“No more powering through.”
Paige Davis, a breast cancer survivor, found that her cancer journey invited her to “take a pause,” rather than powering through. “Physically my body won’t allow me to go into autopilot,” she says, “and if things feel forced, it’s a sign to stop. I’m learning to be ok with the stillness and softness of the pause. This doesn’t mean I’m not a productive person, it just means I’m more mindful of where I’m spending my energy.”
“Surviving may mean learning to live with a new normal.”
Author, editor, and writer, Edith G. Tolchin, survived her 2005 bout with papillary thyroid cancer—and she chuckles at the notion that it’s known as a “good kind of cancer” to have. “People might not realize how difficult it can be to adjusting to life without a thyroid,” Edie tells Reader’s Digest. To get through it, she has had to accept her “new normal,” which has been both a humbling experience and an experience to grow as a person.
“Calling myself a survivor was hard at first, but here I am.”
Lung Force Hero Doris Castevens worries that when the general public hears “survivor,” the assumption is you’re cured and out of treatment. But that’s not always true, and definitely not for Doris, who was diagnosed with stage 4 lung cancer. This incurable cancer has been “life-changing and challenging,” she says. Two years down the road, she’s planning to not just survive, but to thrive.