Your Mind, Prostate Cancer, and the hobby from hell

Posted by hans_casteels @hanscasteels, Apr 9 3:46pm

Let’s raise a glass — not to survival, but to the brain: that twitchy bundle of neurons that insists on interpreting every prostate cancer side effect like it's the end of a Greek tragedy. The disease itself is already absurd — slow-moving but relentless, inconvenient yet existential, like being mugged in slow motion by your own endocrine system. But the real sadist? Your mind.

Chapter One: Psychological Torture, Now in Glandular Format
Prostate cancer doesn’t just attack the body. It recruits your psyche as an accomplice. You’re forced to navigate biopsies, hormone swings, and urinary sabotage while your brain mutters, “But what does it mean?”

The literature (of course there's literature) tells us that a “positive mindset” helps — less fatigue, fewer mood disorders, even better immune response. Apparently, delusion is medicine now. According to a 2015 Psycho-Oncology review, optimists enjoy lower distress and inflammation, possibly because they believe their cytokines can be reasoned with.

Pessimists — those realists with PhDs in worst-case scenarios — suffer more. Likely due to something called “somatic hypervigilance,” which basically means you feel everything and assume it’s cancer. Again.

Chapter Two: Married to a Psychiatrist — AKA Emotional Exposure Therapy
Being married to a shrink during cancer treatment is a special kind of masochism. You get empathy, sure — but also constant analysis. “Tell me how that made you feel,” they say, while you're crying in a hospital gown that’s all draft and no dignity. It's like being comforted by Freud with a scented candle.

Chapter Three: Control Is an Illusion, but It’s a Nice One
People who think they have control fare better. Diet, meditation, even placebo-riddled supplements — it doesn’t matter. The illusion of agency soothes the limbic system. Think of it as psychological Botox: fake, temporary, but weirdly effective.

Even mindfulness helps. CBT, journaling, groups — basically anything short of screaming into traffic. Why? Because the brain responds better to structure than chaos, even if that structure involves writing odes to your withered libido.

Chapter Four: The Carnival of Cognitive Distortions
A cancer diagnosis turns your brain into a rogue theme park of cognitive distortions:

Catastrophizing: “This back pain? Terminal. Obviously.”

All-or-nothing thinking: “If I don’t beat this, I’m just a PSA statistic with a Netflix password.”

Personalization: “This is karma for that bacon-wrapped hot dog in ‘97.”

The brain doesn’t just process trauma — it editorializes it, adds backstory, then casts you as the villain and the victim.

Chapter Five: Learned Helplessness — Now with Free Wi-Fi
Martin Seligman’s bleak little theory comes to life in every waiting room. You start strong, asking questions, demanding second opinions. Then one day you’re just... compliant. Bent over, gown open, whispering “just tell me when to breathe.”

This isn’t weakness. It’s classical conditioning. The psyche numbs itself to survive. Beige walls, endless scans, the scent of antiseptic despair — it wears you down until you’re just another flesh sack on a schedule.

Chapter Six: Coping — Choose Your Poison
There are three main styles of cancer coping:

Approach-oriented: Meditation, research, over-sharing. Admirable. Also exhausting.

Avoidant: Denial, distractions, weird hobbies involving wood glue. Effective until your next PSA test.

Humor-based: My people. Gallows humor, sarcasm, irreverence. Not everyone’s cup of tea, but oddly therapeutic. Studies show it lowers cortisol. So yes — that penis joke is technically medicinal.

Chapter Seven: Optimism vs. Realism — Who Dies Better?
Toxic positivity is spiritual gaslighting. But functional optimism? That’s different. It’s not “everything happens for a reason” — it’s “this sucks, but I’ll make it funny.” Shelley Taylor’s “positive illusions” theory suggests believing you're in control (even when you're not) actually boosts survival. Apparently, lying to yourself — just a little — keeps the immune system from curling up and quitting.

Pessimists may be accurate, but they don’t age gracefully. They just die right and bitter.

Chapter Eight: Meaning-Making — The Final Mind Trick
Eventually, your brain tries to assign meaning. Not because cancer is deep — but because we are. The psyche can’t accept random horror. It needs a story: “I’ve grown.” “I see life differently now.” “I cry less during pharmaceutical commercials.”

Sure, maybe cancer teaches gratitude. Or maybe it just teaches you that adult diapers are a racket. Either way, meaning-making improves mental health. Even if your story is just a sarcastic monologue about hot flashes and waiting-room chairs made by sadists.

Epilogue: Your Brain, The Frenemy
So here you are: a bag of symptoms, hopes, side effects, and bad metaphors. Your body is navigating treatment. Your mind is narrating the whole damn thing with unreliable commentary.

But as much as the mind sabotages, it also saves. It reframes. It rebels. It laughs in the face of hormone therapy and finds metaphors in rectal thermometers. It reminds you — sometimes — that you're still in here somewhere, snark and all.

And if that’s not resilience, I don’t know what is.

Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Prostate Cancer Support Group.

Thank you and that was the idea. The forum is full of questions and answers and advice on how to deal with particular aspects of prostate cancer. I thought that a broader context was missed. Trying to fill that void, and at the same time, channel my anger into writing. I am glad you like it. Thank you.

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