After treatment · 6 minute read
The quiet after
the storm.
Everyone tells you treatment ends. Nobody quite tells you that some things only start when it does. The fear, the questions, the body that doesn't quite feel like yours. This is for that bit.
Going back to "normal" (or not)
In the months after active treatment, you might find:
- Your energy hasn't returned, even though everyone assumes it has
- You feel low — sometimes lower than you did during treatment
- Friends and family stop asking, just when you'd most like them to
- Every twinge feels like a recurrence
- Going back to work is harder than expected
- Relationships feel different — sometimes closer, sometimes harder to navigate
None of that is failure. It's recovery doing its slow, untidy work.
Returning to work
Most people return part-time at first, building up over weeks or months. There's no "right" speed. Your GHA team can write to your employer with recommended hours, and BCSG can connect you with someone in Gibraltar who's done the same return — useful for everything from "when do I have the energy conversation?" to "how do I tell my manager about hospital appointments?"
Fear of recurrence
For most people, the fear is loudest in the first year or two, especially around scans and check-ups, then quietens. It rarely disappears completely — and that's OK. Some things that help:
- Talking. Not bottling it up. Particularly with other people who get it.
- Knowing the signs to look out for, so you don't have to scan every twinge.
- Mindfulness, exercise, sleep — boring but powerful.
- A counsellor, if it's interfering with your life. BCSG can signpost.
The body after treatment
Surgery, radiotherapy and hormone therapy all leave their marks. Some are physical (scars, lymphoedema, joint pain), some emotional. Things that help: a good physiotherapist, the right bra (M&S vouchers can help here), gentle exercise, and — over time — making peace with a body that has done remarkable work to keep you here.
Relationships
Partners often have their own delayed reaction. Children may need to talk about it months after they seem fine. Friends may not know what to say. None of this is unusual. Open conversations, even short ones, are worth more than perfect ones.
Looking after future you.
Follow-up care
You'll have regular check-ups — usually annual mammograms and oncology appointments — for at least 5 years. Don't skip them. Write down anything you've noticed before you go in.
Bone & heart health
Hormone therapy can affect bones; some chemo drugs affect the heart. Your team will monitor this. Strength training, calcium, vitamin D and regular cardio all help.
Lifestyle factors
Maintaining a healthy weight, regular activity, limiting alcohol — all reduce the chance of recurrence. Not perfection, just consistency.
Stay connected to BCSG
Many people drift back to us months or years after treatment ends — for a chat, an event, or just a familiar voice. We're not going anywhere.
If today is one of those days, call us.
Some days are fine. Some aren't. You don't need a "reason" to ring. That's what we're here for.