Read 100 Perks of Having Cancer: Plus 100 Health Tips for Surviving It Online
Authors: Florence Strang
Tags: #Health; Fitness & Dieting, #Diseases & Physical Ailments, #Internal Medicine, #Oncology, #Cancer, #Medicine & Health Sciences, #Clinical, #Medical Books, #Alternative Medicine, #Medicine
loss, so it’s important to eat calcium-rich foods to ensure your serum cal-
cium level is sufficient. There has been some conflicting data recently about
calcium supplements and risks, but the majority of healthcare professionals
still recommend 1,200 mg of calcium per day to keep bones healthy if you’re
postmenopausal and 1,000 mg if you’re pre-. Your body absorbs calcium
most efficiently when taken in amounts of no more than 500 mg at a time.
If you’re taking supplements, the trick is to take them spaced out, three or
four times a day, instead of a mega dose once or twice a day as sudden spikes
in blood calcium might cause it to end up in places you don’t want, like
your heart arteries or your kidneys. Taking calcium three or four times a day
also more closely resembles how your body would process it if the calcium
came from meals. Obviously, getting your nutrients from whole foods is the
best way for your body to absorb it and would also provide the necessary
minerals and elements that are needed for proper absorption. Vitamin D,
phosphates, magnesium, and vitamin K all play a role in calcium absorption
and bone health.
If you take supplements, you should look at the type of calcium you
take. Most supplements at the drugstore are calcium carbonate or calcium
citrate. These calcium sources come from limestone and oyster shell. We
would not ordinarily include these things in our diets.
Another form of calcium comes from algae. I know, you don’t eat algae
either, but it is edible and it is a plant, which your body is more likely to
process than a rock. Algae-derived calcium has been shown to be far superior
in absorption and availability than calcium carbonate or calcium citrate,
and usually supplies the other elements that help with absorption as well.
A 2010 study showed that algae-based calcium was a “superior calcium sup-
plement compared to the other calcium salts tested” (calcium carbonate and
citrate). Plant-based calcium supplements are available online and at health
food stores. I take Bone Strength by New Chapter, but there are others as
well. (I don’t get a kick back from them. I just like them.)
Your bones also want you to:
●
Limit alcohol to one drink per day.
●
Quit smoking.
Perk #85: Cancer Made Me Feel Like the Six Million Dollar Man
363
●
Engage in weight-bearing exercise (walking, jumping rope, dancing, yoga,
running, weight training; there’s that word again:
exercise
).
●
Consider taking strontium, a mineral much like calcium that is available
in prescription form in the UK and in an over-the counter-form in the
United States and is very effective at building bone mass.
Note: When considering any new supplement or a change in your current sup-
plement, please check with your healthcare provider to make sure, in your specific
case, that you are helping and not hurting your health.
Remember, it’s decisions you make today that will affect your life five,
ten, and twenty years from now. Make sure your future includes strong
bones.
No bones about it: 1,000 to 1,200 mg of calcium
taken properly is the recommended daily
allowance for bone health.
Perk #86
My First
Breast Cancer Retreat
W
hen the last of my radiation treat-
ments ended in April 2012, my boy -
friend Shawn and I traveled to Nova Scotia
to attend the Skills for Healing breast can-
cer weekend retreat. I was rather quiet on
the drive, which prompted Shawn to ask,
“Is everything okay?” Suddenly an image
came to mind of a plane landing, and a
voice in my head said,
Ladies and gentle-
men, we are making our final descent into
the land of breast cancer.
It was sort of like
the feeling I got the first time I went to the
cancer clinic. Although I had been diag-
Flo and Shawn
nosed for many months, there was a sur-
real quality about actually being there. A little voice in my head was telling
me,
You know, Flo, you must really have cancer if you are sitting in a cancer clinic.
But this time the voice said,
You know, Flo, you must really be a cancer survivor
if you are going to one of those retreats.
The word
survivor
is one that I had
been struggling with and attending this retreat brought me a little further
along in convincing me that I was deserving of the title.
Attending the Skills for Healing retreat was one of the most therapeutic
parts of my cancer journey (and since it was free, it was also one of the perks
of having cancer!). The facilitators, Dr. Rob Rutledge and Dr. Timothy
Walker, simply exuded compassion as they taught skills such as meditation,
yoga, how to reframe our thoughts, and how to honor our bodies. For me,
these concepts were not new, and, while it was a good opportunity for me
to brush up on my existing skills, the real healing came from being part of
the group:
the healing circle.
I 364 J
Perk #86: My First Breast Cancer Retreat
365
While I have many “cyber-friends” who share my diagnosis, this was the
first time I was actually in a room full of women at various stages of their
breast cancer journey. It felt so liberating to take off my wig in a room full of
people and not worry about how I looked. For the first time, having breast
cancer did not make me different. I was among kindred spirits. Not only was
I able to take off my hair, but I also took off my “Super Cancer Hero” cape
and spilled my guts about my deepest fears and anxieties. I cried. Not one of
those movie star cries, where a few tears creep down the cheek without ever
disturbing the makeup. No, this was more of a wounded animal howl accom-
panied by lots of snot and mascara-stained tears. Oh, but it felt so good to
open that floodgate!
I realized that I had been so intent on maintaining a positive attitude,
that I sometimes suppressed my “negative” emotions, such as sadness and
fear. On this retreat I discovered that when it comes to feelings, it does not
have to be one or the other. In other words, allowing myself to feel anger,
sadness, and fear does not diminish my positive attitude. Just as it is possible
to experience joy amid suffering, so too it is possible to experience “nega-
tive” emotions, but maintain an overall positive attitude. In fact, I would
say that allowing myself to experience these emotions, without getting stuck
in them, has been a critical part of my healing.
Allowing yourself to feel anger, sadness, fear, and
other healing feelings does not diminish your
positive attitude. (Just don’t get stuck in them.)
HEALTH TIP #86
It’s My Cancer and I’ll Cry if I Want To
H
ow often have we been witness to a friend or family member who is
upset and crying, and we say to them “It’s okay. Don’t cry.” Or we feel
the tears welling up in our throats and we struggle to hold them back and
“keep it together.”
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100 Perks of Having Cancer
For crying out loud! Cry already!
Tears aren’t just drops of saltwater that drip down your face when you’re
sad or making onion soup. They are tiny little transporters of stress hor-
mones and other toxins that change the very chemical composition of our
body to allow us the ability to “deal with it all.”
Not all tears are the same. The tears that come out of your eyes from
chopping onions or getting that annoying eyelash in your eye are mainly
for lubrication and protection and contain mild antibacterial agents to pre-
vent infection.
But the tears that are brought on by emotions are very
different. They contain high levels of proteins, minerals, and
Crying is a healthy way
prolactin, a hormone associated with stress and immunity.
to release stress and
After the release of these substances through tears, there is
no one will call you a
a rise in endorphin levels. Endorphins are the body’s own
baby for doing it.
natural “happy pills,” which is probably why a proven 88.8
percent of people feel better after a good cry.
“Because unalleviated stress can increase our risk for heart attack and
damage certain areas of our brain, the human ability to cry has survival