Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search

LiberalLoner

(9,762 posts)
Fri Jul 21, 2023, 03:52 PM Jul 2023

Thanks everyone for being so caring and supportive, I am so grateful. Got the results back

Two malignant masses in left breast, but the right breast is cancer free. Just atypical ductal hyperplasia that does need to be removed and evaluated.

So, now I need to get a referral to a breast surgeon from my primary care doc, meet with the surgeon, get the surgery, at which time I am guessing I might find out what stage it is???

And then on to treatment of some sort.

And then wait and see if I beat it or not.

Thanks everyone for being here.

I haven’t cried yet. I am sure I will at some point.
Right now I am just focused on what steps I need to take next, and then fears of pain after the surgery.

One step at a time.

122 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
Thanks everyone for being so caring and supportive, I am so grateful. Got the results back (Original Post) LiberalLoner Jul 2023 OP
Hugs for you. Srkdqltr Jul 2023 #1
Thank you so much! ❤️ LiberalLoner Jul 2023 #14
Difficult cate94 Jul 2023 #2
Thank you so much! ❤️ LiberalLoner Jul 2023 #15
🙏 claudette Jul 2023 #3
❤️ LiberalLoner Jul 2023 #16
Best wishes! OAITW r.2.0 Jul 2023 #4
Thank you! ❤️ LiberalLoner Jul 2023 #17
Cancer sucks. murielm99 Jul 2023 #5
Thank you! ❤️ LiberalLoner Jul 2023 #18
Wow!!! I admire your outlook. Best vibes. LakeArenal Jul 2023 #6
Thank you! ❤️ LiberalLoner Jul 2023 #19
Take care. My lady friend went through this 2 years ago. Lumpectomy, Silent Type Jul 2023 #7
Thank you so much! It helps me to hear happy tales like that, thanks! ❤️ LiberalLoner Jul 2023 #20
Yes, one step at a time. We are here for you. I think you can beat it! LoisB Jul 2023 #8
Thank you! ❤️ LiberalLoner Jul 2023 #21
Hugs XanaDUer2 Jul 2023 #9
Thank you! ❤️ LiberalLoner Jul 2023 #22
Don't cry. You will survive this. Polly Hennessey Jul 2023 #10
Thank you! ❤️ actually haven't cried yet. Handling the news pretty well. LiberalLoner Jul 2023 #23
Hugs. Best wishes. viva la Jul 2023 #11
Thank you! ❤️ me too! LiberalLoner Jul 2023 #24
Hugs. Hoping your treatment gets results, Lib. ancianita Jul 2023 #12
Thank you so much ❤️ LiberalLoner Jul 2023 #25
Wishing you the best. Several friends have been through breast cancer, and I'm happy to say Lonestarblue Jul 2023 #13
Thank you so much! ❤️ LiberalLoner Jul 2023 #26
I had what sounds like your diagnosis. The doctor did a lumpectomy at the time. I hope the course Karadeniz Jul 2023 #27
Thank you so much! ❤️❤️❤️ LiberalLoner Jul 2023 #33
Did they tell you deRien Jul 2023 #28
The doctor said my masses were both fairly small, but said I would LiberalLoner Jul 2023 #34
One step at a time -- you will get thru this Hekate Jul 2023 #29
Thank you so much ❤️❤️❤️ LiberalLoner Jul 2023 #35
Wishing you the best. Old Crank Jul 2023 #30
Thank you ❤️ LiberalLoner Jul 2023 #36
I had much the same feelings about my breast cancer & surgery. lark Jul 2023 #31
Oh I am sorry for what you went through but glad you beat the cancer LiberalLoner Jul 2023 #37
Sending hugs and strength gademocrat7 Jul 2023 #32
Thank you! ❤️❤️❤️ LiberalLoner Jul 2023 #38
Wishing you improving health, LiberalLoner! pazzyanne Jul 2023 #39
Thank you so much! ❤️ LiberalLoner Jul 2023 #67
We're all with you Wild blueberry Jul 2023 #40
Thank you so much! I am so grateful for all of you here! ❤️ LiberalLoner Jul 2023 #68
Yes. One step at a time and then one day at a time. Solly Mack Jul 2023 #41
Thank you so much! ❤️ yeah, having MS I totally get it about resting... LiberalLoner Jul 2023 #69
Holding you in our DU heart! cilla4progress Jul 2023 #42
Thank you so much! ❤️ LiberalLoner Jul 2023 #70
Sometimes they do chemo first now TexasBushwhacker Jul 2023 #43
Oh I hope you never need to use those wigs. 🙏 thank you. ❤️ LiberalLoner Jul 2023 #71
I sincerely hope you get the medical and emotional support needed to deal with this. Hang tough. Evolve Dammit Jul 2023 #44
Thank you so very much! ❤️ LiberalLoner Jul 2023 #72
One way or another it can be beaten. Don't allow the cancer to become you: be a person with ... marble falls Jul 2023 #45
I'm still a soldier deep down and I will fight this like one! ❤️ LiberalLoner Jul 2023 #73
You know how to do it! Embrace the suck and squeeze the hell out of it! marble falls Jul 2023 #79
👍👏🤣🤣🤣❤️ LiberalLoner Jul 2023 #82
You are a true Warrior Woman, LiberalLoner. You are a Force to be reckoned with. thatcrowwoman Jul 2023 #101
Thank you so so much! You are so wonderful! ❤️❤️❤️ LiberalLoner Jul 2023 #110
Sending positive vibes! forgotmylogin Jul 2023 #46
Thank you so much for giving me hope! ❤️ LiberalLoner Jul 2023 #74
My mother and my sil beat this disease. 58Sunliner Jul 2023 #47
Thank you so much for giving me hope! ❤️ LiberalLoner Jul 2023 #75
You are welcome! 58Sunliner Jul 2023 #107
Thank you so much! The weird thing is I have MS so my immune system is already in overdrive... LiberalLoner Jul 2023 #111
I have an immune disorder as well, 58Sunliner Jul 2023 #117
Oh, very good, I will try that! I need to see if I can find it on Amazon... LiberalLoner Jul 2023 #118
P.S. I'm sorry you have an immune system disorder...Epstein Barr causes such damage, hope they LiberalLoner Jul 2023 #119
Thanks. I was also diagnosed as having MS, but I have only had one episode. 58Sunliner Jul 2023 #120
Thank you! ❤️ LiberalLoner Jul 2023 #121
Hugs to you, LiberalLoner. thatcrowwoman Jul 2023 #48
Thank you so so much, you are the kindest person ever! ❤️❤️❤️ LiberalLoner Jul 2023 #76
Meet with your oncologist first! colorado_ufo Jul 2023 #49
Thank you so much! I am honestly very ignorant of the process so I can use advice. ❤️ LiberalLoner Jul 2023 #77
PM me, if I can help. Diagnosed 2018. colorado_ufo Jul 2023 #85
Thank you so much! I hope it will never return! ❤️ LiberalLoner Jul 2023 #87
Sending you all my good vibes. brer cat Jul 2023 #50
Thank you so much! ❤️ LiberalLoner Jul 2023 #78
I am an 11 year survivor. TNNurse Jul 2023 #51
Thank you so much for the advice and sharing your experience! ❤️❤️❤️gives me hope! ❤️ LiberalLoner Jul 2023 #80
3 women in my family are cancer survivors Javaman Jul 2023 #52
Thank you so much! ❤️❤️❤️ LiberalLoner Jul 2023 #98
Thinking of you and sending hugs. MLAA Jul 2023 #53
Thank you ❤️❤️❤️ LiberalLoner Jul 2023 #97
Everyone's Cancer is Different, but Shana Jul 2023 #54
Wow, I am glad you are okay now, thank you for sharing your story of hope! ❤️ LiberalLoner Jul 2023 #96
❤️❤️❤️🙏🙏🙏 sueh Jul 2023 #55
❤️❤️❤️ LiberalLoner Jul 2023 #95
Holding you in light and love. Your DU family is here for you. Lean as hard as niyad Jul 2023 #56
Thank you so much ❤️❤️❤️ LiberalLoner Jul 2023 #94
Best wishes stollen Jul 2023 #57
Thank you so much, and I wish you a long healthy life! ❤️ LiberalLoner Jul 2023 #93
I'm pulling for you. stage left Jul 2023 #58
Thank you! ❤️ LiberalLoner Jul 2023 #92
Best wishes. My mom had breast cancer, and she did beat it. PatrickforB Jul 2023 #59
I'm sorry for the loss of your Mom. 🙏 thank you so much for this kind message of hope! ❤️ LiberalLoner Jul 2023 #91
Sounds like you have lots of support here Deuxcents Jul 2023 #60
Thank you so very much! ❤️ yeah DU is awesome, really a family and I am so grateful!❤️ LiberalLoner Jul 2023 #90
It's scary as hell when it happens to you. 1WorldHope Jul 2023 #61
Thank you so so much for your kind words and for sharing your experience, it gives me hope. ❤️ LiberalLoner Jul 2023 #89
Hope is how we get through everyday sometimes. 1WorldHope Jul 2023 #105
❤️ LiberalLoner Jul 2023 #113
I have never had breast surgery but soldierant Jul 2023 #62
Oh my goodness that sounds like one heck of an experience! Thank you for sharing it, I wish you good LiberalLoner Jul 2023 #88
My surgeon mde it much easier by helping me prepare soldierant Jul 2023 #106
Thank you so much! Yeah I had an abdominal hysterectomy/oopherectomy at 50 LiberalLoner Jul 2023 #108
My scar was the other way - soldierant Jul 2023 #109
❤️ LiberalLoner Jul 2023 #112
Survival in breast cancer is at an all time high. My sister-in-law is... NNadir Jul 2023 #63
Thank you so very much! ❤️ LiberalLoner Jul 2023 #86
Peace and good health. Magoo48 Jul 2023 #64
Thank you so much....peace to you, too. ❤️ LiberalLoner Jul 2023 #81
My mom was diagnosed at age 77. She underwent surgery, radiation, & chemo. bullwinkle428 Jul 2023 #65
Thank you so much, and thank you for the hope! ❤️❤️❤️ LiberalLoner Jul 2023 #83
In the imortal words of the philisopher emoticon. "You Rock" Prairie_Seagull Jul 2023 #66
Thank you so much! ❤️ LiberalLoner Jul 2023 #84
what the posters said down below. AllaN01Bear Jul 2023 #99
❤️❤️❤️ LiberalLoner Jul 2023 #100
All the best to you as you go forward. pandr32 Jul 2023 #102
Thank you so much! ❤️ LiberalLoner Jul 2023 #114
Warm wishes to you! TdeV Jul 2023 #103
Thank you! ❤️ LiberalLoner Jul 2023 #115
You hang in there, my friend. calimary Jul 2023 #104
Thank you so so much! ❤️ last night my DH and I sat on our deck for a couple of hours and LiberalLoner Jul 2023 #116
Saw the biopsy pathology report. Grade 2, moderately aggressive. LiberalLoner Jul 2023 #122

Silent Type

(2,906 posts)
7. Take care. My lady friend went through this 2 years ago. Lumpectomy,
Fri Jul 21, 2023, 04:18 PM
Jul 2023

some precautionary radiation therapy, but no chemo. She’s great now. She had very little discomfort from the surgery.

Lonestarblue

(9,998 posts)
13. Wishing you the best. Several friends have been through breast cancer, and I'm happy to say
Fri Jul 21, 2023, 04:40 PM
Jul 2023

that all are still here and doing well. One has survived breast cancer for over 20 years, and the others for several years. Hoping your surgery goes well, and your treatment as well. Hang in there!

Karadeniz

(22,526 posts)
27. I had what sounds like your diagnosis. The doctor did a lumpectomy at the time. I hope the course
Fri Jul 21, 2023, 04:47 PM
Jul 2023

of your treatment goes as smoothly !!!

deRien

(165 posts)
28. Did they tell you
Fri Jul 21, 2023, 04:52 PM
Jul 2023

what size the masses are? I had a 5 mm mass and they said I was a stage 0 (first time in my life I was glad to be a 0). I ended up being a stage 1+ ~lumpectomy with radiation only. This was 4 years ago and I've been okay since.

LiberalLoner

(9,762 posts)
34. The doctor said my masses were both fairly small, but said I would
Fri Jul 21, 2023, 05:48 PM
Jul 2023

Probably be sent by my breast surgeon or my primary care doc or someone for an MRI and whatever other imaging to help determine staging.

Thank you so much for sharing your story! It really helps me be more hopeful!
❤️❤️❤️

Hekate

(90,708 posts)
29. One step at a time -- you will get thru this
Fri Jul 21, 2023, 05:06 PM
Jul 2023

And if at some point you need to take the time to cry, take it for the momentary release that it is.
And then the next step.


lark

(23,102 posts)
31. I had much the same feelings about my breast cancer & surgery.
Fri Jul 21, 2023, 05:27 PM
Jul 2023

I didn't cry until later, was too busy trying to beat it. I had a complete mastectomy, but knew from the biopsy that it had not progressed much beyond the cell walls. After surgery I knew for sure I'd had stage 1 and that is was in my ducts so estrogen related. That was 25 years ago, these days I think they do a lot more in=depth analysis.

I didn't cry until I had a 6 month staph infection from an incompetent plastic surgeon and then I only cried from the extreme pain and frustration.

Still - 25 years later and the breast cancer has not recurred. YAY! Hope that happens for you too!

LiberalLoner

(9,762 posts)
37. Oh I am sorry for what you went through but glad you beat the cancer
Fri Jul 21, 2023, 05:50 PM
Jul 2023

Thank you so much for sharing your story! ❤️

pazzyanne

(6,556 posts)
39. Wishing you improving health, LiberalLoner!
Fri Jul 21, 2023, 06:12 PM
Jul 2023

Take good care of you as you take your journey to better health.

Wild blueberry

(6,633 posts)
40. We're all with you
Fri Jul 21, 2023, 06:14 PM
Jul 2023

Step by step. You are gathering information and have a plan.
Thank you for sharing your journey with us.
Big hug!

Solly Mack

(90,769 posts)
41. Yes. One step at a time and then one day at a time.
Fri Jul 21, 2023, 06:15 PM
Jul 2023

Wishing you continued strength.

Be good to yourself. There will be days when your need to prove nothing has changed is at war with your body. Listen to your body when it wants to sleep or just lounge.

It all sounds like platitudes until you've been through cancer yourself.

TexasBushwhacker

(20,192 posts)
43. Sometimes they do chemo first now
Fri Jul 21, 2023, 06:18 PM
Jul 2023

The logic is that if they do chemo and the masses shrink, then 1) the chemo is effective and 2) the surgery doesn't have to be as extreme.

My mother was diagnosed in 1994 and died in 2004. They have SO MANY other treatments now. But I dread getting my mammogram every year. I always pick out wigs while I'm waiting for the results. So far I'm good.

marble falls

(57,097 posts)
45. One way or another it can be beaten. Don't allow the cancer to become you: be a person with ...
Fri Jul 21, 2023, 06:36 PM
Jul 2023

Last edited Sat Jul 22, 2023, 09:40 AM - Edit history (1)

... cancer. Be determined and do not give up!

thatcrowwoman

(1,229 posts)
101. You are a true Warrior Woman, LiberalLoner. You are a Force to be reckoned with.
Sat Jul 22, 2023, 11:23 AM
Jul 2023

We are Team Warrior Woman, your Force Multiplier, at your command, ma’am.

🕊thatcrowwoman

forgotmylogin

(7,529 posts)
46. Sending positive vibes!
Fri Jul 21, 2023, 06:38 PM
Jul 2023

Breast cancer is beatable. It's a long road but my mom survived it in her 70s after surgery and a short bout of chemotherapy.

58Sunliner

(4,386 posts)
117. I have an immune disorder as well,
Mon Jul 24, 2023, 05:56 PM
Jul 2023

originally diagnosed as Epstein Barre/CFS. The supplements don't affect the function of your immune system per se. They are for the detritus of a system that is compromised and in the case of Fisetin, is shown to disrupt breast cancer cell/tumor proliferation. Fisetin is a natural flavonoid. The Mayo Clinic has been doing human studies on Fisetin, and some studies have been done using it as a successful adjunct to chemotherapy. You should ask your oncologist about it. I have done the Fisetin protocol am amazed at the long term benefits.

LiberalLoner

(9,762 posts)
119. P.S. I'm sorry you have an immune system disorder...Epstein Barr causes such damage, hope they
Mon Jul 24, 2023, 07:10 PM
Jul 2023

Make an immunization against it someday.

58Sunliner

(4,386 posts)
120. Thanks. I was also diagnosed as having MS, but I have only had one episode.
Tue Jul 25, 2023, 10:56 AM
Jul 2023

And that was 6 years ago. My last MRI did not show the brain lesions, but some problems with white matter from, I think, a prior seizure disorder, which has resolved itself. I went on a gluten free diet a few months ago to see if I could improve cognitive issues like memory and it has helped. I've spent my life coping with the mystery illness, CFS.
As to Fisetin, Renue is good place to order it from. Theirs is liposomal which means it it more bio-available. As for dosage, I will research the dosage they used for the chemo with Fisetin study. The Fisetin protocol may well be dosed differently. My experience with Fisetin is that it wasn't just physical, it "reset" my brain. Not a scientific parameter at all, but I gained a sense of focus and being present in a positive way that has stayed with me. I have every vertebrae in my neck herniated from an auto accident 3+ years ago, and was told I need surgery. I'm waiting for a better procedure because the surgery is risky. Fisetin gave me the ability to function without pain meds. I can safely drive now too. It also helped with symptoms of a brain stem injury and problems with balance. YMMV.

thatcrowwoman

(1,229 posts)
48. Hugs to you, LiberalLoner.
Fri Jul 21, 2023, 06:52 PM
Jul 2023

Know we’re here for you.
You are a LiberalLoner, but you are not alone.
🕊thatcrowwoman

TNNurse

(6,926 posts)
51. I am an 11 year survivor.
Fri Jul 21, 2023, 07:35 PM
Jul 2023

Single mastectomy with one positive lymph node.

The only painful part of the surgery was the drain. Once that was out, there was little pain.

Chemotherapy has improved since then. Try not to panic.

Do not go to an appointment alone, take someone who can also listen. I remember it was hard to grasp that the things they were saying were about me. My husband was great, he would need to remind me of things the docs said. It is a little bit of out of body experience.

Thanks for keeping us updated.

LiberalLoner

(9,762 posts)
80. Thank you so much for the advice and sharing your experience! ❤️❤️❤️gives me hope! ❤️
Sat Jul 22, 2023, 09:41 AM
Jul 2023

Javaman

(62,530 posts)
52. 3 women in my family are cancer survivors
Fri Jul 21, 2023, 07:39 PM
Jul 2023

My mom, my aunt and my sister.

Cancer sucks but it can be beat

Good luck! 😀👍

Shana

(16 posts)
54. Everyone's Cancer is Different, but
Fri Jul 21, 2023, 08:21 PM
Jul 2023

mine, despite my mother, maternal aunt and maternal grandmother all having breast cancer, was not due to any genetic marker. It was caught very early. I had an odd mass in one breast and referred to an oncologist who sent me for an MRI to see what it was. MRI showed cancer in the other breast but not in the original one. Had needle biopsies which confirmed cancer (MRI breast). Surgery was scheduled with lumpectomies and first likely lymph nodes and reconstruction all done at the same time. The surgeries showed no spread to lymph nodes and clean margins around the known cancer. Biopsies confirmed stage 1. The hardest part of the recovery was sleeping at a 45 degree angle for the first week. Pain was minimal and you're completely out for the surgery.

This was followed a couple of months later, after healing, by 3 weeks of radiation and now I'm on an estrogen blocker for 5 years. (The surgery was mid-November 2022)

It doesn't have to be a death sentence. It can be nothing more than an interruption in your routines and life and then things go back to pretty much normal.

PatrickforB

(14,576 posts)
59. Best wishes. My mom had breast cancer, and she did beat it.
Fri Jul 21, 2023, 10:00 PM
Jul 2023

She had 14 great years after the surgery. Brought a lot of light to a lot of people. Mom is one of my heroes. Lived to 77.

I wish the same for you - that you have many good years left!

Deuxcents

(16,234 posts)
60. Sounds like you have lots of support here
Fri Jul 21, 2023, 11:02 PM
Jul 2023

And I’d like to add myself to the many good wishes. Looks like you’ve found it early so that’s a great start and so many new treatments these days so trust your doctors and let us know how you’re doing. 🫶

1WorldHope

(686 posts)
61. It's scary as hell when it happens to you.
Fri Jul 21, 2023, 11:51 PM
Jul 2023

I'm about 5 years after my experience with breast cancer. But I remember my PC doc telling me that I may not believe it now, but there is a very good chance you will look back one day and you'll see it as a bump in the road. I did not appreciate that comment at all when she said it. But lucky for me, she was right. Whatever it turns out to be, it is an opportunity for you to live in the moment everyday as you live this experience. Embrace the lessons and the people you meet on the way.
Be mindful after treatment how much you and your body have been through and protect yourself for a while. I got bit by a mosquito after my radiation txs and I contracted West Nile Virus. It almost killed me. I don't think I would have been affected if I weren't still so vulnerable. Good luck and happiness is what I wish for you L. Loner. 🤟🏻

soldierant

(6,880 posts)
62. I have never had breast surgery but
Sat Jul 22, 2023, 12:05 AM
Jul 2023

I did have an endometrioma (thankfully benign) and the worst of the pain was over for me by day 2.

The very worst was when I came out of the anesthesia and a nurse was holding a pillow over my incision and told me to cugh, and I did. That would have been unbearable if it had lasted more than a couple of seconds. After that, it wasn't that painful again until the latter parts of the first few periods the pain meds were supposed to last for. The surgeon had instructed them to give me the meds when I asked for them rather than waiting the full whatevr it was, and they didn't. But the second one lasted longer than the first, and by the third or fourth I was getting relief for the full time I was supposed to be getting relief.

Not saying it was a walk in the park, but I was a very good patient -
i wanted out of there, and was willing to work for it. I went around the ward seversl times every day, dragging my IV pole, and I requested and got a little gadget that one breathed into or out of - I forget which now - but it had a little ball in it that you were supposed to be able to lift to the top when you recovered full lung power, and I used it religiously also.

I still had to argue a bit to get out, because for the last few days I was running an allergic fever (and confusing the staff terribly because my blood tests were conclusive that there was no infection.) But I had had one before, shortly after I had gone through allergy testing and was quitting everything I was allergic to at once, so I knew what it was and was able to show that and to suggest it was fumes from their cleaning products to which I was reacting, and I got let out (and the fever went away.)

It sounds like you have a good attitude which will help you tremendously.

LiberalLoner

(9,762 posts)
88. Oh my goodness that sounds like one heck of an experience! Thank you for sharing it, I wish you good
Sat Jul 22, 2023, 09:46 AM
Jul 2023

Health now and always! ❤️

soldierant

(6,880 posts)
106. My surgeon mde it much easier by helping me prepare
Sat Jul 22, 2023, 03:47 PM
Jul 2023

and I had learned the importance of being proative in recovery from friends who had had abdominal surgery before I had mine. That's really why I shared. Having an idea what to expect and how to respond makes a huge difference. I'm now in pretty good health for 77. (aand my doctor says I look aroound 15 years younger.) I wish you uneventful surgery and an easy recovery.

LiberalLoner

(9,762 posts)
108. Thank you so much! Yeah I had an abdominal hysterectomy/oopherectomy at 50
Sat Jul 22, 2023, 06:32 PM
Jul 2023

And it was a pretty long recovery…I remember I had to sleep in a recliner for the first couple of weeks…it was heaven when I finally was to the point where I could lie down in a bed…

I’m hoping the breast surgeries won’t be as hard to recover from, but if they are, they are.

I still have that scar, barely visible, running basically from hip to hip…it was a pretty big incision.

Mostly I want to get started, get some appointments going, get an MRI to see if the cancer has spread, etc.

❤️🌹

soldierant

(6,880 posts)
109. My scar was the other way -
Sat Jul 22, 2023, 09:44 PM
Jul 2023

as people from San Franciso say, like Market Street - Twin Peaks to the Waterfront. That might be why I was in a bed from day one (and when I got home with a cat on me - a small cat as our cats went.

And yes, the most important thing to know is whter it has spread. I certainly hope not.

NNadir

(33,523 posts)
63. Survival in breast cancer is at an all time high. My sister-in-law is...
Sat Jul 22, 2023, 08:26 AM
Jul 2023

...a six year survivor, with no signs of recurrence after a lumpectomy.

We all wish the same for you.

bullwinkle428

(20,629 posts)
65. My mom was diagnosed at age 77. She underwent surgery, radiation, & chemo.
Sat Jul 22, 2023, 09:01 AM
Jul 2023

She is 85 today, and in so many ways, as strong as she ever was! Sees the oncologist on an annual basis, and has received a clean bill of health every single year.

She lost her own mother to the disease in her early 60s back in 1982, just to give an indication of how medical science has progressed over the years & decades.

Wishing you the very best in your treatment, and will continue to keep you in my thoughts.

pandr32

(11,586 posts)
102. All the best to you as you go forward.
Sat Jul 22, 2023, 12:52 PM
Jul 2023

My 1st cousin and a friend both lost a breast. My cousin opted to not have any type of breast reconstruction and my friend did. Both are doing well and happy with their decisions. Of course, recovery for both was a process.
Hugs for you.

calimary

(81,298 posts)
104. You hang in there, my friend.
Sat Jul 22, 2023, 01:24 PM
Jul 2023

Get some good referrals as soon as you can.

And surround yourself with pretty things (and people) who keep you uplifted. Treat yourself to a little something nice and affordable every day - like a fancy new chocolate bar whose brand you never heard of, or a walk through a new park you just discovered. Or an arboretum near you. Or a neighborhood playground full of happily squealing kids. Or surveying all the gardens in the neighborhood where you can marvel at the design or creativity or plantings you never saw before. A good garden center can serve that, too.

I don’t know where you live but undoubtedly within a short drive there might be parks, or shady tree-filled areas or beaches or hills or mountains or canyons worth drinking in with your eyes. Or fancy neighborhoods or shopping areas with unusual or impressive architecture. Or a day at the library - all those books and new subjects to explore. Or a gourmet grocery store. Or watch bees working in a flower patch. I do that in our garden out front. They’re fascinating!

Fill your senses and your spirits with new scenery and details and flavors and scents. Doesn’t have to cost anything, although there might be a local candy shop or bakery…

Or find a good spot to watch the sunset (or sunrise!) or the surf. It can be mesmerizing.

LiberalLoner

(9,762 posts)
116. Thank you so so much! ❤️ last night my DH and I sat on our deck for a couple of hours and
Mon Jul 24, 2023, 03:37 PM
Jul 2023

Watched the hummingbirds….it was so peaceful…

LiberalLoner

(9,762 posts)
122. Saw the biopsy pathology report. Grade 2, moderately aggressive.
Tue Jul 25, 2023, 05:59 PM
Jul 2023

Invasive mammary carcinoma with ductal and lobular features.

Latest Discussions»Support Forums»Cancer Support»Thanks everyone for being...