Progress wrote: ↑Fri May 20, 2022 4:35 pm
Lots going on honeybera. So many hard things, especially the cancer.
Hey, Progress. Yes, lots and lots and lots going on, and yet nothing, too. It's like some sort of cruel roller coaster roaring along, all ups and downs, all rather coming at me really fast, so scary not knowing what the next turn or hill and valley will bring. But I'm not on isurvive.org for nothing! I'm a tough old bird! I outlasted MD and I can outlast this cancer thing, too.

I'm just hanging on for dear life.
Progress wrote: ↑Fri May 20, 2022 4:35 pm
I’m so sorry to hear about it, and what you are going through.
♥Well, thank you, Progress.♥ I do appreciate that. But actually the more I learn about
what I actually have, the more relieved I get. My cancer is so localized, hasn't really spread yet (but certainly has that potential if left untreated), is just in its infancy, so to speak, and "Lymphovascular invasion not identified" (is not in my lymph nodes...yet).
I have an HER2+1 biomarker which translates into "NO chemotherapy" FOR SURE (HALLELUJAH!!!!) and both positive ER/PR, which means probably hormone therapy in a pill for like 5 yrs. or so...maybe. Radiation therapy? Again, maybe, but will be determined
after the lumpectomy, as will all the rest of my treatment plan. Tiny tumor, only 0.8cm while most are found at about 3cm or more. Teeny-tiny and located at 4:00 and WAY up near the front. (NOT near the lymph nodes located on the sides of the breast nor near the chest wall. WHEW!)
How they do it is to take out the offending tissue plus a little of the healthy tissue around it, even a tiny bit from one or two "sentinel" nodes (the nodes usually the first ones to be invaded by bc), just to be absolutely SURE that the lymph nodes are NOT involved (which mine are not), test in the hospital lab these tissues of mine to see if they "got it all" and to rule out other "suspicious" things, and I then get a couple of stitches, a lollipop

, a gold star

, and I'm on my way home soon after that.
If this comes off as the info the pathology reports are saying, I'm almost not severe enough to be "in the club", as they jokingly refer to it. I spoke with "CC" today on the phone, a bc survivor. She had the same thing as me, BUT with the lymph nodes involved. HUGE difference in treatment, I've come to learn. I'm probably more like a Stage 1, but there are people on those boards that are Stages 2, 3, and the dreaded 4. I want to be a NON-stage, a ZERO stage!! But even at a Stage 1, I am freaking out sometimes. What is a Stage 4 dx with small kids and a husband dealing with at this time? Or worse: NO husband! (Although, if he's too upset by all this, especially if he's uncomfortable in his new caregiving role, that can be a big problem, too.) I heard last night in my internet wanderings: "At Stage 4, you do still have a choice: 3 weeks - 3 or 5 months to live without treatment, or 3-5 years with treatment."
And I have Stage 1, GREAT prognosis for a GREAT outcome and a long and happy rest of my life. I'm not even in the same ballpark with these astounding heroes. What a thing for them to face. My troubles are just so much chopped liver compared to them. I can only feel incredibly BLESSED for my good fortune of finding my cancer so early and even at all. If I hadn't shown the mammographer my breast discharge, she would have just sent me home without the further workup (ultrasound and then ultrasound guided biopsy) which FOUND my cancer so I can get RID of it.

Time to put on my big girl panties and face this next part of my "journey" head on!!
Progress wrote: ↑Fri May 20, 2022 4:35 pm
You are handling everything with grace.
I sure hope so. And a bit of good humor helps, too. And as much bc research as I can stomach every day. And exercise, which for me is gardening, housework, and maybe even some sorting out of this house, like the front room, storage room (!), the kitchen...
ALL OF IT. That will always give me a mental lift, too. Today is more sorting (I have THREE huge boxes to sort out already set aside), and really deep clean my bathroom, shower stall, and throw rugs. The throw rugs are important because that's what old Spot, bless her, would crap on if allowed to, so I had to upend my life and normal routines for over a year to care for her and her UN-housebroken ways, hiding my good throw rugs and blocking off my shower stall. She meant no harm, but it really got to me after some time. Now that she's gone, I'm sure she'd want me to get back to normal. I need a nice, clean, and easily accessible shower and pristine throw rugs. Now I deserve some good self-care.
Progress wrote: ↑Fri May 20, 2022 4:35 pm
I love your mindset about MD.
Is this the one you mean?
honeybera wrote: ↑Wed May 18, 2022 2:15 am
I'm glad I did not humiliate/shame/ridicule/etc. MD. She probably really did deserve it, but I now have no guilt whatsoever to drag around and lament over.
It's really funny. The realization of cancer and therefore the reality of lurking death (just stating the facts, ma'am, which struck me a few days ago) changed my ways of looking at things. I know on this thread I've said the word "tomorrow" a
lot. I always felt like life was unending. I don't know why I felt that. You get up and it's a new day. I could either tolerate it or appreciate it, depending on my mood. I often felt depressed. But that old Cancer dx and the unknown behind it really knocked that way of thinking OUT of my head!! I HAVE TODAY, not tomorrow, and not the past. Past is past. It brought my way of thinking to MD (naturally, she
was my mother and a huge influencer in my life, whether for good or for bad). I was pleased that I chose to just walk away from her and not to sink to her level and attempt to "out-cruel" her. It was a good choice. It leaves me feeling clean inside now that she's gone. I hope that death is a kind thing to her (and my Dad) and wish neither of them any ill will. But thanks for the loving of my mindset. I hope that this is the mindset you meant.
I'd better get busy with my chores. I FINALLY got my new VISA card. Yes, the bank screwed that up, too.

Now I have to enter my new card info every time I pay my bills. And on and on it goes. Still, I'd rather be here and alive than the alternative.
Honeybera