Talking Frankly about Living with Advanced Cancer
Are you living with advanced cancer (sometimes referred to as stage 4 or metastatic cancer)?
This discussion is a safe space where you can connect with others to talk about the realities of living with limited time. It's not easy to find people who understand what it is like. For many reasons, you may not feel comfortable talking about your thoughts and emotions with friends or family. Perhaps you are alone. Even if you are surrounded by people who support you, you may experience intense loneliness.
Connect is a place where honest conversation can safely take place. You can speak frankly and be heard without judgement. I invite you to share your reality facing death and living now.
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Cancer Support Group.
Thank you so much for this detailed reply. So sorry for your loss, but glad that you seem to be at peace with your decisions. I need more info like this to make decisions of my own. God bless.
With tears in my eyes from reading your experience I sincerely hope your future holds beautiful things for you. You certainly deserve it.
Of all the hard things I've had to do since learning of Mitchell's inconceivable but unavoidable death, telling all of you was one of the hardest. I'm still crying. I wish you peace in your journey as you make your decisions.
I will tell you that I "feel" Mitchell with me, encouraging me. Whether anyone believes it or not, the night after he died, he came to me as clear as anything and said, "I built this for you; don't you give up". He meant our life that we built together, and to not give up living because it is a gift that must not be wasted.
Peace be with you,
Lauren
It breaks my heart to hear you're so unhappy that you'd rather not consider your options other than refusing surgery and further treatment. There are no guarantees in life--I didn't think I'd end up with stage 3 extremely aggressive, serous endometrial cancer. But there you have it. And I at one point thought "What's the point of going through all this pain and nausea and numb fingers and and toes, if it's going to get me in the end anyway?" My life isn't great: I don't have a particularly good relationship with my spouse either, and most times I don't feel like going home after being out with friends. Neither do I have children or anyone else significant in my life. But, I still hope that the treatment will work, even if it's a just a little bit to make my days a little easier. In fact, the treatment I'm on now (I had previous chemo treatments that didn't work) has shrunk my tumors, yet minimally to my lymph nodes. I have decided to take more control over the direction my own life once I receive the results of my next CT scan. This will mean addressing my home-life situation, work, travel, and whatever else I need to do to live the life I want, for how ever long that may be. I regret not having this conversation with myself while I was healthy.
You too can get out of your situation, if you take control and look to the future rather than at your present circumstance.
Hi Lauren,
I'm so sorry to hear of the death of your wonderful husband. I know it's hard to lose a loved one. My husband died last July, 2024. I miss him terribly. I believe what you said about your husband coming to you the night after he died. That's wonderful! I feel my husband's presence after he died also. Both of our husbands are up in Heaven and out of pain. We will be with them eventually in God's time. It's just hard waiting. What helps me is prayer and a lot of it. I also talk to my husband. That helps too.
I wish you the best and will say a prayer for you.
PML
Hello all, I am sitting here crying, My husband went in for a cardiac catheterization on March 13 that turned to a nightmare. He coded twice and died the next day. He never was conscious so I could not say a goodbye to him that he could hear.
Just like you I talk to him and hold him in my heart.
Love, Eileen