The balance between life and disease
04/02/2007
By: Judy Foreman
Like many other
Americans lately, I’ve found myself thinking hard
about – and personally identifying with – the
dilemma faced by Elizabeth Edwards and her husband,
John, the former senator and would-be president.
His career, her
health. Not an easy balancing act. Who should
sacrifice for whom? How much? Nobody wants to be –
or live with – a martyr. But nobody wants to deal
with – or watch a loved one deal with – cancer
unsupported, either. Ultimately, everybody’s mental
health counts – the sick partner’s, the healthy
one’s, and the kids’.
For 11 years, my
husband, Tom, and I grappled with these dilemmas,
first because of his lymphoma, and for the last five
or six years, because of his prostate cancer as
well. We knew, of course, that there were millions
of other couples in similar situations, but that
didn’t help much. We had to juggle each other’s
needs – and each make sense of our own - with every
up and down of the cancer roller coaster.
He had a need,
which was sometimes tough for me, to minimize
things, and to remain fiercely independent. I was
more emotional.
He wanted to go
through his first chemotherapy infusions alone,
reading his physics journals and his newspapers. I
wanted to be there. That’s what “good” wives did.
But this particular man felt my particular presence
would overly-dramatize things. He could do better,
he felt, pretending that he was just sitting there
reading, as usual, even while powerful drugs dripped
into his arm.
So I let him ---
I developed a kind of rule; we worked as a team,
but he was the patient, so on big decisions, he got
two votes and I got one. Once, though, because he
had seemed more anxious than usual before an
infusion, I showed up at the hospital uninvited.
That time, we were both glad I did.
Like Elizabeth
Edwards, Tom, who died last year, was amazingly
generous in encouraging me to keep up my own life,
almost to the very end, when I did drop everything.
So, for year after uncertain year, he would tell me
to keep working, keep swimming, keep singing with my
singing group, keep going to my book group, keep
going to see my grandkids. All of which I did, with
some guilt, but also, to be honest, with
considerable relief. Unlike Tom, I had the luxury of
getting away from cancer once in a while, and I like
to think it helped us both that I did.
Still, I asked
him over and over how, given his situation, he could
be so generous. I didn’t think I would be. But Tom
didn’t seem to see it as generosity. He saw it as
protecting his best asset – me - from despair and
burnout.
I never did burn
out, but I did despair. We spent hours and hours
over the years talking, and crying, about Tom’s
fears and sadness and my dread of losing him. I
always felt selfish and weak when he sympathized
with my fear of life without him. But he kept
telling me that, precisely because of that, I had
the tougher job. I’m not sure if that’s correct, but
his acknowledgement of how tough it was for me
helped.
When I first
read of the Edwards’ decision to stay in the
presidential race, I was horrified. I thought he was
being utterly selfish, that they were painting an
overly optimistic view of her prognosis and that he
should drop out now and focus on being her husband.
But then I
thought about her, and Tom. From Tom’s example, I
could believe that, from the bottom of her soul, she
would not want him to give up his (and their) dream,
would not want to take on the “sick role” any sooner
than necessary, would not want to be a burden. I
think she is absolutely right to urge him to keep
running. I’m less sure whether he’s right to agree.
Unlike Tom and
me, the Edwards’ case involves the rest of the
country, or could. If he wins and she’s dying, how
could he possibly balance her needs against the
world’s ? But they’re not there yet. Cancer is a
chronic disease until it becomes a fatal one, and,
as we discovered, it’s quite possible to have many
good, relatively disease-free times for many years.
On the other
hand, cancer is a crapshoot. You never quite know
how pessimistic or optimistic to be. You never quite
know which doctors are giving it to you straight, or
who’s right about the statistics and the studies and
the chances.
So, you do your
best, individually and together. And you never
really know if you did it “right.”
Judy Foreman’s column runs every other week. Past
columns are available on
www.myhealthsense.com.
Listen to her live
call-in webcast radio show every Wednesday night
from 8:30 to 9:30 EST on
http://www.healthtalk.com.
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