This week I sat down and wrote two letters I’ve been trying to avoid. One was to an old friend who has cancer, the other, a former colleague whose husband is ill. I’ve known about both situations for a while as the news has slowly seeped from their inner circles to their very outer ones, where I reside.
What to do when you hear someone you know is battling a serious illness? ‘Nothing’ is the answer most of us settle on. I did. These are not women I’d call. I don’t even have their email addresses. So I told myself they probably had lots of support and tried to put it out of my mind.
Until I couldn’t. It just didn’t sit right, especially when I imagined running into one of them in the street. What would I say then?
As a society, we’re lousy at bereavement and possibly worse with sickness. Perhaps it’s the uncertainty. Perhaps it’s an irrational fear of something like cancer being contagious, if not physically then energetically. Or perhaps we’re just more comfortable with our heads in the sand. But should our own comfort really be the priority?
Bruce Feiler author of “The Council of Dads: A Story of Family, Friendship and Learning How to Live”, recently shared an excerpt of his book in The New York Times. Bruce had bone cancer; he also had 3-year-old twins, a working wife, nine months of chemotherapy and 15 hours of reconstructive surgery to deal with. When someone asked his advice on how to handle a mutual friend’s brain tumour, he came up with a list of things not to say to someone battling a dire health situation:
1. “What can I do to help?” (Don’t ask, be proactive).
2. “My thoughts and prayers are with you” (A tired cliché)
3. “Did you try that mango colonic I recommended?” (Leave treatment advice to the doctors)
4. “Everything will be OK.” (You don’t know that)
5. “How are we today?” (Sick people aren’t mentally diminished infants)
6. “You look great.” (Don’t focus on externals).