
Now THIS is what i wanted to tell THAT Doc on Monday night...
Thank~You Universe for guiding me to this article today...
SEE!!! (She says poking out her tongue!!!)
17 Years Later, Stage 4 Survivor Is Savoring a Life Well Lived
By KATHERINE RUSSELL RICH
Published: April 26, 2010
Each year on a day in January — the 15th, to be precise — I go to a Web site and post a message to hundreds of women I’ve never met, saying, essentially, “I’m still here.”
Within days, a thunderous chorus comes back, 200 voices, 300. A few of them ask, “How can this be?” Sometimes they begin, “I’m crying.” Many answer in kind: “I’m here, too. It’s now three years.” “Five years.” “Three months.” “Seven.”
What we’re doing, in a way, is checking for lights in the darkness.
Now there probably aren’t a lot of Web sites where the announcement that you’re arI tell them that when the cancer returned, it came on so fast, spread so quickly, that I was given a year or two to live. Within months, the disease turned vicious. It started breaking
bones from within, and was coming close to severing my spinal cord.
Nothing was working, till a doctor tried a hormone treatment no one used much anymore, and the cancer turned and retreated, snarling. It remains sluggish but active. Every so often, it rears its head; when it does, we switch treatments and it slides back down. In that way, I stay alive.
I tell them: you just don’t know.
Two and a half years after the Stage 4 diagnosis, I confessed to my motherI spent the next five years holding my breath, then did the same for another five. I enacted every New Year’s resolution, past and future, all at once. Quit work that had grown stale and became a writer. Wrote a book. Went to India on assignment, fell in love with the language that was swirling around me, went back to live for a year and learn Hindi. Didn’t realize the reason I’d come to dislike that hyperbolically overachieving Lance Armstrong was that his behavior was too familiar. Take a nap, Lance! I’d think to myself, though in truth I couldn’t
either.
But if I was verging on radical levels of life consumption, I had a reason: No one had told me I wasn’t going to die soon. About 12 years out, my doctor finally did.
There’s a small subcategory of people with Stage 4 breast cancer, it turned out, who live for years and years. “Twenty. Thirty,” said my doctor, George Raptis. This group constitutes about 2 percent of all cases. Doctors can’t predict who will fall into this category. They can’t say you’re in it till you’re in it — till you’ve racked up the necessary miles.
The reason they can’t is that for all the pink-ribbon hoopla, despite
the hundreds of millions that have been poured into breast cancer research, hardly anyone has looked into the why of long-distance survival; not one doctor has specialized in this field.
Here’s pretty much the sum of collective knowledge: People in this group tend to have disease that has spread to the bone (as opposed to lung or liver, say) and feeds on estrogen. They tend to do well on hormone treatments. End of commonly known story.
But as Dr. Gabriel N. Hortobagyi at M.D. Anderson Cancer Ce
nter in Houston told me, you can also find women whose breast cancer spread to organs other than bone, for whom hormone therapy did exactly nothing, who had their lesions surgically excised and who have been free of cancer for 30 years. None of these women could have expected to live.
You just don’t know, and neither, unfortunately, does the medical field.
One reason, as the breast surgeon Dr. Susan Love told me, is that “many clinical trials are funded by the drug companies to run for five years,” obviously not enough if you’re investigating long-term survivors. But through her institute, the Dr. Susan Love Research Foundation, she has begun to conduct research.
Dr. Love said she was inspired by a colleague who told her that in World War II, aviation experts focused on planes that went down until someone said, “Why aren’t we studying the planes that stay up in the air?” By no means a reflexive optimist, she thinks there’s hope we’ll find a cure.
On the Web site, I tell the women how deeply I believe there’s no such thing as false hope: all hope is valid, even for people like us, even when hope would no longer appear to be sensible.
Life itself isn’t sensible, I say. No one can say with ultimate authority what will happen — with cancer, with a job that appears shaky, with all reversed fortunes — so you may as well seize all glimmers that appear.
I write to them (to myself) that of course this is tough: the waiting to see if the shadows are multiplying, the physical pain, the bouts with terrible blackness.
“But there can be joy in this life, too,” I say, “and that’s so important to remember. This disease does not invalidate us. This past year, I’ve had the joy of falling in love with my sister’s kids, who live states away and whom I hadn’t had the chance to know. I’ve had a second book come out, one I worked on for eight years, about going to live in India with Stage 4 cancer. I’ve had so many moments of joy this year, but when I’m in blackness, I forget about those.” Then I ask them to write and tell me about theirs, and lights begin to flash.
“Had a pajama party with my oldest friend, laughing through the night in matching pajamas about old times.”
“Came in second in a bridge tournament.”
“I went on a wonderful camping trip with my family.”
“Seeing my older daughter grow taller than me. She’s now 5-9.”
One thing I don’t ever think to say: When I was told I had a year or two, I didn’t want anything one might expect: no blow-out trip to the Galápagos, no perfect meal at Alain Ducasse, no defiant red Maserati. All I wanted was ordinary life back, for ordinary life,
it became utterly clear, is more valuable than anything else.
I don’t think to say it, and I never will. The women on the site already know that.
Katherine Russell Rich is the author of “Dreaming in Hindi: Coming Awake in Another Language” and “The Red Devil: To Hell With Cancer — and Back.”
One of the many things that i am grateful for is an Oncologist who does not put her faith in stats, this gives me ~Hope~ For then with a free heart i can say to myself "SO!" Cancer is just a word and illness simply a state of mind... i have always said that i betcha if we autopsied every deceased person, many we would find, have lived to ripe old ages riddled with cancer... Because they never knew they had it... Fear can kill you, i believe... So i choose to surround myself with good old fashioned ~Hope~ and good intentions ...and get on with my living X:-)So Be it!


8 comments:
What an amazing women you are, thank you so much for this deep and wonderful life sharing post.
WOW! You go girl, what years?
I have a friend who as cancer of the bowels, do you think these hormones pills will help and what are they called? He could ask his doctor. Doesn't matter if he grows breast does it, as long as it may help. The doctors in the uk may poo,poo it. He has a good specialist at the hospital that could look into it for him.
Loads of love!
Julie
i read every word. you are living as though you are alive! that sure as hell makes sense, vicki. ♥ this article is so inspiring i am so glad it found you and so thankful you have shared it. i love your attitude and approach to life. guess who is grinning at you right now? (that wise imp of a mutual friend named renee)
i read your last post and although i didn't leave comment i did say fuck three times :^)
with love
kj
KJ beat me to it....Renee, Renee, Renee... she would be the first to say that "no one CAN say with ultimate authority what will happen — "...and also that HOPE and LOVE ARE the answers...
You, brave one, must always remember that...and though we are thousnds of miles apart geographically, we are just there -sisters in LIFE and bonded together through friendship - together strong. Never forget that.
BELIEVE. ALWAYS.
Love,
♥ Robin ♥
what an inspiration, you give me that hope.
I believe
Nolly, This is a wonderful post and you are wonderful and brave.
I KNOW that miracles happen everyday and you are a miracle already :-). xoxo
*LOVE* You guyz <3
(Ps) Julie, For breast cancer it seems to be pretty standard to be offered chemo, radiotherapy and then hormone therapy ...If you have a type of cancer that is reliant on estrogen to grow (The hormone treatment/pill suppresses estrogen production) So i don't think that hormone treatment would work otherwise... Here is something i found very interesting the other day though: http://vimeo.com/24821365 and of course i would always recommend Ian Gawlers web site: http://www.iangawler.com/
(((Hugs))) for your friend and for *You* xox
I love this article...I'm so glad you found it. And you are right, most people are full of cancer at death, even people who have lived to a ripe old age. All of us have cancer cells, and fear can kill you, I believe that as well.
You are awesome, amazing and just plain wonderful, Nolly!! xx
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