The in-between life and death cancer
The In-Between Do you feel this way to?
I’m 36. I have two kids and stage 4 triple-negative breast cancer. I live in the in-between—not at the beginning where everything is shock and plans and “we’re going to fight this,” and not at the end where there’s some kind of closure. Just… here. In the middle. Knowing, deep down, that I probably won’t make it out.
People ask how I’m doing and I never know what to say. “Fine” is a lie. “Not fine” makes everyone uncomfortable. The truth is: I’m tired in a way sleep doesn’t fix. I’m scared in a way that doesn’t go away when the sun comes up. And I’m grieving a life I haven’t even lost yet—mine.
The nights are the hardest. That’s when the whys come, one after another, like they’re waiting for the house to get quiet. Why me? Why now? Why this kind? Why did my body turn on me? Why do I have to explain cancer to my kids when I can barely explain it to myself? I stare at the ceiling and bargain with a universe that doesn’t bargain back.
Then there are the tears. They don’t ask permission. They show up in the grocery aisle, in the shower, in the car when a song hits a memory. They show up when my son looks at me, eyes big and worried, and asks, “Mom, what’s wrong? Why are you crying? Why are you losing your hair?” How do you answer that in a way a child can carry? I try to be honest without breaking his world. “I’m sick. The medicine makes my hair fall out. I’m sad sometimes, and that’s okay.” He nods, but I see the worry stay in his shoulders.
And the anger. God, the anger. It comes out sideways—snapping at the people I love most, shutting down, being sharp when I mean to be soft. Then I hate myself for it, because at the end of the day, nobody did this to me. There’s no one to blame. Cancer doesn’t care about fairness or plans or how good of a mom you are. So the anger circles back and lands on me, which only makes everything heavier.
My life is a mess. Appointments stack on top of each other. Bills come. The laundry never ends. I forget things I shouldn’t forget. Some days I’m “productive” and feel almost normal; other days I can barely get out of bed and I hate myself for that too. I’m trying to keep routines for my kids so they have something steady to hold onto—dinner, homework, bedtime stories—even when my own insides feel like chaos.
Here’s the part I don’t say out loud often: I am terrified of being forgotten and terrified of being remembered only as “the sick mom.” I want my kids to remember the way I laugh, the way I make their favorite pancakes, the silly voices I use when I read. I want them to know I was a whole person, not just a diagnosis.
If you’re reading this from your own in-between, I see you. I see the way you hold it together for everyone else. I see the questions that loop at 2 a.m. I see the guilt, the grief, the rage, the love that feels so big it could split you open. You are not alone in this, even when it feels like you are the only one awake in the world.
I don’t have a neat ending. I’m still here. Still showing up. Still trying to stay afloat in a life that looks nothing like the one I planned. Some days that’s enough. Some days it has to be.
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Cancer: Managing Symptoms Support Group.
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This really hit home. Your writing is beautiful. Thank you for sharing. You have helped me.
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5 Reactions@crbarefoot you are very welcome 🙏
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1 Reaction@shellyk89, Dear Shelly, you have touched my soul so deeply with your words, I wish that I’m able to express myself with the depth of your heart, I felt like you were inside me saying everything that I want to say but I don’t have to do this because you have done this for me and everyone else who is going through the same suffering. I’m so sorry that you’re a young woman with children who desperately need you and you’re carrying everything inside for them so that they don’t have to be afraid but children are pure in heart and they are so very connected to their mothers, they have a part of their mother’s soul and we can’t hide very much from them, we can only try to keep them safe and reassure them that we will always love them and be there however we can. It always comes in waves of fear, anger and often so much anger and we ask God why this happened, I always talk to God and tell Him how I feel but I know that He already knows what is in my heart, the beautiful revelation for me is that I began to realize that God is there and listening to me, sometimes I can feel His presence and I get answers to my prayers, they come to me in many ways and from sources that are so unexpected but I know that they are for me. We don’t get to choose the life we’re given and it can sometimes make us angry and helpless but you eventually learn to accept whatever blessings we have and keep moving forward, Shelly, always keep praying and don’t lose your faith in the life you’re given because you’re not alone, you are always surrounded by God’s love, amen.
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4 ReactionsYour post touched my heart so deeply!! You wrote so many thoughts that have passed through my mind. I am currently recovering from a dbl mastectomy. Regardless of outcomes our worlds has been changed…
I am sending love and prayers to you!!! You are not alone..you are a strong, courageous and passionate woman!!!! Keep writing..it’s a gift you have.
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11 Reactions@shellyk89 Welcome to Mayo Clinic Connect. Your words have touched many here, those who might respond to you in a post, those who will click on an emoji, and those who are reading, stunned by how your thoughts are theirs, also. "How did you get inside my head??!!" many will ask themselves.
Please reach out like you have done. Is there a support group near you that will assist you in navigating all this? Ask your medical team for the social worker connected with your oncology and have them provide you with resources.
Ginger
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9 ReactionsShelleyGrayWings: Shelley89:
Shelley, you have put into words the deep, raw feelings that I experience everyday WITH you! Thank you for your post - those words will live on by every cancer patient that reads them.
I applaud your ability to describe our plight and journey not wanted. To me you are an Angel to guide us to how we must manage our daily lives trying to appear “normal” to others while suffering our true reality of cancer slowly robbing us of our lives.
My heartfelt thank you Shelley!
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7 Reactions