When Your Life Is Touched by Cancer: Practical Advice and Insights for Patients, Professionals, and Those Who Care
By Bob Riter
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Reviews for When Your Life Is Touched by Cancer
6 ratings1 review
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Highly recommend this book.
It's got really great general information for patients, their caregivers, family and friends.
My mom and my best friend are currently undergoing cancer treatments, one has the "good" cancer, the other one a "bad" cancer. I found some really great tips in this book on how to support them, without being annoying about it.
I'm so glad I read this book.
Book preview
When Your Life Is Touched by Cancer - Bob Riter
Introduction
I first noticed a small lump under my left nipple one summer night. I wasn’t especially concerned until a few weeks later when I noticed bleeding from that nipple. My reaction was more surprise than worry. I had assumed a man’s nipple was more or less ornamental without plumbing behind it.
I went to see my family doctor who sent me to a surgeon who did a biopsy. The report came back: breast cancer. I was 40 years old, in good health, had no family history of the disease, but there I was writing mastectomy
on my calendar for August 30. It was all quite surreal.
Although breast cancer is rare in men, it’s essentially the same disease as it is in women. One difference is that men almost always undergo a mastectomy. Of course, losing a breast does not have the same significance for a man as for a woman. On the flip side, men are more likely to go around shirtless. I’m usually the only single-nippled fellow in the pool.
Shortly after being diagnosed, I opened a fortune cookie and read a message that said, You have yet to live the best years of your life.
At the time, I wasn’t sure if I was supposed to find that comforting or worrisome, but it’s proven to be true.
For more than 12 years, I’ve worked at the Cancer Resource Center of the Finger Lakes. Most of our work involves helping people through a cancer diagnosis and treatment. We listen, provide support, and create a sense of community.
I routinely talk with patients, their loved ones, and the professionals involved in their care. I often see miscommunications because patients hesitate to ask questions, loved ones make incorrect assumptions about what the patient really wants, and health professionals misjudge the patient’s level of understanding.
I also lead patient support groups and lecture to providers. I hear what patients wish their providers knew and what providers wish their patients knew.
My goal in writing this book is to help patients, their loved ones, and their health professionals communicate more effectively. Above all, I want to empower patients to understand that they are in control of their care.
Each chapter in the book first appeared as a newspaper column about cancer that I write for the Ithaca Journal. Most columns were suggested by a question posed by a patient or a patient’s loved one. I realized that other people probably had the same questions, so I began the column to share my observations with a broader audience.
This book maintains the feel of a column with short, standalone chapters. This seems to work for people just diagnosed with cancer because they tend to have brief attention spans. Their minds are spinning in a thousand directions and they tend to browse rather than read a book cover to cover.
Some chapters are written from my personal experience as a cancer survivor, and others are written from my perspective as a professional in the cancer world. Many incorporate both perspectives.
People often ask how cancer changed me. I began to worry less about the future and began asking myself if I was happy and making a difference in my community.
What I enjoy most is connecting with people touched by cancer and helping them have sometimes difficult conversations with their loved ones, friends, and health professionals.
That’s what this book is all about.
1
Just Diagnosed
Advice for Those Newly Diagnosed
The first few days following a cancer diagnosis are like riding on top of a speeding train. You’re hanging on for dear life and can’t quite see what’s ahead. Although every situation is somewhat different, this is what I generally suggest:
Focus on one step at a time. If you are having a biopsy next week, focus on that biopsy and do not let your mind wander to what might happen next.
Take someone with you to medical appointments. They can take notes and help you remember what was said.
Do not hesitate to ask your doctor to repeat something.
Be wary when family members, friends, and complete strangers say, You should do....
Though well-intentioned, they do not know what is best for you.
Know that you control whom you want to be told about your cancer diagnosis and when to tell them.
Remember that cancer treatments change rapidly. What you hear from people who were treated in the past is out of date.
Understand that cancer is not a single disease. What you hear about cancer in other people probably does not apply to your cancer.
Remember that survival statistics are averages. They can be helpful if you want a general idea of the prognosis for people with your disease, but they can’t predict what will happen to you as an individual.
Do not hesitate to get a second opinion if you think it might be helpful. Your doctor won’t mind. (If your doctor does mind, you should get another doctor.)
Take a breath. A new cancer diagnosis is rarely a medical emergency. You generally have several days or even weeks to explore your options. (Some situations do require immediate attention—ask your doctor how long it is safe to wait before beginning treatment.)
Do not begin a radical cancer curing
diet or any major lifestyle changes before or during treatment. Just eat sensibly and nutritiously, exercise moderately, and get plenty of rest. You can make whatever lifestyle and diet changes you want after treatment is over.
Conserve your energy for activities that are most important to you. Nearly everyone undergoing cancer treatment experiences fatigue. It is probably the most common and least publicized side effect.
Do not be discouraged by the down days. Nothing goes in a straight line. You will feel better one day; then you will feel worse; then you will feel better.
Being diagnosed with cancer is life changing for many and life disruptive for nearly everyone. It is difficult at first, but once the decisions are made and treatment begins, most people gradually regain their rhythms. Cancer isn’t fun, but treatment often ends up being more manageable than people expect. It’s a club that no one wants to join, but trust me, you’re in good company.
Good Cancers and Bad Cancers
I routinely talk with people who have just been diagnosed with cancer. They’re struggling with treatment decisions and the realization that life is suddenly different.
I also talk with people with advanced cancer who are coming to terms with a poor prognosis and the realization that, in all likelihood, they will die prematurely because of that cancer.
It is particularly devastating to receive both rounds of bad news at once—that you have cancer and that a cure is unlikely.
In the regular world all cancer is bad, but in oncology offices there are good cancers and there are bad cancers. I realize that good cancer
sounds like an oxymoron, but cancer professionals often think in those terms. Good cancers are generally curable.
Of course, if it’s your cancer, it’s never a good cancer,
a garden variety cancer,
or any other term that seemingly diminishes your fears or the disruption of your life.
Breast cancer and prostate cancer are the most common cancers (aside from skin cancer), and they’re generally good
cancers. People who receive these diagnoses undergo treatment and then return to their normal lives. In all likelihood, they will die many years later of something else.
But people who are diagnosed with the bad
cancers often die from those cancers. New treatments are increasingly able to extend lives—often for many years—but a cure is the exception rather than the rule.
There are, however, survivors of even the worst diagnoses. I love meeting people who were treated for bad
cancers years ago and are still going strong. There are no