, I'm glad you like the title. I realize it won't appeal to everyone and this is fine. Thank you for your kind words about my mother. I'm sorry for your loss too, and I'm sorry you were diagnosed with cancer. Going through cancer treatment is hard, so be kind and patient with yourself. My advice would be to ditch the expectations. You won't necessarily find yourself transformed into something better either. I did not anyway. Just be you. That's always enough. Thank you for your encouraging words about my writing. They mean a lot. My best to you.

Sue

Friday 20th of November 2015

Cancer is never a gift! I lost my mom to ovarian cancer when I was 23 and since then I know more people who have died of breast cancer than who have survived. Regardless of type or stage of breast cancer the one thing that I know for sure is that breast cancer is sneaky, it's indiscriminate, it's physically and emotionally painful, and it's personal. It's not my breast I miss, it's the person I was before being diagnosed that I miss.

Nancy

Monday 23rd of November 2015

Sue, I appreciate your insightful comments. I miss the person I was too. Cancer impacts just about every aspect of your life. Thank you for sharing.

Tracy

Saturday 14th of November 2015

I hope your book does very well Nancy, the excerpt definitely leaves you wanting to read more. Although I have had reconstructive surgery I don't regard the things on my chest as breasts. There is no breast left, just skin covering ADM and implants. These are clever fakes of sufficient quality to provide a 'normal' appearance when clothed. My own breasts were small in proportion to my frame but they were natural, symmetrical and unblemished. Those things cannot be said for the forgeries and I will always know they aren't me.

Nancy

Monday 16th of November 2015

Tracy, Clever fakes, I feel the same... I'm glad you liked my excerpt and that it makes you want to read more. Thanks so much.