If you have kids how did you explain to them....

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My mom has recently been diagnosed with BC and as stressful as that is I just realized that I am going to have to explain to my 5 year old why grandma does not have any breast anymore. My daughter has asked when she will get her breast (smile) so my work of her not be informed of what is going on now is quickly coming to an end. My mom is having a bilateral masctomy (sp) and reconstruction will happen later her cancer is aggressive so treatment needs to be done soon after surgery. So how do I explain to her what is going on? I'm lost on this one please help.

Thanks.

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  • Moderators
    Moderators Member Posts: 25,912
    edited June 2012

    Hi Kimmie,

    The main Breastcancer.org site has a helpful section on Talking to Your Family and Friends about Breast Cancer, including a page on Talking to Young Children.

    In addition, there's a forum here for Family, Friends, Caregivers and Supporters, where you can chat with others who are experiencing what you are...

    Hope this helps and best of luck to your mom!

    --The Mods

  • Stormynyte
    Stormynyte Member Posts: 650
    edited June 2012

    I'll copy here my reply in your other post. I think I was typing as you were deleting it. I believe the topic will stay there and just show a deleted post, so you may want to watch both threads. :)

    I would keep it simple and tell her something along the lines of Grandmas breasts got sick and they are making them better. At 5, this should be a concept she can understand.

    I've told my 10 year old basically the same thing but with a bit more detail. I try not to give him more information than he asks for. I don't want to overload him or stress him out. He seems content with the simple answers most of the time and if he wants to know more he will ask.

    Best wishes to you, your mom and your little girl. Smile

  • Kimmie32
    Kimmie32 Member Posts: 15
    edited June 2012

    Thanks stormynyte saw this forum thought I should move it and if not oblivious so very new to the community.

  • Outfield
    Outfield Member Posts: 1,109
    edited June 2012

    Kimmie,

    Hi.  My kids were 2 and 3 when I was diagnosed.  I had a bilateral mastectomy and no reconstruction.  

    My 3 year old daughter had a lot of questions, and I never hid my body from her.  She saw the various stages of healing and we talked about them along the way.  

    She's 5 now, and she's seen me naked a bazillion times.  She knows that my breasts are gone because of the cancer.  That's a concept she has been able to understand on some level since she I was diagnosed.  Her questions change as she gets older, but even at 3 she "got it" when it was explained in simple terms.  

    I don't know how open your family is with bodies, and I'm sure it's going to be different with it being grandma, not mom.  Is your mom in a place psychologically where she can comfortably answer questions from a 5 year old?  That's important.  My daughter was about the only one in the world whose questions I would answer at first, but if your mom doesn't want to answer those honest little-kid questions then I don't know what I would do.  If your mom can handle them, then I'd tell your daughter in simple terms - grandma got a sickness in her breast, the doctors are helping her get better but they had to remove her breast.   

    We read a ton of books, and they really allowed my daughter to voice some worries that she had.  The problem is I can't think of any that weren't written from the perspective of a family where the mom has breast cancer, not the grandma.  One of the things that was very clear during the whole process is that my daughter noticed a lot and worried about a lot of things.  I think it was better for her to know she could talk about her worries than having tried to keep things from her.

    I hope your mom does well.  If your daughter is going to be around her when she's immediately post-op, make sure she has some pillows to surround her chest with.  That way, your daughter can still hug her a little without the fear of banging into an incision. 

  • Kimmie32
    Kimmie32 Member Posts: 15
    edited June 2012

    My mom is open when it's us girls so my daughter knows that grandma's breast are big and mommy yours look small. Lol. Her dad is diabetic so she understands that complexity just she tells everybody. My mom wants it kept private right now because she feels fine and is going work. So I know telling my daughter that privacy is gone. She knows something is different with all the adult private talks. Making a script and hopefully she will understand and not fear getting breast.

  • caaclark
    caaclark Member Posts: 936
    edited June 2012

    I actually wrote a childen's book called, "When Our Mom Had Cancer".  Not trying to sell it to you just letting you know there are a few books out there that you can order online.  You could also do a search online to see what pops up.  While my book is about a mom and her children it can also be used to explain what a relative will go through and what cancer is.  Being a teacher/counselor/learning consultant I automatically use books to explain difficult concepts to children.

    When I was diagnosed in 2006 I found very few books that explained cancer to children in a non-threatening way so I wrote one. (see my signature line)

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