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primek's avatar
primek
Member
9 years ago

12 months on

Tomorrow is my anniversary. My anniversary of finding my breast lump. A day I will never forget...as I'm sure most of you remember vividly. It wasn't a feeling of...oh is that different?  It was a definite obvious hardness just above my nipple. It didn't move. It wasn't soft. I knew the moment I felt it, it was cancer.

So I headed into work that day. I knew it was Xmas madness time. My first appointment cancelled so I took myself off to the Emergency Dept at the hospital I worked at as didn't want to wait days for a GP appointment. I knew I needed an ultrasound and biopsy quickly and that was the quickest way to get it.

So referral for ultrasound. The Dr pretended to be unconcerned...but later got me in for an ultrasound within 24 hours. She was concerned. I expressed my worry of the services closing over Xmas and this needing quick action. She listened.

The ultrasound day was one of the saddest days of my life. My sister in law was dying 300km away of endometrial cancer...we had been down a few days before, her condition had deteriorated and I said my Goodbyes on the phone to her, knowing she was unconscious but possibly still being able to hear me. Then I went for my ultrasound.

Nothing like the look on the radiologist face to give it away. She gets the Dr. Then there is the look between them. Oh...we can't really tell you it is cancer...solid black star like lump...but we will biopsy. 5 core biopsies taken. I went back to work...but went home as by this time I was a mess.

Of course the radiology report said highly suspicious of cancer. But no results for ever so it seemed. On the 22nd we drove the 300km to say farewell for the last time to my SIL. I was to speak...but when I got to the funeral service and saw her coffin...I couldn't,  I was a mess, and  kept thinking this would be me and my family soon. All the while keeping this a secret from all but my husband. They had enough grief.

So we stayed with them through Xmas. I put on my happy face, supported my niece and nephew, my brother and their families through a very difficult Xmas. Laying awake at night terrified of my future. 

So we return...no results back until the 29th. My husband was in denial...it might not be...stop worrying. But I knew. I knew the moment I found it. So it was a Es+pr-Her2+ cancer. I only saw her2 on pathology. I googled. Yes I googled. POOR PROGNOSIS....don't you just love those words. But I read. I understood treatment options. I understood recurrence risk. I knew I was facing a fight for my life.

So 4th January I head off to Adelaide. ..500km from home. Back to the hospital my husband and I trained at. I sat having coffee the morning of the appointment at the RAH. I hadn't slept all night. I was so anxious. I decided to do a mindfulness technique. I closed my eyes and listened to the breeze, the birds, the leaves, felt the light. Then it happened. I felt my Mum and my SIL around me. It was both their birthdays. Then I heard it. "You'll be alright. It's gonna be alright"

With that I felt calm. I went to that appointment calm. I was able to take it all in. Dense breasts. Unable to see in mammogram (clear 5 weeks beforehand)... due to breast density. Strong family history. Mastectomy was my choice. Surgeon suggested bilateral due to history and the very strong chance of BRAC1 gene mutation. I agreed and chose immediate delayed reconstruction.

So...the rest is history.
Bone scan, CT scan and breast MRI showed no surprises.
23rd January was my farwell boobie party called Dolly's Parting.
25th January was my surgery with sentinal node biopsy.
4th Feb confirmed...node negative
Within 6 weeks I start ACT-H treatment.
It was hard. I couldn't work but I came through.
Letrozole. ..bearable
Gene testing...negative  :)

So here I am 12 months on. I'm recovering steadily from chemo and surgery. I'm back working part time. I'm  still a bit more anxious than I'd like to be...but generally I'm  doing okay. Herceptin continues. My changeover surgery is planned.

Life is precious. I'm so grateful for this site to be able to connect with others on this difficult path. It has kept me sane on those dark days. It kept me busy supporting others just starting out, knowing how difficult this is. I look forward to 2017 being a year of joy. An end of treatment. Hopefully never to require more. But if it's not...I know I am strong enough, and you have got my back.
  • Well Kath - I bet that you will be so pleased to farewell 2015-16 !

    As the last year has been such a harrowing time for your whole family it is all still so raw and new and very present. Following on from my original diagnosis a fog would settle on me every single July when I knew I had to go for that yearly mammogram and ultrasound to see "if it had returned".

    I guess I am "lucky" in some respects that my I am still around all these years later following my early breast cancer diagnosis of 2003. It has allowed me to look back and reflect.

    Do I remember the actual day ? No, I think 30 or 31 July. I think the beauty of time has erased some of the painful memories (and don't worry, I have an amazing memory !).

    With my mbc diagnosis last year, it is still uppermost in my mind but as it was around my eldest son's high school graduation my focus was on him and his upcoming HSC. It all then came in waves.

    My hope for you is that you create beautiful new memories this Christmas and your current one's fade.

    Here's to a happy joyous Christmas and New Year Kath. x     

  • It's a year since my surgery, I have finished chemo, radiation and now on Tamoxifen.  Some lymphedema in my arm and breast.  Still get quite tired, but doing ok.  Still working through the changes to my personality as a result of getting cancer and the treatment.  I am amazed at the courage and strength people show when faced with this.  We are a lot stronger than we realize.  Good luck.  Karen
  • Congratulations Kath! What a journey you have found yourself on! I hope I can maintain your positivity and optimism over the next 12 months and beyond. I have had 2 of my 6 chemo cycles so far with hormone therapy at the same time, and if all goes to plan will have a double mastectomy with immediate reconstruction next April +\- radiotherapy. It all seems so overwhelming but hearing so many positive stories here really helps. Happy anniversary, may you have many more
  • Well...A small glitch, couldn't comment ..but love that last line.
  • Here's to the best kind of new year for all of us - hope, recovery, optimism and joy.

  • A very happy 2017 to you Kath, and many thanks for all those useful and helpful posts and good research. What a story. It must have been so hard facing a cancer diagnosis at the same time as losing someone you care about from the same insidious malaise. 

    I never found a lump, just suddenly had a funny sore breast - 9 days from funny feeling to mastectomy - it was hard to keep up, but I have read so many stories here about agonising waits that I realise how grateful I am for that speed. When I started, like everyone, a year was an eternity. But then it's done. Next October, if all goes well, I will hit my 5 year mark. It seems like no time and an eternity simultaneously. There are still no guarantees, I know that. As I have said before in a post, one of the unlooked for benefits is coming to terms with the real impact of being mortal. It's not morbid, it's liberating and I still want to live for ever! I won't and that's fine. I have learned to think about how I invest my time- not always well or wisely, but not carelessly and that's a start. If I had not survived, I would have never seen my grandson, held my mother's hand when she died, got to Iceland or worked on a job I really enjoy. Every moment for the last four years feels like the best kind of end of year bonus.

    Here's to the best kind of new year for all of us - hope, recovery, optimism and joy.

    Alison