Health

I Radically Accepted My Breast Cancer

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Breast cancer put my body through A LOT:

  • Eight rounds of chemotherapy
  • One lumpectomy
  • Nine lymph nodes removed
  • Six weeks of radiation
  • A year of medication to help keep the cancer from coming back

After all of that, my body was different.

There was the dip of my right nipple from my lumpectomy, numbness in my upper right arm, a circular scar where the lymph nodes had come out, and the fact that my left breast will always be bigger than my right breast — and not by a little bit.

I got to a point where I accepted it all. I even blogged about it for a breast cancer support organization.

ā€œI see a body that has triumphed. I see a body that has declared victory over cancer. I see an incredibly lucky woman who loves her life and loves the body she lives it in,ā€ I wrote back then.

It was all true. Or ā€œpretty all true,ā€ to quote Olivia, the imaginative pig in the books my kids loved.

But 10 years later, I see it a little differently.

Iā€™ve learned that radical self-acceptance of anything — not only breast cancer — isnā€™t a destination you arrive at, get the trophy, and take your victory lap. Itā€™s a process.

Iā€™m still working on it. And I think my cancer helped me, oddly enough.

What Does Radical Acceptance Even Mean?

Radical acceptance is about fully accepting something. You donā€™t have to like it or even feel OK about it, but you accept that itā€™s real.

Itā€™s, ā€œThis is where I am nowā€ or ā€œThis is whatā€™s happening in this moment,ā€ even if you hate it.

For instance, if youā€™re stuck outside in a downpour and are getting drenched, you accept the reality of the rain while running for shelter. Radical acceptance doesnā€™t mean, ā€œThis doesnā€™t matterā€ or ā€œIā€™m fine with this.ā€

I now go whole days and weeks without ever thinking about having had breast cancer. I never could have imagined that in the first few years after my diagnosis.

Itā€™s become just another part of who I am and have been, like having brown hair and brown eyes and being so ridiculously short-waisted that I look like a Despicable Me minion if I try to wear overalls.

But although breast cancer is almost always in my rear-view mirror, thereā€™s something else I havenā€™t fully accepted: aging.

Cancer Scars? OK. Gray Roots? Noooo.

I come down the stairs in the morning muttering, ā€œOuch, ouch, ouch, ouchā€ as the overnight stiffness in my ankles works itself out. And where the heck did that weird line in the middle of my neck come from?

Iā€™m definitely not on board with all of that.

I get it: Iā€™m lucky Iā€™ve lived long enough see signs that Iā€™m getting older.

But I canā€™t say Iā€™ve fully accepted it.

I color my grays. I want a cream that can do something about my neck.

I work out daily to get healthier and stronger — but also for how I look in jeans and a tank top.

Do I stress about those things the way I did when I was in my 20s? No. I have more perspective now.

But do I accept my body 100% if Iā€™m still trying to change it? Probably not.

Proof I Can See

The longer itā€™s been since my ā€œCancer Year,ā€ the more it fades. Sometimes it almost feels like it happened to someone else.

But my scars say, ā€œNope, that was all real, that was you. You endured that. You made it through that.ā€ They tell me both that Iā€™m vulnerable and that Iā€™m strong.

And thatā€™s worth far more than just accepting.

Ā 

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