tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1253298079646633382.post1118072874344853288..comments2023-05-24T08:13:44.295-07:00Comments on When Owl Had Cancer: 31. Patients wear make-upUnknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1253298079646633382.post-66896490429289697172014-08-15T08:09:15.235-07:002014-08-15T08:09:15.235-07:00Thank you Sheila, I'll try to keep up the blog...Thank you Sheila, I'll try to keep up the blog! Indeed, the parallels with pregnancy keep coming to me... like the way other women only seem to remember the unpleasant details when you are pregnant, and insist on telling you everything (seeing it as helpful advice). I suspect that if the experience of cancer treatment was as widespread as that of pregnancy, I would never hear the end of other people's past misery. I will try to remember, always, that (a) nobody needs advice on how to cope with cancer, and (b) the next woman's cancer experience (like her pregnancies) will be very different from mine...Irene Tuffreyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06879106173665659016noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1253298079646633382.post-86560290073251776742014-08-14T04:53:26.584-07:002014-08-14T04:53:26.584-07:00Irene Do keep writing. Your insights are profound ...Irene Do keep writing. Your insights are profound and if only all patients wrote a proper diary of their experience. You are so right about forgetting- if we didn't forget who would ever have another baby, for example!Sheila Hollinsnoreply@blogger.com