Henry Jeffreys: No, having cancer did not heal my life
I'm not generally a fan of the Spectator, but this article is really good:
...Others were less helpful. One woman at work, even before offering any sympathy, wanted to know what alternative therapies I would be doing, and seemed offended that I had put my trust in the oncology department at Barts. A writer I know called Felicity Carter had a similar experience when diagnosed with NH Lymphoma: I got lots of advice about consuming vast quantities of fruit and veg to boost the immune system. As if a carrot is any match for malignant cells whose speed of division is exceeded only by foetal cells.
Because cancer treatment is so unpleasant, and often ineffective, it leaves a vacuum to be filled by the likes of Noel Edmonds and his negative energy. The late journalist John Diamond wrote a book called Snake Oil and Other Preoccupations examining this nutty, predatory world. Professor David Colquhoun continues the fight on his website dcscience.net. He notes one woman, Barbara Wren, who claims to have cured thyroid cancer by applying external compresses, half an hour with castor oil and half an hour with your own urine. Aussie blogger Belle Gibson built a career on curing her cancer through healthy eating until it turned out that she had never had cancer at all.
....Its subtitle is How Cancer can Heal your Life and the author claims one can grow and learn from the illness. This is perhaps the biggest lie of all: that having cancer gives you a kind of wisdom. Not long after going back to work, I remember the artist Sebastian Horsley asking me whether I was now a better person. I thought about it and realised I hadnt changed. Cancer didnt bring my whole life into focus or make me count my blessings. Horsley agreed; as a former heroin addict people expected him to have a hard-won wisdom which he simply didnt have. He died a few years later from a drug overdose. Felicity Carter said that when she told a hospital psychologist that work is central to my life and I was eager to get back to it, she accused me of learning nothing from my illness.
I was fortunate in that my treatment was successful and I have been clear for ten years. Most arent so lucky. If someone you know has cancer they need support and love, not advice from magazines and bestselling books. Sympathetic family, friends and strangers (someone gave up their seat on the tube with a quiet you look like you need it more than me) are a great help but its doctors and nurses they need. Please dont pester them about alternative therapies, dont send them an electrical pulse kit and dont expect them to emerge as a saint. Just be thankful theyre still alive.
http://www.spectator.co.uk/2016/10/no-cancer-not-heal-life/
eShirl
(18,768 posts)Ptrsnross
(13 posts)I am a cancer survivor and have experienced all of those things. Even now, many people invoke God to explain my recovery. I usually reply "I'd like to think that science and the skill of my surgeons, doctors and nurses saved me." The experience was life changing in that I now have a permanent disability due to loss of muscle in my neck. God had nothing to do with it.
progressoid
(50,734 posts)I recently had someone tell me how an acupuncturist helped his sister-in-law recover from cancer treatments. Because, you know those acupuncturists have to go to school just as long as a medical doctor!!