cancer

Apples, Onions & Coping with Uncertainty

Photo credit:  @ericmogie

Photo credit: @ericmogie

“Life is like an onion. You peel it off one layer at a time, and sometimes you weep.” - Carl Sandburg

Some problems are like apples, while others are more like onions.

Sometimes when you try to reach the core, all you find are more layers.

Cancer taught me not every problem has a core issue that can be clearly resolved.

Some issues are more like onions— seeping into our everyday life and changing the essence of everything they touch.

Have you ever tried to peel an onion completely to its core?

Once you start peeling layer by layer, you will find that the center of the onion is simply another layer waiting to unfold.

In many ways, 2020 has been like one giant onion.

Layer

upon layer of

Unprecedented.

Undeniable.

Unavoidable.

Uncertainty.

This year has been full of moments where I wanted to crawl out my skin from the itchy, uncomfortable feeling of constant overwhelm.

I’ve felt a mixture of anger, confusion, fear and downright insanity as the boundaries between working, schooling, parenting and society continue to blur and bend.

On top of chronic health challenges, I’ve been juggling work and homeschooling, plus my family was recently displaced out of our home for nearly four months due to extreme water damage. 

It’s so easy to get lost in this idea that we are only feeling one thing when, in reality, many layers are happening at once.

Life can’t always be boiled down to this or that.

Sometimes it’s this AND that.

You can be both.

Grateful AND grieving.

Exhilarated AND exhausted.

Determined AND disappointed.

Hopeful AND heartbroken.

As we peel back and work through each layer of ambiguity and move towards understanding what this “new normal” means heading into 2021, we may be met with tears and untold resistance.

Yet each layer serves a purpose and strengthens the whole.

Onions remind us of the importance of staying firmly rooted when those around us try to cut us apart. They are proof that even the tiniest pieces can make a huge difference.

Maybe apples and onions are God’s way of reminding us you can’t have bitter without a little sweet, and some things can’t be truly understood until they pass through all of our senses.

Ultimately, it seems the only way to truly know the difference between an apple or an onion is to taste it for yourself.

Adversity and Answered Prayers

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Sometimes it takes a significant hardship for healing to occur.

Sometimes it is only when we are deep in the struggle that we remember our real strength.

 The last few weeks have been full of adversity, obstacles, and challenges.

Health. Family. Work. Finances.

The waves of adversity have been flooding us from all sides lately.

Though adversity may bring enormous obstacles, it can also usher in unexpected answers to our prayers.

My journey has shown me that mishaps can lead to incredible miracles.

 No one wants to hear they have cancer or a brain tumor.

We just want validation what we are experiencing is real.

Deep down, we all want confirmation our feelings are valid.

In this way, a diagnosis can be weirdly validating.

Finally, you have an answer.

All the symptoms and years of suffering start to make sense.

While a diagnosis can be devastating and difficult to cope with, it’s comforting to know there is a valid reason for your pain.

A week ago, I was told my latest MRI showed some abnormalities in my brain that are suggestive of an MVNT tumor.

My doctors reassured me it was not cancerous and therefore does not require any surgery or treatment, just continued monitoring.

As shocking as the news of a brain tumor is, I felt strangely validated.

Now I had an explanation for all my ongoing neurological symptoms since finishing treatment nearly two years ago.

The last week has been a frenzy of doctor visits, scans, and testing, trying to determine exactly what is going on in my brain.

Within the last week, I have spent close to an hour inside an MRI scanner. 

As painful and uncomfortable as all the testing was, it was a necessary piece of the puzzle.

As much as I dreaded the thought of undergoing back to back brain scans, I was able to definitively know there is no actual tumor causing my symptoms. 

I was just starting to accept the reality of having a brain tumor, so I’m still trying to process the news that I don’t.

Where I once had a possible answer, I am now left with more questions.

But that’s the nature of healing.

Just when you think you are closer to resolving one issue, a new one appears.

As disheartening as this can be, it’s important to remain hopeful.

I am continually reminding myself where there is pain, there is purpose.

 Where there is uncertainty, eventually clarity will come—sometimes when we least expect it.

Where there is great adversity, God always ensures there are avenues for miracles too.

Knowledge Is Power: Be Your Own Health Advocate

“There is no wealth like knowledge, no poverty like ignorance.” Buddha

“There is no wealth like knowledge, no poverty like ignorance.” Buddha

Knowledge is power, but information can be a double-edged sword.

After I was diagnosed with cancer, I was told not to dwell on the statistics.

I was told everyone responds differently, and endlessly researching every symptom and potential outcome will only increase my anxiety.

 I believe the same advice applies now too.

When you are dealing with life and death scenarios, information is critical.

Cancer taught me that the right information at the right time can make all the difference.

But can you ever really trust all the information that you read?

Can you ever really be sure you aren’t taking someone else’s opinion as fact?

No, I don’t believe you can.

That’s why you should always trust your gut.

Trusting my gut and constantly pushing for answers is a big reason I believe I am still here.

My cancer journey and numerous health challenges have taught me that we should always respect doctors, nurses, and health professionals, BUT you always have the right to disagree.

Never be afraid to get a second or third opinion.

There is absolutely nothing wrong with questioning a medical professional who offers health advice because it is simply just that—ADVICE

No two doctors are necessarily going to give the same advice to a patient.

It’s important to always keep an open mind regarding the information and facts as they are presented.

Health can be subjective.

There is not always one answer to every issue.

There is no one-size-fits-all approach to health.

What works for one person won’t necessarily work for everyone. 

Medicine requires a lot of trials and errors to get it “right.”

To understand how the information applies to your life, you should always run the “facts” through your body’s other brain: your gut.

Your gut is the final test.

You know your body best.

Does something feel off?

Always trust your instincts.

If I didn’t trust my gut and push for a surgical biopsy as soon as I discovered the swollen lymph node in my neck, I don’t know where I’d be today.

If I didn’t thoroughly read my labs, scan results, and seek out independent consults, you might not be reading this right now. 

Always be your own health advocate.

Now, more than ever, you have all the information you need at your fingertips to empower your health decisions.

Take the time to understand how your immune system works.

Don’t be afraid to read and research your condition or symptoms in medical journals.

You should always be allowed to ask questions.

Any medical professional who encourages you NOT to ask questions, or who criticizes you and tries to discourage you from researching things for yourself, is not being professional.  

You shouldn’t feel rushed to decide about treatment, even when your health problem is severe.

Second opinions are critical:

  • When the diagnosis is cancer

  • When surgery is recommended

  • When the diagnosis or treatment is unclear

  • When the patient is your child

  • When you want peace of mind

Always remember, your diagnosis is not always correct.

 Many studies show second opinions often result in a completely new diagnosis:

 A 2017 study of over 200 patients by Mayo Clinic found that 88% of patients looking for a second opinion, left with a new or refined diagnosis. 21% of the people left with a “distinctly different” diagnosis.

 Another controversial study conducted by researchers at Johns Hopkins Medicine in 2016 estimated that more than 250,000 Americans die each year from medical errors—making errors the third leading cause of death behind heart disease and cancer.

Be your own advocate. 

You’ll never regret getting a second opinion. 

Staying informed about your diagnosis and the possible treatment options helps ensure you will walk away with the best treatment plan possible.

 

Sources:

Yale Medicine

Mayo Clinic

Johns Hopkins University

Visit my Resources page for more blogs and other resources to help support you and your loved ones during your cancer treatment and beyond.

 Learn more about The Hopeful Warrior Project.

5 Lessons From Cancer that Helped Prepare Me For The Pandemic and Uncertain Times

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Nothing throws a monkey wrench into your life quite like cancer.

 Suddenly everything about your life gets put on hold.

No matter how many days, weeks or months it took to bring you to your diagnosis, deep down, you realize life as you know it now will never be the same.

Getting diagnosed with cancer in late 2017 right before the holidays wasn’t the first time I faced a life-changing diagnosis—nor will it likely be my last.

Dealing with various forms of chronic illness, both visible and invisible, for over half my life has taught me a few powerful lessons about the things we can control and what we need to let go of to truly heal.

My journey with cancer, anxiety, depression and chronic illness showed me that although we can’t always control what happens to us, we can always choose how we respond or react to a situation through our mindset.

What wounds us has a way of healing us in more profound ways than we could ever have imagined.

Cancer was never something I envisioned would be part of my story, or my daily life, but somehow it has brought many blessings, connections and opportunities to my life that wouldn’t exist now if it weren’t for my diagnosis.

Sometimes our biggest bummers turn into our greatest blessings. Here are 5 Lessons from Cancer that helped me prepare and cope during times of uncertainty.

Sometimes our biggest bummers turn into our greatest blessings. Here are 5 Lessons from Cancer that helped me prepare and cope during times of uncertainty.

5 Lessons From Cancer that Helped Prepare Me for the Pandemic:

1. Letting go of my sense of control.

Uncertainty can be unsettling, but it is an unfortunate reality we all must face. During difficult seasons and times of change, we want so desperately to hold on to life as we knew it.  Cancer taught me that although I can’t control what happens to be, I can always choose how I respond to the situation.

2. Learning to accept change.

Life is unpredictable and things are always shifting and changing underneath the surface whether we realize it or not. When we resist the change, we also miss an opportunity for growth. Cancer showed me that sometimes the strongest thing we can do is let go. Sometimes we must surrender to what is and not focus on how we thought things would be or should have gone.  

3. How to accept, react and respond to disappointment.  

Cancer showed me that we have the power to transform any situation by the power of our beliefs. Things can go from bad to better. The broken can become beautiful again. My journey with cancer showed me our biggest bummers can become our greatest blessings in the end.

4. How to redirect my energy to things I can control.

Worrying is like a rocking chair. It may keep us busy for short time, but it leads us nowhere in the end. Cancer showed me there are so many things in life that happen to us that our outside of our control. Dwelling on what happened to us or worrying about the future, only takes our power away. Cancer showed me that I can’t look too far into the future. Instead, I have to focus on a few things I need to do each day and trust everything else will eventually work out.

5. Awful things can be opportunities for growth.

Painful and difficult things have a way of reminding us of our true strength. Our setback can put us on the path to realizing our true purpose. Yes, this may not be what we had ever wanted or planned for our lives, but somehow, some way, things always work on in the end.

When all hope seems lost and when the future is unsettling and uncertain, we must have faith that anything can change for the better.

I can’t promise where we’re going.
I don’t know where this path may lead.

Although everything is clouded with uncertainty, we must remember:

The blackest of nights eventually become day.

Keep the faith.
There are better and brighter days ahead.

 

Supporting You & Helping You Cope

One of the things that’s helping lift my spirits and keeping me grounded during these uneasy times is music. If you need a pick me up or quick escape, check out the Hopeful Warrior Playlist on Apple Music and Spotify.   


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We Are Warriors

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“Are you going to get the virus mommy? I’m scared.”

 My five-year-old daughter asks me as tears fill her eyes.

 “I remember when the ambulance took you away.”

 “I was so scared. I thought you were going to die.”

 My daughter recounts this heartbreaking story way too often.

 It’s been said that when one person gets cancer, the whole family and everyone that loves them does too.

 As much as I would like to put the memory of my treatment far behind me, for my children, the fear of my cancer returning or a virus sending me back into the hospital absolutely terrifies them.

 I try to move past those days, but the smallest thing can trigger a memory and I find myself reliving those moments all over again.

 My oldest had just left for summer camp that morning. I was violently ill and couldn’t sadly see her off to camp. My condition continued to worsen throughout the day. I couldn’t keep anything down. My husband made the difficult decision to call an ambulance.

 As the paramedics arrived, I remember being so weak I could hardly speak as they loaded me on the gurney. My mother-in-law and young children were sobbing and watching helplessly as the paramedics wheeled me out of our front door and into the ambulance on our driveway.

 The paramedics couldn’t get my nausea and vomiting under control. I was severely dehydrated by the time I got to this hospital. Hours after testing and a cocktail of anti-nausea medication and IV fluids my condition finally improved. 

 During my treatment and first year in remission, I battled severe bouts of nausea and vomiting.

I had to be hospitalized five times.

Each time I said goodbye to my family, we all wondered and feared what would come next. Thankfully, I was able to recover, and my health has greatly improved since then. Still, those what-ifs and worst-case scenarios keep replaying in the back of our minds.

It’s hard to move on, yet we continue to push forward in faith.

This is the reality most cancer fighters, survivors and immunocompromised face on a daily basis.

We may be tired.

We may be weary.

We may feel broken.

We must remember, we are warriors.

 Warriors view obstacles as opportunities.

Warriors work to defy the odds.

We refuse to give up on anything or anyone.

Warriors understand our greatest enemies can become our greatest teachers.

Warriors realize our current struggles will one day become someone else’s survival guide.

We have faced numerous battles.

We have experienced many defeats,

Yet our spirit is not defeated.

Cancer, like any virus, feeds on a sense of dysfunction.

It is often fueled by the many fears that surround any diagnosis.

The fear of the unknown and the frightening possibility of living life without the ones we love.

Although we may fear what’s in front of us,

We continue to push forward fearlessly through faith.

Thank you to all the doctors, nurses, first-responders and other medical professionals on the front-lines.

 You are warriors.

You are the reason I am still here.

You are the reason my family is still here.

After all, some must be warriors, so that others may live in peace.

 

 

 

Healing is Not Linear

“Some people cannot be cured, but everyone can heal.”Healing is not a linear process, but rather, more of an upward spiral. You process things cyclically and each time it comes around, you peel back another layer and get closer to your core.

“Some people cannot be cured, but everyone can heal.”

Healing is not a linear process, but rather, more of an upward spiral. You process things cyclically and each time it comes around, you peel back another layer and get closer to your core.

Healing is not linear.

But nothing in life ever really takes a straight path, does it?

Rivers wind.
Valleys dip.
Branches bend.

Many times, in my health journey I thought I was coming to the end, only to realize it wasn’t actually the end— it was the start of a new beginning.


Is there a good time to get cancer?


No.

But I think I came pretty close.

By the time I was diagnosed back in early December of 2017, I was showing signs of advanced cancer.


When I was told I was Stage 3, part of me felt guilty I had let my health reach this point. But I ended up getting diagnosed at the perfect time because it allowed me to take part in a new immunotherapy clinical trial.


Had I been diagnosed sooner, I would have missed this opportunity. I believe this trial is a large part I’m still in remission today.

It’s funny how things tend to work out for the best, even when all can seem lost.
One unexpected turn and it turns out you were exactly where you needed to be all along.



I’ve found that when we are worrying all is lost, God is working.


Just as our heart rate rises and falls, God draws straight with crooked lines.


We may not always see the big picture, but God sees the entire canvas.



We often expect the events in our life to unfold in a linear way.


We believe we must go from point A to get to point B.


We believe we must have XYZ in order to be truly happy.


But, my journey has taught me there are no short-cuts to coming full circle.

Healing takes time to unfold.


Each arc in the path of our journey is an important part of our story; without those experiences, we wouldn’t be the person we are today.


Maybe this struggle was sent to help anchor your faith?


Maybe what wounded you was meant to help remind you of your true strength?

It may not make sense now, but one day it will.
There is purpose is our pain.
There is meaning behind all this madness.

I’ve found that is only in overcoming ourselves that we able to help others heal too.

Laughing Through the Pain: Funny Cancer Memes

If you can laugh in the face of adversity, you’re bullet-proof. - Ricky Gervais

If you can laugh in the face of adversity, you’re bullet-proof. - Ricky Gervais

I’m a little under a month away from my next scan.

 It’s a big scan because if it is clear, I will be celebrating being 2 years cancer-free on May 1st, 2020.

 As soon as February began to fly by, I started to notice a shift.

The nagging “scanxiety” is back.

I feel a sudden tightness in my throat as my appointment creeps closer on the calendar.

Countless tests and endless waiting are some of the most difficult and mentally exhausting parts of cancer treatment and remission.

I try to look at my scan as another hurdle I must pass on my journey to long-term remission.

I can’t change the fact it’s coming and I can’t avoid it.

But I’ve learned that it’s best not to focus on my scan until it’s right before me.

Working myself up over the what-ifs and possibilities of relapse won’t help.

I do best mentally when I stay productive and distracted with work, housework and my kid’s activities so that I don’t start to dwell on all the possible outcomes of my next visit.

Trying to find a little humor in the situation always helps too.

One thing I like to do is keep a collection of memes on my phone so that when I’m feeling a little down or anxious, I can quickly scroll through them for a little pick-me-up.

Laughter really is the best medicine!

So, I thought I’d share some funny memes about cancer and chronic illness to hopefully brighten your day as much as they did mine.

Finding Joy in the Journey

“We cannot cure the world of sorrows, but we can choose to live in joy.” —Joseph Campbell

“We cannot cure the world of sorrows, but we can choose to live in joy.” —Joseph Campbell

JOY.

How can three letters be so hard to find?

Most of us try hard to find joy every day.

But for many of us, our joy is hidden under layers of heartache and past hurts.

Our joy has been pushed to the back burner to make room for other’s needs.

Our joy has been cast aside to make room for the passions of others.

Our joy has been linked to some future state we are always striving for but can never fully reach.

What if we have been searching for joy in all the wrong places?

This picture hangs above the desk in my office as a reminder that my journey will lead to many unexpected places.

I may experience tremendous loss, heartache, and defeat.

But JOY can always be found in the journey if I know where to look.

Take the word JOURNEY.

If you look closely you will see the word JOY is hidden among the letters, too.

JOURNEY.

Just like life, the word JOY can only be found once you complete the word JOURNEY.

This helps remind me that with perspective often comes the joy we have been longing to find.

Within the word, JOURNEY is also the word URN.

Reminding me that all our bodies are vessels and we are all on the same journey. We will all eventually return to the ashes of creation that formed us.

The string reminds me that our life is a tangled web of possibilities.

The bicycle made of silvery-blue string reminds me that our journeys are what we make them. We can let life knock us around or we can choose to grab the wheel and forge our own path or even blaze a new trail.  

No matter where our journey leads, we must always try to find a thread of silver lining —for where there is hope, joy will soon follow.

Perhaps our journey isn’t so much about the destination. It’s about realizing and rediscovering the joy we have been searching for all this time was there in our hearts all along.

To My Fellow Warrior Who Was Just Diagnosed with Cancer

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To My Fellow Warrior Who Was Just Diagnosed,

3 words can change everything can’t they?

I’ll never forget the soul-crushing anguish that washed over me as soon as I heard the words, “You have cancer.”

I’ll never forget the weight I felt carrying the news of my dreaded diagnosis and having to tell those I love and care about, especially my three young children, just how sick I was.

But I’ll also never forget the bear hug I received from a complete stranger after I broke down in tears at my children’s school explaining I had just been diagnosed with cancer.

I’ll never forget the outpouring of love and support my family and I received after the news that I had cancer spread.

Know that it’s okay to be terrified. It’s okay that your tears won’t stop and the worry won’t leave.  And even though you don’t feel like it now, you are strong and incredibly brave.  You are not alone in this fight. You CAN get through this. And you WILL.  Many times you may wonder how you will go on.  But I’ve learned the HOW isn’t important. It’s ultimately your WILL that matters.

Your willpower is more than staying positive. It’s digging down deep into your primal will to survive. It’s focusing on the WHY you are fighting when you start to feel like WHY should I keep going? It’s focusing on WHO you are fighting for when you feel like you are losing yourself amidst all the pain and uncertainty of this battle.

Cancer has been by far the worst thing that has happened to both me and my family, but in many ways it has also been a blessing. Overcoming cancer has caused me to view every day as an opportunity rather than just an another obstacle I have to get through. It has brought me closer to family and friends and helped me to realize the depth of my own strength.  And it has taught me to see and appreciate my own beauty even when I hardly recognize the face staring back at me in the mirror.

Although the testing, treatments, procedures and waiting for answers seems like it will never end. I promise you it will.  Believe it or not, this crazy, wild ride will one day become a blur in your rearview mirror.  And even though it seems like cancer has taken everything from you—YOU, my warrior, are still here.

Your story isn’t over yet.

Fight on!

The Hopeful Warrior

Holding on to Hope

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Today I will receive some answers and I will undoubtedly leave with more questions.

I’m bracing myself. I’m white-knuckle holding onto hope that my cancer is still gone. The realist in me is also whispering the  ‘what ifs’ but I’m doing my best not to listen.

You see, I believe hope is a choice. I believe you cannot be fearful and hopeful at the same time— so I choose hope.

I choose to focus on the glimmer of good in this sea of bad. I am choosing to be grateful because I believe you can’t be both grateful AND fearful at the same time.

So when I’m faced with a thousand reasons to cry, I’m choosing to smile. When life brings me to my knees, I will use it as an opportunity to pause and thank God that there is still breath in my lungs so I can say I love you. I am grateful I still have eyes that allows me to see the love in my husband’s eyes and the opportunity to watch my children grow. I’m thankful for this pain, because it means I am still alive to feel. I’m grateful for my body—bruised, broken and all.

I am beautiful mixture of sunshine and chaos. I’m ready for this storm. I know I’ll be shaped by its fury. I will let it tear down the pieces of my life that no longer serve me. I will be shaped by what’s next but I refuse to be reduced by it. 


The Waiting Game

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When you have cancer, you do a lot of waiting. Waiting to see doctors. Waiting for test results.

The waiting. The uncertainty. It’s definitely the hardest part. Hearing you have cancer in your body—or that it is back and you are doing nothing to treat it, is excruciatingly difficult.

Once treatment begins, life assumes a more predictable pattern. You have identified the problem and you are attacking it. But before treatment and afterwards? I think that’s when the struggle is most difficult. You are wrestling with the unknown. You are facing thousands of possibilities.

That’s the thing about facing severe illness or trauma. You’ve met the boogeyman. You know nightmares can become real. “It’s happened before, what’s to stop it from happening again?”, is what I have caught myself thinking. However, I’ve come to learn that THAT thought is all wrong.

The truth is I have no control over whether or not my cancer returns. Sure, I can eat a healthy well-balanced, diet, exercise regularly and try to minimize my stress. All these things can help lower the risk of reoccurrence, but none can completely STOP or prevent it from ever returning.

I’ve come to accept that the idea of control, particularly trying to control a particular outcome is an illusion. My cancer returning is just one possibility out of several. What I can control is where I place my intention and my focus each day.

Try as I might, I can not rush the answers. Time will reveal whether or not I require more treatment.  Right now, I am focused on reveling in the endless possibilities of the unknown. I am learning to be comfortable with ambiguity.  I keep reminding myself that when nothing is certain, ANYTHING is possible. And sometimes, the unexpected things in life are merely making way for the unbelievable to occur.


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8 Lessons I've Learned from Having Cancer

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It has almost been a month since my last chemo. I finally feel like the fog of treatment is lifting, and life has begun to return to a sense of normalcy. Now that the predictable uncertainty of treatment is over, I’ve had time to reflect on these past 9 months since I learned I had cancer.

I say predictable uncertainty because treatment offered a predictable routine, however, in the back of my mind, I was always wondering if my symptoms would get progressively worse as time went on. There were days of constant nausea and vomiting. I’ve been so weak I’ve been unable to stand upright,  spending most of my day hunched over in distress due to excruciating stomach pains. There were embarrassing times, like having to puke in a Ziplock bag in an elevator full of people. (Yes, really!)  There were also amazing times like learning I was in remission halfway through treatment.  There were times when I was humbled and awestruck by the outpouring of support for my family. 

Getting diagnosed with a serious illness or experiencing a loss or trauma forever changes you. Your world gets shaken to its core. Sure, the world keeps spinning, yet life will never be quite the same. Here are eight lessons I’ve learned through my journey with Stage 3 Hodgkin Lymphoma:

 

1.     Our struggles can lead us to our strengths. Sometimes the worst things that happen to us put us on the path to the best things that will ever happen to us. I’ve learned that when life rips you to pieces, you get to decide how to put yourself together again. Tough moments shape our future selves. The same boiling water that softens a potato, hardens the egg. It’s not about the circumstances, it’s about discovering what you’re made of.

 

2.     Focus on what you can control. Let everything else go. There is great power that comes with learning to embrace uncertainty. I’ve learned we must trust the wait and learn to accept what we cannot change. Because when nothing is certain, anything becomes possible.  One way to do this is to focus do your attention on what you need to get today and do it to the best of your ability. Take things moment by moment if you have to. Remember you can only climb the part of the mountain that is underfoot.

 

3.     I am the hero of my story. We will all face difficult seasons that push our limits and test our faith. But the truth is, no one else can walk through the fire for you. While we cannot control what happens to us, we CAN control how we respond. You must stop waiting for someone else to save you. I’ve learned the only way out of any difficult situation is to go through it, facing my troubles head on.

 

4.     Choose hope over fear. One of my favorite quotes is, “Hope and fear cannot occupy the same place. Invite one to stay” by Maya Angelou. I've come to accept the fact that no amount of worry can change the future. I'm learning to let go of the what-ifs and the what-could-be’s. You have to surrender to what is and have faith in what will come. Instead of worrying about the what could go wrong, get excited about what could go right.

 

5.     Make peace with your broken pieces. Embrace the chaos and the glorious mess you are. Appreciate your scars because they are proof you are stronger than what hurt you. I am learning to love the person in the mirror who has been through so much but is still standing. Because the truth is we are never as broken as we think we are. Sure, we have our battle scars, but then again, all great heroes do.

 

6.      Showing up means more than words. I will never forget those that went out of their way to show up for me by helping support my family throughout my treatment. Never underestimate a kind gesture or the power of sharing space with another person. Your actions and presence can make all the difference in someone’s life.

 

7.     The time is now. Sometimes ‘later’ never comes. We need to be careful about the things we put on the back burner of life. A major illness or tragedy is an expert at reminding us of our own mortality. It calls you to put your priorities in the right order and urges you to take action while you still can. Tomorrow is never guaranteed. I will never let myself forget about the wonderful gift it is to be alive each day.

 

8.     This is tough. But I’m tougher. Throughout your life you will encounter may defeats, but you must not become defeated. Our tough seasons have a way of exposing our character. I've learned pressure of these times often squeezes out bits of ourselves that we didn’t know existed.

When you feel as though you can’t go on, take a moment and put your hand over your heart. As you feel your heart beating in your chest, take a deep breath and remind yourself, “I am still here. Through all the difficulties I have faced, I am still standing.” You must remember your difficulties don’t define you, rather, they strengthen your ability to overcome the next challenge you will face.

I am still here because I refuse to let anything or anyone decide what I get to have. I am still here because I refuse to let my trauma have the last word. I am still here because I will not let a nightmare have more power than my dreams. I am still here because I didn’t allow the hard time to make me weak; I willed it to make me strong.
— Rachel Hollis

I am thankful for all my challenges because they’ve helped to shape me into a better version of myself. By far, cancer has been one of the most difficult challenges I’ve ever faced. However, I believe that by leaning into my faith and choosing hope over fear, I have been able to weather this storm.

Time

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As a wife and mom of three, I can definitely say there is truth in the saying, “the days are long but the years are short.” The years seem to be flying by at an incredible speed, yet sometimes it feels like the days are crawling by at a snail’s pace. Sure, it feels like I blinked and my babies are now 4 and my oldest, now 11, is heading to middle school in the fall.

Admittedly, this is a year I hoped would fly by. Since I was diagnosed with cancer in November of 2017, I wished so bad I had that nifty remote from the movie Click with Adam Sandler where I could fast-forward through all of the pain and uncertainty of this year. 

But as much as I would have loved to run and hide from it, I knew in my heart I had to face it head-on. There was no mistaking, this was going to be incredibly difficult on all of us, but the only way to beat it was to go through it—together.

Now, instead of counting down the days until our next family trip, we’re counting down the days until my last chemotherapy treatment. Now, every other Thursday, I’m counting down the minutes as my chemotherapy slowly infuses into my veins. Instead of focusing on my summer tan, I’m trying to regrow my hair. It’s a new twist and I’m trying my best to accept my current state—bald and all.

This is our life now.

These are the days in the trenches. It’s week after week of doctor appointments, labs, tests and trips to the ER. It’s been nearly 8 months since my initial diagnosis, and I’ve come to realize chemotherapy isn’t like it’s shown on TV and the movies. It’s a slow process filled with a lot of ups and downs.

But I’ve been surprised to find that I have been feeling better during the course of my treatment. Sure, I still have good days and bad days, but there is a predictable pattern to my symptoms, and with just three treatments to go, the end is in sight and the light at the end is getting brighter by the day.

All of this had me thinking about the nature of time, and how it often feels so relative to our surroundings. For instance, we all have had those times where it seemed time seems to warp around whatever we are experiencing, both good and bad.

Like the feeling of time standing still when we are with our partner, or how hours can fly by in mere moments when you’re talking to a dear friend or someone you love. Then there are the times, when the hours seem to drag: when you’re waiting for your last class or work to end, standing or sitting anywhere and waiting for longer than 15 minutes.

But that is the paradox of time. We boldly treat it as a commodity we have plenty of. If we aren’t always mindful of how or where we spend our time; we tend to waste it.

I know I sure was guilty of it and still probably am.

Like most women, I would often tell myself, I will be happy when “X” happens. I would often tell myself I’d finally be happy and able to relax when I lost the 10 pounds, got the job or when my kids are more independent.

It wasn’t until I discovered my time was in jeopardy of running out, that I began to truly appreciate what a gift each day is. Because cancer insists on its own time.

To me, cancer is analog in a digital world. Each phase of the disease — diagnosis, surgery,  chemotherapy and other treatment — carries its own distinct sense of stepping outside traditional time, and its own sense of separation from the world around you.

However, one of the blessings of cancer, is that it cements you to the present moment. All I have is NOW. I can no longer get to hung up in future events or beat myself up over past transgressions. In many ways, the certainty in which I use to naively eye the future is gone.

When you’re diagnosed with a serious illness like cancer, it makes sense to wonder how many birthdays, holidays and events you will be able to witness.  Because when your days start to feel numbered, it’s only natural to start counting them.

But I’ve learned that when we become too preoccupied with counting our days, we forget to fill each one with things that matter. Sure, now that I’m in remission, we have new milestones and anniversaries to celebrate. I hope I am fortunate to count my remission by the number of years that have passed. But for now, I am thankful for today and I’m focused on making the most it because the way I see it:

Now is the time.

Now is the time for more hugs and fewer words left unsaid. For more belly laughs and less tears. For extra late-night cuddles and butterfly kisses. For letting the dishes and the laundry wait while we make more family memories.

I’ve come to realize and appreciate that there is a reason God numbers our days.
It’s to make them precious. NOW is the time to appreciate all we have because NOW is all we truly ever have. And the only thing more precious than our time is who we spend it on.

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Dealing with a Difficult Diagnosis

Getting diagnosed is a double edged sword. On one hand, you can find comfort and a sense of relief in finally knowing what’s going on inside your body. But on the other hand, being diagnosed forces you to see yourself in a new, often negative light. You realize that you are not well. Part of your body is dysfunctional. For me, that was a difficult truth to face.

Whether you were recently diagnosed with a terminal illness, or you are battling an invisible illness or injury—a diagnosis can bring sense of isolation. You feel separated from the outside world. You now know without a doubt that part of you is unwell.

Normal every day life starts to feel hollow. You start to feel like you are living in two different worlds. One inside your head, where the reality of your illness consumes every waking thought. On the outside, you can smile and pretend at times that you are fine, but the truth is, the reality of your illness is never far from your mind.

For me, I was first diagnosed with a serious illness at 15. It was 2001, and a year of great personal change and societal upheaval. In the spring of 2001, my aunt took her own life. This was the first time I lost a close family member. It was a shocking and traumatic blow to my close-knit family. During the same time, my beloved grandfather was dying of leukemia. Then in the fall, 9/11 happened and life in the U.S., as well the entire world, was forever changed. 

I felt like I was losing control. It was all too much.  I felt scared and alone. Soon I just wanted to sleep and shut off the outside world. When I wasn't sleeping, my eyes were filled with tears. The constant stream of scrutiny in mind was unending. In my head, I was failing my family, my friends and even school. I could not find any hope in my current situation or the world. When my family would ask what was wrong, all I could do was answer, "You just don't understand."

Soon the negative thoughts consumed nearly every waking thought. I was hardly eating or sleeping. I wanted it to stop. I wanted the pain to end. It was then that I first attempted to take my life.

Thankfully, my mom found me before any serious harm came to me. My suicide attempt was truly a cry for help. I needed help getting control of all the thoughts in my head.

After my suicide attempt, I was diagnosed with bipolar disorder. I was given a host of medicines to try, from anti-depressants to lithium. I began to go to therapy. We were told to limit stressors and identify triggers. The medicine helped to slow down my racing thoughts but the rest of the world seemed to slow down along with it.

I felt like I was standing alone in a crowed room, screaming at everyone around me to hear me and see the pain that I was in. But everyone else was moving so fast that they could not hear or even see me. They were not on my level. Once again I was alone. 

While I wanted to fully accept my diagnosis and treatment plan, part of me rejected the idea that I wasn't well. After all I had been through that year and early on in my life, who wouldn't have a hard time adjusting to this much change and tragedy?

In my head, being told I was bipolar at 15 was a death sentence. My aunt who took her life was bipolar. I assumed that I was destined to meet a similar fate since there is no cure. I began to rebel and thought it was best to live fast and hard since I was destined to die young. So I did.

I fought the ups and downs of bipolar disorder for over 5 years. Throughout high school and my early years of college, I went on and off medicine and in and out of therapy depending on the severity of my symptoms. I ultimately had to leave college when I became pregnant with my first child at the age of 20.

The patterns of mania and depression were obvious to everyone but myself. It was only after I lost control again and was on the brink of suicide that I finally sought and accepted the help and treatment I so badly needed.

Taking Control

When I found out I was pregnant at age 20, life as I knew it was forever changed...for the better. By honoring the new life growing inside me, I was able to finally start to heal. I wanted to be better, not just for myself, but I wanted to be there to love, guide and nurture the new life growing inside me. 

Whether you are struggling with addiction, mental illness, trauma or serious illness, I believe the first step is acceptance. You need to accept and surrender to your situation in order to fully move past the negative and find the positive.

In a 12 step program, recovery starts by admitting you are powerless, but that a power greater than yourself can restore you to sanity. For some, they find strength by finding a higher power in religion, while others find solace in nature, their pets or in living for their family. 

I believe that the first step toward recovery lies in finding a motivation outside yourself. For me, my saving grace was having my daughter. Feeling the flickers of life growing inside me filled me with hope for me future—for the first time in my life.  She became the cornerstone upon which I built the foundation for my new life. Having the courage to have her, gave me the strength and confidence I needed to finally face my fears and grow into the woman I knew in my heart I was capable of becoming. 

By finding the right mix of medicine along with cognitive behavioral therapy, I was finally able to take back control of my life and find the stability that is so often elusive when you are suffering from mental illness. Outside of medicine and therapy, what helped me the most to come to terms and accept being bipolar was the unwavering love, support and guidance from my (now) husband, parents and close friends.

I believe having a strong support system outside of medicine and therapy is critical for long-term success. Their unconditional love allows me to feel at ease confiding my thoughts, no matter how strange or silly they might seem. This helps me understand if I am processing and reacting to a situation in the right manner.

One of the most challenging parts of dealing with bipolar disorder or cancer is learning how to separate yourself from your illness so you can learn effective strategies to cope with the anxious or obsessive racing thoughts.  What helped me tremendously was understanding that intrusive thoughts are a symptom of my disorder. 

Intrusive thoughts are thoughts that consistently enter your mind against your will. They're considered intrusive because you simply cannot get them out of your mind, and they often pop up at unusual moments. Intrusive thoughts may also occur in flashes, and often cause significant anxiety when they enter your mind. Examples of intrusive thoughts include unwanted memories and violent or sexual thoughts. Through cognitive behavioral therapy and by practicing mindfulness and meditation I was able to learn how to better control them.

A book that helped me enormously to come to terms and learn effective coping strategies was Take Charge of Bipolar Disorder: A 4-Step Plan for You and Your Loved Ones to Manage the Illness and Create Lasting Stability by Julie Fast. If you or your loved ones are suffering from mental illness, I highly recommend reading this book. One of the reasons this resonated with me is the author Julie Fast has bipolar disorder. She wrote the book along with her doctor. Her honest perspective about dealing with mental illness coupled with the medical advice make this book one of the best I have ever read on the topic.

After committing myself wholeheartedly to my treatment plan, I was able to go back to college, graduate with honors, get married, start my career and a family. Life was finally coming together. Then I was diagnosed with cancer. It's a shocking turn of events to accept when you feel that your life is finally getting on the right track.

However, I am choosing to view my cancer diagnosis with an open and grateful heart. I’m grateful because I believe all my past experiences have prepared me for the difficult journey ahead. One of the ways I have been able to remain strong, positive and focused on my recovery is by applying a growth-centered mindset to my current situation.

As Eckhart Tolle explains in his book, "A New Earth: Awakening to Your Life's Purpose:

The primary cause of unhappiness is never the situation but your thoughts about it. Be aware of the thoughts you are thinking. Separate them from the situation which is always neutral, which always is as it is. There is the situation or the fact, and here are my thoughts about it. Instead of making up stories, stay with the facts. For example, “I am ruined” is a story. It limits you and prevents you from taking effective action. “I have fifty cents left in my bank account” is a fact. Facing facts is always empowering. Be aware that what you think , to a large extent, creates the emotions that you feel. See the link between what your thinking and your emotions. Rather than being your thoughts and emotions, be the awareness behind them.

 


He goes on to say that, “Life will give you whatever experience is most helpful for the evolution of your consciousness. How do you know this is the experience you need? Because this is the experience you are having at the moment.” 

According to Tolle, the root of our suffering has a noble purpose. Instead of wishing it away, we need to fully embrace it. For it is through embracing our suffering that we will awaken to our true purpose. While some things look negative on the surface, you will soon realize that space is being created in your life for something new to emerge.

The fact is I have cancer and bipolar disorder. I can't change the fact I have these illnesses, but I can control my actions, and in doing so I can create a positive mindset focused on healing rather than fighting. So I am choosing to embrace the uncertainty of my illness. I am learning to honor and accept my pain. For I believe this is all temporary and preparing me to be better, stronger and wiser on the other side. Every painful or uncomfortable moment is getting me one step closer to being both cancer free and whole again.

Finding Healing with a Warrior Mindset

It is said that a fighter’s journey begins in the mind. We all have those line-in-the-sand moments where our life is forever changed in an instant. For me, it was finding out I have cancer a week before I turned 32. So, how do you push on and find positivity when your whole world seems to be falling apart?

Preparing through PositivityIn life, difficulty doesn’t discriminate. I believe it is how we respond to difficulty that ultimately defines us and shapes our character. The first step in developing a warrior mindset is to prepare for future obstacles…

Preparing through Positivity

In life, difficulty doesn’t discriminate. I believe it is how we respond to difficulty that ultimately defines us and shapes our character. The first step in developing a warrior mindset is to prepare for future obstacles and challenges you may encounter by cultivating a sense of self-awareness that is focused on growth.

When negative events happen, instead of asking “Why me?” ask “What can I learn from this?”. “How can this challenge help me grow if I am brave enough to face my fears?”

An attitude typically means a state of mind, feeling, or disposition. It also encompasses how a person views something or tends to behave toward it. This is why attitude is so important. A mindset is developed when you employ a fixed mental attitude that predetermines your response to a given situation. For example, your attitudes toward something helps develop your response or approach. Your mindset then becomes your approach.

Believing it is Possible

You often hear “if you can see it you can achieve it.” Well, there's a reason. It works. Using mental imagery or visualization is one of the most powerful skills you can use to enhance your mental toughness and performance under stress. Research has shown that if you mentally prepare and believe you can accomplish something, you will increase your chances of success. However, if you allow negative thoughts and doubts to creep in, they will ultimately decrease your chances of success.

Using Mental Imagery for Success

Here is a simple form of imagery training for everyday life:

First, think about the action you are about to take. Go over it in your mind and imagine yourself doing the task while sitting or standing quietly. Next, think about it again but now go through the motions almost in a robotic motion. The final part is actually practicing the task.

The goal of this training is to help create a bridge between the psychological and physical aspects of what you are trying to accomplish. If you incorporate this into your life, new skills won’t seem so new when you try them for the first time. However, mere repetition won’t do the trick. You must also visualize yourself being successful.

Finding Your Own Mantra

A mantra is a statement or quote repeated frequently, often when praying or meditating. I believe finding an empowering mantra or belief statement is the first step you can take towards healing.

For me, during my cancer treatment I am employing the following mantra:

“I have the strength, faith and support I need to heal from this cancer.”

Your mantra doesn’t have to be religious, it can be a quote— even lyrics to a song. It just has to be something that empowers you and helps you focus on a positive outcome despite your current situation.  The key is to select one quote or empowering statement and repeat is out loud (to yourself) with emotion.  This is not a simple memorization process; this is to create energy, passion and a new belief.  Also, it’s important to select a different word to emphasize.  Say that you choose “Men’s best successes come after their disappointments.”  For the first 5 times you say it out loud with energy on the entire phrase.  Next emphasize the word “men’s”, for 5 times, then “best”, and so on until you have repeated the entire phrase. 

Once you have your mantra, the next step is to visually pair it with a positive outcome in your mind.  Focus your intention and imagine yourself successfully tackling your current obstacle. Now, picture yourself many years in the future and think about how facing that fear or challenge has made you better, stronger. Take note of all the thoughts and feelings that come to mind.

In regards to my own battle, every day I am picturing myself receiving the news that I am in remission. I then follow that image with more detailed visualizations of my body being healed and well enough to run in a 5K. Next, I picture myself well into the future—older, wiser and healthy, holding my grandkids in my arms.

Thinking Like a Warrior

The keys to a warrior mindset are preparing and believing.  Being a warrior simply means putting your heart and soul into something you believe in and never looking back. Having a warrior mindset means refusing to quit no matter the circumstances.

Having a warrior mindset also means doing whatever it takes to be prepared for future challenges because warriors don't just survive, they overcome and win. At the end of the day, life is merely a mind game; so it's important that you play to win. Your life could depend on it.

Sources:

 Police Magazine

Warrior Mind Coach

The Many Gifts of Cancer

Cancer affords me the opportunity to see the world with my eyes wide open, reveling in the smallest details that I so often took for granted.

Cancer lets me speak my truth without fear of judgement. Knowing my time here is growing uncertain, I no longer want to waste an interaction without telling those around me how I truly feel.

Cancer grants me the courage to admit my past mistakes, failures and work to make amends with those I’ve wronged.

Cancer makes me focus on the present moment rather getting lost in the past or scared about the future. All I have is NOW. Cancer helps me make the most of the present moment.

Cancer gives me the opportunity to be vulnerable to those around me. By no longer being afraid of showing weakness, cancer gives me the courage to ask for and to accept help.

Cancer helps me recognize the good in people by their many gestures of goodwill and support for my family.

Cancer strips me of my vanity and ego. Cancer is helping me learn to be comfortable in my own skin, despite its ever-changing appearance.

Cancer gives me hope that my pain and suffering may become a source of inspiration and healing for others.

Cancer is a reminder that we can’t control what happens to us or those around us. All we can control is our reaction. So, choose love. Always try to do the right thing, the kind thing.

Cancer is a daily reminder of the fragility and sanctity of life. Never forget that every day, people are fightingto live, to heal, to survive. While we all struggle, cancer is a reminder that we are never alone in our struggle.