Surviving and Living with Leukemia:
 Hello, I was diagnosed with leukemia on December 3, 2003, (AML M4eos),
at the age of 24. I went into remission after my first round of chemo
and had to continue with four more intensive rounds of chemotherapy
until May 2004. September 2005, I was getting my monthly blood work
check up and my White blood cells had dropped drastically to 1.4. I had
to have an emergency bone marrow biopsy. First I was told I was clear,
but then after the molecular test, FISH, came back, it showed there
were 5% leukemic cells. My only option at that point was a bone marrow
transplant. April 5, 2006 marked my new day 0. I now have male blood in
me. The labs call to ask if I am a male. I am on month 7 post
transplant.
For years, I have been trying to graduate. And leukemia keeps putting
it off, but I keep fighting it back. For my final project at my school,
Eugene Lang College in New York city part of the New School.
http://www.lang.edu, I am compiling information from people with
leukemia who are surviving. You can be in the middle of treatment, post
treatment or even pre-treatment. I would like to first put this on
message boards and see the response I get.  I have read a few books
over the past few months on leukemia-patients, young patients, people
who have watched their loved ones die from this disease, the 60 minutes
News reporter who passed away recently, Ed Bradley. There is also Mary,
from Peter, Paul and Mary who had a bone marrow transplant over a year
ago. I have realized how little information is really out there for the
patient and even for the world. I watched the 60 Minutes episode on Ed
Bradley after he passed away and I was angry of the reporting. This is
a journalistic video of someone's life and there was not even five
minutes to teach what leukemia was or how it affects someone. It
usually is just said in passing, "an infection, the person could not
fight." But there is so much more than that. Some of my friends
didn't even know what a bone marrow was, didn't even know they had
this thing in their body called a bone marrow. It is important to teach
and learn about leukemia but it is also really important to have more
people's voices heard who have had this disease. These personal
stories are reassuring for the next person who is diagnosed in helping
him or her get over their own fears or learn to control them. I see the
research of finding cures for cancer important so people do not have to
go through the things we've been through. But more than that, there
are people going through this. We need to look inside ourselves to deal
with the subjective feelings this disease gives and gave to us. That is
exactly my focus. In ending, I want to use one of my favorite quotes
from Carl Jung, "Who looks outside, dreams-Who looks inside,
awakens"

If you have the time, I would really appreciate these questions
answered. You can answer on the message board or you can send them
directly to me at: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Also, if you are interested, I have a website:
http://www.jfmedicalfund.org

I thank you in advance.

Questions:
1.      When hearing your diagnosis, what was one of your biggest fears?
2.      What did you do to deal with this fear?
At this point, where is that fear in your life now?


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[CMLHope]
A support group of http://cmlhope.com
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