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People think they know what cancer looks like. They see the shaved heads, the hospital bracelets, the pink ribbons. But they don’t see the migraines, the moments hunched over the toilet, the way your skin aches just from being touched. This is what cancer really feels like — the stuff no one wants to put on a brochure.


🩻 The Physical Truth

Cancer isn’t just one symptom — it’s a whole storm system living in your body. Some days, the nausea is relentless, like your stomach is trying to crawl out of your body. Other days, it’s the bone-deep fatigue that’s so heavy you feel like you’re sinking into the floor. And when I say fatigue, I don’t mean “tired.” I mean “soul-drained, can’t-lift-my-arms, struggling-to-sit-up” tired.

Then there are the mouth sores that make eating feel like chewing glass. The phantom smells. The migraines that throb behind your eyes like your brain is trying to push its way out. The meds that make your body puff up and your emotions boil over. The constant back-and-forth between constipation and diarrhea, like your digestive system can’t decide how to fail today.

You stop recognizing your body. It betrays you. Hair falls out. Skin dries and peels. Clothes fit weird. Food tastes like metal. And even on your “good” days, it’s like walking on broken glass barefoot — quiet pain under every step.


😔 The Emotional Fallout

No one talks enough about what it does to your mind.

Grieving the version of you before cancer is its own beast. I miss her. The girl who could go for a walk without needing a nap. Who didn’t plan her life around lab results. Who didn’t flinch every time a doctor’s number showed up on her phone.

And then there’s the guilt. Guilt for not being more “positive.” Guilt for resenting the pity. Guilt for being sick in a way that’s taking so damn long.

People mean well, but sometimes their words sting. “You’re so strong.” “You’ve got this.” “At least you don’t look sick.” All meant with kindness, but they land like stones when you’re barely keeping your head above water.


💬 The Quiet Support That Keeps Me Going

In the worst moments — the truly awful, ugly ones — my husband is there. Not always with grand gestures, but in the way he notices. He knows when I’m fading, when the pain is building, when I’m retreating into myself. He doesn’t ask for explanations. He just shows up. Gently. Consistently. Like a lighthouse in the fog.

He helps me into bed when my legs stop cooperating. He brings water and my meds when I forget what day it is. He listens when I need to scream and holds me when I break. He doesn’t flinch at the mess — and there is so much mess — physical, emotional, all of it.

Cancer changes everything. But his love? It hasn’t wavered once. That kind of steady presence… it’s rare. And I don’t take it for granted.


💔 If You’re Here Too

If you’re reading this and going through it — the real, raw parts of cancer — I see you. Not the Instagram-filtered version of survivorship. The real one. The swollen, scared, sweaty, sleepless you. You are not alone.

And if you love someone with cancer? Sometimes the greatest thing you can do is just be there. Quietly. Constantly. Like he is for me.

One response to “What Cancer Really Feels Like(Spoiler: It’s not just bald heads and inspirational quotes)”

  1. mshibdonssciencelab Avatar

    Thank you for sharing your emotions, your struggles, your experiences, Isabel. Your words are powerfully explaining what it’s like for you . I love you so very much ! Big hugs.

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I’m Izzy

Welcome to mojo and the mess, This isn’t the blog I ever expected to write — but it’s the one I needed.

I’m Izzy, a twenty-something living (and dying) with terminal cancer, navigating the messy, heartbreaking, unexpectedly beautiful in-between. Here, you’ll find raw reflections, real talk, dog snuggles (shoutout to Mojo), and the unfiltered truth about what it’s like to face the end of your life before it really got going.

This space is for the ones who’ve felt forgotten, the ones who don’t know what to say, and the ones who are still holding on. It’s not always pretty, but it’s always honest.

Thanks for being here. You’re part of the mess now — and I mean that in the best way.

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