If you have been involved with a Terminal cancer patient step on in...

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SLOPAR72

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So a guy at work learned about 3 months ago that his wife had Breast cancer. She didn't do the right things such as checkups and such but no since in worrying about spilled Milk over the bridge. And she started the Chemo-therapy. He is not educated at all in the reality of Cancer and that's not such a bad thing IMO however that is a double edged sword. So then it went wrong quick.

Into the 3rd treatment she came home and the next night paseed away in bed with him. Now that is a hot mess for him to live with however she did what I have yet to see and that was tell her Husband how far along the cancer was and had spread. Her body just gave up between the treatments and the spread of it....

He's really mad at her. I don't know about that. I have seen how Cancer can drag someone through the mud and hornets nest before death and maybe this is the easier way to end it...

What say you? There is no right or wrong answer but am curious as to what other people would think of their Spouse holding back on the intel...

JW
 
Havnt had a close family member but, had a good friend die of cancer. Similar as far as in not goin to the doctor. He is gonna have to work through it himself. Not much you can do. At the end of the day it is her body and her choice. Kinda selfish I guess but, still up to her. I would say have him go see a shrink but, they will just put him on pills. Antidepressants and ****. Not a fan.
She may not have made it even if she had dome everything by the book. Rough situation. Wish I could be more help.
 
Havnt had a close family member but, had a good friend die of cancer. Similar as far as in not goin to the doctor. He is gonna have to work through it himself. Not much you can do. At the end of the day it is her body and her choice. Kinda selfish I guess but, still up to her. I would say have him go see a shrink but, they will just put him on pills. Antidepressants and ****. Not a fan.
She may not have made it even if she had dome everything by the book. Rough situation. Wish I could be more help.

Actually I think this will make sense to him in a few months. As said having watched someone drug through the phases of the end of life for someone with Cancer I see nothing wrong with it. Sux to lose your partner but there is nothing we can do about that...

JW
 
My dad had throat cancer. They started by taking his voice box then put in a trach. He had a feeding tube put in a couple of times. Through all that had chemo too. This was over a period of a couple of years. He never said anything but I think the quality of life 40 - 50%. In the end, he started hemorrhaging from his mouth, the last time he bled out by the time they got him to the hospital, but they saved him. They told us they would have to remove his tongue and told us that the cancer was spreading fast. We decided on comfort care, he went 8 days before he passed. That is something that I pray to never go through again
 
Dad passed from Multiple Myeloma(blood cancer) was open an honest with everyone about it. I regret to this day them giving my blessing on pulling the plug.
Your coworker MAY have misguided anger. Hopefully there is no financial struggles he has to deal with along with her passing.
Positive thoughts sent.
 
Ex MIL had pancreatic cancer, had surgery and was given the all clear, less than a year later it was back in the liver, she was gone in 3 months. Her body gave up, she went from about 160 lbs to 75 lbs in the 3 months, family was devastated, personally I would not be surprised if she had not been upfront with her husband the first go round, she kept her cards pretty close to the vest.
 
My wife was a home hospice nurse. A large part of her job was working with the family. She said he’s grieving. Talk to a counselor, there is a lot of help out there if he will reach out for it.
 
I've been through this business twice. First off, my condolences for you, your friend, and this situation. There is nothing about cancer that doesn't suck.

My first go round was with my MIL. She was fine, then started coughing and couldn't stop. She goes to the doctor and finds out she has lung cancer. Six weeks later she was gone. It was a hard deal for the entire family as it happened so fast.

A few years later my wife was diagnosed with breast cancer. We did all the surgical, chemo, and radiation treatments but none of it did any good. She was in a three year slide until it finished eating her up. In my case, I had a good idea well ahead of time my wife was a likely candidate for cancer, but that didn't make it any easier to deal with. It was horrible. Knowing what was coming was like watching a train wreck in slow motion. You know what's going to happen, and all you can do was watch. You can't affect anything to improve the situation.

In your case with your friend, there are no good answers. So if I tell my hubby I'm sick, then I have him go through the grinder knowing I'm in bad shape? Or should I not tell my hubby to help shield him from this horror that can't be stopped? It's a shitty deal either way. Tell your friend to try hard not to be angry. There are no right or good answers to this situation. Only varying levels of lousy answers. There is no good way to lose your people. :(
 
I'd be pissed too
Pissed at her for stealing what might have been years with her from me
And pissed at myself for not being able to protect her

Like halfafish said, lousy situation all around
 
Mama fought breast cancer for seven years. She was diagnosed stage 3 in early 1977. May as well have been a death sentence right then in 1977, but Mama was not your average person. She fought it hard. Daddy retired two years early to be her caregiver in 1982, when she became paralyzed from the waist down, as our family's never had money and that was the only way, even with me chipping in. My sister was off at nursing school. Mama finally lost her fight, February 4, 1984.

It killed, Daddy, but being the rock he always was, he picked up and made things work. We started fishing more, going to local Macon Peaches ball games, watching baseball on TV. I never really cared, but I loved it because he did. Then in 1996, we had to end up putting him in an assisted living home.....per his wishes. He had been leaving the frying pan on when finished.....things like that. He knew he was going to mess something up. Kitty and I had been married since 94 and living with him, per his and my sister's wishes and we both had jobs. We were buying the house I was born and raised in from Daddy's estate while he was still alive. If you want a complete clusterfuck and something that's the most difficult thing to do in your life EVER, do that. Then about in early 1998, we had to keep putting Daddy in the hospital for recurring upper respiratory trouble. His doctor kept treating him for such and sending him home. About the end of October, he was in again and his doctor on call found he had metastasized lung cancer. Daddy was gone almost 30 days to the day later on December 28th, 1998.

Then I joined here and shortly after met Bruce (70-71DartGTReg). We chatted frequently in the chatroom we had back then and realized we had a lot in common, including our love for the slant six. I also learned he lived in Ft Valley, Georgia, about 62 miles away. Kitty and I would go see him and eat supper occasionally getting to know him more. He was a wealth of information. But he was already sick. He knew something was wrong, as his throat was swollen and sore all of the time. He had no family and no friends locally and no insurance. He was very financially strapped. So it was up to me to take him to the few doctors appointments we could get him into. Once a diagnosis was confirmed, that he had stage 4 throat and stage 4 lung cancer, he was very depressed. But I still drove the distance taking him to his treatments. Sitting with him as I did many years before with Mama. That was hard. One of the hardest things I've ever done. He called me after his hair fell out from chemo saying he had always wanted a tattoo on his head of a spider web and a black widow, that he knew a guy in Ft Valley that was an artist ans asked me to go and get one with him. I said hell yeah, because we knew where this was going and you only live once. But he got sicker and dies that following week. I did get that tattoo, only on my elbow and with his birth date and date of death in the web. about two weeks prior to that though, he asked Kitty and I if we knew of anyone who might come to the house, that he wanted to accept Christ. I have a friend who is a retired Methodist Pastor and took his Communion kit, gave Bruce Holy Communion and he accepted Christ that night. It was a beautiful thing and something I am glad to have been involved with, even if only a little.

So yeah, I've been involved with terminal cancer.
 
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As RRR pointed out above, if you haven't lived it first hand you'll thankfully never understand.

Biggest thing I can't live with is the fact that I can fix anything with a pocket knife and/or a hammer, but I couldn't fix my own kid. The most helpless feeling you'll hopefully never know.
 
So a guy at work learned about 3 months ago that his wife had Breast cancer. She didn't do the right things such as checkups and such but no since in worrying about spilled Milk over the bridge. And she started the Chemo-therapy. He is not educated at all in the reality of Cancer and that's not such a bad thing IMO however that is a double edged sword. So then it went wrong quick.

Into the 3rd treatment she came home and the next night paseed away in bed with him. Now that is a hot mess for him to live with however she did what I have yet to see and that was tell her Husband how far along the cancer was and had spread. Her body just gave up between the treatments and the spread of it....Mom says usually people die around 6 months into hospice-except the men on her side of the family, they live way longer (but the hard stop for all of them is 88-the magic number that is the sound or age barrier)

He's really mad at her. I don't know about that. I have seen how Cancer can drag someone through the mud and hornets nest before death and maybe this is the easier way to end it...

What say you? There is no right or wrong answer but am curious as to what other people would think of their Spouse holding back on the intel...

JW
My uncle just quit all of his treatments and went on hospice. The doctor told him that he admired him, and learned from him. the doctor said that the doctor decided that he would not put his father through all of the treatment my uncle went through to reduce pain from a growth that went into my uncle's spine. My uncle did these treatments (in all of our family's opinion and his) to some excess in order to gain a little more time with his beloved wife. He reached his pain and suffering threshold (now extremely, highly elevated) with the treatment, made peace with his fate (through faith and support) and is trying to enjoy what time he had left. His pain despite pain meds is through the roof of a skyscraper. He got on, and immediately off of opiates. Mom says people usually live about 6 months on hospice.

On a real personal note, my beloved grandfather, a devout christian, after 20 years of multiple cancers ( we used joke about the Simpson's tv show character Mr. Burns, whom it was said that all of his different cancers and ailments were actually somehow keeping him alive-a tv show joke) eventually killed himself from the suffering of pain, years alone living after his wife's death with pancreatic cancer, and multiple versions of suffering. He had a softball size prostate cancer for at least the last year of his life (difficulty in urination and deficating) along with blood, bone, and 2-3 other cancers simultaneously. He worked a little with herbicides and pesticides in farming, suffered from extensive Radon (just a simple, low level ground radiation exposure plowing up fields {prominent in south texas and ohio for some reason-which I read and saw charts from a classified book onboard the submarine that the nuclear reactor trained operators had}, and as a pilot with over 7-8000 hours flying-received allot of radiation exposure from the sun as well.
At first, he tried to take a bunch of pills (can't remember what they were) and was in a coma (at age 88) for two days in hospice. The family tried to get him to go the hospital when he woke up, but he had spent so much time there as a private investigator (investigating hospital mistakes for the insurance company and lawyers he worked for) that he not only refused to die in a hospital ($15,000 a day back then), he convinced his wife to die in hospice and pretty much most of the rest of us family. When he woke up from the coma, he was adamant that he wanted to just go to a buffet and eat.

The second way he tried to kill himself was to not eat for three weeks. He was in such good shape his whole life, and especially aerobic shape with his metabolism and heart (doctors said he had the heart of a 50 year old man at 88) that he just couldn't die. He was weak, tired, and miserable. My cousin was living with him and taking care of him at the time. Paba didn't have a bowl movement for several weeks during that time either. At the time his prostate cancer had returned (it will for all of us males if we live long enough so they say) from 20 years prior, previous treatment was a radioactive enema pill (he called it the silver bullet, told me that was the only way they could kill him-jokingly to me). At the time surgery to remove prostate cancer was fairly new and had a 50 50 shot of success, or radiation and chemo treatment (I think, am not sure) but the doctor just told him only surgery or death-which he shamed the doctor for being an obtuse liar. (which further convinced him how untrustworthy doctors were)
-My aunt, a nurse said that in hospice, if you are on morphine like grandma was the nurse specifically tells you not to take a (table spoon?) large dose of the morphine ?on your tongue or it will kill you-kind of a Dr. Kevorkian explanation hinting how to end your own suffering.

In the end Paba used a revolver filled with a blankshot next to his temple and my cousin had to find him like that. I know for certain that he didn't want to devolve into a vegetable and that was slowly happening. Initially he had a 150 plus IQ and photographic memory -I remember him complaining to me about how far he dropped from such competence and telling him, "Welcome to my world and the rest of the population Paba. Now you have to live your life as a mortal man." Just because he had just now started to forget things and misplace things, struggling to recall things-just fairly recently.

The family was REAL WEIRD about his suicide because most of us are. devout christians Our faith condemns suicide to hell. I didn't find out until I had pieced details together from different relatives' stories (as I was 1100 miles away fulfilling deployments).

This man was the standard of excellence that I judged other men by, to include myself. Most of us fall short of him, or my step dad- the older generation simply HAD TO and did work hard(er) and harder than most due to the tough times then (depression or for dad vietnam) when money was tight like it is now. I am not sure, but he told me that most of his life he only slept 4 hours a day and was working otherwise-which was how I perceived things with him. I lived with him for a couple of years total, on and off. He would farm on moonlit nights since he was a child in the depression. His family farmed 1600 acres (great grandfather Theodore Daniel and 6 boys-5 or 6 tractors and Paba drove horses instead. Great-grandfather never defaulted on his bank loan in the depression, he paid it all back, his word was honorable and worth gold.

The point is, it took allot of thought and processing to see Paba fall so far from grace-I learned that there is only so much we can handle, despite how hard any of us are and that family and friends alleviate so much of that suffering towards the final years. There are people here on FABO that after sharing many personal details have truly inspired me not to give up after a divorce, home invasion, (which were not the end of the world{and I didn't think bothered me, except some paranoia at home, alone}, but I didn't realize how much they bothered me until the addition of not having my precious 7 year old child anymore compounded a little anguish.

Now another part of his suicide, was of all things, a tax hole loop that was going to destroy everything he worked for-death taxes. I guess a fight to the death for all that he earned. He left his family a 200+ acre ranch that the Federal Government financed (and offered to WW2 veterans). If I remember correctly he said he paid $75 a month up until the 1970's on the loan for that land. I believe that $75 in 1945/46 was big big money at the time.

In 2010, it was the last year for someone to utilize a living trust, disperse the wealth he had earned to family, and avoid paying the government. Paba lived during the golden age of wealth in America and had saved, invested, worked multiple jobs at once, and his wife (Masters Degree educated/employed as a teacher) worked for over 30 years at the same job while saving on groceries by having a farm. -the farm land has grown past tens of thousands of dollars in value per acre, and several family members have sold their share already to cash in. He did not want to give any of that back to the IRS, and who could blame him. He even said he would not live past 2010 because he could not afford it. I thought he meant his life savings.

I was hoping for more kids because of witnessing all of the children/grandchildren that took care of my grandparents, they did not die alone, or in a home. I hope I die at 88 either having sex (like one ancestor) or driving my Mopar alone, in the middle of no where. Mom said she would fly delivering food to people, "in the mountains" in her bonanza plane. One mistake with wind-sheer and it would be over in seconds, and that was the idea.
 
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Some sad stories and am so sorry for everyone's loss.
Lost my wife to breast cancer about 18 years ago she refused to go to the doctor in the beginning and went to alternative doctors and tried herbs and natural healing and organic food for I think 3 years. I put my foot down and made her go to a regular doctor and they found out it was cancer and was to late to do anything.
She died in my arms with all 8 of her children around her with a smile on her face.
Not the end of everything really I'm not mad at her for doing what she wanted but she could have maybe seen her kids grow and have grand kids.
The youngest 3 kids didn't know there mom real well the youngest was 2 when she died.
 
Many of us on here have went thru this. I applaud your wisdom and strength reaching out to us. My experience was similar in that no doctors visits and as a result she suffered in silence. Once it got to the point of chemo it was to late. Holding her hand and feeding her ice chips I was angry at entire world. Your buddy can certainly look at his situation as a blessing. Those of us that have watched the destruction chemo wrecks upon the body only extending the breath of life for a short time understand the pain that that entails as well. Your buddy’s wife perhaps got called home early to spare her the long inevitable painful ending. She passed quickly and was spared much suffering. In turn he has been spared the suffering and feeling of helplessness that we have all felt. I certainly cannot speak for others but as I stared down at the wrecked body in the hospital bed wondering at the unfairness of it all guilt wracked my body as I felt undeserving of life while she laid there easily the far better human being. Your buddy may be feeling these guilt emotions. Again the woman he loved got the call to go home early, merciful for sure. Perhaps he will see the mercy in the end of her walk her on earth. My heart aches for him as I know so many others on here do as well. You can read the pain and suffering in every post. Cancer Sucks. Be there for your friend in whatever capacity he needs.
 
Perfect reply Sublime one. She knew what was probably the easiest route for him emotionally. We talked for a minute today and he is glad there is no more suffering. As I told him there is no good way to die or a good day to die. She got the call and that's the storyline.

Such an animated guy (loud and talks with his arm lol) but is a kindred spirit who's gotten his heart ripped out again. He lost his daughter a few years ago. Getting old ain't for sissie's and certainly the stories I am reading in this thread back that statement up....

It's in all of us. And it's an opportunist. It patiently waits for the right moment to grow just like a big game hunter looking out of his stand waiting for the shot. Luckily most don't ever endure the suffering of it as a patient. As I say gotta keep moving....

JW
 
I watched my dad fight off his blood cancer for over 20 years. At first he was just medication that made him a little tired, and not handle heat well. As time went by they had to take out his spleen that had grown to the size of a football, half his tongue followed later. In the last few years it was part of his ear, or recurring growths on his head. Then came the day he told me that he only had six months, maybe a year. He looked at me, and said he would not make it even six, and said he was sorry for leaving me to take care of everything. I was in the room when he told the doctor he was done with treatment, he went to hospice the following day, and passed the next. I'm not sure what is worse, going through it, or watching someone you love do it. Neither is a pleasant experience. I can't speak to what your friends wife did was right, but I do know that us knowing in the last couple of months let us sort things out, and say the things we needed to. One of my dads last wishes was that I finish my car in his shop. I work with many of his tools that I grew up with when we worked on my cars together. Somehow it is a little better knowing he wanted it that way. Next month will be two years of his passing, I hope your friend can find peace somehow.
 
I lost both my mother and father to cancer. My mother was decades ago. She fought tooth and nail and God sustained her. It was a horrible life full of weakness and excruciating pain. Maybe one good week out of a month, for years. We all felt relieved when she crossed over. Dad got cancer decades later that spread so fast, there was nothing to do for him. He refused treatment and medications, stopped eating and drinking, and was gone in a couple weeks. Tell your friend, that his wife is in a better place and that it is nice she did not suffer long and was by his side when she crossed over. I hope I am that lucky when it is my time to go...
 
Found out that there are three ladies on the street that i reside on, have cancer.
I know this because i'm the old man that walks around my neighborhood all the time, and they have confided in me.
One told me, she's not doing anything about it anymore, and will just now take it day by day.
Another i don't see, as she now never seems to come out of the house.
I just see her daughter, every so often coming or going from work.
The third is doing the best one can, but who knows for how long.
I am respectful to them all, if i see them, and hope nothing like that befalls me, in my old age.
I have a bone marrow, white blood cell, mutation, disease, cancer, (whatever you wan't to call it) that if it mutates, i get leukemia.
Do i have a time bomb waiting to go off? Dunno.
Hematologist says it won't happen, but who can guarantee that, in this life on top of planet Earth.
And i just went thru heart surgery on Nov. 30th.
I'm a walking, medical disaster area. lol
Jim V.
 
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I lost both my grandfathers to cancer, my dad to complications due to cancer treatment even though he was in remission at the time. We lost my wifes grandfather and her mother to cancer.

During my mother in laws battle my wife had broken her ankle really bad and, required major surgery to fix it so, I transported my mother in law back and forth to her treatments. A very sobering time in life watching her fight and go through the things she went through knowing what the ultimate outcome would be.

I always attempted to keep our conversations light on our trips to and from her treatments and, sometimes I would have to get a little firm with her on trying to stay positive although, I couldn't imagine myself staying positive if I were in her position.

She ultimately lost her battle at age 53. I have seen the very dark side of cancer many times and, I feel there should be another option for people who are suffering terribly from a terminal situation. It's inhumane to allow your dog to suffer but, it's ok to let a human being to suffer every second of their life sometimes for months until they ultimately lose their life.

I remember watching my grandfather slowly die from brain cancer. This was one of the most horrific things I have seen in my life. The moans, screams and, things that went on have stuck with me since. That sadly is how I remember him...moaning...screaming...yelling from his bed not, the strong, proud man he was when healthy. During the time where our family members have taken a bad turn in their battle I have stood tall on putting my foot down on not allowing our kids when they were younger not to see this happen. I think it probably pissed off my wife a little and, maybe a couple members of her family but, I didn't want thier most vivid or lasting memories to be of them clinging to life. My wife thanks me for that now as she watched as an adult and, couldn't imagine how the kids could of gone through that.
 
Last year a good friend of mine had stage 4 ovarian cancer but after 8 months she was deemed cancer free for two months and then it was back. After her first chemo treatment she had a major stroke and past away in the night. As hard as it's been losing her it was probably inevitable and easiest on her. The treatments were very hard for her almost grueling and the quality of her life sad to watch.
 
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