Emerging Courageous Online Magazine - Stories
Cancer
– Courage and Love by Lorraine
Kember
Everyday we hear of people dealing with incredible sadness and loss and we
wonder; how do they do it? Where do they find the courage the strength? We
may even ask ourselves how we would cope under the circumstances. Sadly, we only
become aware of the answer, when tragedy visits us and our own lives are thrown
into turmoil.
When some
one we love is diagnosed with a terminal cancer, life as we knew it changes
forever. Suddenly we enter a new world, a world filled with helplessness,
despair and fear of the unknown. We no longer walk aimlessly around
shopping Malls; we walk the Hospital corridors and sit in chemotherapy waiting
rooms and are shocked by the number of people afflicted by cancer. We can
not help but wonder if one day we too may be a patient and we fear for our own
mortality.
Sitting in a Chemotherapy ward is an experience not to be forgotten.
Cancer has no respect for gender, age or wealth. There are people from every
race, color and creed; rich, middle class and poor; and none of this makes the
slightest difference. They are all united in their suffering, fellow human
beings on the same sad journey.
One can not bear witness to the incredible courage of those who have cancer,
without being deeply affected. My husband’s courage in the face of his
terminal mesothelioma cancer held me in awe and I decided to do everything
within my power to help him.
I learned about the stages and symptoms of his disease; the pain he would
experience and ways to bring it under control, so that I could work with his
doctors, to achieve for him, the best possible quality of life for what ever
time he was granted. It was incredibly hard to wake each day with the
knowledge that my husband was dying; my anticipatory grief often overwhelmed me
but somehow I managed to carry on. One day a lady said to me, “You are
such a strong woman.” and I wondered what had made her say that. I
didn’t feel strong, I felt like I was breaking.
Despite a prognosis of three to nine months, my husband survived for two years
and was not bed bound until three short days prior to his death. My
journey beside him as he traveled to the end of his life, has taught me many
things, above all the true meaning of love and the strength of the human spirit.
Deep
within ourselves there is strength and courage to sustain us in times of
personal tragedy. I have come to realize that during my husband’s
illness, I was indeed strong. I may have staggered with the burden of my
grief but I did manage to help my husband achieve a quality of life few thought
possible considering the nature of his disease. And, thanks to the expertise and
dedication of the Palliative Care Team, I was able to fulfill my promise to him
that he would not die in hospital. His death at home was as loving,
sharing and peaceful as anyone could wish for.
I have witnessed courage; that of my husband as he battled his disease and of my
own as I stood beside him, determined to improve the quality of his life.
The knowledge that I was successful in this has brought me much peace. My
husband’s illness and death have wounded me deeply yet I have emerged far
stronger than ever before and gone on to achieve things I never thought
possible.
My
experience has taught me not to take life for granted and to live each day with
thanks for the wonderful gift that it is. I have witnessed death; my awareness
of the fragility of life, despite the strongest of wills strengthens my
determination to grasp everything life offers me, with both hands.
Article
written by:
Lorraine
Kember – Author of “Lean on Me” Cancer
through a Carer’s Eyes.
Lorraine
’s
book is written from her experience of caring for her dying husband in the hope
of helping others. It includes insight and discussion on: Anticipatory
Grief, Understanding and identifying pain, Pain Management and Symptom Control,
Chemotherapy, Palliative Care, Quality of Life and Dying at home. It also
features excerpts and poems from her personal diary. Highly
recommended by the Cancer Council. “Lean on Me” is not
available in bookstores - For detailed information, Doctor’s recommendations,
Reviews, Book Excerpts and Ordering Facility
- visit her website:
http://www.cancerthroughacarerseyes.jkwh.com
email [email protected]
***
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