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A Case of What Ifs

When you finish cancer treatment people will think that the worrying stops and that it was a page from a book that is closed. The reality is much different than everyone’s perception. The fact is that the fear never goes away. The possibility that the cancer can be somewhere in your body is just too scary to ignore.

I have a friend from high school who was diagnosed with an aggressive form of breast cancer a few years before I was. She had a recurrence a few years later and has now been cancer free for about 5 or 6 years. Like me she is mother and is only 41 today. She had a sore ankle and went in for some test thinking maybe she tore some ligaments or something and the Dr does a bone scan. They notice a spot on her collarbone and suggested doing a Ct bone scan.

Now on x-rays a tech touching the films before they were dry, arthritis or any number of things but if you are a cancer patient/survivor your first thought automatically goes to the worst case scenario. As hard as you try to keep positive thoughts the negative ones tend to surface more often than not. She had not told her kids who are 14 and 22 years old because it was close to her son’s birthday and she did not want to worry him and ruin his birthday.

She patiently waited for her test to be scheduled, and then she waited almost a week for the results. Why is it that doctors make people wait? Why don’t they think about if the roles were reversed would they like waiting? Luckily for her the test results all came back negative but for 2 weeks she had a severe case of the What ifs. What if the cancer is back a third time? What if this time it will get me? What if my kids lose their mom too soon?

My friend was lucky this time she is still cancer free but the what ifs will always be there.

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About Tammy Woolard

My name is Tammy and I am 40 year old mother of 3 wonderful children who came to us through domestic adoption. Although we did not have any fertility issues we chose adoption because there are so many kids that did not ask to be born but truly want a family to love. We did research on adoption choices and decided on domestic adoption through CPS. You would be surprised the differences between each agency. The adoption process is nothing like you see in the movies. I am also a 5 year breast cancer survivor. When I was diagnosed my kids were 3, 5 and 7 I did so much research I may have driven my Dr. a little crazy but that is ok it is my body not his.