Facing a Cancer Diagnosis as a Couple
A traumatic event is defined as one that is life threatening, unimaginable and unexpected. It is an event that can assault your body, your spirit and your life as you know it. For a couple, a medical diagnosis of cancer is a traumatic event for both partners – the one diagnosed and the one standing by their side.
As discussed in the book Healing Together, one of things we learned working with partners who have courageously faced the terror and challenge of cancer is that when a couple understands each others’ burdens and recognizes each others’ strengths, they have a physical and psychological advantage in the journey they never expected to take.
Diagnosis and Self-Definitions
The Patient
Perhaps as difficult as the physical symptoms and medical interventions associated with a cancer diagnosis is the initial threat to a person’s sense of self. Whether symptoms were present, denied or not even there, it is psychologically discrepant to go from the definition of self as new young mother, soccer coach, CEO, retired golfer, or school principal to that of cancer patient in the time it takes to hear a final diagnosis.
As one man replied in response to his wife’s worried urging that he decide upon a doctor and course of treatment, “ I can’t even get my head around the thought of being someone with cancer – much less grasp what to do.”
In a beautiful little book, Valley of The Shadow, in which Gay Lindquist, a former nurse, shares her journey through lung cancer and beyond, she tells us that before treatment began she asked her husband to take her picture to help her hold on to the self she knew. While applauding those with the courage to go without a wig, she discloses her initial need to look like herself- to wear a wig so nothing will “give me away” to the outside world.
The Patient’s Partner
To bear witness to a partner’s diagnosis of cancer and walk the path with them is also to be thrust into a new definition of self. Life has suddenly changed. The future is no longer as it was planned for self or partner. How could this happen? With feelings of heartache, fear and confusion there is often the self-imposed demand of making it better but not knowing how.
Given that most of us would rather hold on to an illusion of control than accept life’s painful twists, the partner like the patient may feel shame and blame. Sometimes helplessness and anger are hidden in initial feelings of blame of the diagnosed patient. “Why did he have to smoke?” “Maybe she should have exercised more.” Rarely is it voiced. Often it ushers in guilt. Mostly it recedes behind the true worry and concern for the partner.
One man came to see me because of panic and stress symptoms. He had never associated these with keeping his wife’s breast cancer a secret from his co-workers – an important support system that he later re-claimed.
The “We”
Partner recognition of the burdens each carries becomes a source of mutual resilience. Gay Lindquist reports that she really felt she could go to her chemotherapy alone but her husband insisted on going. Feeling that it might make him feel less helpless, she agreed only to find that the shared experience and the rose he brought her after each session – was invaluable to both.
The Mission
Medical Treatment
Balancing the Rest of the Life
One way to re-define cancer as one dimensional and not the total definition of a couple’s life is for partners to encourage and help each other re-claim the valued aspects of themselves in some old, new or creative ways. By getting together with friends, taking the weekend trip, watching TV together, running to the kids’ events, singing at church, cooking together, being intimate in some way, couples re-set the balance and the broader definition of who they still are together.
Stress Reducers and Separate Support Systems
Traumatic events like cancer freeze time and absorb attention. It is difficult when you or someone you love is in danger to focus on anything else – but when partners make an effort and give themselves permission to return to their original individual stress reducers and networks of support – her piano, his bowling league, her friends, his golf games, etc. they enhance their resiliency as a couple because they double their reserves and support.
The Journey
Perhaps the most effective thing that couples can do as they face a diagnosis of cancer is to take turns holding on to hope. Because partners have a bond, they are often the most devastated by the pain and suffering they see in the person they love. They are also the most emotionally significant in “ being there” in a way that makes the future seem real and possible. As Celine Dion’s song lyrics imply – this is “The Power of Love.”
We’re heading for something
Somewhere I’ve never been
Sometimes I am frightened
But I’m ready to learn
Of the power of love
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From Psych Central's website:
PsychCentral (June 25, 2010)
From Psych Central's website:
PsychCentral (June 25, 2010)
KentBottles (June 25, 2010)
Facing a Cancer Diagnosis as a Couple | Healing Together for Couples | Cancer (June 25, 2010)
Part 3: Holistic Cancer Cures & Healing Yourself From 6 (June 26, 2010)
Last reviewed: 25 Jun 2010