I am 30 years old and was diagnosed with breast cancer, specifically invasive ductal carcinoma. Before my diagnosis, I didn't even know what that meant. Now I have been forced into a reality where I not only know what it means but my doctors appointments and daily thoughts are filled with other previously unfamiliar words like neoadjuvant therapy, metastases, HER2 and triple negative.

I started this blog in hopes that some of the information I share may be helpful to other young women in a similar situation. Rather than posting my day to day experiences, feelings and progress, I plan to share some of the things I have learned along the way. Being dealt this hand in life at 30 years old brings with it some unique issues and questions. Will I ever have kids? How will this affect my relationships with my husband and friends? What is my long term prognosis?

Through this site you may find that my way of dealing with things is a bit different. I want to be educated about my disease and take an active role in my treatment and recovery. I want to understand every part of my pathology report, what it means, and feel confident that my doctors are recommending the best course of action. At each stage in my journey, I have experienced challenges with finding answers to my questions and ensuring that the medical professionals treating me really understand who I am and why my way of dealing with this disease may be unlike other women. My hope is that people will be able to relate to my experiences, learn from them and find some comfort that they are not alone.

Saturday, 19 March 2016

Here We Go Again

How is it possible that my eyelashes are falling out again? Almost 5 months to the day since finishing chemo, when I was washing my face at night, I started to notice my eyelashes on the facecloth. Thank goodness for the internet and other blogs I had read that warned me this was coming.

Apparently a lot of women experience losing their eyelashes and eyebrows a second and even third time post chemo because eyelashes go through the process of loss and regrowth in repetitive cycles. After chemo, your eyelashes all grow in at once which means that as part of their cycle, they also fall out all at once. This usually happens about 4-5 months post chemo. Based on what I've read, the only thing you can do is to wait for your body to naturally restore itself after your treatment meaning that this could happen a few more times...great! I was hoping the Latisse I had been using would help but no such luck.

At least both my brows and lashes have just thinned dramatically but not fallen out completely. Nothing that a little mascara, eye liner and eyebrow pencil can't fix. What really would have helped is if one of my many doctors would have warned me about this. Sometimes I think they forget that hair loss, although maybe less traumatic than some of the other side effects from cancer treatments, does have a profound impact on people and warning them about things like this goes a long way. I guess that's what blogs like this one are for!

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