What do you do when THEY cry
Comments
-
I said the hardest part of
I said the hardest part of cancer was holding everyone else up. So I stopped. I simply said I didn't have the energy to make them feel better about my disease so they could suck it up and fight with me or get out of my way while I fought. *Stop crying!* worked wonders for me. It's not a negotiation so just tell them that if they need to cry, fine, but it will have to be on someone else's shoulder because you have enough on yours.0 -
I'm hanging the signKathiM said:Hang a sign at the door...
Mood upon entering: cheerful and upbeat!
Persons breaking this rule will be eaten!
Hugs, Kathi
Thank you all for great advice. I will be hanging the sign. When i see others i want to know that there is another world out there besides my cancer. In order to keep my self upbeat i will ask them to be cheerful and upbeat or they "will be eaten"!! loved it
Thanks Kathi!!
Jackie0 -
I appreciate your post. It
I appreciate your post. It seems harder for those around us to watch us go through this experience. But the advice you've been given is very wise. And I like the sign idea...it kind of nips those tears right in the bud!
I didn't really cry in front of anyone until my treatments were almost over (a year after my diagnosis) and no one really cried in front of me. Though I had plenty of people giving me advice and asking questions that I couldn't answer...or asking questions that I was tired of answering. That does get overwhelming. I decided to set up a blog and to let others experience the journey with me. It really helped me and it helped my family/friends stay connected.0 -
Wah Wah Wah!!!!
The sign is a great idea ( leave it to Kathi!!!) To be honest, mortality has indeed tapped us on the shoulder, and most of us here on the boards don't need to be reminded of that by having to comfort crying friends! If we are all crying and peeing in our pants because our friends are making us laugh so hard we can't conrol ourselves, that is one thing!
Hmmmmm...maybe that can be some kind of a sign~ "Tears of Joy permitted~ Leave Your Sadness at the Door"
We're happy to have you here with us, you are a great asset to our family of survivors!
Hugs,
Claudia0 -
I loved Kathi's idea. I
I loved Kathi's idea. I personally told everyone that I was in the fight of my life and that I needed to be surrounded by supportive and positive people. If they would continue to cry then I was just not going to see them anymore. And...... it worked. Hugs, Lili0 -
Positive commentsmmontero38 said:I loved Kathi's idea. I
I loved Kathi's idea. I personally told everyone that I was in the fight of my life and that I needed to be surrounded by supportive and positive people. If they would continue to cry then I was just not going to see them anymore. And...... it worked. Hugs, Lili
What I hate is the unpositive comments, like So and So had breast cancer and it went to her brain. My sister-in-law got me very down after a visit (And she is a nurse and should know better)she talked about all the people she knew that did not have a good outcome. I had to finally tell her I can't talk to her if she did not have positive things to say. She has not called me since, which doesn't bother me.0 -
HI janJan_M said:Positive comments
What I hate is the unpositive comments, like So and So had breast cancer and it went to her brain. My sister-in-law got me very down after a visit (And she is a nurse and should know better)she talked about all the people she knew that did not have a good outcome. I had to finally tell her I can't talk to her if she did not have positive things to say. She has not called me since, which doesn't bother me.
I also hate the neative comments.. such as Oh-yeah my dads first treatment was a piece of cake and steadly got worse until he died..... and it always comes back... and even those who just look at you with sad eyes, shake their head and look down without saying a word they depress me. Those people i used to like i don't want to be around. Give me a friend that can give me a good belly laugh and i'll be their best friend... I just don't think that alot of people who haven't gone through this are even aware of what their words and attitude do to us.
I am so happy to have found this wonderful caring support group on-line since i'm from a very small town that has no support groups!! maybe a good time to start one huh???
Thanks for all your posts to this they made me laugh and start creating that sign for my door.
God bless
Jackie0 -
Negativityrjjj said:HI jan
I also hate the neative comments.. such as Oh-yeah my dads first treatment was a piece of cake and steadly got worse until he died..... and it always comes back... and even those who just look at you with sad eyes, shake their head and look down without saying a word they depress me. Those people i used to like i don't want to be around. Give me a friend that can give me a good belly laugh and i'll be their best friend... I just don't think that alot of people who haven't gone through this are even aware of what their words and attitude do to us.
I am so happy to have found this wonderful caring support group on-line since i'm from a very small town that has no support groups!! maybe a good time to start one huh???
Thanks for all your posts to this they made me laugh and start creating that sign for my door.
God bless
Jackie
Sometimes I just don't understand people. How do they know that "it always comes back"? First of all, that's just not true. When people say things like that, I tell them this story. Both my grandmothers had breast cancer. One of them in the 1950's in a poor town in Turkey. She was 32 with 3 young boys at home to take care of and a husband who was away for weeks at a time working on the railroad. She walked to the hospital for treatments. She died forty years later of a heart attack, not breast cancer. My other grandmother had a mastectomy and then refused all other treatment and never went in for monitoring. No mammograms, nothing. She died many years later of an unrelated illness. So, if we are going by anecdotal evidence alone, I would have to say that it never comes back, even if you don't treat it. Of course the fact is that it sometimes comes back and sometimes doesn't. There are a lot of factors to consider, and people shouldn't make generalizations based on a few cases they heard about.
Here is the cheery story my co-worker told me when she found out I was diangosed with breast cancer:
Co-worker: Oh, my neighbor has colon cancer. She's 34.
Me: That's too bad, but they can treat colon cancer.
Co-worker: No.
Me: Well, yes, they can. There are many options for...
Co-worker: No. They are only keeping her alive so that her 4-year old daughter can have a few memories.
People can be so clueless!0 -
Tongue removalmimivac said:Negativity
Sometimes I just don't understand people. How do they know that "it always comes back"? First of all, that's just not true. When people say things like that, I tell them this story. Both my grandmothers had breast cancer. One of them in the 1950's in a poor town in Turkey. She was 32 with 3 young boys at home to take care of and a husband who was away for weeks at a time working on the railroad. She walked to the hospital for treatments. She died forty years later of a heart attack, not breast cancer. My other grandmother had a mastectomy and then refused all other treatment and never went in for monitoring. No mammograms, nothing. She died many years later of an unrelated illness. So, if we are going by anecdotal evidence alone, I would have to say that it never comes back, even if you don't treat it. Of course the fact is that it sometimes comes back and sometimes doesn't. There are a lot of factors to consider, and people shouldn't make generalizations based on a few cases they heard about.
Here is the cheery story my co-worker told me when she found out I was diangosed with breast cancer:
Co-worker: Oh, my neighbor has colon cancer. She's 34.
Me: That's too bad, but they can treat colon cancer.
Co-worker: No.
Me: Well, yes, they can. There are many options for...
Co-worker: No. They are only keeping her alive so that her 4-year old daughter can have a few memories.
People can be so clueless!
Too bad we can't remove the tongues of these insensitive jerks. I don't understand why people babble like that. I can't imagine they think that this is helpful. There are no givens in this. Two people can have a virtually identical cancer and it will react and resolve differently in each even with identical treatment. When I was 15, one of my best friends got Hodgkin's. I believe that back then the survival rate was dismal. Well, she received treatment at Stanford Hospital over a long period of time and 8 years later she was married, she has two children and last I heard (2years ago) she was going strong. So the only rules seem to be there are no rules. Those are stories I love to hear. People that beat the odds and that 45 years later are still going strong. Like your grandmothers.0 -
Thanks for the great idea. IKathiM said:Hang a sign at the door...
Mood upon entering: cheerful and upbeat!
Persons breaking this rule will be eaten!
Hugs, Kathi
Thanks for the great idea. I will putting my sign up tomorrow. I have enjoyed reading all your stories and have taken alot of ideas with me. Mikes Sunshine0
Discussion Boards
- All Discussion Boards
- 6 CSN Information
- 6 Welcome to CSN
- 121.8K Cancer specific
- 2.8K Anal Cancer
- 446 Bladder Cancer
- 309 Bone Cancers
- 1.6K Brain Cancer
- 28.5K Breast Cancer
- 397 Childhood Cancers
- 27.9K Colorectal Cancer
- 4.6K Esophageal Cancer
- 1.2K Gynecological Cancers (other than ovarian and uterine)
- 13K Head and Neck Cancer
- 6.4K Kidney Cancer
- 671 Leukemia
- 792 Liver Cancer
- 4.1K Lung Cancer
- 5.1K Lymphoma (Hodgkin and Non-Hodgkin)
- 237 Multiple Myeloma
- 7.1K Ovarian Cancer
- 61 Pancreatic Cancer
- 487 Peritoneal Cancer
- 5.5K Prostate Cancer
- 1.2K Rare and Other Cancers
- 539 Sarcoma
- 730 Skin Cancer
- 653 Stomach Cancer
- 191 Testicular Cancer
- 1.5K Thyroid Cancer
- 5.8K Uterine/Endometrial Cancer
- 6.3K Lifestyle Discussion Boards