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Angelo's avatar
Angelo
Member
6 years ago

How long should you keep working.

Hi everyone, 
I was diagnosed with Mets in December 2018 and am having pleasing results to date, however I’ve been told that Ribociclib is only effective for a year, I’m hoping my Oncologist is wrong. I am working full time in a senior management position and feeling the effects of fatigue from the treatment. My work is my life and a distraction from the reality of this shit disease. I’m 57 and financially could consider dropping my hours and stepping down from my role. My fear is am I giving into this shit disease or is it time to start easing up and smelling the roses. The unknown of how much time I have and the quality of time is weighing me down and causing anxiety. I’m so tired of the uncertainty and inability to concentrate and even make decisions because of this shit disease... it’s hard work and it’s been a f... hard day 😩. Is there any hope out there, if so send it my way xxx

14 Replies

  • Thanks for your supportive messages...they are all valued xx
  • Whilst I don't have metastatic disease, all of us when faced with breast cancer diagnosis think about stuff like this.

    So I say...do what you love. If you thrive by working and it makes you feel mentally great and not physically too taxing...why stop? If you feel you need to work a bit less due to tiredness...then look at that. Lots if  work places will accommodate that.
    There are other treatments after ribociclib, so even when it stops being effective that doesn't mean that's it.
    Working on bucket lists can be helpful. So...if you want to see the pyramids...have that holiday. It doesn't mean you have to do it all now...finish work because you think you should rather than want to. Great holidays take money...so working and regular breaks can be the perfect combo.
    Small steps. You'll know when the time is right to finish.
    We all have shitty days. ..that's what sick leave is for. Or having a short break. 
    My sister lived 10 years with metastatic disease. She and her husband bought an ostrich farm. She volunteered at her grandkids kindergarten so she got more time with them....she did this right up to last few weeks. She thrived on being busy and useful. Something I suspect you do too. 
    Kath x
  • I think it's about self-knowledge @Angelo. Only you know the answer.

    How much is work intrinsic to your enjoyment of life? If it fulfils you, brings you contentment and satisfaction, and outweighs the exhaustion, then keep working, making adjustments as required.

    Maybe you could try approaching it as a retirement decision. We're advised to have plans for retirement. You're retiring in a month... what's the plan? How does the thought of retiring in a month make you feel? Panicked or relieved? Are there hobbies you want to pursue? Places to go, books to read, new skills to learn?

    Perhaps a few sessions with a counsellor to parse through your options, motivations, hesitations and anxieties would be useful.

    Some people with mets get more time than they expect, others get less. And everyone, mets or otherwise, wants to die with no regrets. Keep talking here, let us know what you're thinking. Big hug, K xox
  • Hi Angelo, sorry you are having a shitty day :( my oncologist hasn’t been able to say how long the ribociclib will work for, she has a patient who has been on it for 4 years! Hoping you have a better day tomorrow x