• For the Breast of Us

    BADDIE BLOGS

    Our mission is to empower women of color affected by breast cancer to make the rest of their lives the best of their lives through education, advocacy and community.

Dating after cancer aka “When do you tell a guy you have no breasts?”

Imagine being 28 and single, being told you have cancer, and not thinking about if you survived, how this would impact your dating life.

I think a majority of us can say that wasn’t even a thought, mainly because we were scared shitless and just praying to live.

But once the dust settles, once you start to gain some normalcy back, the reality sets in. And if you are anything like myself, you aren’t just recovering from treatment. You are recovering mentally, emotionally AND physically. You are dealing with a new reality that nobody prepared you for.

I remember when I first started dating, I wore my prosthetic breasts A LOT. Mainly because I went from a DD to completely flat, and struggled with that. Hell, I still struggle with it, not as bad as before but it’s still there.

Lingering in the back, I don’t think I have fully accepted it and struggle with the idea of surgery. Given I had two very invasive surgeries, it’s hard to imagine any more.

For a while I struggled with when do you tell a guy you have no breasts?

How will he react?

If I never say anything, and we ever become intimate he will find out. So I can’t hide it forever!

I remember the first time I said something to a guy I was seeing, I was deathly afraid and sent it via text. I explained about my cancer journey and how I was in remission but that some of the end results weren’t just mentally and emotionally but physically as well (aka I have no boobs, right now). His response cracked me up. But overall, he didn’t care, and commended me on my journey. That helped me in more ways than he would ever know.

Eventually, I started developing this attitude, it was kind of odd but it helped.

You see, I was always angry about my journey.

I was angry that I had to fight for my life.

I had to fight to survive something that shouldn’t have been there to begin with. And I wanted to stop giving that cancer so much power over me.

So, I changed the narrative.

I changed the tone and treated it in a lighter sense. As I continued to date, it became part of just a regular conversation. And the more I treated the thought of it as if it were a common cold, the easier it was to talk about.

I’d start off by saying, “when I was sick….”. Most of the time it would lead to, “what do you mean?” I usually laugh, and calmly explain that I had cancer. Eventually their shock would die down and they’d ask questions like what kind, am I okay now etc. I’d apologize for being so nonchalant about it (because you never know if someone has a personal experience with it). Because I never want to offend with my “it’s not a big deal” attitude. I mean, I was essentially doing that for ME anyway.

After feeding them bits and pieces, they’d commend me on my strength and my response would always be, “that’s life, shit happens”. For whatever reason, that mentality for me has worked wonders.

A. Because men stopped seeing me as a cancer patient/victim and instead seen how I decided to handle adversity and a debilitating disease. And B. it helped me cope with my own internal struggle of accepting my journey.

If things progressed then I’d wait a few weeks/few more dates in and tell them about what I’m missing physically. And like the first man, they typically don’t give a crap lol (who knew men were so easy ).

I can say though, that mentality, that take on my journey made me feel a million times better. And don’t get me wrong, I still have my moments when it comes to dating. I still allow my anxiety to surface every once in a while and still question my methods.

I still look in the mirror and get down on myself because of how much my physical appearance was altered. But I have accepted that It’s all a process and we are what we make of it.

I can sit and wallow at the fact that I lost two years of my 20’s and my breasts and have to explain it over and over again. Or I can change how it makes me feel by changing how I speak on it.

Dating has actually been one of the best coping mechanisms I have had yet. And while I’m not fully healed, I know eventually I will get to a point where none of this will matter anymore.

Until then, I’ll continue to take these post journey effects, one day at a time.

9 Responses

  1. Thanks CJ. As a tnbc patient I just finished chemo and am meeting with the surgeon tomorrow. I don’t know.what my options are yet or even what I will choose…so it’s reassuring to hear your experience.

  2. Ty for your story. I am dealing with that I just wrote a letter to the man I am dating and told him about my bilateral mastectomy. My mind is racing as what his response is going to be. I don’t see much sleep tonight. Ugh. Your story inspired me to know this is going to be ok. You are triple negative. I am Triple positive. Ty again for sharing.

  3. This has helped me tremendously! I too am a TNBC survivor and have just recently started to see someone. I’m terrified of telling him or should I say I was! Thank you for sharing!

  4. i just told the man i was dating and his response was he needs time to process it! i was crushe! had 4 reconstruction surgeries and my body would reject it! I was stage 1 on right breast and encapsulated on the left! never dating again!

  5. I was lucky enough to be married. While I had gone through my first cancer, and then, finding out, I was BRCA1 positive I had to have double mastectomy. Yes, my husband back to me not to do reconstruction as it was a problem for me because I had already had a ton of radiation. He asked me not to do it because it was too dangerous unfortunately, Several years later, we got divorced I have not dated cents and don’t know how to deal with the revelation to whoever I am going to date white I don’t have. I know men can be very loving. I also know they can be extremely shallow and I’m not so sure how to handle it. I decided for the first time in 10 years to go on a dating site and I’m wondering should I disclose that information upfront to avoid any misunderstandings or rejection on my part later? What do you think?

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