I've never taken or been near a person on chemo but don't people tend to get symptoms that would make riding a bike incredibly difficult ?
As far as I know you're supposed to get someone else to take you to and from just to be safe.
Also climate change is such a long-standing political lie based on real issues that I'm still surprised it lasted this long. Then again so does the "increase minimum wage->inflation->repeat" cycle
I've been told undergoing chemo is like running a marathon- a woman I work with had to go thru it and she had to keep taking those Boost energy drinks.
Some are basically poison that will kill-off more cancerous cells than normal cells in a bid you'll survive and the cancer won't, or claw a few weeks and months of extra life. You're going to suffer alot and be exhausted. It might kill you faster than the cancer could.
Some treatments for some types of cancers manage to target the cancer cells rather well, reach and kill the cancer easily, and spare most of everything else. That's usually well tolerated.
Than said, fuck that pozzed org for virtue-signaling standing on the neck of sick people. It's not their place to do Climate Cult activism. Yet another subversion.
My co-workers husband who is in his early 30's with an inoperable brain tumor doesn't need to worry about this fucking shit, he's already been dealt the worst fucking luck, climate and the elites can go fuck themselves.
He is soo fucking sick from the chemo and radio therapy, he'd easily die trying to ride a fucking bike to an appointment.
Dude is likely to be dead by the end of the year leaving behind a 4 and 2 yo to grow up without a farther.
They won't even let you take a cab home from some hospitals. They want someone with you for a while after you get home in case of delayed complications.
Pre start of chemo, getting in as much exercise as possible to get your starting fitness as good as possible before they poison the shit out of you is a good idea, but once you start you will have trouble slowly walking to the end of the street, let alone ride a bike (YMMV as chemo covers a myriad of different treatments)
I've never taken or been near a person on chemo but don't people tend to get symptoms that would make riding a bike incredibly difficult ?
As far as I know you're supposed to get someone else to take you to and from just to be safe.
Also climate change is such a long-standing political lie based on real issues that I'm still surprised it lasted this long. Then again so does the "increase minimum wage->inflation->repeat" cycle
I've been told undergoing chemo is like running a marathon- a woman I work with had to go thru it and she had to keep taking those Boost energy drinks.
Depends for each cancer treatment.
Some are basically poison that will kill-off more cancerous cells than normal cells in a bid you'll survive and the cancer won't, or claw a few weeks and months of extra life. You're going to suffer alot and be exhausted. It might kill you faster than the cancer could.
Some treatments for some types of cancers manage to target the cancer cells rather well, reach and kill the cancer easily, and spare most of everything else. That's usually well tolerated.
Than said, fuck that pozzed org for virtue-signaling standing on the neck of sick people. It's not their place to do Climate Cult activism. Yet another subversion.
My co-workers husband who is in his early 30's with an inoperable brain tumor doesn't need to worry about this fucking shit, he's already been dealt the worst fucking luck, climate and the elites can go fuck themselves.
He is soo fucking sick from the chemo and radio therapy, he'd easily die trying to ride a fucking bike to an appointment.
Dude is likely to be dead by the end of the year leaving behind a 4 and 2 yo to grow up without a farther.
They won't even let you take a cab home from some hospitals. They want someone with you for a while after you get home in case of delayed complications. Pre start of chemo, getting in as much exercise as possible to get your starting fitness as good as possible before they poison the shit out of you is a good idea, but once you start you will have trouble slowly walking to the end of the street, let alone ride a bike (YMMV as chemo covers a myriad of different treatments)