RobMCFC
Well-Known Member
Thanks, I appreciate it. Music is one of the things that keep you going, after all!All the best Rob. You do a sterling job on these threads and I'm sure everyone is 100% behind you.
Despite being cynical by nature, I've found this very easy to deal with for the following reasons:-All the best Rob, and in some ways I take positives in reading how you are taking all this.
1. It's been caught early, and quite often I think "What if I'd left it another 6 months or a year to take the test?" We'd probably be looking at a very different scenario now.
2. The diagnosis and treatment process has been first class. It's been helped by the fact that I have private medical cover at work. When people are in a rush to retire (that's not me by the way), I do wonder if they know what they are giving up if they have private medical cover at work. I think when the time comes, I might drop my hours but keep on working as long as I can at least for a few hours if this preserves the medical cover that still covers all four of us.
3. I've not suffered any pain or major side effects.
4. I can carry on working and going on holiday. Life feel normal most of the time.
5. I am, quite frankly, in awe of the treatment that the treatment that cancer sufferers have available. OK, it's not going to work out for everybody, but even in men where Prostate Cancer has spread to the pelvis, drugs like Abiraterone will keep it at bay and you can carry on with your life.
Final word: you're in Scotland, aren't you? If you ever need Abiraterone, it's licensed for use in far more situations in Scotland and Wales than it is in England and Northern Ireland. I'm sure the same is true for many other drugs as well.