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Cancer Faith

Help! My Loved One has Cancer. A Guide to Helping Those Recently Diagnosed with Cancer

When you are diagnosed with cancer, your life can feel flipped up on its end. You are having to juggle new information, with making weighty decisions, while on an emotional rollercoaster. Those first few days/weeks/months are not easy. But they aren’t easy on those around us either.

Family and friends don’t always know what to say or do when they hear that a loved one was diagnosed with cancer. You are unsure how to talk about the new life change, fearing that you’ll upset your loved one. Perhaps you send them all the latest research you’ve found on Google. Maybe you organize a meal schedule. Or perhaps you do nothing, because you just don’t know what they need.

I’ve been asked by numerous people in the last year “My loved one has just been diagnosed with cancer. What can I do?”

I’m here to give you my personal guide to helping those recently diagnosed with cancer.

  1. Weep with those who weep

Romans 12:15 tell us to “Rejoice with those who rejoice, weep with those who weep.” Be willing to sit in the pain with your friend. Hug them, tell them how much they are loved, and be a shoulder to cry on. Dealing with pain, fear, emotions, can be hard for us as people. But, when my friends simply sat in the ashes with me, crying, I felt supported and cared for. I knew that their heart hurt as much as mine did, and it made the pain easier to bear.

2. Ask the questions

Until I was diagnosed with cancer, I really knew nothing. It’s amazing what happens when you get a crash course in cancer 101. I wanted to talk about my cancer. I wanted to tell people my story and to share how I was doing. Don’t feel afraid to ask “How are you?” with the desire to really hear how your loved one is doing. And if “how are you?” feels trite, ask “How are you feeling today? How is the chemo effecting you this week?”

3. Research, but only so much

I’m not a cynical person, but y’all, we are all dying. And if you do enough Google researching, we are all dying tomorrow of some incurable disease. But, listen to me – please research what your loved one is going through. Ask what chemotherapy s/he is taking and research side effects. Research the terms, and stages, and grades. Then stop. Walk away. Unless your loved one has asked you – do not give them a list of ways to “naturally beat cancer”. Don’t tell them that you read some article and think they need to try this one supplement. Dealing with cancer is bad enough without having to second guess the decisions we are making with our doctors. So… research enough to understand what your loved one is enduring, but then stop.

4. Be a Mary Poppins

Or hire a Mary Poppins. My treatment got so bad that I couldn’t walk up the stairs in our house without feeling faint. Cleaning? Yeah, that’s not going to happen. Cooking? Ugh. Too sick for that. Know what my friends did? They hired a maid to come once a week and they brought my family dinners and cared for my kids.  Y’all. Can I get an Amen? Talk about seeing your community love of you in a big way.

5. Touch base

To this day, I have friends send me random texts letting me know they are praying for my health and that they love me. These sweet reminders let me know that I’m not alone. Even if my journey of chemotherapy is done, my journey with friends certainly isn’t.

Most importantly, don’t be afraid to mess up. Fumble with your words, be awkward. It is okay. More than anything, your loved one wants to know that you care about them, not that you have the perfect words, that you have great answers.

I heard a wonderful sermon this past weekend that taught on 1 Peter 1:22 “Having purified your souls by your obedience to the truth for a sincere brotherly love, love one another earnestly from a pure heart.” We are to love with an earnest love, a love that knows no bounds. We are asked to help carry the burden of our loved ones. We aren’t always going to do it perfectly. I mess up day after day (just ask my family).

So, if you have a loved one who has been diagnosed with cancer, weep with them, ask them questions, research, help them, and most importantly, love them as you have been loved.

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Faith

Good Friday to Good Friday; It Is Finished

Good Friday, 2016 – I began my first round of chemotherapy.

Good Friday, 2017 – I finished my last round of chemotherapy.

This past Friday I finished my herceptin chemotherapy. I didn’t share much about taking herceptin because it’s a low dose of chemotherapy and quiet frankly doesn’t make me sick. After being on four different, painfully awful chemotherapy drugs, herceptin is a walk in the park.

There are been a mix of emotions with the end of chemotherapy. I am so grateful to be done, but sad to not see my infusion nurses every few weeks. I am so grateful to not have cancer in my body, but sad to not have such a close relationship with my doctors.

Today was even more mixed emotions.

I had my port removed.

PortRemoval

It seems weird, I’m sure, but I have become attached to my port. It’s become a security blanket to me. Something I truly hated, has become something I love. My port means my body is fighting. My port means I am winning. My port means cancer is defeated.

My port has become part of me. This small contraption has signified so much in my life and now it’s gone.

I processed these mixed emotions with some friends yesterday, and today was reminded by a sweet friend to take the time I need to grieve. Grieving over the loss of a port sounds odd when I think about it, but grief isn’t meant to look a certain way. So today I’m going to shed some tears for my port and all that it did for me.

And tomorrow I will celebrate my first day as a new creation – one without a trace of cancer or cancer related relics in my body.

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Faith

Filling in the Blanks

2016 was a punk of a year. I don’t know too many people who just loved this year. From the election, to world tragedies, to cancer, 2016 won’t be missed.

As ridiculous as 2016 was I can still fill in the blanks with all the great things that happened.

I was diagnosed with cancer.

I was declared cancer free.

Our family face so.many. challenges.

Our family has never been closer.

I underwent three surgeries.

My doctors were amazing and my healing went faster than anyone expected.

I had a serious meltdown in November.

My family and friends supported me yet again through my anguish.

Through God’s grace, I’ve been given this life to live for a little longer. And as painful as 2016 has been, I’m choosing to fill in the blanks with all the good memories.