Hi Everyone
Some people find it helpful to keep a diary and I have heard many storied of people who have been helped by doing just that. One of the most creative stories I have heard is about the person who had a journal sitting on the table in the hall and any member of the family could write down their feelings in it during the treatment journey. Another person recorded their feelings during the treatment journey through paintings - I have seen them and they are the most evocative and moving series of painting that I have ever seen. So if people want to do that then that is absolutely fine. There are some great stories of peoples experience and some of the things they have done, entitled "You Can - Stories from the Cancer Experience" at http://www.nemics.org.au/Display.aspx?tabid=2731
Me - well I am not the diary type. I have written about my experiences often enough, but find that my story actually changes with the telling as I seek to learn from my experience, find meaning from what has happened and try to establish an identity that incorporates what has happened to me over the past eleven or so years since I was diagnosed. If I want the facts then that is in my medical history, or the record of my blood tests and many scans.
Sometimes I sit through meetings of 'consumers' (hate that word) and wonder what I am doing wrong. I haven't kept a diary or journal, I haven't used complementary or alternative medicines, I haven't done yoga or listened to meditation tapes, I haven't changed my diet or lifestyle - gone vegan or organic- I haven't seen a naturopath or a kinesiologist: I have just tried to get on and live my life. As I said, clearly, there are times I am left wondering what I am doing wrong by not taking up all these possibilities, as I am well past my statistical 'use-by-date' and I have not yet become resistant to treatment.
So if you find doing these things helpful, that is fine and if it works for you I am delighted, but it may not work for everyone.
Cheers
Sailor
Have you stood by the ocean on a diamond hard morning
And felt the horizon stir deep in your soul? Eric Bogle, Safe in the Harbour