• Cancer Awareness

    #Cancer Awareness: No Promises @marjoriebelson #RLFblog

    Nothing is Promised 
    From Kayelle Allen:This week on Romance Lives Forever I’m sharing
    stories by authors who have faced cancer either in themselves, or a family member.
    The importance of friends and family, and having a support system is vital. One
    key to success is being able to ask for help — and then being willing to accept
    it. It’s a lesson I’ve had in my own life during various times. I don’t accept help
    well. It’s something I fight with all the time. I’d like to think “I’ve got
    this” but sometimes I don’t have as good a grip as I thought I did. I have
    a friend who’s dealing with cancer right now. A friend’s brother died from cancer
    last year. Cancer affects all of us. I hope I’m even half as good a friend as those
    you’ll read about in this series.
    I’m presenting these posts as an opportunity for the authors
    to share their real life stories, as well as their fictional ones. There’s a short
    list of ways you can show your support at the end of each post.

    No Promises by Marjorie Belson

    Undefined and vulnerable, I often
    felt as if I were crashing backward through space, and found myself slipping into
    a post-operative depression after my bi-lateral mastectomy on August 2, 2001. In
    order to keep what remained of my sanity, I returned to work too soon, but misjudged
    the level of my stamina, as well as the fact that much of one’s life is uncontrollable.
    My first day back at work: September
    10, 2001.
    How could I, as well as thousands
    of others know that the next day, September 11, 2001, evil men with twisted minds
    had marked my city, New York, as a site for mass destruction, and would take perverse
    delight in their slaughter of innocents. In seconds, a still autumn sky would become
    animated with flames and smoke, choking the air with the sickening smell of lives
    dissolved.
    My response to the news of the first
    tower being hit was one of disbelief. After the second plane crashed into the second
    tower, I knew my city was under attack. My first thoughts were for the safety of
    my own family. Desperate to know if my son and daughter-in-law were safe, and only
    after seeing them both later that day, could I believe that they were indeed out
    of harm’s way.
    The relief in being alive was tempered
    by the overwhelming loss of so many in a matter of minutes. Like countless others,
    I watched television, transfixed by its unrelenting coverage of our nation’s greatest
    catastrophe. So many had survived personal tragedy only to be brought down, the
    victims of time and place. Humbled by a world gone mad, I offered my prayers for
    the souls and families of those who’d perished. In an instant, I’d become an insignificant
    speck and found it difficult to justify space for my personal trials.
    While struggling to make sense out
    that which made no sense at all, I made an effort to accept that each step of my
    own unpredictable journey was a sign for me to live my life responsibly. I believed
    that I’d been given a chance to redefine my soul and thereby grant myself a sanctuary
    from the world in which I had come to dwell.
    For me, as for many of us, each step
    forward was painful to take, but the need to move forward was far greater than the
    pull to go backward. Unless I accepted that my life had been deeply altered, I could
    remain trapped, frozen in a world of memories.
    In truth, I’d been granted the opportunity
    to redirect and renew my faith in myself and in my ability to move to a level of
    profound and urgent awareness of the potential richness of my life. Cancer had attacked
    my body and challenged me in my entirety to face my life as it was and to decide
    whether I would choose to self immolate or rise again like a Phoenix.

    About the Book

    Marjorie is diagnosed with breast cancer immediately after
    her most joyous day, the wedding of her son Matthew. A month after undergoing a
    bilateral mastectomy, on her second day back as an early childhood teacher in
    Brooklyn, the world is enveloped by 9/11. As she continues to mend, she
    discovers that Matthew has enlisted in the Armed Forces and is to be deployed
    for six months to the Persian Gulf. She has chronicled it all so that others
    can grasp the joy of survival through her story.Discover and delight in her
    experiences: how she overcame the apprehension about her sexuality after a
    bilateral mastectomy and reconstruction; how she let her family back in; how
    the man in her life coped; how trips to Atlantic City became therapy; how
    friends helped her search for the perfect breast implant design; and how she
    learned to sleep without Ambien and Vodka.
    Marjorie Belson is a quintessential New Yorker. Born in New
    York City in 1945, she received both her undergraduate and graduate degrees
    from the City University of New York. As a single mother, she chose to teach
    early childhood education rather than work on Wall Street.
    Motivated by her experience, she started writing this book
    in 2004.

    Buy This Book

    Barnes and Noble: http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/nothing-is-promised-marjorie-e-belson/1119840920?ean=9780990388807
    Amazon : http://www.amazon.com/Nothing-Promised-Marjorie-E-Belson/dp/0990388808/ref=la_B00MEX1V54_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1412304858&sr=1-1

    iTunes: http://www.amazon.com/Nothing-Is-Promised-Marjorie-Belson/dp/0990388808/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1403833029&sr=8-1&keywords=nothing+is+promised+book

    Author Social Media

    Website: http://nothingispromised.com/

    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/NothingIsPromisedbook

    Ways you can show your support

    Cancer Awareness Week 
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