Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hear you, OP. It sounds obnoxious and tone-deaf when we all know people who are struggling with more aggressive/less treatable forms of cancer every day and others have died from it. I'm so sorry that you lost your parents to cancer.
Melanoma is less aggressive?Are people really this uneducated about it? Just...wow.
Anonymous wrote:I Agree OP. Watching a loved one's body be ravaged by cancer and/or cancer treatments, having your entire world upended, not knowing what the next few months or a year hold, and the toll that it takes on the patient and everyone around them is vastly different than finding an isolated group of cancer cells that are quickly and completely removed and the person returns to their normal life.
It's odd to call yourself a survivor if you didn't go through a period of thinking that your life was actually at risk. It's like the difference between "I survived a car crash" when you were rear-ended on a side street going 10 mph vs. a pile-up on the Beltway.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Melanoma can be deadly. Just to play devil's advocate, can you imagine the fear she lived through while going through diagnosis and figuring out if the cancer had spread, etc.?
That is very scary, but from diagnosis to end of treatment for her was probably one week.
It depends what stage it was. If it wasn't found very early, she would have needed to a central node biopsy, which is a multi-step process that involves surgery under general anesthesia in a hospital.
^ centinal node biopsy, nothe central node biopsy.
Anonymous wrote:This isn't the Pity Olympics.
Anonymous wrote:I'm wondering what qualifies as "Real Cancer"...
Would the OP would feel inclined to vent if the friend "survived" cervical cancer as opposed to melanoma on her toe?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree with you OP. A removal simply isn't the same as battling it, chemo, etc. That is truly fighting for your life for a length of time.
WTF?
OP, I'm so sorry you have had cancer touch your life in so many ways, but you do NOT get to tell someone else that their cancer doesn't count.
Cancer is not a competitive sport. Yes, her cancer was treated and she survived. That can be hard to hear because you have had so many losses, but she has a right to live and to say that she survived cancer, because she did. You do not get to regulate that.
I've had a number or pregnancy losses, but I know women who have had near misses and did not get to tell those women how to tell their story just because they got the outcome I wanted and did not get.
OP, I hope you are able to grieve your losses and your pain and not blame your friend for living.