A Quote by Joan Kirner

I tried chemo, but chemo and I didn't agree, so we didn't persist. — © Joan Kirner
I tried chemo, but chemo and I didn't agree, so we didn't persist.
Doctors say there's no such thing as chemo brain, but ask any chemo patient.
Chemo days make me tired, though it's hard to say that's because of the chemo when you have kids who have inherited their dad's usual energy level.
A study of over 10,000 patients shows clearly that chemo's supposedly strong track record with Hodgkin's disease (lymphoma) is actually a lie. Patients who underwent chemo were 14 times more likely to develop leukemia and 6 times more likely to develop cancers of the bones, joints, and soft tissues than those patients who did not undergo chemotherapy .
I didn't have chemo.
Chemo is awful!
When you are doing chemo, you have a load of time.
I danced through chemo and radiation cycles.
If I was at the club you know I balled(bald), CHEMO.
I had a mastectomy in 1998, and then chemo.
Chemo gets all the notoriety, but for me, radiation was really the tough one.
Chemo is properly punishing, and it's hard to do things at the usual level.
The question was, which would the chemo kill first: the cancer or me?
Going through chemo is a monster. You literally feel like you're dying every day.
The steroids I'd been taking made me look bloated, and I'd lost my eyelashes due to the chemo.
I called the album 'The Chemo' because it seems like the industry and music overall is dying slowly.
Did I still feel like I'd been run over by a Mack Truck? Absolutely. It's chemo, after all.
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