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Michael Solomon

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So You Have Cancer: 10 Things to Do Now, Even if You're Not Warren Buffett

Posted: 04/24/2012 7:10 am

Cancer is all over the news lately, thanks to early detection, celebrity patients, and those ubiquitous "Hey Cancer" ads. Though medical breakthroughs may be in the offing, the Big C still packs a psycho/spiritual wallop for the newly initiated, no matter what effective tax rate you pay. Here are 10 ways to beat back the cancer blues and be your own best friend:

1) Blame Canada -- Or Philip Morris. Or your stress-Nazi boss. Just don't blame yourself. Because even if it is your fault, right now it's not your fault. Nothing about cancer is your fault. Give yourself the Robin-Williams-in-Good-Will-Hunting Hug because it's not your fault. Once you're all better you can get down on yourself for smoking, or eating poorly, or internalizing your parent's guilt trips. For now, stay focused on getting better.

2) Divide and Conquer -- Learn survivor math. Say the median survival rate of your cancer is five years. Does that mean you will be dead in five years? No, math-slackers, it does not. The median is not the same as the average. A median rate (which is how survival rates are measured) means half the people with your condition will die before the median, most likely people WAY older and WAY more decrepit than you. Are you old and decrepit? Because if you're not then you can live another 10 or 20 or 50 years, depending on your age, even if the median is only five years. I used to hate math too, till I got cancer. Now it's kind of awesome.

3) Take Your Google and Stick it Up Your iPad -- Don't be a masochist and try to "learn" about your cancer on the Internet. Every other post you read will make you feel like you're gonna die any minute. Remember, just because people before you have died of cancer, or even your type of cancer, does NOT mean you will too. So take that, Google founder Larry Page, who once built an inkjet printer out of Lego (it's fine to search for that kind of useless dreck).

4) Trip Out, Dude -- Look yourself in the mirror and say: "I have cancer." It's weird the first time, like saying "I'm tripping on LSD" (not that I would know) -- but it helps to get used to the idea while you're all alone. You have cancer, you can survive, and sooner than you think you'll be looking in the mirror again going, "I don't have cancer anymore." That'll be weird too, but the good kind of weird. The magic mushroom kind of weird (not that I would know).

5) Get Into the Closet -- Keep the lights off. You are now a medical imaging device trying to see inside the total darkness of a human body. Sometimes you see things that aren't really there, like the CAT scan that "saw" potentially fatal tumors on my liver, till a sonogram "saw" they were only harmless cysts on my kidney. Whoops... glad I didn't jump off a bridge that week. So remember: trust but verify.

6) Think About Sex -- I'm a man, so I can't even get through a top 10 list without thinking about sex at least once. If sex is on your mind during these trying times, remember it's perfectly ethical to sidle up to a good-looking girl or guy and say: "You know, I wouldn't ordinarily be so bold, but I have cancer, so I was wondering if we could get naked together." At least you're not lying. Lying is unethical.

7) Channel Judge Judy -- Will your doctor keep probing and testing you because she thinks you have something else, or God forbid, something worse? Probably. Is he also making sure he doesn't get sued for misdiagnosis? Hmm... never thought of that. Doctors work in the real world, my friend. Their job is to be thorough, for many reasons, so keep a running list of each horror they look for but don't find. Not so you can sue anyone. Just to remind you not to be afraid of anything until you're absolutely sure you have it. And even then, just repeat step 3.

8) Tell it to the Hand -- No one knows what the hell to say to someone waylaid by cancer (my best friend asked if I owed him money -- at least it made me laugh). Informing loved ones is a HUGE burden, and you've got enough on your plate as is. Email is a solid way to keep your peeps up to date, and tell them what you need -- namely, their well-timed support. Trust me, you don't want all your loved ones calling for news every time you go to the doctor. With a group email, they can feel connected to you and also give you some much-needed space.

9) Turn On Your High Beams -- E.L. Doctorow once said this about writing, but it's true for surviving cancer as well: "It's like driving at night in the fog. You can only see as far as your headlights, but you can make the whole trip that way." So each day, just focus on getting to tomorrow. That's the only "long-term" goal you need to be concerned with till you hit remission.

10) Count to 28 Million, Babe -- That's how many cancer survivors there are worldwide. And with a little luck, you'll be next. Number 28 million and one. Just like Lance Armstrong and Sheryl Crow over there at the bar. Wait, they broke up, didn't they? "You know, I wouldn't ordinarily be so bold but..."

Michael Solomon is an award-winning filmmaker and the author of "Now It's Funny... How I Survived Cancer, Divorce and Other Looming Disasters."

For more on cancer, click here.

 
 
 
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Cancer is all over the news lately, thanks to early detection, celebrity patients, and those ubiquitous "Hey Cancer" ads. Though medical breakthroughs may be in the offing, the Big C still packs a psy...
Cancer is all over the news lately, thanks to early detection, celebrity patients, and those ubiquitous "Hey Cancer" ads. Though medical breakthroughs may be in the offing, the Big C still packs a psy...
 
 
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12:07 AM on 04/26/2012
Love it! I really wish that I could have read this when I was diagnosed. My oncologist and surgeon were outstanding and it was(is) very evident that they care about me as a person. They are not money hungry demons who just want to keep me alive so they can give more chemo and sutures! My doctor told me that she has trouble sleeping when she is waiting for her patient's pet scan results. And it's not because she is excited about buying a yacht in case someone has a re occurrence. Perhaps instead of bashing medical professionals you should try to make inroads or become a healer yourself. We live in amazing times medically and you can very easily fuse the traditional with the ancient, the spiritual, even the brand new.
10:55 PM on 04/24/2012
The word cancer is a 'cancer' itself, best to run from the cure and clean your tissues. The degenerative condition is because the tissues are polluted,, it's just nature,, and she will always heal when given the opportunity. My colon cancer was gone in 6 weeks when I "ran from the cure" and house cleaned! So many cures so little time to explain, cancer is a business make no mistake as the treatment itself is a cause. Get eating green and get the acid out of the diet, the body balances fast than you can imagine, and use your imagination to destroy the cells, it is done in many places each day on this planet, why does western culture have to make a cult of it(cancer)?
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homer winslow
Truth in Beauty, Beauty in Truth
06:19 PM on 04/24/2012
You forgot the one main thing that just may help you survive and that is change your lifestyle. You got cancer for a reason and it is possible to beat it with a change of habits and especially diet.
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BeerLover
Carpe Diem!
06:00 PM on 04/24/2012
Immediately watch "BurzynskiMovie" on You Tube. Learn how it works, and learn how your doctors will work against you........looking to squeeze every penny from your misfortune.

THEN, contact Dr. Burzynski.....he has a website......and you have hope.... at least some hope to survive if not prolong your life for many years, and, where you're not a victim of the FDA, pharma and the NCI...who could have prevented thousands of people from dying...but instead tried to shush a proved and effective treatment.

Sad.......but true. Find your strength and do it today!!!
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11:25 AM on 04/24/2012
Rather than "each day, just focus on getting to tomorrow," one might also focus on letting go, enjoying each moment and accepting that death may not only be a part of life but may be its culmination. Ah but that surrender thing, which may sound so good to Eastern mystics or woozy new-agey types, just ain't baked-into-our human survival-at-all-cost bones. Transcending that fear, however, may be EXACTLY what getting old/sick is supposed to teach us. Ain't going to happen, I guess, where we're told to just pop another pill and pretend your immortal.
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BeerLover
Carpe Diem!
06:01 PM on 04/24/2012
Please.....Immediately watch "BurzynskiMovie" on You Tube. Learn how it works, and learn how your doctors will work against you........looking to squeeze every penny from your misfortune
11:19 AM on 04/24/2012
You've got an edge on you, but I like it. My husband was diagnosed with Stage IV Colon Cancer. Life will never be the same since the moment we heard that, but at the same time, the gig isn't up. I don't even like to think about numbers anymore. Today is here, we are lucky to love each other and we're just having to turn each day into a miracle. There's a part of the brain (the worry part) that you just have to shut down. My overarching theory is that death or dying will be bad enough when/if it happens. I don't have to rush it by feeling sad now. As my Rabbi so wisely said to me, "don't go to the funeral now." Who knows, I could die first, and I'm theoretically healthy.
Thanks for the plain speak about this issue. I think it can help those who are around cancer patients to understand a little better.
11:27 AM on 04/24/2012
Thank you for that quote -- "Don't go to the funeral now." Excellent.
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homer winslow
Truth in Beauty, Beauty in Truth
06:20 PM on 04/24/2012
Te best thing you could do for your husband is get him on a completely plant based diet.
08:34 PM on 04/24/2012
gee homer...you must be a riot to hang out with. There are various undersea life forms with more warmth.
11:09 AM on 04/24/2012
"6) Think About Sex -- I'm a man, so I can't even get through a top 10 list without thinking about sex at least once. If sex is on your mind during these trying times, remember it's perfectly ethical to sidle up to a good-looking girl or guy and say: "You know, I wouldn't ordinarily be so bold, but I have cancer, so I was wondering if we could get naked together." At least you're not lying. Lying is unethical."

Prostate cancer patients need to be careful with this one...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
onlyThis
How do you free a bird from an empty cage?
10:59 AM on 04/24/2012
Honestly, if I was over 80 or maybe even over 70 and I was diagnosed with cancer I don't think I would even care. We all die sometime and if I have had 70 or 80 good years I would be thankful and let myself go to whatever comes next (if anything). If you live a good life, death should hold no fear for you, just my opinion. I lived with my grandmother when I was in college, she was in her 90's and still active but even she was tired of living and seeing all her friends and family die. At 96 she would frequently ask " I don't know why God doesn't just take me" She was healthy and active but after a while old age just isn't much fun anymore. She died in a nursing home at the age of 102, she had dementia and could not control her bowels. I'm sure she would rather have lived a few years less. I am NOT saying if you have cancer you should just give up, but I'm just saying to be realistic.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Kate Bratskeir
10:49 AM on 04/24/2012
My dad's words: I've tried to live by rule #11: Do what you need to do to get better. If you're lucky, like me, put it in a compartment so small and remote that you hardly ever think about it, except as a reminder of how good your life is.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Carl Caroli
I just don't understand people
10:21 AM on 04/24/2012
"You know, I wouldn't ordinarily be so bold, but I have cancer, so I was wondering if we could get naked together."
Really? And this works? Normally I'd not stoop so low.
10:08 AM on 04/24/2012
"...medical breakthroughs may be in the offing..." When it comes to cancer, Isn't that wishful thinking?
08:57 AM on 04/24/2012
Three things I learned--

First--consider your cancer like you would consider building a house:

Your surgeon (if applicable) is like the plumber during home construction--his goal is to get the plumbing done correctly (cut it out successfully).

Your oncologist is like the General Contractor--his responsibility is to keep his eye on the whole job (the cancer).

It is your regular doctor--your GP--who is the architect--it is their job to understand the owner's vision (your overall health and your quality of life).

As good and and caring as my surgeon and oncologist were--and they saved my life--they were less concerned about how I felt than they were about the "mechanics" of their jobs. Luckily I had a great GP who got all the reports, answered my questions, and gave me some low dose Xanex when things got stressfull.

Second--Combine #3 & #8 above. Make sure your relatives and friends are NOT diagnosing you via the internet. Or their golf buddy's father-in-law. It is YOUR cancer--and not telling others until you are ready is your prerogative.

Third--Look around at Chemo--somebody has it worse than you. Quit complaining.
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BeerLover
Carpe Diem!
06:03 PM on 04/24/2012
FOURTH: Watch the BurzynskiMovie and don't give up. Don't give up..... when the medical field does.....after it extracts all your insurance money.
11:53 PM on 05/15/2012
On the third item, you're so right. I was diagnosed with Endometrial cancer in March. They got it very early. I had a Hysterectomy and now they want me to have radiation - only 3 treatments. I've joined a couple of cancer support centers and gone to 2 support groups. The women there are MUCH worse off than I am. I feel like I don't even belong in those groups. My ordeal is a day at Disneyland compared to what they're going through. I don't feel lucky, but, compared to them, I am.
Linda from Deerfield
Paying attention
08:51 AM on 04/24/2012
That was pretty good. It presupposes that people are reasonably tough and resilient, if they can just get their act together, and I think that is well founded.

Now if you could do as much for the care giver, the second-in-command, the loved one, the one who is second most affected (or ones), or however that unlucky party should be described, because some of us have begun to suspect that this other person in some sense suffers more than the big C patient. For sure, that person will be tempted to put life and issues on hold and that does not always work out well.

Cheers.