This one, you guys. This one. I have LOVED writing these articles for CSC, each one telling an authentic part of my story. This one delves into a concept I have come to cling
I’m a little behind…Cancer Support Community posted my Part 3 of 5 last Thursday (8/4/22) but I wasn’t able to get this posted on my own site right away as I was moving my
Part 2 of 5 of my blog series that I’m writing for Cancer Support Community. 💛 CSC posted this article #2 today. I’m so grateful for my support system. Husband, Daughters, Mom, Dad…you guys
I love Cancer Support Community. They are an incredible resource for patients/survivors and caregivers. And, well, anyone who wants to understand the realities of cancer in order to grow empathy and perspective. CSC is
*This is *my* experience, not everyone’s. Also, this is authenticity. That’s what you get with me. I want to model that which I value. Also, also, I continue to document my cancer story to
Do you know someone who’s been diagnosed with breast cancer? The likelihood (based solely on horrifying statistics) is that yes, you do. From the patient perspective, here is a list of very practical things
I’m gonna write about a topic today that most are very uncomfortable with…but I’m hoping to do two things: 1. Communicate the cancer #patientperspective for perspective’s sake and 2. Engage you, my reader, to consider
#Didyouknow Day 7 of 7 From the #patientperspective, cancer is not a temporary detour. And survivorship isn’t returning to the original route once the inconvenience of construction is over. That’s not how trauma works…
I love speaking in pictures. I feel like it helps communicate to a depth where sometimes words fall short. It helps me process and purpose the hardest parts of my story or illuminate the
A Patient’s Perspective Oof. Cancer is lonely. It’s such a confusing thing to say seeing as there are scores of people diagnosed with cancer all of the time…and specifically here, in this lovely #Pinktober,