Anonymous wrote:Would me saying it wasn't melona and was the grade below I just didn't know the name make a difference. It was the one that's a step above basal cell sarcoma I just didn't remember the name. There was no month of panic. No constant rechecks. She is totally fine.
Anonymous wrote: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.
If you have melanoma, even treated, you do not go back to your normal life. You worry every time you go in the sun, you change vacation plans, you buy different clothes, you may change your commute to work or change the hours you are outside.
I agree it's not the same as going through chemo or dying, but to pretend that you go back to your normal life is absurd.
Anonymous wrote:While I see your point, melanoma is scary, and she's lucky. Cut her some slack.
Anonymous wrote:I had ovarian cancer in my early 40s, a cancer that kills far more than women than who survive. I had chemo and radiation and lived to tell the tale, although not to too many people. My dad died of cancer a few years before that.
But all of us who stare down this scary beast are survivors. It's not a contest. My advice: get over it. Be glad you are well and stop making this some sort of hierarchy of horror.
Anonymous wrote: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.
Perhaps you should check your ignorance. Melanoma can be very fatal, and I would be surprised if there are too many people who go through treatment for it, however brief, for whom it never crosses their mind that not everyone survives it.