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.
Tried to teach our kids Empathy, Altruism, and Work Ethic. Thanks for sharing.
I would have liked your wife! Ventibug
Thanks @ventibug I appreciate your kind words. My journey though grief is almost as hard, and in some aspects harder, than my years as caregiver. The most valuable lesson I have learned is the oft quoted 'stages of grief' are not at all what the majority of individual experience as they live in grief. But that is for another discussion another time.
I know my wife felt as you did...not liking to be the one on the receiving end all the time. She did finally come to accept it as an inevitability, but it took a few years.
Strength, courage, and peace!
@ventibug Personally I think that is the best thing we can do!
Cheers to you and your spouse!
@jamienolson oh I have plenty of anxiety to share but, yes, I need help navigating. I dont know how to start a thread. Where is the "start a thread" button? We all know life is not fair, but my Iphone croaked the week I started chemo. I was so mad that Apple wouldnt do anything to help me with a 23 m/o Iphone on recall that i refused to buy another one! Now Im trying to learn a new Samsung phone! Joke is on me!
I bet you would have @ventibug She was a pistol for sure! 100% full Italian, driven, loving, and an amazing partner who always had my back. She and I were about polar opposites. She was creative, an artist, and an entrepreneur who created a chain of five children's clothing stores and then reinvented herself as an accomplished interior designer. I don't have a creative bone in my body, can't draw in a coloring book, and always worked for large firms.
At the end of her life, when she was designing her Celebration of Life, she asked me to get a second sheet of paper. I did and asked why. She said it would be for the list of those folks she wanted me to invite to her Celebration. I said 'honey, these things are not usually done 'by invitation only' you know!' She responded with (pardon the language) 'Scott, I don't want someone in our living room blowing smoke up your a*s telling you how much they cared about me after I'm dead, when they didn't give a sh*t about me when I was alive'.
56 names. 54 attended (the only two who missed were overseas). She even picked the wine to be served. We drained 62 bottles that night!
Yes, I think you might have enjoyed her!
Strength, courage, and peace!
@nogginquest. Thanks for your honesty. I am already tired of being told not to be negative. I am human. Some of my emotions in response to loss & grief are negative. I dont want to stop being fully human. Silly people. I have never liked simplistic responses to complex human experiences.
@kateia. Thank you for persisting in relationship with your friend. Many herein have mentioned their loss when friends/relatives dissapear from their lives when they have cancer. Please do not underestimate the value to her of "being with", just adapting the pace and pattern of the last 2 years of your friendship, and staying in relationship. When I have done that, I have always been so blessed; I am certain I received more than I gave to my dieing friends. Now, to learn the corresponding role as i am the patient. Ah, gee, another Dang learning experience!
@shortshot80 Hi Nancy. Can you at least tell us what kind of book you are writing?
@ventibug
You are sooo right! Simplistic responses to complex problems are not at all helpful. They reflect a lack of understanding. I have learned to soften my irritation to simplistic responses by realizing that they simply don't understand my situation and chalk off their response to ignorance and lack of experience in the tough stuff of life.
Groups like Connect give us a place to share with others who understand. That is probably why we are all here.
Teresa