by JANE HIDER
My oncologist said this to me when we first met: cancer is just the wrong form of energy. This slightly hippie-ish comment impressed me on a number of levels. But most importantly, it makes the point about what cancer is.
It is part of you. At its most basic level cancer is a collection of cells who grow uncontrolled or refuse to die. And how can I fight what is part of me? I am not engaged in a battle. It is not a fight.
To me, it is learning to live with what is in me.
What cancer isn’t? It isn’t a blessing, it doesn’t create brave warriors, it doesn’t make us like statistics more.
Here are 12 commonly believed myths about cancer patients (and what you THINK we want to hear from you.)
Myth #1: We like to be reminded there are other ways to die
Is there anyone with cancer who has not had this happy possibility pointed out to them: ‘Well of course we could all be hit by a bus tomorrow.’? (As it happens I have already had my bus run-in, as a teenager, when my friend Julia pulled me out of the path of an oncoming bus. I feel reasonably sure I will not be having any more bus action in my life).
I could drop dead of a heart attack at my desk, as clients of mine have done. I could contract a rare parasite and fade away. My car could be involved in a six car pileup on the freeway. I could, according to my father, quite easily die from Alzheimers, because did I know that at least four hitherto unmentioned relatives all died of it, not knowing or caring who their family was? (I think, but cannot be certain, that he was trying to make me feel better telling me this).