Tag Archives: spouse

Breast Cancer Caregiver Guide for Spouses

The source of all life and knowledge is in man and woman, and the source of all living is in the interchange and the meeting and mingling of these two: man-life and woman-life, man-knowledge and woman-knowledge, man-being and woman-being. – D. H. Lawrence (1885-1930) English writer

I hinted at this yesterday but it has been beating on my mind all day.  When I retraced my steps over the last several months I looked back and wonder how I made it with my senses still intact. 

Let me first say that what the men go through when their wives have breast cancer is nothing compared to what their wives or mothers or daughters will experience, but I believe the life partners  (I’m mostly talking about husbands) are a critical part of the management when cancer enters a woman’s life.  There is no doubt that men get a bad rap about how we react when our loved one tells us that she has cancer in a part of her body that is such an intimate part of our physical relationship.  But aside from where it is located, we just aren’t ready for cancer period.   Even if we men were better prepared, all it takes is one bad apple to spoil the cart and our reputation as a group would be back out curbside.

I’m not saying we men are the fairer sex.  Heck no.  We definitely have a few (make that many) flaws.  That’s why we love women so much!

What I am saying is that while my wife came home with packets of information and videos, there was nothing for me.  Not a word of guidance.  I spent hours taking notes at each doctors visit, I ended up having to do lots of research and looking to other women and their spouses for what to do and more importanly what not to do.  Its harder than you think.  I don’t even think that my wife’s surgeon shook my hand the first time we met.  Mind you she is a wonderful lady and we have a great relationship, but I don’t know if the doctors know what to do when the spouse shows up.  Rightly so, they spend all the time talking to our wives.  They need tools to give us. I don’t need much.  All I needed was a one pager.  Something that said, the best thing you could do right now is hold your wife’s hand.

Well I gathered a lot of information.  Unfortunately I found some good resources after the fact, but I saved them.  I have links to most of them in the Cancer Resource Links in the right column of this blog.  So if you’ve just found this, take a look at these links specifcally for men.  Some come from friends I’ve met and others from research I’ve done:

Good Websites:

Men Against Breast Cancer

Breast Cancer for Husbands

Breast Cancer Husband

Some Real Personal Blogs:

The Moutray Chronicles

The Price of Love

Articles Every Husband or Father Should Read:

Love Her Tender

A Guide for Clueless Guys

A Supremely Kind Spouse

I hope you all find these useful in your journeys wherever you may be.

Enjoy Life – A Loving Fight against Breast Cancer

“Be the Tortoise, not the Hare.  This is not a race.”

Is it ironic that the little saying on the nametag of the waitress at Heidi’s in Lake Tahoe said, “Enjoy Life”?  It was our last day of a wonderful vacation with family and I asked our perky 54 year old waitress why it said that on her tag.  She said that she had gone through some struggles in life and appreciated what she had.  She said she took the time to smell the roses every day.

I think my wife has embraced this battle with so much vigor that she might burn out.  I don’t want to slow her down as I see her energy being used to distract herself, but I also see how tired she is from runnning around all day and talking to people.  She has gotten hoarse from talking nad has developed a bit of a cough that has her worried.

Fortunately her doctor ordered her a chest x-ray just for piece of mind.  My wife sometimes gets thoughts in her head and no matter what I say, she is going to think what she is going to think.  Stubborn?  Head strong?  Maybe a little of each. 

The battle now is to get her to slow down and smell the roses.   Its hard too get her to settle down and stop talking.  The anxiety is taking its toll and she is still finding her short of breath.  She knows that this might be all in her head, but the only way to get it out of her head is to see for herself.

She has been definitely more resourceful of late which is a refreshing change, but I don’t expect her to be Superwoman.  She understands she has to slow it down.  I just have to remind her.