Wednesday 14 October 2020

Resilience in Secondary Breast Cancer: BRiC's Collective Voice

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Why is resilience important in secondary breast cancer;and why BRiC as a group has not separated primary and secondary women with breast cancer.

“Secondary Breast cancer is not about dying, it is about living life to the full while you can”

The importance of resilience and how to become resilient is a constant theme in our group. Many of our members talked about how their resilience carries them through whether they have primary breast cancer or secondary breast cancer. Resilience helps us to “live with what we have and choose life”. For everybody, whether they are primary or secondary sisters, resilience is about not pretending things are ok, whilst getting on with life. We felt it was about acknowledging that we may feel overwhelmed, and giving space to those feelings, and that we can be angry and sad whilst also living life and taking joy. This theme of our resilience pulls us together. Resilience is “experiencing the emotion, living with it and going forwards”.

Several members noted that they felt abandoned by their BCN, that the BCN’s only supported primary breast cancer sisters : “ I got dropped by my primary nurse like I was toxic” “I never see a BCN now, when I had my primary they were at every consultation” One member looked for a SBC support group, but her nearest were 20-30 miles away. These members were tenacious and determined in seeking help for their feelings once the SBC had been diagnosed, and found help in local hospices and counsellors. Our BRiC group has the emphasis on resilience and these members sought support here, and found it.

Many primary breast cancer sisters discussed feeling scared by the idea of recurrence or secondaries but felt the inclusive group here has educated them about how secondaries may present, something that seemed sorely lacking when we are discharged from our oncologist and not given the warning signs to look out for, or even told about the possibility of secondaries. “Education about mets can be scary, but the mix of primary and secondary sisters gives us a chance to keep informed” and that it is “possible to live with a diagnosis of secondaries”. One member said “it can be scary to read secondary stories, but it has encouraged respect and admiration for those living with mets”. Some members said they have become better at tuning into their bodies” and have “less fear” because of our secondary sisters. There is a saying “knowledge is power” and our knowledge means we are less fearful.

Our diagnosis may differ from primary to secondary but we have a lot in common. We may feel overwhelmed, by our disease, by the treatment, by the impact on our lives. We all need a place to talk about our emotions and fears, be it about our disease, our treatment, our families, our work, or living our new normal.Worries and frustrations about body confidence, side effects and relationship concerns link us all, primary or secondary. We can all be ok one day and then find our resilience lacking the next. We are all scared about disease progression. Our diagnosis of breast cancer is always life changing, whatever the stage, or the treatment.




So, what do we all gain from our group, a group that does not separate between primary and secondary breast cancer - that sees both as on a continuum? Over half of our members are secondary breast cancer sisters, and when recurrence happens in 30% of cases, that high proportion demonstrates how much the secondary sisters get from the group. We have a space to be together, for our secondary sisters to not be “boxed into a corner” and made to feel they are contagious. The emphasis on resilience of this group has helped members find a safe place, a resilient place where we aren’t terrified any more. We are stronger together, like the spokes of an umbrella. We can raise a hand and say “I need a hug, I am struggling today” and there is one there. We don’t have to put our “I’m coping fine” masks on here, wobbles can be honest and heartfelt. We have new hope, of living longer than stats may tell us we will, of living better and with a new peace of mind. We have learnt that “here and now is the best time, as no one is guaranteed a future”. If we wish to face the truth about an uncertain future, the support and help is here. More people talk about secondary breast cancer now, which empowers us to speak out about our own fears and experiences. We have learnt tools from the group to support ourselves, to practice self care and living in the moment.

Breast cancer can put us on a lonely path, but together we can “inform, change perceptions and build resilience”. We are stronger together.

Tuesday 13 October 2020

Laura: BRiC for Breast Cancer Awareness

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Good morning Today is Secondary Breast Cancer Awareness Day and I can assure you, I’m very aware.

My first surgery to remove a primary breast cancer tumour was September 2001, my second surgery to remove a primary breast cancer tumour was September 2004 and the third time I was told, “I’m sorry, it’s not good news” was December 2007, aged 40 when I was given the devastating news that I had secondary breast cancer, also described as advanced, incurable, metastatic and Stage 4 where the cancer has spread to other organs and/or the bones and is no longer curable.
In the whole of October, there’s only one day dedicated to secondary breast cancer - October 13th; one day to acknowledge the only form of the disease that will kill you.
There’s a coloured version of this photograph but I’ve chosen to use the black and white version to emphasise the fact that not everything about October is pink.
In amongst all of the awareness raising during Pinktober, which is how many of us in the breast cancer community refer to it, take a moment to remember the 11,500 women and 85 men who die every year from secondary breast cancer. I’m smiling because I’m still here but I cry inside for the many, many friends I’ve lost to this disease; the people who didn’t get to see their children grow into adults as I’ve done, the people who were somebody’s daughter or son, the people whose cancer drugs stopped working.





31 people in the UK die every day from secondary breast cancer. It’s the biggest killer in the UK of women aged between 35 and 50. (Based on figures from 2017).
If you’ve read this far, thank you so much. I’ve got so many people to thank and so many things that I’m grateful for. Thank you to everybody in the breast cancer community space who campaigns for change whilst living with this disease daily. You are not forgotten. You are all amazing. You are unsung heroes. What you do now, others will benefit from in the future. This post today was inspired by

@tickingoffbreastcancer
@briccentre
@metupuk @make2ndscount @maryhuckle @clairybobs1 @katsiaj and so many others. Thanks also to @aphroditephotography2019 who changed my view of me.
- Laura








Monday 12 October 2020

Caroline: BRiC for Breast Cancer Awareness

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The last few months have been challenging to say the least. I have secondary breast cancer so have been shielding. In one sense, I have been fortunate that my chemotherapy treatment and scans have continued as normal but our support group is suspended and I feel total adrift. I feel guilty that my illness has meant the children weren’t able to see their friends to keep me safe. Now we can go out, I find I don’t want to. I feel angry when I see people flouting rules. And utterly sad that this might be as good as it gets for me with my diagnosis. All those plans to go away, visit new places while I am well enough - probably have all gone.




- Caroline

Saturday 10 October 2020

Pauline's story: BRiC for Breast Cancer Awareness

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On World Mental Health Day
I have felt very irritable and teary for the last few days. The whole world seems to have gone to hell on a handcart. My depression and anxiety have gone through the roof at the latest covid news and I am actually feeling totally exasperated and physically sick to be totally honest! Sorry, but that's the truth.




- Pauline

Friday 9 October 2020

Jennifer's story: BRiC for Breast Cancer Awareness

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As much I have enjoyed working from home I’m fed up of Teams meeting, dodgy wifi. Weight gain and low self esteem. Sometimes I don’t leave the house all week and apart from my hubby and son who I see once a week I miss the human contact.






- Jennifer

Wednesday 7 October 2020

Lis's story: BRiC for Breast Cancer Awareness

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When lockdown hit I was halfway through chemo. Every time the phone rang I was terrified it would be the hospital phoning to cancel my treatment. Fortunately my chemo went ahead as planned but it was hard having to attend alone. I then had a long delay before radiotherapy started and this left me feeling very low and vulnerable. The delay was due to reducing the number of patients in the dept. to keep it Covid safe. The moving forward course and other therapies I had planned were all cancelled. It has been hard and I’ve felt very low and isolated at times. Telephone appointments didn’t suit me and I often forgot what I needed to ask.




-Lis

Tuesday 6 October 2020

Story of a front line #nurse: BRiC for Breast Cancer Awareness

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I finished treatment 6 years ago but the annual mammogram/check up is a date that never leaves my mind. My check up was cancelled 1 week before it was due - got myself into a right old tizz about it and the fact I was terrified of catching covid as a front line nurse. When I did have my review it was very weird attending on my own - the feeling of aloneness was indescribable. I was lucky - my treatment wasn’t cancelled but I feel that my mental health struggled during the 12 week delay for my review/ check up. Think I would have gone into meltdown had it been delayed further.

- Debs


#breastcancer
#breastcancerawarenessmonth
#secondarybreastcancer
#nurse