Deanne
8 years agoMember
Life after active treatment
I found this network early in my treatment and interacting with others on here helped to change my view of myself. During the months of treatment, I began to see that people who opened themselves to sharing and learning from others seemed to cope better. I think before all this I was a private and closed sort of person. I definitely had myself convinced that I was good at particular things and not good at others.
Having no choice but to confront a lot of tough situations and get through them I began to see myself differently. I began to realise that I was maybe capable of much more than I thought I was.
A big change for me has been in my physical capacity. Sport and exercise was something that previously made me anxious. From a young age I believed I was not the sort of person who was any good at those things. So I avoided them wherever possible and stuck rigidly to the things I felt more comfortable and capable with.
During and after treatment though, I knew that I needed to exercise if I was to recover from the damage of chemo etc. Not to mention it helping with the side effects of hormone therapy too. So I kept an open mind and tried lots of different things, things way outside my comfort zone, simple because I wanted desperately to have the best quality of life possible.
Today I came across this article and it really hit home with what I have experienced during my treatment and recovery from bc. In my experience ATTITUDE is really important and I really believe that opening myself to change has allowed me to get better.
https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2017/08/heres-why-your-attitude-is-more-important-than-your-intelligence
Having no choice but to confront a lot of tough situations and get through them I began to see myself differently. I began to realise that I was maybe capable of much more than I thought I was.
A big change for me has been in my physical capacity. Sport and exercise was something that previously made me anxious. From a young age I believed I was not the sort of person who was any good at those things. So I avoided them wherever possible and stuck rigidly to the things I felt more comfortable and capable with.
During and after treatment though, I knew that I needed to exercise if I was to recover from the damage of chemo etc. Not to mention it helping with the side effects of hormone therapy too. So I kept an open mind and tried lots of different things, things way outside my comfort zone, simple because I wanted desperately to have the best quality of life possible.
Today I came across this article and it really hit home with what I have experienced during my treatment and recovery from bc. In my experience ATTITUDE is really important and I really believe that opening myself to change has allowed me to get better.
https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2017/08/heres-why-your-attitude-is-more-important-than-your-intelligence