relationship stress with cancer

lk
lk Member Posts: 6

Help. My husband has been fighting strong against stage 4 colon cancer. It has been tough, but he has been remarkable in fighting this. He is so strong for three years. But now he got an idea that I am cheating on him and it is eating him alive. I am not cheating in him, but nothing I say makes him believe me. I am fearful the stress if him thinking I did this is going to make his health worse. Help please

Comments

  • david54
    david54 Member Posts: 164 Member
    Hi IK-first I am sorry you

    Hi IK-first I am sorry you both are experiencing this struggle, cancer. While my wife does not think I am cheating on her, she does get nervous when I leave the house for what she percieves is too long. I find myself calling her when I'm out at the market or car wash and its taking longer than anticipated-I guess she does fear I am starting to "Move on with life" even though my life it totally committed to her! She gets nervous when I go upstairs for a long time and I'm not with her watching HGTV while she's asleep on the couch!  I'll tell you one thing, the food on "Country Kitchen" sure looks good, and I never had any idea Martha Stewart could cook as well as she does!!

    I think cancer alters our body appearance and in some ways, possibly, our spouses are acknowledging that they will leave us single at some point. That may be hard to hear, but I believe there is some truth to that. That being said, it hurts to think that the person we have sacrificed so much time and effort to supporting is suspecting us of being unfaithful. For my spouse, it has a lot to to with the former men in her life, when things got tough, they bailed. I am not anything like her previous partners, but I understand its what she has experienced.

    If it helps I recommend therapy, for you and or him or both. I get asked all the time if I am in therapy, as if there is no way I could cope without it, but there are times when it's useful.

    Take care

    David

  • Art in Austin
    Art in Austin Member Posts: 4
    david54 said:

    Hi IK-first I am sorry you

    Hi IK-first I am sorry you both are experiencing this struggle, cancer. While my wife does not think I am cheating on her, she does get nervous when I leave the house for what she percieves is too long. I find myself calling her when I'm out at the market or car wash and its taking longer than anticipated-I guess she does fear I am starting to "Move on with life" even though my life it totally committed to her! She gets nervous when I go upstairs for a long time and I'm not with her watching HGTV while she's asleep on the couch!  I'll tell you one thing, the food on "Country Kitchen" sure looks good, and I never had any idea Martha Stewart could cook as well as she does!!

    I think cancer alters our body appearance and in some ways, possibly, our spouses are acknowledging that they will leave us single at some point. That may be hard to hear, but I believe there is some truth to that. That being said, it hurts to think that the person we have sacrificed so much time and effort to supporting is suspecting us of being unfaithful. For my spouse, it has a lot to to with the former men in her life, when things got tough, they bailed. I am not anything like her previous partners, but I understand its what she has experienced.

    If it helps I recommend therapy, for you and or him or both. I get asked all the time if I am in therapy, as if there is no way I could cope without it, but there are times when it's useful.

    Take care

    David

    Thank you, David for your response to IK-first. As a man brand new to this painful part of our journey together, I feel hopeless and helpless in coping  with the news my wife and I just received, barely two days ago now, that has left us accutely aware of our love for each other and the possibility of that becoming a one-sided event for at least one of us in the worst case scenario. That refrain from Harry Nillson's song keeps running over and over  through my head, "Can't live if living is without you." https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f1_ZukxEpfs. We go later today for our second appointment post cat scan to speak with a Gynocologist about how to interpret the results and what next steps to take. Is their a board on this site that features mainly men speaking frankly with other men whose wives are going through this? I just want to fix this or make it all go away and am having trouble feeling the pain that keeps popping up.

  • Noellesmom
    Noellesmom Member Posts: 1,859 Member
    This is about his own self-doubt

    Not about anything you may or may not be doing.

    You've been fighting this right along with him.

    You can only do so much, lk.  You have a life to live and doing it while supporting his fight is difficult enough without added, unnecessary stress.

    You have my sympathy and empathy but also my advice that you not worry about the stress he is causing himself.  There is not a blessed thing you can do about it.

    Enough is enough.

  • david54
    david54 Member Posts: 164 Member

    Thank you, David for your response to IK-first. As a man brand new to this painful part of our journey together, I feel hopeless and helpless in coping  with the news my wife and I just received, barely two days ago now, that has left us accutely aware of our love for each other and the possibility of that becoming a one-sided event for at least one of us in the worst case scenario. That refrain from Harry Nillson's song keeps running over and over  through my head, "Can't live if living is without you." https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f1_ZukxEpfs. We go later today for our second appointment post cat scan to speak with a Gynocologist about how to interpret the results and what next steps to take. Is their a board on this site that features mainly men speaking frankly with other men whose wives are going through this? I just want to fix this or make it all go away and am having trouble feeling the pain that keeps popping up.

    Hi Art-
    That is a great

    Hi Art-

    That is a great question-a site for men to share their pain. I believe that we process our feelings of fear, anger, even joy differently than women do, its how we are programed so to speak.

    I hope the visit with your spouses Gynecologist was at least informational and hopeful as well.

    What was so difficult for my wife and I was the waiting. Waiting is torture. Routine, as stressful as it can be, becomes familiar.

  • KimberlyKR
    KimberlyKR Member Posts: 2
    edited August 2016 #6

    im 48 years old and within the past month or so I have had a lung resection and a surgery to remove a GIST.  I've been dating this guy for just over a year who I care about very dearly, but he is really struggling with my diagnosis.  His father passed away in March of this year from liver cancer and keeps comparing what I'm going through with what his dad's final stages.  I'm not sure how to handle all of this.  

    After surgery I ended up with two infections and in the hospital but have recently re started my Gleevec.  I'm not sure I can keep dealing with him and try to keep a positive attitude myself?  Someone please advise what I should do

  • Noellesmom
    Noellesmom Member Posts: 1,859 Member
    Have you told him?

    Kimberly, tell him his ongoing comparison needs to stop. He can tell it to someone else but not you.

    Being realistic is one thing but you need positive, encouraging people around you.

    Get your chin up and March forward.  The past is the past and you are building a future. Your boyfriend can get on board or get off this roller coaster. Either way, you will be fine.

     

  • Psjeepster
    Psjeepster Member Posts: 63
    edited August 2016 #8
    Many years ago my husband

    Many years ago my husband thought I was seeing someone else. Funny thing was I worked with my husband, we rode to work together. I think the only time I was not with him was if I went grocery shopping.

    After a year of this and him breaking his hand hitting a door. I finally had enough.

    I told him that there is no way I could prove that I was not cheating on him. So it was up to him to prove that I was. I said you have my permission to put GPS on my phone, truck. Load anything on my computer you want to track my online activities. What ever will make you happy. However I do not want to hear another word about me cheating on you until you have proof in hand.

    This was over 10 yrs ago and he has never said another word to me about this.

  • iammaryp
    iammaryp Member Posts: 2
    edited December 2016 #9
    Husband with advanced cancer decided to cheat

    My husband after 5 solid years of continuous chemotherapy for advanced urothelial cancer, who was not prepared to die, decided to attempt to cheat on me.  He was unable to perform the act, but in his heart he was.  I was devastated, and lost 50# lbs over it.  I couldn't understand what I was not doing to adequately care for all aspects of his care, including emotional.  I'm tormenting myself that I lacked in some way.  The truth is, this woman was pushing him to leave him and marry her.  I'm not sure if she felt he had money, but has convinced his family that I was improperly caring for him.  He lived 5 years longer than expected, and as I am a nurse, I don't believe I maltreated him.  He was functional and relatively healthy throughout.  He had 5 solid years of chemo, trial drugs, radiation and multiple surgeries.  As he was unable to work, I was the primary wage earner.  He had excellent care from the oncology team.  Am I wrong to blame myself?  Please-honesty only.

     

  • iammaryp
    iammaryp Member Posts: 2
    Husband with advanced cancer decide to cheat

    As an afterword, he passed away in March.

  • JerzyGrrl
    JerzyGrrl Member Posts: 760 Member
    Blame / Loss

    I'm not sure what you could blame yourself for. None of us can reasonably be responsible for another person's actions. None of us are perfect, but that doesn't mean our imperfections entitle, cause, or force our significant others to scamper off with a "Go Do Something Stupid" or an "OK to Cheat" pass

    I'm sorry for your loss, and by that I don't just mean your husband's death. Thinking you're somebody's "onliest" and then discovering you're not, then with cancer taking away any possibility of reconciliation really stinks. 

  • Noellesmom
    Noellesmom Member Posts: 1,859 Member
    iammaryp said:

    Husband with advanced cancer decide to cheat

    As an afterword, he passed away in March.

    Blame yourself for what?

    Mary, you are wrong to blame yourself for anything.

  • Fiancee
    Fiancee Member Posts: 3
    end of life stresses

    I understand what you are going through as far as relationship issues--it seems old issues get magnified. It can be hard to separate the condition stresses and any relationship issues

    that come out during a patient's need for your presence and ongoing care. I still wonder if I 'didn't do enough' in helping him at the hospice for his comfort, because he had a tendency to extreme ideas about doing anything for him before he got sick. He also was afraid of a woman 'doing too much' for him, and this attitude could change out of the blue either way. I still don't know if his last day alive was about that because he was dissatisfied with my request for the staff to help with what I told him I didn't know enough how to do, or medication issues. He suddenly look bewildered and then very angry, slamming his bed to the side, pulling the bed curtain in front of him and refused to communicate further. I tried to wait patiently; he fell asleep later and then i gently kissed him before leaving as the hospice was closing. He died the next day.