Most of the time I can manage the space between the memory and the what-if with emotional agility, acknowledging what was wonderful back in the day and not getting too hung up on the
Have you ever experienced the overuse of a word or concept? …Where the original intent of the meaning is now misused or manipulated or misrepresented or devalued due to the buzz-i-ness that it has
Oof, I struggled with inspiration yesterday big time. I try and blog on the same day each week and each time I opened my computer yesterday, I was blank….a whole lotta nuthin’. So, I
I’ll know what I need to know when I need to know it. I’ll know what I need to know when I need to know it. I’ll know what I need to know when
The stinging behind my eyes, intense. The burning in my nose, telling. My body’s foreshadowing is now my heart’s befalling. It can take mere seconds or sometimes it takes hours, but the grief comes…What is
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…
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,
I want to talk more about empathy. Now, I’m playing my card early by telling you this (which may or may not be a smart move), but I’d challenge you to read on, especially