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Don't Miss Me In Cure Magazine - Coping with Cancer Anger


The summer issue of CURE Magazine is out! As promised in an earlier post, I'm quoted extensively in an article entitled Seeing Red: Coping with Anger During Cancer. It's a really interesting article on how anger is normal for cancer patients/survivors and how it can be used constructively to advance healing.

If you missed the original post I wrote on anger here at WWGN, I'm reposting it here in its entirety. I'm also working on a new post about cancer anger which I'll be posting very soon. To make sure you don't miss it, sign up at the Feedburner box to the right to get my posts sent directly to your email box. Also, don't miss my newsletter and gift to you: The WhereWeGoNow Manifesto - "20 Intentions for Your Inspired Survivorship" by signing up at the top of the home page. 

Bitterness is like cancer. It eats upon the host. But anger is like fire. It burns it all clean. Maya Angelou

The Merriam-Webster dictionary defines an emotion as  "a conscious mental reaction (as anger or fear) subjectively experienced as strong feeling usually directed toward a specific object and typically accompanied by physiological and behavioral changes in the body." Notice there is no value judgment as to the negativity or positivity of our emotions. They are simply reactions to friends, family, medical professionals and cancer itself.

The truth is we often consider anger to be a and try to avoid it at all costs. The social message is loud and clear: Don't overreact, don't yell, don't curse, don't scream, and don't ever be impolite. Hold it in at all cost. But how do we cope with cancer anger?

As a cancer survivor, I remember a lot to be angry about. Although I never wondered "why me," I did feel anger about changes to my bodyloneliness, and having to deal with past emotional traumas stirred up by cancer. I was especially angry when a year had passed since my diagnosis and I was not yet "over" my cancer anger. 

I also remember being really angry at the people who wanted to move on and forget about my cancer before I was ready to do the same. I felt alone, abandoned and unheard. As my anger increased, it got too big to share with those same people. The only thing that saved me was being able to voice my anger to my oncology therapist, who encouraged me to curse, yell and be impolite. I know it is only due to her being there for me that I was able to work through my cancer anger and get to a better place in those relationships.

The experience which made me the most angry was my first mammogram after my diagnosis. I was already emotional about returning to the scene of my initial bad news, but the technician's insensitivity pushed me over the edge. She started off on the wrong foot by talking about my history in the middle of the waiting room, where our conversation could be overheard. 

In the dressing room, she asked me again about my history (she couldn't seem to understand why I only needed one breast to be mammogramed.) Finally, I realized that she didn't even believe that I had had a mastectomy, despite the fact that I told her so many times. At that point, she told me that many patients don't always know the difference between a lumpectomy and a mastectomy. Really? You try having a mastectomy and then tell me you don't know the difference.

Next, she moved on to my diagnosis, which in her opinion (despite her lack of a medical degree), was "not breast cancer." This shocked me, but I looked her straight in the eye and responded that it was in fact cancer. Not to be deterred, she responded by saying that there was some debate whether it was or wasn't. At that point, I stopped talking because I didn't want to break down and cry, or possibly punch her.

Despite my silence, she kept talking. She told me she knew someone else who had DCIS and she had a mastectomy too, "so she wouldn't have to worry about it anymore." Could she not sense my intense worry and upset at that very moment? Or did she actually think that my mastectomy made it all better and I had nothing to worry about anymore?

When the mammogram was completed, she invited me to take a rose. I considered not taking it, because I was nauseous from the whole experience, but I did to keep my head down. I got dressed, holding myself together, walked as fast as I could out of there and got to my car, where I broke down and cried. When I got home, I threw away the rose.

A day later, I was still over the top angry and knew I had to do something. I decided to call the breast center and complain. When I talked about it later with my therapist, she applauded me for calling, but asked why I felt I had to hold it all in while I was there, rather than let the technician see the hurt she had caused. It was an excellent question.

The bitterness of cancer anger was exactly what I was feeling before I made that phone call. By holding in my anger, I caused it to eat through me, rather than use it to deal with the source of the problem. Once expressed appropriately (by complaining about how I was treated) my anger burned clean my resentment and bitterness. I felt validated. I felt empowered and I felt heard.

How have you coped with your cancer anger? Have you been able to express it constructively, or have you held it in like I did? To read the many comments this post inspired, make sure to check it out here.

Yours in validation,

Copyright (c) 123RF Stock Photos

Comments

Jan Baird Hasak's picture

Congratulations, Debbie, on being quoted extensively in the current issue of CURE magazine! I held less anger toward cancer than I did toward lymphedema. I was extremely mad at the doctor who did not recognize this swelling for what it was. Anger is common among those afflicted with lymphedema. Most medical practitioners deny it to protect themselves, or out of ignorance. But whatever their reason, I let my anger show through speaking about it, writing about it, and telling anyone who will listen that he or she should not sit back and wait for second opinions. Go now! No longer do I hold my anger in. It empowers me to the max. Thanks for this enlightening post! xx

Debbie's picture

Jan:

Your story is an excellent example of the positive power of anger. Good for you for letting others know the truth about lymphedema. The bottom line is that anger is neither positive nor negative, it's how we express it that matters. You've found an extremely positive way to express yours and I'm so glad to hear that it empowers you and educates others. Bravo!

Survival > Existence,

Debbie

 

Barbara Bair's picture

very interesting article about anger
I didn't realize how angry I still am about many aspects of my treatment for aggresive breast cancer. I usually smile and try to be positive, but when I think about my breast surgeon repeatedly telling me my lumpectomy wound was ok and an infectious disease doctor telling me it was most definitely infected and the reason for my trips to ER with 103 degree fevers, I still get furious. I guess she was reluctant to admit that one of her surgeries did not go well. She was outraged that I asked for a second opinion from a doctor at a wound center who eventually performed a second lumpectomy to close the still open wound a year later. I'm also angry that the neuropathy in my feet is still a problem and painful, as well as my lymphodema. I'm angry that I had to retire from a job I loved in order to deal with the side effects of chemo - a chemo brain, fatigue, more surgeries, etc.

However, whenever I fee this anger, I remember to feel GRATITUDE that I am still alive ( 2 years after diagnosis). I remember writing the list of few losses and many gifts - all the positive relationships, the love and support, that I have with family and friends, many new interests that I now have time for. I now understand when some survivors say, "Cancer has been a gift."

Debbie's picture

Barbara:

Your breast surgeon's ego was definitely more important to her than you were. That's worse than a damn shame and you have every right to be furious. In fact, I believe fury is every bit as legitmate an emotion as gratitude. That you feel them both simultaneously is normal and healthy and should be honored. And, just like gratitude has compelled you into action (by giving back through the Women's Cancer Teaching Project and the many oher things you do), so can fury compel you to act. Have you fired this doctor and found a new breast surgeon? If not, ask yourself whether you want to forgive and forget or if you would rather start anew with a medical professional who respects your needs over her own. 

For me, one of the most important gifts I received from infertility and miscarriages all those years ago was the clarity of knowing that not all doctors deserve my time. And when it comes to your health, there is nothing more precious than time.

Survival > Existence,

Debbie

Helen's picture

I found your site by googling "cancer anger". Guess how I've been feeling??! Thank you for somehow writing just what I was looking for. You've inspired me to start a "gifts and losses" list. I really need to remind myself of some truths on both sides of the list. I too felt a great deal of anger following my first year mammogram (June). It mostly stemmed from having to wait alone for 15 minutes next to the empty room in full view of the bench where I'd had my eleven core biopsies prior to surgery in June last year. Those 15 minutes got me really wound up and brought back a lot of trauma. Then of course to suffer the pain of the mammogram didn't really help the emotional situation. I have had professional help in the form of counselling and art therapy, though I've had to stop for the summer while the kids are on holiday - these therapies helped drag me out of depression in the spring - but I think dealing with my own anger and trying to find a way to deal with it myself will be key to my ongoing recovery. I'm normally a very self-reliant person, and it's been a big deal for me to ask for and receive help. Still not really accepted this "newness" in me yet. Some days I just think "is it the Tamoxifen???" The therapy is fantastic, but I want to learn to deal with my emotions myself without going mad or falling back into depression. I'm not there yet - but I will get there!!! Looking forward to following your blog.

Debbie's picture

Helen:

I'm so glad Google brought you here! There's a lot to be angry and upset about itsn't there? I so relate to your sitting alone, looking at that bench and suffering in silence. I think the bravest thing I did for myself was to go to therapy and openly deal with all that suffering. I'm self-reliant too, but I learned that showing up and talking it out was the only way I was going to survive all the emotional trauma. I couldn't have done it any other way. 

I'm so glad you're inspired to write your own Gifts & Losses List!! I hope you let me know how it goes. Also, if you haven't done so already, you can sign up for the WWGN Newsletter and get your free copy of the WWGN Survivors' Manifesto - "20 Intentions for Your Inspired Survivorship." (Sign up at the top of the home page.) You can also sign up to have my posts sent right to your inbox. Just fill out the FeedBurner box to the right.

 I hope you are able to relax this summer, enjoy your kids and take some time for yourself. It takes a lot of time to accept the "new normal." Be extra kind to yourself.

Survival > Existence,

Debbie

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