Lost in Canada
Comments
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This is a great place to come and talk, ask questions or just vent. I wish the live chat room was up and working so it was more like a "real" conversation, but the discussion boards are better than nothing. There are sometimes support groups being held at your local hospital. You didn't mention your age, but it is not wrong at any age to decide what kind of treatment you want. Most folks that have lung cancer do not find out soon enough to be able to have surgery. If it has already progressed out of the lung, they don't bother with that. The radiation and chemo work to some degree and apparently are doing the trick for you. It is very scary being diagnosed with cancer. Most of us get highly emotional. Many get treatment for clinical depression on top of their treatment for lc. I told the doctor I thought I had a good reason for being depressed and refused meds, but looking back I wonder if they might have made life easier. I went the "good routine" route and upped the amount of exercise I got each day, ate "calming foods, found support groups (this one online, a bunch of fellow survivors at church, a face-to-face one at the Wellness Community[nation-wide organization] in town, and occasional other workshops on lung cancer or Relays for Life held nearby), talked once to a clincial social worker about my fears(she said I was coping just fine but meds were there if I ever wanted them), and did short-term fun stuff (ski trip, kayak trip, camping trip, visit to family...like every three months or so). I notice that I'm not nearly as emotional now as I was the first two years. I used to cry two or three times a day, though sometimes it was so bad I couldn't cry. A plan helped and so did friends. Husbands are great, but mine says he has his own life and doesn't want to go through cancer too unless he has it. Mind you, mine will take me to the clinic 100 miles away, but he goes off shopping while I'm there when he comes. I think I got one or two extra hugs each time I was diagnosed (I have both breast cancer and lung cancer, both stage 1), but no honeymoon treatment. Not dealing with it is his way of keeping things on an even keel. He would rather I not even mention things to my teenage son, but that doesn't work for my son who wants to know everything so he knows how much to worry (like me that boy!). So I guess it is more how people are and how they cope with scary stuff than just a man thing. I try to get my needs met elsewhere if it turns out to be something my husband can't or won't do, and my friends seem to be really good in the supportive department when I need it. Write back any time!0
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My husband 31 years old was diagnosed with small lung cancer oct 2007 and the doctor said: It's kind of late and we don't know how the tumor will respond. That's scary. But the doctors can say something but you have the last word. The doctor said if we don't arrive to the hospital my husband will be dead. It's almost a year since then and my husband is responding to the treatment because he wants to live and be in the survivors of cancer. But I know he couldn't be strong without the support of all his family including me. You need to talk with your husband. You need it. Maybe he doesn't want to talk about it because he don't want to hurt you. Sometimes we don't know what to say. When my husband said one day:"If something happen..... and I interrupted him..."nothing is gonna happen" and he very calmed told me : we need to talk about this just one time and after that I don't want to talk dead just to live every day.
Talk with your husband just one day about your feelings, you will feel better, and after that just talk about the simple things of live and try to enjoy every day.
Difficult? Yes
Painful? Of course, but I'm sure your husband loves you but he is scared more than you.
take care
Nubis0 -
I'm 59 years old and counting. My cancer was 3cm. but the doctor said I had a 50% that he would get it all. Not good odds for me, I'm new in town so I don't have friends. I deal with it on my own, my son worry more about me. I tried to talk to my husband, he said he didn't want to hear about and if I keep trying he would get up and leave. I do vitamins and in April I went to see the radiation doctor, he told me now I can go a year then see him. The cancer is at the top of my lung, but the doctor who wanted to operate thought he was god. I didn't like him from the start, I told him I wanted a second opinion, he told me that it was a wast of time. I had nothing to say that I had cancer and I still don't. My husband think that as long as I can get out of bed that there is nothing wrong with me. I cry a lot but my husband just figures that I'm having a bad day or night and goes away.cabbott said:This is a great place to come and talk, ask questions or just vent. I wish the live chat room was up and working so it was more like a "real" conversation, but the discussion boards are better than nothing. There are sometimes support groups being held at your local hospital. You didn't mention your age, but it is not wrong at any age to decide what kind of treatment you want. Most folks that have lung cancer do not find out soon enough to be able to have surgery. If it has already progressed out of the lung, they don't bother with that. The radiation and chemo work to some degree and apparently are doing the trick for you. It is very scary being diagnosed with cancer. Most of us get highly emotional. Many get treatment for clinical depression on top of their treatment for lc. I told the doctor I thought I had a good reason for being depressed and refused meds, but looking back I wonder if they might have made life easier. I went the "good routine" route and upped the amount of exercise I got each day, ate "calming foods, found support groups (this one online, a bunch of fellow survivors at church, a face-to-face one at the Wellness Community[nation-wide organization] in town, and occasional other workshops on lung cancer or Relays for Life held nearby), talked once to a clincial social worker about my fears(she said I was coping just fine but meds were there if I ever wanted them), and did short-term fun stuff (ski trip, kayak trip, camping trip, visit to family...like every three months or so). I notice that I'm not nearly as emotional now as I was the first two years. I used to cry two or three times a day, though sometimes it was so bad I couldn't cry. A plan helped and so did friends. Husbands are great, but mine says he has his own life and doesn't want to go through cancer too unless he has it. Mind you, mine will take me to the clinic 100 miles away, but he goes off shopping while I'm there when he comes. I think I got one or two extra hugs each time I was diagnosed (I have both breast cancer and lung cancer, both stage 1), but no honeymoon treatment. Not dealing with it is his way of keeping things on an even keel. He would rather I not even mention things to my teenage son, but that doesn't work for my son who wants to know everything so he knows how much to worry (like me that boy!). So I guess it is more how people are and how they cope with scary stuff than just a man thing. I try to get my needs met elsewhere if it turns out to be something my husband can't or won't do, and my friends seem to be really good in the supportive department when I need it. Write back any time!
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I'm 59 years old and counting. My cancer was 3cm. but the doctor said I had a 50% that he would get it all. Not good odds for me, I'm new in town so I don't have friends. I deal with it on my own, my son worry more about me. I tried to talk to my husband, he said he didn't want to hear about and if I keep trying he would get up and leave. I do vitamins and in April I went to see the radiation doctor, he told me now I can go a year then see him. The cancer is at the top of my lung, but the doctor who wanted to operate thought he was god. I didn't like him from the start, I told him I wanted a second opinion, he told me that it was a wast of time. I had nothing to say that I had cancer and I still don't. My husband think that as long as I can get out of bed that there is nothing wrong with me. I cry a lot but my husband just figures that I'm having a bad day or night and goes away.cabbott said:This is a great place to come and talk, ask questions or just vent. I wish the live chat room was up and working so it was more like a "real" conversation, but the discussion boards are better than nothing. There are sometimes support groups being held at your local hospital. You didn't mention your age, but it is not wrong at any age to decide what kind of treatment you want. Most folks that have lung cancer do not find out soon enough to be able to have surgery. If it has already progressed out of the lung, they don't bother with that. The radiation and chemo work to some degree and apparently are doing the trick for you. It is very scary being diagnosed with cancer. Most of us get highly emotional. Many get treatment for clinical depression on top of their treatment for lc. I told the doctor I thought I had a good reason for being depressed and refused meds, but looking back I wonder if they might have made life easier. I went the "good routine" route and upped the amount of exercise I got each day, ate "calming foods, found support groups (this one online, a bunch of fellow survivors at church, a face-to-face one at the Wellness Community[nation-wide organization] in town, and occasional other workshops on lung cancer or Relays for Life held nearby), talked once to a clincial social worker about my fears(she said I was coping just fine but meds were there if I ever wanted them), and did short-term fun stuff (ski trip, kayak trip, camping trip, visit to family...like every three months or so). I notice that I'm not nearly as emotional now as I was the first two years. I used to cry two or three times a day, though sometimes it was so bad I couldn't cry. A plan helped and so did friends. Husbands are great, but mine says he has his own life and doesn't want to go through cancer too unless he has it. Mind you, mine will take me to the clinic 100 miles away, but he goes off shopping while I'm there when he comes. I think I got one or two extra hugs each time I was diagnosed (I have both breast cancer and lung cancer, both stage 1), but no honeymoon treatment. Not dealing with it is his way of keeping things on an even keel. He would rather I not even mention things to my teenage son, but that doesn't work for my son who wants to know everything so he knows how much to worry (like me that boy!). So I guess it is more how people are and how they cope with scary stuff than just a man thing. I try to get my needs met elsewhere if it turns out to be something my husband can't or won't do, and my friends seem to be really good in the supportive department when I need it. Write back any time!
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