Dear thurnefi
Congratulations on your first anniversary - think of it as the first of many!
I also found that I thought about the cancer all the time at that stage. It is normal - you’ve been through such a lot physically and emotionally and have the added concern of someone totally dependent.
I don’t do stats - I’m sure somewhere there will be a study that shows the world will end tomorrow!
I’m almost at my 6th anniversary and, like many of us with bc, I still have good days and bad days emotionally - more good than bad now. Mostly, other people, including family, (apart from my darling husband who has always “been there” for me) don’t mention the breast cancer unless I do - I look quite normal! (Bit podgy round the middle, thanks Tamoxifen, but definitely normal.)
I think it is hard for other people to understand the enormity of what we have gone, and GO through. It’s still a rare a day without thinking, at some point, “what if it comes back?”, “is that twinge something new beginning?”, or a day without living with the side effects of Tamoxifen, made worse by the pharmacy’s struggle to maintain a consistent supply of one brand, the joint pains, flushes and night sweats……… et al, I seem to have all the side effects going and a few others thrown in for good measure! The fear of a return or spread is always there though I can conquer it most of the time. We’re not lucky we’re strong - look what we’ve achieved so far!
BUT, there is a joy in knowing that we have “come out the other side”, that the sun still makes gorgeous sunsets, the frost is beautiful, that I’ve just spent five minutes watching a female blackbird devouring the apple I put out in the garden, that I’ve been for a walk with my husband…… There are so many things to enjoy that there isn’t time to be gloomy. The dark thoughts are there at the back but are crowded out by the things I can still do!
And Wonky, the “book doesn’t close”, however, you can turn the page. The destruction that is breast cancer will always be part of our lives - although it is only part.
So, it’s taken time, and though six years on I still acknowledge the devastating thing that is breast cancer, I have realised that there is much more to me and to life.
Sending hugs to you all. xxx