Coping Within the Family
- Cancer is a blow to every family it touches. How it is handled is determined
to a great extent by how the family has functioned as a unit in the past.
- Problems within the family can be the most difficult to handle; you
cannot go home to escape them.
- Adjusting to role changes can cause great upheavals in the way family
members interact.
- Performing too many roles at once endangers anyone's emotional well-being
and ability to cope. Examine what tasks are necessary and let others slide.
- Consider hiring professional nurses or homemakers. Financial costs need
to be compared with the physical and emotional cost of shouldering the load
alone.
- Children may need special attention. They need comfort, reassurance,
affection, guidance, and discipline at times of disruption in their routine.
Although cancer has "come out of the closet," much of what
we read in newspapers and magazines is about the disease itself-its probable
causes or new methods of treatment. There is little information about how
families deal with cancer on a day-to-day basis. This gap reinforces feelings
that families coping with cancer are isolated from the rest of the world:
that everyone else is managing nicely while you flounder with your feelings,
hide from your spouse, and are incapable of talking to the children.
Cancer is a blow to every family it touches. How you handle it is determined
to a great extent by how you have functioned as a family in the past. Families
who are used to sharing their feelings with each other usually are able
to talk about the disease and the changes it brings. Families in which each
member solves problems alone or in which one person has played the major
role in making decisions might have more difficulty coping.
Not Everyone Can
- Problems within the family can be the most difficult to handle simply
because you cannot go home to escape them. Some family members may deny
the reality of cancer or refuse to discuss it.
- It is not uncommon to feel deserted or to feel unable to face cancer
openly. "My brother-in-law is suffering from cancer," one man
confided. "The entire situation is depressing, and my reaction has
been one of running and hiding. I have not visited them for I feel I have
nothing to offer."
- A woman with cancer found none of her family could help her. "My
two wonderful sons tolerated their dad's heart surgeries very well, but
now I have cancer, and they don't know how to act. Phone calls and letters
expressing sympathy are not what I need. I've tried since last November
to express my thoughts to my husband, but he shuts out what I'm saying.
I know that he's uncertain about our future, but I can't seem to get through
to him; I've learned from other patients that it's a common concern."
- In these situations individual counseling or cancer patient groups can
provide needed support and reinforcement. Moreover, these resources provide
an outlet for the frustrations you are facing within the family.
Changing Roles
- Families may have difficulty adjusting to the role changes that are
sometimes necessary. One husband found it overwhelming to come home from
work, prepare dinner, oversee the children's homework, change bedding and
dressings, and still try to provide companionship and emotional support
for his children and ill wife.
- In addition to roles as wife, mother, and nurse, a woman might have
to add a job outside the home for the first time. A spouse who was sharing
the load sometimes becomes the sole breadwinner and home maker. The usual
head of the household might now be its most dependent member.
- These changes can cause great upheavals in the ways members of the family
interact. The usual patterns are gone. Parents might look to children for
emotional support at a time when the children themselves need it most. Teenagers
might have to take over major household responsibilities. Young children
can revert to infantile behavior as a way of dealing with the impact of
cancer on the family as a unit and on themselves as individuals. The sheer
weight of responsibility can become insurmountable, destroying normal family
associations, devouring time needed for rest and recreation, and depriving
family members of wholesome opportunities for expressing anxiety and resentment.
The Health of the Family
- Performing too many roles at once can endanger emotional well-being
and the ability to cope. Examining what's important can solve the problem.
For example, you can relax housekeeping standards or learn to prepare simpler
meals. Perhaps the children can take on a few more household chores than
they have been handling.
- If a simple solution is not enough, consider getting outside help. Licensed
practical nurses can help with the patient; county or private agencies might
provide trained homemakers. If outreach is an important part of your church,
feel free to ask for help with cooking, shopping, transportation, and other
homemaking tasks. One family was adopted by the daughter's scout troop when
the girls learned of the extra responsibility she had assumed. Everyone
benefited from the relationship.
- Let someone who can be objective help you sort out necessary tasks from
those that can go undone. The financial cost of professional services needs
to be compared with the emotional and physical cost of shouldering the load
alone. You also may be able to obtain assistance from hospital, community,
or self help groups or from a clergy member. It is important to remember
that the family is still a unit. If the family strength is sapped, the patient
suffers, too.
- The San Diego chapter of Make Today Count, a mutual support group for
patients and families, compiled a "Bill of Rights for the Friends and
Relatives of Cancer Patients." Several items address the problems of
family burdens:
- The relative of a cancer patient has the right and obligation to take
care of his own needs. Even though he may be accused of being selfish, he
must do what he has to do to keep his own peace of mind, so that he can
better minister to the needs of the patient.
- Each person will have different needs. . . These needs must be satisfied.
The patient will benefit, too, by having a more cheerful person to care
for him.
- The relative may need help from outsiders in caring for the patient.
Although the patient may object to this, the relative has the right to assess
his own limitations of strength and endurance and to obtain assistance when
required.
- . . . When the relative knows that he is already doing all that can
reasonably be expected of anyone in caring for the patient, he can have
a clear conscience in maintaining contacts with the rest of the world.
- If the patient attempts to use his illness as a weapon, the relative
has the right to reject that and to do only what can reasonably be expected
of him.
- If the cancer patient's relative responds only to the genuine needs
of the moment-both his own needs and those of the patient-the stress associated
with the illness can be minimized.
- Increased burdens and shifting responsibilities can occur whether the
patient in the household is a spouse, a child, or an elderly parent. Each
family member must take care to meet his or her own needs and those of the
other healthy members of the family as well as those of the patient.
Help for the Children
- Children might have difficulty coping with cancer in a parent. Mother
or Dad may be gone from the house-in a hospital that may be hundreds of
miles from home-or home in bed, in obvious discomfort, and perhaps visibly
altered in appearance.
- In the face of this upheaval, children often are asked also to behave
exceptionally well: to "play quietly," to perform extra tasks
or to be understanding of others' moods beyond the maturity of their years.
The children may resent lost attention. Some fear the loss of their parent
or begin to imagine their own death. Some children, formerly independent,
now become anxious about leaving home and parents. Discipline problems can
arise if children attempt to command the attention they feel they are missing.
- It may help if a favorite relative or family friend can devote extra
time and attention to the children, who need comfort and reassurance, affection,
guidance, and discipline. Trips to the zoo are important, but so is regular
help with homework and someone to attend the basketball awards banquet.
If your efforts to provide support and security fail, professional counseling
for a child, or child and parent together, may be necessary and should not
be overlooked.