If you’re healing from cancer or cancer treatments and are coping with radiation side effects, or side effects from chemotherapy,
you may feel overwhelmed. If you’ve been trying to heal from eczema and haven’t yet been able to clear it up, you may feel resigned or frustrated. If your life seems particularly demanding right now, if it’s pushing you to new limits, know that you don’t have to run full force to the finish line. You just have to do what is before you. You just have to take one step at a time. Take good care of yourself by resting, moving at a pace that feels comfortable, and allowing yourself to handle no more than what you can handle. Right now, you just have to take one step at a time.
Archive for the ‘Support’ Category
One Step at a Time
Life After Cancer Treatment Ends
You spend months juggling appointments and dealing with radiation side effects and the side effects from chemotherapy. You
make it through the diagnosis and then the demands of healing. You finally complete your treatment protocol and get a clean bill of health. Now what?
For many people, life doesn’t get “back to normal” – at least not right away. Life has to find a new normal. This may involve lifestyle and diet changes, a difference in outlook, or re-assessing your support network. You may still be coping with the effects of treatment on your body, such as fatigue, memory and concentration changes, pain, or menopause symptoms. You may be addressing body changes or a lowered sex drive. And as one cancer survivor put it so eloquently, “You’re always a little afraid of it coming back.”
So what do you do? How do you handle this beginning to the rest of your life? Here are some great resources to help you navigate life right after treatment ends:
Facing Forward: Life After Cancer Treatment
Cancer Survivors: Managing Your Emotions After Cancer Treatment
Cancer Treatment Side Effects: How To Apply Make-Up During Chemo
April Capil created this Makeup Tutorial for Women going through Chemotherapy because, during her journey through
breast cancer, she “found it discouraging that so many of the women we see on television and in the media (like Celia in WEEDS, Lynette in DESPERATE HOUSEWIVES, and Samantha in SEX AND THE CITY) are depicted as just having buzzed hair or bald heads. If you’ve had cancer and chemo, you know that’s NOT what you look like! Your hair thins, often not fallling completely out. You lose your eyebrows and eyelashes – often you don’t even recognize yourself when you look in the mirror!! It can be very discouraging and you don’t want to go out in public.
“It doesn’t have to be that way. With just a little effort, you can put your face together and feel more comfortable going out in public and not feeling like a freakshow. You just have to rediscover makeup again! Let this video be your inspiration, and check out other YouTube Channels like MichellePhan and MakeupGeek (women who are way, way more talented than me!).”
We LOVE the job she does here – how easy she makes it look to be beautiful!!! Thank you, April!
CLICK HERE FOR HER TUTORIAL.
How To Ask for Help
If you’re like most of us, just the idea of asking for help can bring up anxiety. But sometimes in life, we’re overwhelmed
and simply cannot move forward without the kind assistance of others. This can be especially true if we find ourselves in a healing process, working our way through cancer treatment, chemo and radiation side effects, chronic severe eczema, and so on.
If asking for help is new for you, here are a couple of tips to help you out:
1. Get Clear. What is it that you really need… A ride to the doctor’s office? Someone to cook for you or just sit with you a couple of hours?
2. Be Direct. Forthrightly ask for what you need so that the other person can get a realistic picture of what’s involved.
3. Let Go of Rejection. If someone says, “no,” it has nothing to do with whether you are worthy of being helped. It simply means that they are not available and someone else is better suited to help you. Keep asking until you find the right support.
4. Relax and Enjoy. If someone is helping you, let go and enjoy the assistance. Really use it as a time to receive and focus on your healing.
5. Say, “Thank You.” Sometimes saying a simple, “thank you” is enough. Other times, you might feel drawn to send a note or gift of appreciation. It’ll depend on the situation and friends can help you decide if you’re not sure.
Just think how good you feel when you’re able to do something kind for another person. The people in your life will generally feel the same way, so don’t assume your request is a burden for them. You may actually be the brightest part of their day.
Get Ready To Laugh!
You have probably heard how good laughing is for you ….how it boosts the immune system,
lowers stress hormones, decreases pain, relaxes muscles, and improves mood.
When is the last time you laughed? Have you made laughter a priority in your life? If not, we want to help you laugh more starting today.
Here are a few websites we’ve found that always seem to get us laughing. Do you have any others that you like? If yes, please share them! Post a comment with a link to the website.
Hyperbole and a Half
This is a particularly funny blog entry…you’ll be rolling on the floor laughing. We promise!
FML (F*** My Life)
Please forgive us for the crudeness here…..but, this site really is hysterical. With one sentence you can tell the world what was the one thing that ruined your day. Of course you get to read everybody else’s problems, some of which are completely hilarious and give you a fresh perspective on your own troubles.
The Oatmeal
Offers comics and quizzes to make you laugh.
Stand Up Comedy
These women are great – great ready to crack up!
Enter Our Book Giveaway!
Not Now…I’m Having a No Hair Day Book Giveaway
When most of us hear the word “cancer,” the last thing we think of doing is laughing. But humor uplifts our spirits,
opens our hearts, and boosts the immune system. This week, you have a chance to win a wonderfully fun book called Not Now…I’m Having a No Hair Day! It was inspired by the author’s experience with breast cancer and offers hope through the healing power of humor.
While author Christine Clifford paints a realistic picture of what it’s like to discover cancer, undergo surgery, and endure radiation and chemotherapy treatments, she finds humor in herself and her predicament. Throughout the book, her moments of fear, frustration, uncertainty, love and joy are captured by the gentle wit of illustrator Jack Lindstrom in 60 cartoons that reveal the vulnerability and strength of the human soul. Together, Clifford and Lindstrom show how the power of laughter and positive thinking go a long way toward promoting recovery and growth.
If you’d like to try for a chance to win Christine’s book for yourself or a friend, here’s what you need to do: Leave a comment by 6pm on Tuesday, February 8, 2011 and tell us why you’d love to have this book! If you have a funny story to share, tell us about that too!
What people are saying about Not Now…I’m Having a No Hair Day!
“…No Hair Day” is a wonderful book. Humor—that’s the most important ingredient for facing the enemy—cancer. I had breast cancer in 1979-surgery, chemotherapy for a year. I’m sure it was laughter from God that saved me.
- Julie Harris, Star of stage, screen and television.
I’ve always felt that humor is even better than chicken soup for the healing process. My friend Christine Clifford’s book handles grave subject matter with sensitivity and warmth.
- Jim Davis, Cartoonist and creator of Garfield
Some technical details…
1. Only one entry will count.
2. Giveaway is open to legal residents of the continental United States who are at least 18 years of age.
3. The winner will be selected at random and notified via email.
Transitioning After Treatment
What happens after treatment ends? After coping with the radiation side effects, the side effects of chemotherapy, the surgery, and so on. One woman in this video says it took the first year to get her body through treatment, and a second year to get her spirit through it. How has life after treatment been for you?
Let Yourself Grieve
Grieving is a natural process and many of us don’t allow ourselves to do it enough. Because life is constantly changing, we are
often leaving behind people or circumstances that were once very important to us. If we have been diagnosed with an illness, we may need to grieve the life that came before. We may feel sad about losing a sense of invulnerability or easy peace of mind. We may have to change the way we relate with others. Our bodies might never be the same, or perhaps recovery will help us feel better than ever, but we may have to say goodbye to our old lifestyle and way of relating with our physical form.
The trouble with denying our grief or stuffing it down, is that it never has a chance to wash through us and leave us clear and open to new, positive experiences. You may need to cry, sleep more, mope around for a day or two, or just talk to friends about your loss. But consider your grief real and legitimate – no matter what the perceived loss is. Allowing yourself to be real about how it feels to let go will bring you greater support and an internal sense of comfort about whatever changes you have been going through.
Letting the Light In
If we’ve just gotten a diagnosis about our health that scares us, we may feel like our world has gone dark. We may be unable to see past our present situation and remember that life truly does go on. And while there’s no guarantee about what the future holds, allowing the spark of hope to enter our hearts will make us much more available for the love and grace that await.
If you find it difficult or scary to entertain hope, here are a few ideas to help:
1. Consider the Possibilities. Just because you are afraid does not mean that you’re headed on a track towards the worst
possible outcome. Rather than miring yourself in negative projections, try opening up to the many possibilities that lay before you.
2. Focus on relationships. While everyone needs some alone time, isolating is a sure path down a slippery slope. Spend time with people who accept and love you the way you are. Share meals with friends and family. The more you can feel connected with others, the more naturally hopeful and positive you will become.
3. Choose to Feel. If you try to repress or ignore your emotions, they get stuck and eventually shut you down or cause you to lash out unfairly at others. If you can instead feel whatever comes up (e.g., fear, sadness, confusion, anger, jealousy) when it arises, you’ll remain much clearer to see the goodness in your life.
4. Trust Yourself. Believe in your own resourcefulness and creativity to handle whatever comes your way. This will help lift anxieties about the future and give you confidence in your ability to turn things around.
5. Make a plan. Find out all the information you need and start setting up a plan. It’s much easier to relax and feel hopeful when the most pressing or nerve-wracking decisions have already been dealt with.
6. Accept What Is. And sometimes what is, is difficult. Hope isn’t about avoiding what’s real. It’s about knowing that good is still possible, no matter what things look like at the moment.
How to Inspire Hope When Life Seems Hopeless
GUEST POST BY LORI HOPE
I recently had lunch with someone I often think of as my “miracle pal,” my dear friend Roxanne. Her advanced cervical cancer returned more than
a year ago, after an almost two year remission, but she has remained remarkably healthy.
Rox chose not to pursue any more conventional treatment. Her doctor told her that undergoing chemo again would only extend her life for a very short time, and since she was symptom-free, she chose to live her days fully, pursuing alternative treatment modalities, including and perhaps most important, what brings her joy.
But joy wasn’t what I saw as we waited for the black-haired waitress to bring our spicy tuna sandwiches. I sensed a sadness in Rox; It looked like hope had drained from her face like blood from a tournequeted finger. Knowing how private she is, I let her take the communicative lead; in other words, I simply asked in a nonchalant way how she was doing, and allowed her to choose the topic of conversation. She kept things light, but I could feel a heaviness sinking her soul.
I kept wondering how I could impart hope to her. Was that in fact even possible? It’s easy to dash hope; people inadvertently do it all the time by telling cancer “horror stories.” But how do you give someone hope, besides telling a success story of someone else who fared well or survived?
I know that telling people with cancer to think positively can actually make them feel worse. Yet everyone knows that thinking positively makes one feel more hopeful. So it would follow that people with cancer would want to be reminded, “You have to be positive.” Right?
Wrong. Hope is a feeling, while positive thinking is a mental construct. It can be nigh impossible to “change your mind” and think about the bright side when you’re traumatized. And it’s normal to feel sad, angry, and even hopeless when faced with a diagnosis of cancer.
But there is still great hope for inspiring hope. Here’s what I’ve found. When someone shows me they love me, when they demonstrate that they accept me for who I am, right now, even when I’m being cranky or negative, it makes me feel better, and therefore more hopeful. Studies show that social support increases feelings of hope.
When I’m criticized or told what to do, the implication is that I’m not doing it — whatever “it” is — well enough. That can undermine my confidence and make me feel worse.
Over lunch, I told my friend that I love being with her. That I love her calm energy, but that I love her whether her energy’s calm or not or whether she’s feeling up or down. I told her how much I love our friendship.
By providing comfort, love, and confidence, and by silently supporting her treatment or lack of treatment decision, even if it’s not the decision I would make, I think I inspired hope. At least I hope I did.
It’s always a struggle to say and do the “right thing,” and, sometimes nothing you say or do will be “right,” because your friend or loved one is so stressed and therefore mercurial. Hence, the statement that people with cancer want you to know, “My moods change day to day; please forgive me if I snap at you,” rings all too true all too often.
But by just being there, and by listening, you can make a world of difference. By telling someone you are thinking about them, that you love them, that you believe in them, you can help them live a richer, more meaningful, and more miraculous life.
Always hope,
Lori Hope
Cancer survivor, Lori Hope is the author of Help Me Live: 20 Things People with Cancer Want You to Know, Amazon.com’s second bestselling “cancer support” book. A newly expanded second edition of the book will be out next year. You can find more of Lori’s work on her blog. And if you’d like to participate in an anonymous survey about what was most helpful — and not so helpful — to you after receiving a cancer diagnosis, please click here. Participants will be eligible to receive a package of outstanding health and healing books.
