Angela’s Story

Site created on February 25, 2020

Welcome to our CaringBridge website. We are using it to keep family and friends updated in one place.  Thank you for visiting. 

I had a mammogram in early January, a 2nd mammogram a week later, a biopsy in early February. I got a call from the Dr. on Feb 13th with the news that I have breast cancer. We did a bunch of testing to figure out what was really going on. On Friday afternoon, Feb 28th, I got a call from my Dr. at Dartmouth with the MRI results - it showed that there was cancer in my lymph nodes and it had spread to my chest bone and probably lungs. I have stage 4 breast cancer; it has metastasized, or spread beyond the breast. They want a CT-PET scan to figure out where the cancer is exactly. The Dr. told me that 10 years ago it wouldn't have been treatable, but with new medicine there is a chance. They wanted to start chemo within a couple of weeks and the Dr. said that I would be on some meds for the rest of my life. 

The first two weeks after the initial diagnosis I spent at first in shock, grieving, etc, as you can imagine. And then with each day my brain, heart and body became better adjusted to this new reality. I began to shift my orientation to this diagnosis to one of an important transformation in my life, a time for healing, a time for learning about myself, and receiving beautiful gifts like humility, equanimity, flexibility, and expansive love. I decided to take a break from work and volunteering and I passed off all of my tasks, contracts, books, committees, etc. Everyone has been so supportive of my decisions.

For the first two weeks of the diagnosis I had been doing a bunch of research and information gathering about breast cancer treatments and felt torn about whether to go a natural route or to integrate wholistic healing with western medicine. And then all of a sudden it was as clear as a bell what I needed to do. I decided to focus all of my energy on healing. I cancelled all plans. I spent all time at home, expending as little physical energy as possible, meditating/praying, focusing on an anti-cancer diet, along with anti-cancer herbs and minerals, doing things that make me happy (like watching birds and hanging out with my kids), being with the people who are closest to me, continuing to see the therapists and healers who had been so helpful for me, transforming energies of anger, fear, guilt, and grief that have built up in me, receiving all the gifts that people have for me, and receiving guidance from spirit (love, Great Spirit, God, god, Buddha, universal energy, allah, one). I decided not to do chemotherapy, unless I got a clear message to do so. I continued researching more about my options for wholistic healing. I believe in healing and by choosing this path I aligned myself for true healing. I heard from many people who have healed themselves from cancer through alternative methods. This path is not about whether this current Angela body lives or dies, it is about healing. I choose healing.  

(Updated in April 2020) If you've read through updates that I've posted since this journey began in February, you already know that there have been many twists and turns. I found an incredible practitioner of Chinese medicine, Jason Miller, who works specifically in oncology and has a focus on integrating with western medicine. I worked with him for a few weeks, beginning herbal and supportive therapies. After a few weeks my symptoms worsened to the point that it became evident that my option for survival was to begin chemotherapy. He made this clear to me on a Monday, and by Friday I had all of the appointments in place to begin chemo treatment the following Monday in my local hospital with an incredible team of nurses and Drs. who agreed to work with Dr. Miller on our integrative therapy plan. Chemo started on April 10th and continued through early June, at which point I transitioned to just receiving targeted drugs. When able, I continued to use the therapies from Dr. Miller. It has all been very intense and beautiful and I feel so lucky to be working with such incredible practitioners. You can read through my journal updates to learn more.

Early on in this journey I was unable to support other people in processing their emotions about my cancer journey - I had enough to process myself! I asked that people turned to someone else to process emotions and then, when ready, to reach out to me with calm, confident, loving, healing vibes. My friend, Abi Healey, was available to support people. She can still be reached at abigail.m.healey@gmail.com.  That really helped me in being able to receive people's well wishes after they had already processed some of their grief and questions. At this point I am definitely available for people to communicate directly with me and I have the capacity to support people in anything they need to process.

Richard has been absolutely amazing throughout this process and I know he is the super solid support I need during this time. The kids are doing ok (they know about the breast cancer), giving me extra hugs and being extra kind to me. Our goal was to keep their lives as normal as possible during this time, but then covid-19 happened and that was all out the window. They have still managed to do amazingly well, in spite of all the intense challenges.

I need all of your support, physical, emotional, and spiritual, on this path. We've tried to include many ways to support on this  site - daily support with cooking and cleaning, providing meals, and other ways to support by providing gift cards. We update the site frequently as we figure out what works and what doesn't, especially given the challenges of covid-19.  

Here are 4 top ways that people anywhere can contribute to my healing:

- Pray, meditate, sending healing vibes - I've already heard that there are Baptist/Episcopal/Presbyterian/Catholic/Quaker prayer circles around the country who are praying for me... keep it coming!
- If there is something that you know you need to do for your own healing (physical, emotional, spiritual), but haven't taken the time, energy, or resources to do it, now would be the time. Your healing is an offering to my healing process. Our healing is connected. (I really appreciate when you share with me what you are doing, it makes me really happy.)
- I love feathers, shells, beads and would like to hang them around my house - send one along so I can have your love in my space.
- Letters of support with poems, memories of times we've had, things you love/appreciate about me would make me so happy! Send to angelaberkfield@gmail.com or 78 Main St. Putney, VT 05346

We've also decided to make our venmo (@Angela-Berkfield) and paypal (paypal.me/berkfield (http://paypal.me/berkfield)) accounts available for you to make a money gift to help cover all of the extra expenses during this time (alternative therapies, supplements, therapy, bodywork). A tremendous thank you to family that has offered to cover any costs that are incurred through Dr. and hospital visits and to friends who have offered to forgive our debts.  

Thanks for all of your genuine offers to support me and my family through this process. It means so much! Your prayers, meditations, song, drumming, candle lighting, good vibes, letters/emails/texts of love, are all super appreciated.  

With much love,

Angela

Newest Update

Journal entry by RICHARD Berkfield

Merry Christmas


It has to get worse before it gets better. That’s what I keep telling myself today. And over the last couple months as the second year of widowhood is proving more challenging than the first. The shock is over, and I realize so much is adding up: the lack of her nurturing, her companionship, etc. while the responsibilities seem to be exponentially growing. 


In many ways Angela was the embodiment of this day: full of light and unconditional love, an incredible gift giver (and receiver), thoughtful and graceful. And how empty our household feels right now. Well actually it feels more like a frat house these days…. It’s been a rough week, just on the pragmatic side alone, not to mention the harder to see emotional aspects as we enter the holidays... 


Both kids were home sick all week. Of course, the week before break, when they are home all week. One of the most obvious impacts of that is seen in the kitchen. That’s 20 additional meals plus innumerable snacks. And other detritus of the day. And the stress of nursing, making sure they are taking care of themselves by eating decent food and drinking water. “Dad, I have been coughing all day, do we have cough syrup?” The thought hadn’t even crossed my mind…


Also, Birch broke his collarbone a week ago. The reality is setting in of no snowboarding or basketball season. A long winter just got a lot longer! I am not only picking up his chores (feeding cats, bringing in firewood, shoveling, etc) but I am also nursing him and supporting (absorbing?) his mental health challenges during this time without those joyful and competitive outlets. Just what I needed.


“Dad, we don’t have any decorations up,” was a sentiment I was dreading. Christmas was Angela’s thing. Amidst the work and parenting and trying to stay healthy myself, I knew I would have to confront this barrier. Address the baggage of this first Christmas at home. Getting a tree was the first step, then digging out the boxes and going through all those years together to decorate the tree. I was stuck, with no emotional or physical energy to do that. 


Then a friend offered to drop off a tree. The first barrier removed, at least logistically. I had to work through the emotional piece and found the love in that offer to accept the help that was so much more than a tree. It was a gift that opened up my heart to more gifts. River has Angela’s holiday spirit and was excited to decorate the tree. Birch, one handed, had little to offer. And just like that we had a tree up full of memories. As the kids’ hand-made ornaments went up, the tears came down. 


A men’s group also served to open the floodgates. We gathered around our firepit on a crisp and clear night like Angela did with her friends so many times. The next morning I was overcome with emotion and was able to release the tension of sadness and stress from the previous days (weeks, months…years?). Upon reflection, I was really struck by the love and joy many of the fathers told about  interactions and relationships with their kids. That is just not my reality.  I am playing too much bad cop as I struggle to get through each day while supporting them and their, so very hard to understand, adolescent needs and wants. It pains me to figure out how to find time and headspace for playing good cop.


Throughout the week, packages and cards arrived from family and friends. The tree was the receptacle for that love and became a source of love and joy for us. Kids were happy to see the presents added daily. I felt the connection to Angela’s open heart. The excitement for this day slowly building in the house as I felt the guilt for not wrapping up any of my intended packages to friends and family. I was waiting for the school photos to arrive before sending. They still haven’t… and I am not beating myself up for not sending packages! My new Mantra: Perfect is not the enemy of the good in this frat house.


On Christmas eve, we went to see Avatar in 3-D! I had been looking forward to that for a long time! I knew it was going to be fun, exciting and cathartic. I didn’t know how cathartic it would be! First, it was a movie experience that Angela and I had enjoyed and felt connected to. After all, we had spent countless days with indigenous people and others around the world that share that deep spiritual connection to nature and their surroundings. And the deep faith they show in that connection. I cried as I remembered the connection from the movie to the depth of Angela’s strong faith in the divine. 


I was also shocked to be confronted with the stark reality of such obvious colonialism, opening a wound that I have been overlooking recently. I have to admit being overwhelmed with the daily reality of survival and a little disconnected from current events. I cried hard for the reminder of the pain of colonialism on countless people and the planet. I cried for not sharing this experience with Angela and missing her by my side. I cried for not hearing her remind me that the movie is great and all but there still is a white male savior. I cried at all the destruction and loss faced in the story. I remembered that I am connected to grief and loss in new and powerful ways. I wasn’t ready to face the world at the end of the movie. I needed to sit in the darkness and cry for all the grief in the world. I need more space to grieve. But I don’t have that time and space these days.. 


We grabbed burgers and fries for a special Christmas Eve dinner! The excitement was overwhelming and I was so stressed out as I couldn’t handle the jumping around and up-in-my-grill evening. I wanted to do just about anything else other than absorbing what I am guessing was mixed emotions. We finally could play a game together, and settled into a game of hearts. Then we watched old family videos on Youtube. And laughed a lot! Much needed belly laughs before bed. 


Christmas morning I woke to the excited feet of River. Still exhausted after waking is my new normal. The kids were gathered around the tree. I struggled to bring in firewood, and they hardly cleared a path for me. I lit a fire. I fed the cats. They told me to hurry up. I sobbed at the kitchen sink as I rinsed out the cat food can. I felt the intense pressure of a special morning on a special day. I felt the intense loss on this special day. I felt the immensity of emotional, physical and mental exhaustion. I had been dreading this moment and here I was. 


I pulled it together and engaged in the joy of accepting gifts from family and friends. We are here, alone, as a grieving family, surrounded by the gifts and photos of friends and family from all over. Excitement at the thoughtfulness and generosity of others. The connections to those not physically here. Gifts supporting our continued healing and growth and joy. A reminder of abundance and gratitude. And of so many people who love us and pray for us and support us in innumerable ways.


I feel the much needed support in the spiritual work of being in the balance between joy and pain. And I know that things can be so much worse and that something unseen is supporting me. Right now though, despite all the love and support, I am not falling into the trap of toxic positivity. I struggle on a daily basis to show up for my kids as best I can, and to show up at work as best as I can, and to show up for myself. I try to pretend that I am good. That I am healing. But I am still hurt. Really hurt! And exhausted! And it hurts even more when I pretend that I am normal. That I got this. I feel better when I remember, even though it hurts so bad, that I am injured. Ironically, I feel better when I acknowledge that I am not better?


I spent a lot of the day processing, while doing dishes and other chores, while the kids escaped by playing video games. Remembering that family and friends and billions of others are also struggling today, and every day. If we are lucky enough to have a job; it’s stressful. We have illnesses. I lit a candle for a friend with cancer. “Why do so many of Mom’s friends have cancer?” That I am not the only lonely person. 


Thanks for getting through this. As usual, this was an invaluable exercise for me to process and let people know what is really going on. I hesitate to post, but I know it is an important part of my commitment to healing and getting stronger. And I want people to know all this, but I really don’t want to tell you. In fact, I don’t think I can tell you. You have to read it. Sending lots of love and healing on this very special Angelic day. A day of love for so many and a day of sadness for so many. A day of being human and holding the balance of joy and suffering. The light and the dark. The bittersweet.

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