5 Ways to Help Someone With Cancer

awareness

cancer awaranessHi, this one truly hits home for me. Have you ever known someone who was diagnosed with cancer? Did you ever wonder how you could offer help but just didn’t know what to do? Chances are at some point in your life, you will know someone- a loved one, family member, a friend, co-worker or even yourself who will be diagnosed with that “C” word. June 2003 I was told I had cancer.

Let me tell you, this was a very difficult time in my life for me and my family. What was normal, was normal no more. So many emotions are running through my mind as I am typing. Family, friends and the community were asking how they could help. At the beginning I had no answers. Now looking back I have many suggestions from the kindness I received. Here are just five things one can do that will mean a great deal.

Send Cards

When I say send cards, I mean the old fashioned way- via USPS, snail mail. Oh how I loved these. Spiritual, funny, just a note to say hi- anything at all would brighten my day. There were times during my chemo cycle I literally had zero energy. It was nice reading and rereading these cards and notes. It also allowed me to cry in private when you gave me words of encouragement. Yes, cards- these were cherished greatly.

Frozen Dinners

Yes, frozen dinners. When neighbors brought meals to the house I was so thankful. My children were still in school and active. This just helped tremendously. Keep in mind Chemo destroys bad cells and good cells. When your body has limited white blood cells, food not heated to the right temperature causes food poising. A nuisance for the healthy but deadly for a cancer patient with a weakened autoimmune system. I was not allowed to eat leftovers during certain days in my chemo cycle. Frozen foods could be popped into the oven and monitored for the correct temperature and cooking length. I highly recommend this one!

Prepaid Phone Card

Okay, this idea was more specific to me during my treatments. I would have a treatment every three weeks. One treatment consisted of two days. Each day lasting approx 8-12 hours each. Cell phones were not allowed. Anyone I would need to call was long distance. I had mentioned this to a friend and the next treatment she gave me a prepaid phone card. Wow- this made me do the happy cry. I appreciated this a lot.

Helping Hand

This is a rather wide suggestion. A helping hand can be a simple as picking up a gallon of milk from the grocery store. Does the cancer patient have children that need a ride to or from school? My goal was to try keeping daily routine as normal as I possibly could. For example, I had to do two loads of laundry a day just to maintain. I always use the clothesline weather permitting. Well carrying the basket out to the line was heavy and drained the little energy I had. I still did the laundry, but had my son carry the basket to the line where I hung the clothes. I was not sleeping 8 hours. It was more like small naps throughout the night and day. One friend worked in a bakery, which bakers go in really really early in the morning. Many time I called her just to talk. With that said, anything that may seem small to you, would be very helpful to the cancer patient.

Power of Prayer

I have posted this one at the end for a reason. In my opinion this is the most important of the five. It is not my intention to push my faith onto someone. However, after going through my cancer treatments and witnessing the daily miracles just confirmed my faith even more so. Say a prayer for the cancer patient and their family to be strong for the daily challenges they each will face. Prayer is very powerful- Amen!

Do you have any suggestions you would like to add of helpful things you have done for a person with cancer? Or if you experienced cancer, what did your family and friends do to help that you most appreciated?

Take care-

Best Wishes,
debra

Pills, Pills, Pills

The Pills, the pills, the pills- Oh My!

When I was going through my chemo treatments (R-CHOP) it was quite the ordeal. What an under statement. I was very lucky. My whole family gave me the support I needed to pull through this disease. Chemo Brain– you have probably heard this phrase? If not, think of it like Brain Farts. Lucky me, I experienced the chemo brain during and after my treatments.

I received 6 rounds of R-CHOP. Once every 21 days (much like a menstrual cycle) I went in for the R portion to return the second day for the CHOP portion. Approx the 10th day after treatment, I was tired and sad and cried. Then in approx 10 days from my low point I had the pleasure of repeating the cycle with my chemo treatment. Now- everyday, I had this humongous amount of pills I had to take throughout the day. There was so many, I had to have the calendar the nurse made me to coordinate the time for each pill. Each pill had it’s own highlighted color on the calendar and my bottles of pill were highlighted to match the calendar. There was no way I could have remembered when and what pills to take without this color coded calendar- chemo brain. I was so sick of taking pills!

It is with great pleasure to say my doctors consider me to be “cured”- AMEN. I will be celebrating my 10 anniversary January 2014!

In the past several months I have been introduced to an amazing new technological device. This would have been a much appreciated item to have used during my cancer treatment. You ask what it is? A nifty pillbox. But not just any pillbox. The pillbox I am speaking of is one that blinks when it’s time to take it. If you miss the blink, it beeps. If you miss the beep, it can call you. Yeah, it’s nifty. A very handy tool.

pillbox
Nifty Pillbox

Photography tip: When taking a picture of your subject; first take the shot the way you think you should take it. Then take another a different way. Doesn’t matter how you take it differently. It’s fun to see an object in a different way than you actually experience seeing it. The top image above is how I actually saw the pillbox. Then I bent down and took an angle image of the pillbox.

If you are interested in the pillbox shown, visit the website Medminder.com