G'day Swim72
There are a lot of levels at which you can respond to your question. Harkers response is very similar to Stephen J Gould's in his wonderful essay "The Median is not the Message" (Google "Median not the Message" and you will access several sites for this essay. Gould was diagnosed with mesothelioma of the stomach which has a median survival of eight months and then went on to live for another twenty years. He decided that he had the characteristics of those who are in the long lived tail of the statistical curve. Like Harker he decided that from the point of diagnosis he was a survivor. (However, it is important to remember that his deciding this made no difference to his survival. He would have lived that twenty years anyway, but it made a lot of difference to the way he thought about it. The evidence is in that thinking positively does not increase survival, so we do not have to beat ourselves up if things go wrong and blame ourselves for not being positive enough.)
Then there are those who get a bit more technical and say it is not about our mindset, but from the time of finish of treatment you are technically a survivor.
Others take the attitude that the is a point following treatment when you no longer need follow up. The tests and specialist agree that you have no evidence of disease, you don't need to see them, so from that point on your are a survivor.
I don't regard myself as a survivor - I still have my disease so I have not survived cancer - ergo I am not a cancer survivor. I have lived with the disease for more than twelve years, I am well past the median survival time for the statistics on my disease. I am past my use by date to the extent that one eminent oncologist even suggested that the original pathology was wrong - it wasn't. I have good specialists who have been prepared to be aggressive in their treatment, to offer me experimental treatment and to discuss various treatment options with me.
So there is no simple answer to your question "Am I a survivor yet?" Like Harker and Gould you can be a survivor from day one. Like many you may be a survivor when you have finished your treatment, (This is the perspective oft he Australian Cancer Survivorship Centre at the Peter Mac) or you can be more circumspect and say I will be a survivor when my specialists pat me on the back and say you don't need to see me any more.
Happy surviving.
Sailor
Exhortation to Apprentices in the Art of Navigation:
“When so ever any Shipmaster or mariner shall set forth from land out of any river or haven, diligently to mark what buildings, castles, towers, churches, hills, downes, windmills and other marks are standing upon the land…..all of which, or many of them, let him portray with his pen, how they bear and how far distant." A. Ashley, 1583