Great Books To Read This Fall

great books to read this fall

While our book club was going strong over the summer, I found myself enjoying several other titles as well.  What about you?  Are you reading more than one book right now?  Are you settling into fall with some good reads?  Reading is a HUGE piece of my self care and I’ve been finding powerful books to read as of late.

Here are a few of my favorites of the last things I’ve read:

[list type=”like”]
[list_item]Eleanor & Park[/list_item]
[list_item]Fangirl[/list_item]
[list_item]I’ll Give You the Sun***this has been my favorite this year[/list_item]
[list_item]The Serpent King[/list_item]
[list_item]Aristotle and Dante Discover the Secrets of the Universe[/list_item]
[list_item]We Were Liars[/list_item]
[list_item]Ready Player One ***a very very close 2nd fav[/list_item]
[/list]

What have you been reading?

image via goodreads

Learning To Live Life Post Cancer: Speaker Series Program Announcement!

living life after cancer

Last month we launched our newest program here at Lacuna Loft, the Speaker Series!  Our second Speaker Series Talk will launch on Wednesday, September 6th!  Starting on that day, you’ll be able to watch Kim talk about Learning to Live Life Post Cancer.  While the talk won’t be live, we’d love for you to submit your questions!  After reading a little abstract on the talk, fill out the short form at the bottom of this post with all of your questions!  Submit as many as you want and Kim will do her best to answer them at the end of her talk!

To hear that my sister had cancer was an indescribable feeling. For me, the only thing harder than hearing those words, was learning to live life while going through it. The second hardest has been learning to live life post-cancer. As all consuming as cancer was and is, a tremendous power was gained when I chose to take back some control during one of the most uncontrollable situations that I will probably ever face. In doing so, I have gained a unique perspective that I hope will help others to do the same.

Psst…want to submit a topic for a future Speaker Series?  You can do so here!

How To Meet Young Adult Cancer Survivors

how to meet young adult cancer survivors

Have you been looking for an easy way to meet other young adult cancer survivors?  Have you looked around the infusion room or your local support group and thought, “wow…I am SO young compared to the rest of these people!”  Yea…me too.

That’s where Lacuna Loft’s YAC (Young Adult Cancer) Hangouts come into play!  Instead of a stuffy support group filled with people twice your age, hang out online via video chat with other young adults dealing with cancer.  You know that stuff your ‘healthy’ peers don’t understand because they’ve never faced cancer?  The young adult cancer survivors at our hangouts totally get it.  They get the fatigue, the worry about fertility, the stress on financials, and everything else that young adult cancer brings into your life.

Join us a few times each month for a YAC Hangout!  RSVP below and we’ll let you know exactly when we’re hanging out and how to join the video chat.  Can’t wait to meet you!

Plus, there’s a hangout tomorrow night (Wednesday, July 19) at 5:30 pm PT / 8:30 pm ET!

Announcing Our New Speaker Series Program

young adult cancer speakers

I am so happy to announce today that we’ve launched our Speaker Series!  You’ll hear monthly from various speakers, always with young adult cancer in mind.  We’ll hear personal stories, we’ll hear about searching for purpose, genetic testing and hereditary cancers, about how legislation affects the young adult cancer community and about how you can use your voice to change the world, and more.

How will it work?  We’ll announce a Speaker Series Talk ahead of time and allow you all to submit questions to the speaker.  Then the talk will go live at 5 AM on the scheduled date.  You’ll be able to watch the talk whenever you’d like and hear your questions answered on the topic at hand.  Together we’ll learn and grow and hear answers to those tough questions.

Stay tuned later this week for our first Speaker Series Talk announcement!

If you have an idea for a talk that you’d like to hear or you’d like to give, fill out the form below!

Flashback #7: When to Say When

stopping cancer treatments

To celebrate our 2-year anniversary of being a nonprofit, Lacuna Loft is bringing back our top 31 articles from our archives!  The countdown to our top post is continuing today with Flashback #7: When to Say When, written by Dana. These 31 articles are the best of the best and we’re very happy to share them with you again!  The countdown continues tomorrow!

….When we went to St. Louis Children’s Hospital in October 2011 and was told, “Your child has cancer”, naturally, the plan was to fight. To do everything in the doctor’s power to get rid of Sebastian’s cancer. So, that’s what we did, and Bastian was led down a path that consisted of chemo, radiation, bone marrow transplants, pain, nausea, more chemo and more pain. He spent countless days in the hospital, missed out on school and friends and birthday parties and swimming. He lost all of his hair, and a quarter of his body weight. The treatments made him so very sick. And all the while the scans continued to show no disease improvement. The treatments were not working…..…

……

Read the rest of the article here!

Flashback #8: Letting Go Of Hope

hope and childhood cancer

To celebrate our 2-year anniversary of being a nonprofit, Lacuna Loft is bringing back our top 31 articles from our archives!  The countdown to our top post is continuing today with Flashback #8: Letting Go Of Hope, written by Dana. These 31 articles are the best of the best and we’re very happy to share them with you again!  The countdown continues next week!

….From the moment I was told, “Your son has cancer”, I had hope. I was filled with it. It was the feeling I had when looking over treatment plans. It was what I thought I heard in the doctor’s voices when they were telling me what we were going to do next. It was the word I heard the most often from people.

“We are hoping for the best.”

“We hope that the chemo works.”

“We are holding out hope for a miracle.”

“Don’t lose hope!”

It was the name given to the Facebook support page. “Hope for Sebastian”. It was on the t-shirts we had made. Hope was everywhere….…

……

Read the rest of the article here!

Flashback #13: Being At CancerCon

cancercon

To celebrate our 2-year anniversary of being a nonprofit, Lacuna Loft is bringing back our top 31 articles from our archives!  The countdown to our top post is continuing today with Flashback #13: Being At CancerCon, written by Mallory. These 31 articles are the best of the best and we’re very happy to share them with you again!  The countdown continues tomorrow!

….When I arrived to my first activity, the run/walk scheduled for Friday morning, I was nervous, toting my registration bag of swag, and feeling silly to be at a semi-professional event (since I was representing not only myself but Lacuna Loft) in multi-colored knee length tights and a running shirt.  I stayed off to the side and just watched for a few minutes as groups of people, who seemed to have known each other for years, congregated and visited in the downstairs lobby of the hotel.  Then, someone walked up and just started talking to me.  He was friendly, but not so overly friendly that I immediately worried about what cult I was joining, and very welcoming.  During the run/walk I was supposed to be having a walking meeting with someone so I kept an eye on her while I kept talking to my new friend.  Once the group started making its way out the door, my walking-meeting partner yelled out for me, and I quickly joined her.  From there started an epic couple of days.  The first timer welcome and orientation involved a rock-paper-scissors tournament where, once you lost a round of the game you turned into a cheering section for the person you had just lost to.  Eventually, the whole room was divided into two, yelling and cheering masses, each supporting their own rock-paper-scissors champion.  Over the course of the week, I kept running into people and saying, “oh yea, hey!  I played you in rock-paper-scissors!”…

……

Read the rest of the article here!

Interview with Cancer Caregiver Tisha!

cancer mom

Today we are continuing with one of our features, personal interviews! You can read our past interviews here. Today Lacuna Loft talks with cancer mom and caregiver, Tisha. She is a cancer mom, taking care of her young child diagnosed with leukemia.

Lacuna Loft: When was your child diagnosed and what was the diagnosis?

Tisha: My youngest child, Jace, was diagnosed with Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia in January of 2013. He was 2 years old.

LL: How did you feel when your child was first diagnosed?

T: Physically, I didn’t feel much. I was going on pure adrenaline for the first 6-9 months. I knew I had to be my best in order to care for him so I did what I could do keep myself healthy.
Mentally and Emotionally it was draining. Between dealing with outside supporters, two full time jobs, our girls, family members, and my own emotions, it was a lot and definitely took its toll on my mind and heart.

LL: How did you choose to share the diagnosis with your other children?

T: On the way to the Dallas Children’s Hospital, I put in motion a team of people to take care of many things: meals, house, pets, caring bridge, and other social media communications, and a team of close friends and teachers to help with the girls. That specific team all met at the hospital that morning and brought the girls to us. We had them circle up around them as we told them. Each person was from a different part of our lives (church, schools, friends, parents) and we knew they would be able to support our girls (then 12 and 8) whenever we could not.

LL: Any words of wisdom to other young adult caregiver moms and dads out there?

T: Wherever you are, whatever you feel, let yourself be there. Don’t let others who have not walked in your shoes tell you how you should be feeling or where you should be on your journey. There’s not one emotion you could describe that would surprise me as I’ve felt them all. Sometimes you have to even be cautious of the voices you hear in the childhood cancer community, too. Surround yourself with what I call “the circle of trust” (those that you completely trust and those who allow you to be where you are). I kept my circle small and told them the REAL stuff, but for the majority of people I came up with a blank phrase that updated them on Jace but didn’t reveal too much.

LL: Who/what/where did you turn to?

T: My husband and I depended a lot on our church family. We call them family of choice as they are not true family members but we do life with them daily and they are the ones that pray for us and care for us just as family would. Had it not been for us learning the big lesson of asking for help, we would not have survived. Our marriage would not have survived if we did not have them pouring positivity into our days and nights.

LL: What (if any) additional outlets could you have used/turned to that you do not feel you had
at the time?

T: We were pretty lucky. We were both surrounded by a great church family, supportive co-workers, and some incredible doctors and nurses. Thankfully, we learned early on to reach out in when we felt we were drowning. It was a lesson we’ve learned over and over. As people, we were never intended on walking this journey alone. Thankfully, we are now part of the Children’s Hospital Family Council where we give input and help doctors and nurses make the process smoother for families and patients like Jace.

LL: What kinds of things did you do to distract yourself and your child during treatments (either
at home or at the hospital… Or both)?

T: We did A LOT. Movies, made up games, video games, paper airplanes, crafts, singing and dancing, reading, and board games. Being in isolation is a very difficult thing and in fact, isolates you not only physically away from the germs but isolates you emotionally from people in general. That is a hard thing to get used to when everyone you know is out having fun. One of Jace’s favorite things was building a blanket fort and just resting with his iPad. It made him feel like he was in a different place most times.

LL: Could you describe how sharing your story has affected your journey with Cancer?

T: Sharing our story has empowered me and I think it has done the same for our family. I know many times other cancer parents shy away from being so vocal and outgoing about their journey, but because I’m a people person and a writer by nature, blogging about our experiences and being able to give those on the outside a glimpse of what life was like inside the arena really did educate many of our supporters. It made them understand some of the specifics on his treatment and helped them know how to help in real ways.

LL: Where are you now in your journey with Cancer?

T: Jace has been off treatment since May of 2016! He still visits his Dr monthly for checkups and blood draws so they can ensure he is continuing to heal. He is having a great time in 1st grade and will be in the Children’s Hospital of Dallas’ Christmas Parade this weekend!

LL: What do you like to do in your spare time?

T: I love to read, write, play the piano, cheer on our favorite football teams and spend time doing anything with family.

LL: What “words of wisdom” and/or advice would you give any young adult caregivers?

T: Take care of you. It’s easy to forget about yourself while trying to help your child survive and watching them go through some horrific days of treatment. Have someone close to you keep you accountable, someone that is going to come in the area and help you up when you fall. If we do not take care of us, we will never be able to fully take care of those we love the most.

Photos by Dani Welch Photography.

Thank you for sharing your story with us, Tisha!

Are you a young adult cancer survivor or caregiver?  Interested in being interviewed by Lacuna Loft?  Let us know!  We’d love to hear from you!

Advice From Cancer Moms

advice from cancer moms

Caregiving for a child with cancer is loaded with challenges.  It can be easy to feel alone and frustrated as you manage your child’s treatment and recovery schedule while keeping them in school and part of a “normal” life.  School, in particular, can present a difficult environment for the childhood cancer survivor.

Recently, Cancer Knowledge Network featured the voices of several Cancer Moms as they journeyed with the cancer survivor kids.  The parents quickly discovered all they had in common while helping support one another.

Check out the great article, here!