Wednesday, July 23, 2014

The Lessons I Have Learned From Cancer

A few weeks ago, a friend on Facebook challenged me to write three positive statements or expressions of gratitude for seven days.  I accepted the challenge because I believe that using social media to put in the universe a positive message/energy could only bring about good things.  Part of the challenge included asking two people each day to do the same.  The end result was every time I checked my Facebook news feed, it was filled with positive energy from people posting what they are grateful for that lasted for several days!  How awesome is that??

On the last day I expressed my gratitude for being dealt the cancer card.  That’s a pretty unusual statement to make and I feel I need to elaborate.

Let’s set the record straight: I do not wish cancer upon anyone.  The past year has not been easy.  There is not one day that goes by that I don’t think about it.  When I look in the mirror at my scars, radiation tattoos or my port, I am  reminded.  I still can’t lift heavy weights at the gym and am being be fitted for a compression sleeve today.  I have photos of my bald head, wigs, odd mementos and items lying around (like a box of medical supplies in the cupboard) to remind me.  I think about what my body has gone through and frequently wonder if it will ever come back. 

But over the past year, there are moments, I would not trade for anything.  I have learned so much about cancer, about the people in my life and most importantly, about myself.  

Below are the top ten things I have learned from having cancer: 

  • The importance of a healthy diet/ exercise

I always knew eating healthy was important.  I just chose to ignore it.  I was lucky – I could eat whatever I wanted and not gain weight.  My diet consisted of red meat, carbs, salt, sugar, fat and very little vegetables.

I decided that adjusting my diet to include more vegetables like broccoli, cabbage and kale; would help keep my body healthy and therefore help manage any side effects of treatments.  I learned the benefits of juicing (how else can I eat two whole heads of broccoli in one day?) and experimenting with ways to mask the taste of vegetables.  In the past few months, I believe I have consumed more vegetables than I ever have in my entire life.

Do I believe it will cure me from cancer?  Absolutely not – so to anyone out there who believes that eating lemon rind, or soursop fruit, or turmeric, or wheat grass will cure and prevent cancer from returning; I just don’t want to hear it and please don’t be insulted if I reject your belief; especially if you have never had cancer in the first place.  If pineapples cured cancer, they would cost more than 3.99 at Loblaws.  End of Story!

  • Everyone has an opinion.  Trust your own

People genuinely want to help and that is fantastic!  It makes the world a better place.  But I was quickly overwhelmed with advice and opinions of people.  Some thoughts included that I should not have worked during treatments, that I needed acupuncture, naturopath, physio, special mastectomy bras, XYZ vitamins, that I shouldn’t stay at the farm alone, that I should not work out… even my ability to drive was questioned.

The best opinion to follow is your own gut instinct.  You know yourself better than anybody

For example, there is no point in seeing a Nutritionist who believes in a vegan diet when I hate vegetables!  It makes more sense for me to speak with moms who sneak veggies into their kids’ foods successfully.

I learned to ask for help when I wanted or needed it.  That is a pretty big, gutsy move, especially for someone who is independent.  People are afraid to show vulnerability but it’s ok to ask for help from time to time.  I also learned how to be selfish and that NO is the biggest word in the English language.  I am grateful for everything that everyone has done but sometimes I wanted to be alone.  I didn’t mean I was depressed or sick.  I cannot go out every evening to dinner, I cannot have 3-4 people visiting me the day after chemo, and when I was flat out on the floor in pain from treatment; people checking in on me was the last thing I wanted.

I have learned that if I want to help a friend, going through a difficult time, the best way to check in on them, offer my services, maybe even suggesting how I can help (i.e pick up groceries, shovel a walk way in the winter.) Then, step away and let them ask me for help when they are ready.

  • Use your china and silverware

How often have we purchased or received a gift that we use specifically on special occasions, only to discover 5 years later, we never used it?  What is the point of having something if we do not enjoy it?

I recently watched my God daughter play in the dirt at home, wearing a cute, ruffled party dress and her ball cap.  At 4, she is totally unaware that she gets the concept.  She likes her dress and doesn’t need a special reason to wear it.  She will outgrow that dress in a year anyways.

So use your china when eating Kraft Dinner, wear your fine jewelry while grocery shopping, set out your white tables linens at your next dinner (Ok, I still struggle with that one), and drink that expensive bottle of wine on a random Tuesday evening to celebrate that you made it through another day.   If you don’t think you will never use something, get rid of it to either A- make more room for what you will use and enjoy and B- perhaps someone else may enjoy what you do not want.

You never know what could happen tomorrow and it would really suck if you never take advantage of the opportunity to enjoy what you have.

  • Meditation/reflection and solitude

Meditation is something that takes lots of practice.  When I started working from home, I practiced meditation.  I found an app to guide me through the process which helped and I became better at it, when I took time off work.   I would even set myself up outside to practice. I actually put a reminder in my calendar to mediate every day at 5 PM.

One of my favorite memories is sitting in the middle of a forest, oblivious to the cold, meditating while a dozen deer graze around me.  To sit that still is an incredible feat.

This exercise came in handy during radiation.  Sure I had to stay still for only 5 minutes but Murphy’s Law dictates that is the precise time when I had an itchy nose.  Using the techniques I learned over the previous months, I was able to zone out and ignore external forces.  I began to look forward to those 5 minutes every day.

My former art teacher, and fellow vixen recommended that I use my time at the farm to live like a monk…to reflect and meditate.  What a smart woman.  Having the time off gave me the opportunity to think about what I have accomplished in life, thus far and what I need to do moving forward, to accomplish further goals.

  • The importance of family and friends

During the last few months, I relied on family and friends for help and support.    In a post earlier this year, I wrote about my appreciation for everything everyone has done and the encourgaement is never ending!  Peter constantly reminds me how the past year has brought me closer to my family.  Yup, he is right. 

My family and community have given me an incredible amount of support and the trivial things we may have argued about in the past, are overlooked.  My friends are my second family and I can’t thank everyone enough for doing all that they have done.  I get very choked up thinking about how everyone rallied around me.  I hope that one day, I will have a chance to repay everyone individually for their kindness.

I learned of the limitations of some people.  There are people I can come to in a moment of crisis and others cannot handle any stress in their lives other than their own.  It doesn’t make them bad people.  I just accept who they are and what they can handle.   I can cry on some shoulders and others I can have a beer and talk about the weather.  I don’t have time to manage others' agendas, emotions and reactions at this point of my life.  Maybe someday I will, but not right now.

I also realize that there people who are negative, toxic and full of drama that I need to step away from.  I don’t hate them or are mad at them.  I may be disappointed in some but learning to let these people and the negativity they bring to the table, go allows me to focus on others who have made a more positive impact on my life. 

  • Spirituality plays a role

Not everyone believes in God and I am not the person to convince anyone he/she does exist. It’s a personal thing.  In my case, I was raised in a faith based home.  I go to church.  I used to teach Sunday School and now I am even a church councillor.  Although it makes me cringe when I hear my name announced during prayers, it is comforting to know my church community thinks of me.

It kind of surprised me that after being diagnosed with cancer I didn’t turn into a God loving bible thumper or become the exact opposite; reject God because I felt he abandoned me.  I have actually spent a lot of time pondering this…how come this situation has not solidified or crumbled my faith?

Then it dawned on me that that having a sense of Faith doesn’t mean you have to pray more, go to church more or become totally God fearing.  I have accepted and embraced my situation and tried to find its purpose in order to make a positive impact in my life and in others’ lives.  Rather than viewing cancer as a life sentence, I see it as doing community service.  How can I use it to make it a better world?  Discovering faith in myself and having a desire to make a positive impact has in fact, made my relationship with God stronger.

My greatest fear is being dead.  No one has ever told us what it feels like….I mean really dead and buried in the ground or cremated, not that "I saw a white light for 5 seconds on an operating table" crap.  If there is a soul; are we aware we are in a small box, covered with dirt?  Are we aware we are being burned to ashes?  Is there really a heaven and is it high up in the sky where we look down upon our loved ones? (because I am also afraid of heights.)  These questions have plagued me since I was a child.  My former Art Teacher, Carol (can you not tell that I love this woman to bits?) told me once that perhaps our souls are not inside our bodies but they are a larger entity and our bodies live inside our soul.  So when we die, it’s like losing a fingernail and there is so much of us leftover in the universe.  Doesn’t seem so bad when you think of it that way.

I trained myself to be less afraid.  I cannot predict the future.  I believe God has it all planned out for me and everything serves it purpose.  Cancer may return tomorrow or it may never.  I may die next week, next year or 40 years from now.  When it’s my turn, it will be my turn.  I can’t stop the inevitable or waste my time thinking about it.


  • Cancer doesn’t have to be scary

Or any illness, tragedy or stressful, life altering situation.  Prior to August 19, 2013; I knew nothing about cancer.  I thought it made people die.  I thought treatments were the same for every type of cancer and made everyone sick and weak.  I thought radiation and chemotherapy were the same thing.

So when my doctor told me that I have cancer, I did not take the news well.  I was scared shitless!  I thought I was going to die and for about two weeks, I couldn’t make it through one hour without breaking down.  I was scared to be alone because I would consistently imagine the worst possible scenario.

It wasn’t until my first consultation with my surgeon that I realized I could get through this.  She put my mind at ease that it was treatable and that I would return to normal when it was all completed.  After our consultation and  an evening fuelled with alcohol, followed by an incredible hangover the next day; my fear was replaced with determination.  My mottos became: “It’s gonna take more than a lump in my boob to get me down” and “Survive cancer like a rock star.”  I decided to turn the next year into an experience, document it and celebrate every milestone.  I was going to get through this; physically and emotionally

  • In difficult times, people find ways to cope and find an inner strength

To elaborate more on the above, people find their own way to deal with crap.  Some of the women I met on the tour, preferred experiencing their own personal tour privately.  I was the opposite.  One way isn’t better than the other.  It is finding what works for you.  I relied on my sense of humour and outgoing and open attitude to get through everything.  I turned chemo in a party, I embraced my scars and bald head.  I learned to make the best of the situation and view it as an experience

I did everything in my power to keep my usual routine.  Sure, I was frustrated that I couldn’t do some of things I like to do, like the winter beer festival, snowshoeing or skating for long periods of time or Christmas parties but I had to be smart about things.  On the flip side, I looked for bonuses…like the free swag you get from the Look Good, Feel Better program or the portraits from the photo shoots, I participated in.  Again, the c card is a shitty one to be dealt so take advantage of any perks.

  • Be careful what you wish for

For years I always said “I need to eat healthy,”  “I need to learn to slow down,”  "I should take better care of myself," “I need to learn to not sweat the small stuff” and never really did anything about it.  Guess what?  When you are going through cancer treatments, you learn how to do all the above.

While I was off work, I was reading about the fundamentals of Tibetan Buddhism and “Noble Truths.”  One of the teachings that really struck a chord with me was that sometimes bad instances should not be viewed as a sufferings but as opportunities for development.  An example was provided of someone surviving a heart attack to see it as a warning to make appropriate changes to his or her lifestyle.

That is exactly how I have viewed my diagnosis.  It’s a second chance at making better choices for myself.  I hope I do not waste that second chance

I am going to sound like a total nut job for a second but I feel like a different person.  I feel lighter, happier, my senses are heightened and have an overall feeling of satisfaction and gratitude.  The only example I can equate it to:  Ebenezer Scrooge waking up, after being visited by the ghost of Christmas yet to come, to find that he is still alive. He has a renewed sense of gratitude and states "I will honour Christmas in my heart, and try to keep it all the year.  I will live in the Past, Present and the Future.  The spirits of all three shall strive within me.  I will not shut out the lessons that they teach!"

Furthermore, Dickens writes:  "He went to the church, and walked about the streets, and watched the people hurrying to and fro, and patted the children on the head, and questioned beggars, and looked down into the kitchens of homes, and up to the windows, and found that everything could yield him pleasure.  He had never dreamed of any walk...could give him so much happiness"

Some days when I walk to work, I feel the same way

  • It’s your own choice to be the victim or the conqueror

Just before I returned to work, I came across a powerful quote by a man named Victor Frankl who wrote about his experiences living in a concentration camp in a book called “Man’s Search for Meaning.” His theory is how a prisoner imagines his future, affects his longevity.

"Everything can be taken away from a man but one thing: the last of the human freedoms - to choose one's attitude in any given set of circumstances; to choose one's own way."

Wow....I have yet to read his book and in absolutely in now way would I ever equate surviving cancer to survival in a concentration camp but Frankl walked away from a horrific situation and shared his experience to inspire and motivate others. If he has chosen not to be a victim, I have no reason to see myself as one.

Sometimes in life, we find ourselves in unpleasant situations.  Sometimes it is our own doing; other times it is at the hand of another or circumstances beyond anyone's control.  We have a choice.  We can lament and pin blame or we can learn, look for a solution and move forward.  In my opinion, the latter makes us better people.

I am not perfect and do not pretend to be.  I have made mistakes in my life and guess what?  I will likely make many more.  Some people will like me and others will think I am a complete asshole.  But I feel that I have learned some very valuable lessons over the past year.  I was lucky and after observing others at the hospital, know that I got off scot free.  I have been given another chance to appreciate what I have, look for ways to improve myself and to give back to society, hoping to make a positive impact no matter how small it may be.

And I finish with one more quote by Frankl:

The pessimist resembles a man who observes with fear and sadness that his wall calendar, from which he daily tears a sheet, grows thinner with each passing day. On the other hand, the person who attacks the problems of life actively is like a man who removes each successive leaf from his calendar and files it neatly and carefully away with its predecessors, after first having jotted down a few diary notes on the back. He can reflect with pride and joy on all the richness set down in these notes, on all the life he has already lived to the fullest. 


That is exactly how I want to live!!


Friday, July 4, 2014

Leave All Your Troubles On The Ground

Now that I have returned to work and trying to have an active, sociable summer; I am going to bet it will be hard to keep regular updates on the blog.  I know I am supposed to take it easy but at times I equate myself to a kicking horse at the rodeo, just as its being released from the pen….There is a burr under my saddle.

Last Sunday I had an incredible experience.  A gentleman by the name of Alan, has been following my blog.  The connection is that he is good friends with Ron (who refers to himself as my stalker) who has been Meta’s coach throughout the tour.  Alan is also a cancer survivor (or as Kris Carr calls them: cancer cowboy) and has a Cessna plane.  Towards the end of radiation, Alan extended an invite to take Meta and myself flying over Ladysmith and my farm.  Of course I jumped at the chance….what an awesome way to celebrate the end of radiation.

Albeit hot and muggy, it was a beautiful day with just a little bit of haze.  Alan did his safety check, showed us how to get in and out of the plane (the doors cannot handle too much stress.)  I rode shotgun and just as I was buckling myself in, turned to Meta and said “you know I don’t do ferris wheels.”  But I figured I would not have a fear of a small plane since I was well caged in.  Alan allowed me to act as the navigator.  Of course, I initially sent him on the wrong course but eventually we found our way and before we knew it, I was flying over where I grew up. 


Thanks Alan for an amazing day!


Alan and I - Preflight

Where I spent my time, meditating this winter

Meta and I back on the ground