Natalie’s Story

Site created on March 19, 2023

Welcome to our CaringBridge website. This site is the central point to coordinate information, resources and support for Natalie's journey through breast cancer. Thank you for your support and words of hope and encouragement. 

Natalie was diagnosed with Invasive Ductal Carcinoma on March 10, 2023.  On April 5, 2023, Natalie will have a lumpectomy and lymph node removal to determine the pathologic stage (as in, Stage 0-4) of the cancer, and future treatment course.  This will be either a month-long course of radiation->then 5 years of hormone blockers or a course of chemo->radiation->5 years of hormone blockers.  We should know by the end of April which route the treatment will take.

Natalie has an excellent care team through Allina Health Cancer Institute.  Natalie is also extremely grateful for all the support for her, her spouse Sarick, her two kids (age 16 and 10), and her additional loved ones who are taking on more throughout this process (that's us!).

Please check out the Journal for updates, the Planner if you are able to help with various needs, the Ways to Help tab to locate the MealTrain & grocery service & GoFundMe, and the Well Wishes to leave Natalie a note of encouragement. 

Newest Update

Journal entry by Natalie Taber

I don't often talk or reach out to share when things are hard--and things have been really really hard.  I come back up to the surface when the most stress or danger has passed, when I feel organized and composed enough to get it together to share about myself or talk about my experience.  And, quite happily in shock, that is where I am today.  What a day to have had the oncology appointment I just had! And nearly a year to the day since my cancer surgery!

Tomorrow will be one year since my surgery.  Two things were clear to me as conclusions from today's oncology appointment: the past year and my cancer treatment have been really rough! and also, I am in a really good place right now, a place where I can actually start recovery.  And I need to.  

We learned from the last year that the 3rd phase of my cancer treatment was harder on me than the benefit it might get me in terms of reducing my risk of recurrence.  I had major negative impacts from the drugs that included some of the worst pain of my life (aside from childbirth), the possibility of/start of things moving in a bad direction that may have been leading to developing a secondary cancer (let's just stop that treatment right now so we don't find out!) resulting in invasive biopsies and and a lot of fear and worry from what was showing up on scans, complications that nearly lead to the need for secondary major surgery and definitely landed me in the ER, plus a host of other negative impacts to my quality of life that I will not detail here right now. For now, all is clear, no breast cancer, no ovarian cancer, no uterine cancer (and that is huge news!!).  Let me just say, it has been really hard and it is not over. I know they often say cancer treatment can be worse than cancer. I don't even know, I think they are just both awful. And even though I experienced some statistically very unlikely negative outcomes from treatments (along with the intended positive outcomes I'm reporting today)

I really do feel lucky in a million ways, and very very grateful.  

Thank you.

To everyone who wrote me a message on here or donated to the GoFundMe--every time that happened I felt less alone, more cared for, more held in community and in mind.  Thank you.  I also felt buoyed by my work, being able to continue to show up offering care to others, to use my mind and my experience in the service of caring for others who are also suffering, to have spaces that were not about me but where I could be competent and other-focused held me together in many ways. I really appreciate that through all of this I *mostly* could still show up, and when I couldn't, I didn't. 

I am not being dramatic when I say that the last year has ravaged me. The current state of my body and my heart are evidence (I think I've cried about 100 times this week and I was crap at wrestling my son last night).  My job now is to start to re-build, to start to build health.   My oncologist has recommended a Mediterranean diet and lifestyle, so I, of course would like to go to the Mediterranean--I'm thinking to Italy where I can ultimately retire. You can help me get there.

In all seriousness though, I will be working to prioritize caring for my body and my heart/whole life, while I also will continue to care for my awesome kids, partner,  clients  and patients. I will have testing (MRI/Mamos) every 6 months to make sure the cancer isn't paying another visit. For now, we're good.  Thanks for being here with me.

Patients and caregivers love hearing from you; add a comment to show your support.
Help Natalie Stay Connected to Family and Friends

A $25 donation to CaringBridge powers a site like Natalie's for two weeks. Will you make a gift to help ensure that this site stays online for them and for you?

Comments Hide comments

Show Your Support

See the Ways to Help page to get even more involved.

SVG_Icons_Back_To_Top
Top