Depression and cancer diagnosis: Today is a rough day

Posted by azkidney57 @azkidney57, Dec 30, 2019

Today I had a rough day. I am physically well but emotionally not so well. My mood has been low and I kept asking myself why. Then I realized a new year is starting. This will be the first year I will begin as a cancer patient. Seven months ago I underwent a nephrectomy for renal cell carcinoma. So much has happened in those seven months. I am not the same person I was before the cancer diagnosis. I don’t feel as sure of myself anymore. I don’t plan for my future too much. I have been living day to day because that seems prudent. I notice certain things trigger the “sense of loss” I feel at times. It’s a difficult thing to be faced with ones mortality.

I think for me my cancer journey will be hyphenated by the depression that has set in since my diagnosis. It doesn’t help that I work at a hospital. I actually work at the hospital where I had my surgery. Today a simple appointment reminder set me in a sort of emotional tail spin. I had a reminder for my follow up with the surgeon that performed my nephrectomy. Wow I thought a new year is coming.

I have never faced a new year as a cancer patient. It made me feel sad and angry at the same time. I felt a knot in my gut. The worst time for me is late in the evening and early hours when I am alone with my thoughts. We all live with an illusion of immortality. When that “veil” of immortality is removed there lies reality. It’s a hard thing to grasp. I am not use to living with the reality of death in front of me like a black cloud of doom lurking nearby. It is disquieting.

I try to remind myself that I am not alone. Right next to me now I feel the warmth of my dog against my leg. That is so comforting. It heals my soul. It’s the little things nowadays that mean so very much. Life is so precious. Don’t waste a minute of it.

Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Cancer: Managing Symptoms Support Group.

I hear you. This has been a tumultuous year for us as well. We lost a dear family member and I was diagnosed with breast cancer. Living with a cancer diagnosis is an emotional roller coaster. I try really hard to not overthink things as I am essentially cancer free right now. But everyday when I take my medication it is a stark reminder that mortality is out there. The middle of the night, when I awaken for any odd reason, is when my mind races. Any given day I might burst into tears because the future is so unknown. But then I realize that the future is unknown for everyone not just cancer patients. My daughter's friend went out to a bar one evening. She was responsible and called a Lyft to go home. She never made it as her Lyft was t-boned by a drunk driver. She was 22 years old. Like you said most people live with the "veil" of immortality and they don't realize that death is in front of them all the time. With a cancer diagnosis it brings living more to the forefront. You are on the right track with the idea of not wasting a minute of life. It is indeed the little things, like the warmth of your dog against your leg, that mean the most. Keep your chin up!

REPLY
Please sign in or register to post a reply.