|
|
| |
|
|
| |
Life Support
WebMD Feature from "Women's Health" Magazine
By Kelly Corrigan
5 ways to help a friend with
cancer - even if it scares the crap out of you.
I bet you know me. I'm the friend who bought you
a really funny birthday card, but when your big
day came around I couldn't find it, so I whipped
off an e-mail instead. Oh, and when you called,
I meant to ask about your mom's knee surgery,
but I started blabbing about how I got another
parking ticket. Then I volunteered to bring
homemade cookies to the team party and showed up
with a box of generic vanilla wafers instead.
In the cosmic accounting books, I'm minus one to
just about everyone I know.
So I would have understood if my August 2004
diagnosis of Stage III breast cancer failed to
elicit waves of support.
But all my pathetic and heartfelt apologies must
have paid off, because there I was, floating in
a sudden swell of kindness as I stared down a
7-centimeter tumor.
At 36, I was the first run-in for most of my
friends with the turbocharged Hummer that is
cancer. So I went easy on the ones who
unintentionally made things worse -- like by
asking if my two young daughters were now at
increased risk.
But for the sake of your friend who has cancer,
or may have it someday, let me share some
advice. (Names and details have been altered to
disguise the identities of the loving and
well-meaning, except in the case of my husband,
whose name is Edward Lichty and who has already
apologized for himself.)
Remember, most of us don't look good in yellow.
Lance Armstrong can trigger feelings of
inadequacy in the best of us. Even his heroic
name, straight from a Dickens novel, can make a
girl feel puny and defenseless. Although I
enjoyed reading about his ordeal and all those
yellow jerseys after my treatment was over,
early mentions of him made me wonder if I really
had what it took to conquer the beast, or even
if I deserved to win. After all, I'm just a mom
who writes a local newspaper column. I don't
have the endurance to win the Tour de France --
I can barely get through Pump class down at the
Y.
My husband picked up Armstrong's biography while
I was in chemo and read it in three extended,
obsessive sittings (when he could have been
pampering me instead), only lifting his head to
make the occasional remark, like: "Boy, Lance
had it so much worse than you do. He had to do
chemo 5 days in a row." The fact is, Lance
Armstrong's legendary fight against testicular
cancer relied on a very specific blend of
chemotherapy drugs that are as relevant to
today's breast cancer patient as a lobotomy.
Which brings me to a larger point...
Avoid comparisons.
You know, like: "My friend's neighbor's sister
had breast cancer 5 years ago and now she kayaks
to work and competes in kickboxing!" Every case
has elements that make chemo more or less
effective, that make surgery more or less
imperative, that make survival more or less
probable.
Play Godfather.
Back in the '70s, Marlon Brando delivered the
line "I'm going to make him an offer he can't
refuse," which is now the motto of all
self-respecting mobsters and salesmen -- and is
also a good rule of thumb for the friend of the
breast cancer patient.
An example of an offer that can't be refused
(which is the opposite of saying "Please let me
know if there's something I can do") was when my
friend Katy sneaked over the week before
Halloween to decorate and brought a
jack-o'-lantern, a couple bags of Snickers, even
fuzzy fake bats. If Katy had called to ask if I
needed anything, I probably wouldn't have asked
her to carve a pumpkin for me and stretch
cobwebs on the bushes. But when what you need is
a normal life, it's hard to put it into words.
Which is why I loved Katy's gesture -- for the
simple reason that it meant my kids didn't have
to have a mom who was sick and miss out on
Halloween too.
Add life.
Remember in E.T. when the potted flowers turn
brown and die? Cell warfare doesn't leave much
time for chores like scrubbing the bathtub or
weeding. So where my flower beds used to sing
out to me about the exuberance of life, during
my treatment they became an unavoidable symbol
of decay.
What can I say? Cancer turns everyday things
into existential symbols. Dirty laundry, dust
bunnies, and empty refrigerators quickly become
images of disorder and loss of control. So snip
off spent blossoms, water her plants. Drop a bag
of groceries on her front porch. If you can
swing it cash-wise, send over a housecleaner --
preferably on a chemo day so she has no choice
but to accept.
Say anything.
If you're still hesitant to reach out, remember:
Simple, even clich, is totally fine. "I'm
thinking of you" never gets old. "That cancer
doesn't have a chance against you" is
empowering. "I'm rooting for you" feels good.
Some of the most fortifying messages were from
friends I hadn't seen in forever or people I'd
recently met. And I particularly appreciated the
cards I got once treatment was well under way
and the game started to drag a bit. It took me
the better part of a year to get rid of that
tumor, and every time I looked up in the stands,
even in months 7 and 8, there they were: a
handful of devoted fans, on their feet, who
weren't leaving until the ref lifted my arm in
victory.
Whatever you do, don't let the idea of
perfection stop you.
Sure, there's a card out
there that's just right, but if you can't find
it, or you lose it, an e-mail works too. And I
promise you, generic vanilla wafers, given with
love, taste just like the real thing.
© WebMD Inc. All rights reserved.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
| |
|
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
Some
of the most fortifying messages were from friends I
hadn't seen in forever or people I'd recently met. |
|
|
|
| |
|
|