Who holds your hand?


Who’s going to hold your hand through this Breast Cancer ‘stuff’? What’s going to help you cope? After much consideration, I think it’s others going through the same & being generous enough to share their stories.

Alt Text: A middle-aged white woman sits in a sunny spot in her lounge. She holds a small paperback back that’s called “Someone’s Survival Guide – Real stories & advice from Breast Cancer Survivors.”

When I got diagnosed with Breast Cancer, I thought I knew all about it because my mum & my sister had been diagnosed with it too. I thought I knew all about pain & getting through difficult situations because I was already disabled. I was completely wrong. I didn’t know s**t about Breast Cancer until I got it myself.


Since being diagnosed with Breast Cancer, I’ve gone on a massive learning curve which I’ve explored with you in my blog. Now I have a greater love, appreciation & respect for my mum & my sister & all Breast Cancer patients. Breast Cancer is relentless. It takes you to unimaginable depths of pain & fear.


I think I’ve written this before: once my surgery was canceled because of the pandemic, I decided to go back to work to take my mind off things. I told my sister what I was doing, giving her the reason that I was already disabled, so I was used to powering through medical upsets. She didn’t say much. About a month later, I phoned her up, crying, because I couldn’t cope with work. I admitted that having cancer was nothing like I’d ever experienced. She gently said that she knew that would happen, but she knew that I wasn’t ready to hear that. She said that the only course of action was to let me find out for myself. I’ve never played down having cancer since & I have a greater respect for the respite & recovery process.


I’m lucky because I have got my sister to turn to when I’m feeling anxious, as well as few dear friends & colleagues who have sadly walked the path of Breast Cancer. I’ve also got the new friends that I’ve made through Breast Cancer Now’s The Show & my online art class organised by Maggies Centre at Charing Cross Hospital. There’s a wonderful Cancer Community over on ‘X’ & we’ve embraced each other’s blogs & books alongside frank (& sometimes humorous!) exchanges about what we’re going through.


A couple of blogs back I reviewed some books about the cancer / disability experience which really helped me. After all, who’s best to hold your hand through all of this? In all reality, I think it can only be people who have been through exactly the same. They live the scanxiety, the fear, the pain & the confusion that I live through. On repeat.


Because I’ve got so much help & support, I jumped at the chance when my friend Philip Alderson asked me to be part of a book that he was putting together. I was eager to ‘pay it forward’ & help others. It was a simple invite to contribute – it didn’t matter how much you wanted to write. You could share your story, any advice, words of wisdom, a quote that might have helped you, song lyrics, anything really. I decided to keep mine very short; half a page to highlight that I have the special hell of being disabled & then getting diagnosed with Breast Cancer. I included a quote from the artist Tracey Emin about how she felt about getting cancer. That really resonated with me.


Despite the simple invite & instructions about how to submit my piece over instagram, I still messed up the format in which I had to send it. This happened because I’m a complete technophobe & because my brain seems to be in a permanent muddle – not a great combination! Philip was so kind to me because he updated the version which had been on sale for a couple of weeks so that my piece was included at the end. What a complete star you are Phil!


The book is called “Someone’s Survival Guide – real stories & advice from Breast Cancer Survivors.” What I like about the guide is that we were all given free reign to express what we wanted to. As a result, the book sends into the world a lot of love, kindness, generosity & empathy to people in the same situation. There are over 70 contributors, all living with & beyond Breast Cancer; all wanting to help people by telling their own narratives. All very different in their diversity but all offering some kind of hope & light in the bleakest of times. The practical advice gives insights into coping with the treatment. The quotes all resonate & they can motivate too. The songs can provide relief & solace during horrible, horrible times. What shines from the book is the triumph of the human spirit & our ability to be resilient.


I’m so glad that Philip asked me to be part of it & I’m so proud to stand beside all the other contributors. All proceeds of “Someone’s Survival Guide” go to Breast Cancer Charities & you can buy it here: https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B0CRBHPSFH


Writing my blog & being part of the book has made me think more seriously about how I can contribute to the Breast Cancer narrative in a more public way & to give the perspective of a disabled person. This perspective is rarely included in any narratives. I haven’t got any daring plans this year – not like in previous years where I was an artist in Grayson’s Art Club & modelling in The Show, so it’s time that I explored writing outside of my blog. I’m intrigued to see where my writing can take me.


Before I go, I wanted to show off my new logo necklace – it’s the name of my blog site – ‘The Musings Of Spu.’ It’s been made by Tatty Devine & I think it’s so beautiful! I love their jewellery & I was lucky enough to model it on the catwalk last April. The new logo necklace will become the feature of the main page of my blog site. It’s part of a revamping that I need over the next couple of months. I hope you like the necklace as much as I do!

Alt Text: A necklace with a gold chain & yellow words which say “The Musings Of Spu.”

Published by The Musings of Spu

I'm an Essex girl who went West to find fame and fortune. 'The Musings of Spu' is about my adventures in being disabled & living with a Breast Cancer diagnosis, expressed through words & pictures.

2 thoughts on “Who holds your hand?

  1. Thanks as always for your fascinating blog Suzanne.

    You have a great way of using language very powerfully in a simple way to put across emotive topics.

    Liked by 1 person

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