Well, cancer can go fuck itself.
I always remember what Ginger said, that five-year survival rates are always running five years behind.
'Serenity'
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, butt kicking, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
Well, cancer can go fuck itself.
I always remember what Ginger said, that five-year survival rates are always running five years behind.
even if it is, not all bad, right? Denial has gotten me through a lot over the years. (not really the same thing, of course, but...)
I'm sorry it's such a hard diagnosis, JZ, I was hoping for better. But I will keep hoping for those better outcomes! I remember Ginger always saying to remember that the 5-year prognosis was always based on at least 5-year old treatment. Love you!
Timelies all!
I'm sorry, JZ.
Love to you, JZ, and I, too, am glad you have every possible resource at your disposal. Love to all of you.
Love to you, JZ. I will hope that your tumor is one that takes super well to current treatments!
JZ, diagnosis is a shock, confirmation is a shock.
Having a plan helps. Do the next thing. Then the next. Repeat.
If you will be getting IV chemo rather than oral chemo, is the doctor recommending getting a port? More and more I wish I still had mine. It would make blood draws and contrast injections (and any other IV procedures) a lot simpler and less stressful.
Share as much or as little as you like. We'll all be here, ready to give you whatever support helps best.
If you need any back-channel sounding boards, you know how to reach EpicTangent or myself.
JZ, I’m so sorry that the news wasn’t what I know we were all hoping for. I say lean into that denial. From what I’ve been told my dad lived much longer than he was supposed to purely from denial because there wasn’t much treatment available at that time.
If you will be getting IV chemo rather than oral chemo, is the doctor recommending getting a port?
She's getting the port-a-cath inserted next week (Probably Monday).
If you will be getting IV chemo rather than oral chemo, is the doctor recommending getting a port? More and more I wish I still had mine. It would make blood draws and contrast injections (and any other IV procedures) a lot simpler and less stressful.
Way back when I was discharged from the ER, I told the nurse removing my port that I almost wished I could keep it--the person who'd placed it was so skilled, it had gone in so smoothly and painlessly and never caused even a moment's discomfort. Next week's Portacath has quite a standard to live up to.