Guest guest Posted November 21, 2004 Report Share Posted November 21, 2004 A ROAD MAP FOR DYING OF CANCER Since most Americans trust their doctors and believe that they will be given the best chance of survival by following the traditional treatment of surgery, radiation and therapy, the least I can offer is a road map of the road you will likely travel over the next seven years or so. I’m giving you this roadmap because I will not be traveling this road with you. I’m saying goodbye, farewell, best wishes, but I am not following you down that road. I will not sit submissively by your bed and encourage you as you are led to your death. You will likely have many others to do that, so good luck, farewell, and good bye. When you cancer is first discovered, it will likely be small, assuming it is cancer at all. Not to worry, because if it was incorrectly diagnosed, you stand a good chance of developing cancer from the radiation therapy and chemotherapy which you will receive. At this stage the chemotherapy you are given will be relatively light, making you sick, ruining your energy, risking the loss of your children, but with family support, you will weather this stage and return to “normal” life. Of course, the missing breast (s) will be a private issue between you and your partner. Mutilated and frightened, you will attempt to get on with your life, awaiting the five-year mark when you can declare yourself “cancer-free.” Around the five-year mark or shortly thereafter you will be tested for the last time, and for some reason, the cancer has “returned” and now has spread. It was actually there all the time, embedding itself into your body. The reality is that it was not cut out with the breast because it was not localized in the breast. Cutting your breast off was just a hit-or-miss approach. Now the Big Time treatment begins with all of its fanfare. Now you are visiting the doctor several times a week for assorted therapies-chemo, radiation, and surgery. The entire family circles around you, driving you, picking up prescriptions, taking you in for treatment. God hope that you are strong because the regimen you will follow would exhaust the average person. You become the “star” of the show. At this stage, you still feel great and can’t believe you are really sick with cancer. You are told that with your confident attitude, you have an excellent chance of beating the odds. At this point, you may take on an incredible interest in vitamin supplements and nutrition, but you continue your bargain with the devil that if you just obey and do what your doctor tells you to do, you will have the best chance of seeing your children graduate from high school, attending their marriages, seeing your grandchildren. The pain starts to set in big time. The doctor prescribes you some of the good stuff, as much as you need, and you go on with your duties. At this point it is hard to imagine that you are dying and that within months you will be a wheelchair or bedridden. You ignore suggestions to make a video message for your children, to write your will, to assemble a list of friends to contact on your death. The truth is, you will likely be dead within a year. Now you are told that the chemotherapy is not working but there is this or that other experimental chemotherapy with a small percentage of chance of success. You grab at anything. As the disease progresses, you become bedridden, and it is harder and harder for your family to care for you. Your bed is moved to the living room and you become the queen of the household. You are the center of attention with everyone trying to please you and give you rest so you can recover. You are the good, obedient patient. You are even helping science by submitting to experimental treatments. You may go out at spend large amounts of money on a magnetic mattress pad or some other device in hopes of a miracle cure since the chemo has not worked at all. Now it’s time to go in the hospital. By this time, you feel best when you lie on your back, still. You are given a luxury room with a view and better art, private room service. This all reinforces your belief that you are special and somehow you will beat the odds and survive. There is room service with a delicious menu, movies that can be ordered. It’s quite glamorous to have friends stop by and visit. “Your” oncologist will visit you on a daily basis, stopping briefly, his face gray like a mortician’s. But you don’t see the look on his face. You are still hoping on hope. At this stage the big danger is bedsores. Even with the best care, it is easy to not move the body enough. You friends and family are shocked to see a huge hole has rotted in your underside. You don’t feel anything because of the meds. This isn’t supposed to happen, but in all fairness, it is hard to avoid. The hospital does an operation to address the first bedsore. Later it just cleans it regularly and packs it with gauze. You are told you have exhausted all of the experimental chemo options. Your nurse, who sincerely seems to have believed it might have worked, sympathizes with you, feeling truly bad that your options are up. You might as well go home to die. A home care provider will stop by daily to help you. You are back home in the living room, surrounded by pills, a catheter to urinate. Your small son helps by emptying the urine bag. The children are all so loving and supportive. Your husband buys you whatever you desire to eat. A special ramp it built to the front door so your wheel chair can get in and out. You won’t really be needing it for much longer. One night, you suddenly start to die. You mother jumps on you and performs CPR, bringing you back to life. But it’s too much; she doesn’t want to go through that again. She decides she can’t bear to see you die. The family starts looking for hospice care. Many hospice centers are very bad, but your lesbian sister finds you a room in a new AIDS hospice which has few AIDS patients to fill it. It’s very luxurious, and you are able to get digital TV, which you really appreciate. The professional, attractive nurse treats you as if you are there for a short visit although everyone knows you could not be admitted unless you were expected to live less than 6 months. Your family comes every day to visit you. Your children bring artwork to put on your stylish walls. The family tries to combine visits with you with trips to nearby restaurants, to ease the stress. Everyone is still feeling very elegant, special, pampered, and just not the type to fail. The end is nearing. You are a model guest at this hospice, pleasant and charming with the nurses and other guests whom you meet when you are wheeled to the art room for a little diversion. Before long your health declines further. After a month or so you appear to be dying, so the hospice makes the decision to end food and water. The family obediently follows doctor’s orders and is given a little swab with lemon flavor to swab your lips with water. You quick fall into a coma due to lack of water and are dead within a few days. When it is time to bury you, there are numerous papers that need to be filled out for the funeral home. The funeral home director is frustrated that these were not filled out in advance of death. To him it was obvious that your loved one would be dying. The husband is scurrying around attending to these last details which only a husband or next of kin is authorized to decide. At your funeral your husband cannot believe how beautiful you look and reminds the children of all of your saintly qualities. The entire community comments on what a wonderful and kind person you were. You die a saintly death. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 22, 2004 Report Share Posted November 22, 2004 I have metastatic breats cancer and I really didn't need to read this C as <glkbreeze wrote: A ROAD MAP FOR DYING OF CANCER Since most Americans trust their doctors and believe that they will be given the best chance of survival by following the traditional treatment of surgery, radiation and therapy, the least I can offer is a road map of the road you will likely travel over the next seven years or so. I’m giving you this roadmap because I will not be traveling this road with you. I’m saying goodbye, farewell, best wishes, but I am not following you down that road. I will not sit submissively by your bed and encourage you as you are led to your death. You will likely have many others to do that, so good luck, farewell, and good bye. When you cancer is first discovered, it will likely be small, assuming it is cancer at all. Not to worry, because if it was incorrectly diagnosed, you stand a good chance of developing cancer from the radiation therapy and chemotherapy which you will receive. At this stage the chemotherapy you are given will be relatively light, making you sick, ruining your energy, risking the loss of your children, but with family support, you will weather this stage and return to “normal” life. Of course, the missing breast (s) will be a private issue between you and your partner. Mutilated and frightened, you will attempt to get on with your life, awaiting the five-year mark when you can declare yourself “cancer-free.” Around the five-year mark or shortly thereafter you will be tested for the last time, and for some reason, the cancer has “returned” and now has spread. It was actually there all the time, embedding itself into your body. The reality is that it was not cut out with the breast because it was not localized in the breast. Cutting your breast off was just a hit-or-miss approach. Now the Big Time treatment begins with all of its fanfare. Now you are visiting the doctor several times a week for assorted therapies-chemo, radiation, and surgery. The entire family circles around you, driving you, picking up prescriptions, taking you in for treatment. God hope that you are strong because the regimen you will follow would exhaust the average person. You become the “star” of the show. At this stage, you still feel great and can’t believe you are really sick with cancer. You are told that with your confident attitude, you have an excellent chance of beating the odds. At this point, you may take on an incredible interest in vitamin supplements and nutrition, but you continue your bargain with the devil that if you just obey and do what your doctor tells you to do, you will have the best chance of seeing your children graduate from high school, attending their marriages, seeing your grandchildren. The pain starts to set in big time. The doctor prescribes you some of the good stuff, as much as you need, and you go on with your duties. At this point it is hard to imagine that you are dying and that within months you will be a wheelchair or bedridden. You ignore suggestions to make a video message for your children, to write your will, to assemble a list of friends to contact on your death. The truth is, you will likely be dead within a year. Now you are told that the chemotherapy is not working but there is this or that other experimental chemotherapy with a small percentage of chance of success. You grab at anything. As the disease progresses, you become bedridden, and it is harder and harder for your family to care for you. Your bed is moved to the living room and you become the queen of the household. You are the center of attention with everyone trying to please you and give you rest so you can recover. You are the good, obedient patient. You are even helping science by submitting to experimental treatments. You may go out at spend large amounts of money on a magnetic mattress pad or some other device in hopes of a miracle cure since the chemo has not worked at all. Now it’s time to go in the hospital. By this time, you feel best when you lie on your back, still. You are given a luxury room with a view and better art, private room service. This all reinforces your belief that you are special and somehow you will beat the odds and survive. There is room service with a delicious menu, movies that can be ordered. It’s quite glamorous to have friends stop by and visit. “Your” oncologist will visit you on a daily basis, stopping briefly, his face gray like a mortician’s. But you don’t see the look on his face. You are still hoping on hope. At this stage the big danger is bedsores. Even with the best care, it is easy to not move the body enough. You friends and family are shocked to see a huge hole has rotted in your underside. You don’t feel anything because of the meds. This isn’t supposed to happen, but in all fairness, it is hard to avoid. The hospital does an operation to address the first bedsore. Later it just cleans it regularly and packs it with gauze. You are told you have exhausted all of the experimental chemo options. Your nurse, who sincerely seems to have believed it might have worked, sympathizes with you, feeling truly bad that your options are up. You might as well go home to die. A home care provider will stop by daily to help you. You are back home in the living room, surrounded by pills, a catheter to urinate. Your small son helps by emptying the urine bag. The children are all so loving and supportive. Your husband buys you whatever you desire to eat. A special ramp it built to the front door so your wheel chair can get in and out. You won’t really be needing it for much longer. One night, you suddenly start to die. You mother jumps on you and performs CPR, bringing you back to life. But it’s too much; she doesn’t want to go through that again. She decides she can’t bear to see you die. The family starts looking for hospice care. Many hospice centers are very bad, but your lesbian sister finds you a room in a new AIDS hospice which has few AIDS patients to fill it. It’s very luxurious, and you are able to get digital TV, which you really appreciate. The professional, attractive nurse treats you as if you are there for a short visit although everyone knows you could not be admitted unless you were expected to live less than 6 months. Your family comes every day to visit you. Your children bring artwork to put on your stylish walls. The family tries to combine visits with you with trips to nearby restaurants, to ease the stress. Everyone is still feeling very elegant, special, pampered, and just not the type to fail. The end is nearing. You are a model guest at this hospice, pleasant and charming with the nurses and other guests whom you meet when you are wheeled to the art room for a little diversion. Before long your health declines further. After a month or so you appear to be dying, so the hospice makes the decision to end food and water. The family obediently follows doctor’s orders and is given a little swab with lemon flavor to swab your lips with water. You quick fall into a coma due to lack of water and are dead within a few days. When it is time to bury you, there are numerous papers that need to be filled out for the funeral home. The funeral home director is frustrated that these were not filled out in advance of death. To him it was obvious that your loved one would be dying. The husband is scurrying around attending to these last details which only a husband or next of kin is authorized to decide. At your funeral your husband cannot believe how beautiful you look and reminds the children of all of your saintly qualities. The entire community comments on what a wonderful and kind person you were. You die a saintly death. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 22, 2004 Report Share Posted November 22, 2004 Yes it wasnt really the nicest article. In fact i didnt really see the point of it at all. Whoever wrote it obviously doesn't believe in mainstream treatment (fair enough), but does not propose any alternatives or give any hope to the reader. It comes across as quite mean actually and would be pretty depressing to read if you have been diagnosed with cancer. Sorry you had to read this Christina. When i get the time (in the next few days) I will find some of the better articles that have been posted here in the past. Regards, Cara --- christina <cbmd3 wrote: > > > I have metastatic breats cancer and I really didn't need to read this > > C > > as <glkbreeze wrote: > > > > A ROAD MAP FOR DYING OF CANCER > > Since most Americans trust their doctors and believe > that they will be given the best chance of survival by > following the traditional treatment of surgery, > radiation and therapy, the least I can offer is a road > map of the road you will likely travel over the next > seven years or so. I’m giving you this roadmap > because I will not be traveling this road with you. > I’m saying goodbye, farewell, best wishes, but I am > not following you down that road. I will not sit > submissively by your bed and encourage you as you are > led to your death. You will likely have many others > to do that, so good luck, farewell, and good bye. >.... Find local movie times and trailers on Movies. http://au.movies. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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