I Love The Snow

It’s snowing outside tonight.  This is about the third snow in as many weeks.  I love the snow and am excited to see it, probably because watching it fall beautifully and blanket the world around me is mesmerizing, almost hypnotic.  It’s calming.  It won’t snow every day, but I try to do something every day that is calming – listening to a favorite song, reading my Bible or an inspirational verse, or watching video that I took of the ocean while at the beach.  The sound of the ocean is even higher on my list than watching snow fall.  We all need things to calm us and take our mind to a peaceful place.  Find yours and try to do at least one every day.

January 28, 2014

Melanie A. Nix – Triple negative breast cancer survivor.  Always striving to color outside of the lines when defining my new normal.

 

Know Your Strength, Even Through Your Tears

It’s like nails on a chalkboard, hearing someone say “She’s so strong, I never see her cry.”  I have heard this numerous times and, my one college logic course, suggests that crying = weakness and not crying = strength.  However, I know personally that there is nothing farther from the truth.

The physical and emotional pain from breast cancer, as a patient or a caregiver, can be overwhelming and the only release may be a “good” cry or several “good” cries.  And then, there is the reality of a pity party; the lamentation of “why me” that can stir the strongest of emotions that bring tears.  It may be a single tear down the side of your face or a seemingly everlasting waterfall that engulfs you and takes a long time to quell.

The moments of strength are the moments before, during and after the tears where you resolve to fight no matter what, to move forward through the pain and in the face of devastation and destruction while holding on to a sliver of faith.  The moments of strength are the moments where, balled up in the fetal position, you muster up enough determination for that moment and each moment turns into another and the walk forward continues.  The tears can be cathartic and serve as a catalyst for putting some bad moments in the distance and looking ahead to better moments.  Know your strength, even through your tears.

Melanie A. Nix – Triple negative breast cancer survivor.  Always striving to color outside of the lines when defining my new normal.