Sorry to hear your stress OP, off phone now so can type properly.
my thread - from April this year
Dad was diagnosed through PSA in April. they said it was localised and non aggressive. He is also young - late 50s.
He has looked through all the options and decided on radiotherapy over surgery (equal success rates, and any side effects tend to be temporary, where surgical ones can be permanent). Brachytherapy I think is even better, but not an option for my dad, as he had an enlarged prostate, apparently.
My dad is also being calm, and I veer from being practical and positive about it (you know that many men are found to have had it after they have died from something else at an old age!) to thinking "Fuck my DAD has CANCER" which isn't helpful.
He is about halfway through hormone therapy and will begin his radiotherapy early in September. He will be in hospital every weekday and expects t to take less than half an hour. He has asked for the first appt of the day, so hopes to be done by 9am and for life to carry on as normal. Time will tell. The impression I get is that the main side effects are cumulative (tiredness etc) and so he may be fine for a few weeks and then it will hit him.
I find that I want to know, so was constantly nagging my parents, when will he make a decision, when will he start treatment? I tried not to but it's the way I cope, to know all the facts and make plans. What I want to know now, is when he will hopefully get the "all clear" and then will life for him just go back to normal? Is he then more prone to it recurring than any other man?
I realise this has been more about me than you, sorry. I find it helpful to chat about this stuff, so let me know if you don't want that.