Embarrassed to be sick
Not guilty but embarrassed. I'm having cancer for the third time. Every time I start something new at work I get cancer and others have to take over. I know that it's not my fault, and I didn't get cancer on purpose but I still feel embarrassed. Nobody can count on me, hey I can't even count on me.
My boss is rather useless and my colleagues have kept their distance (as if it's contagious). I hardly hear news/gossips from work although I read every day the work mail.
I've tried to discuss this with my therapist but she didn't have anything to say. So I'm turning to this forum to hear if there're others who feel this way and if there's something to be done about it.
Thank you
Comments
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Sorry you are going through this! I say do whatever you need to get through this recurrence and don't worry about your boss or coworkers
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Hi!
I'm sorry to hear about your co-workers and boss. When I was undergoing active treatment, I cut down on some of my work responsibilities. No one minded. What's funny is that two men took FMLA to cope with health/family issues at the same time I was undergoing treatment. They made me look good! At least I was able to contribute to my department in significant ways. They were doing...whatever. (In one case, the faculty member was looking after his son, who had a liver transplant. That's a serious surgery but his ex-wife was around to help out! Yet, he couldn't contribute AT ALL to his job? Really?) At this point, I'm happy to have a job that pays a decent salary and has good health benefits. Whether or not my department thinks I'm a slacker doesn't enter into the equation.
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MoreShoes - I'm sorry you're going through this a third time. You took the words right out of my mouth. I said the exact same thing to my DH yesterday. This is my second time around, and I feel like I'm letting everyone down - my family, friends, colleagues. I feel undependable. And since I've been here before, I sometimes feel like I'm inconveniencing everyone this time around. So I find myself not asking for help, and trying to do everything as if life was "normal" right now - pushing through at work, trying to do everything around the house, still teaching yoga and working out at the gym.
When I really spend time thinking about it all, though - so much of what I perceive I'm feeling from others, is really coming from myself. I like what you said - "I can't even depend on myself." And this isn't our fault, but sometimes it feels like it.
Yes, some people have pulled back from me, particularly colleagues. I can't tell if they're uncomfortable, or if my cancer brings up feelings about others they know who have or have had cancer, or if they just don't like me. Whatever the reason, it's really all about them and has nothing to do with me.
I'm working on practicing patience and lovingkindness with myself - much easier for me to do with others. Right now, you deserve some of that lovingkindness yourself, and hope you find some peace. Sending you love and hugs.
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I'm afraid to share my situation because I don't want people to discriminate against me, fear me, shun me, or treat me differently. But I feel that by keeping the secret, I am putting a wall between me and others, and that they will sense that I am somehow inauthentic.
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MoreShoes: You should never feel embarrassed, although I understand why you might do. I suspect (and hope) the response that your colleagues are giving is their embarrassment and that it is they who do not know what to do in the circumstances.
We humans compare ourselves to others so frequently, and with Breast cancer its no different. On these forums we hear about so many who seem to be coping so well, hardly taking a day off work, bouncing back to full fitness. Whilst this might seem commendable, we each react differently and no one is right or wrong. I felt so inadequate as I didn't work (actually due to my emigration from the UK and I had started to look for work but this was curtailed on my dx) I found recovery so hard and long, and no way could have continue to work normally. No one persons experience is the same and I can't understand people who judge if someone has to take a break or take it easy. I feel that to go though this experience without any impact is not common. You have been though this three times, and I commend you for working and continuing to try to act normally.
ShetlandPony: The reaction of others is usually from their inability to cope with the subject and to know what to say. I would advise that you do as you want, tell who you want, but know its for your own reasons and not others. We don't have chance to control much whilst being members of this club, so feel confident and put yourself first.
Hugs, and I wish you both comfortable and successful treatments.
Sarah
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Nancy, thank you. It's amazing that you still do so many things. Lovingkindness myself, that I have to remember. I've been doing yoga for more than 10 years and it has helped me A LOT through all these.
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ShetlandPony, if you feel "normal"then you don't have to say anything. If it's a burden, you can always share. Sometimes you want to really forget everything and just be normal, I understand that.
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Scwilly, I'm groing though chemo right now and the future (HA!) is very blurry. I'm waiting for the scan next month to see what operation I'd have to do, radiation and of course no guarantees for survival or no recurrence. Currently I'm not working, hence the embarrassment.
I want to think that you're right and my colleagues react like that (lack of reaction that is) because they don't know what to say.
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Shetlandpony and others in the same boat,
Being stage IV was too big a secret for me to keep. It also made me feel as if I had something to be ashamed of, which of course, I didn't. So, over the course of 4+ years, I have gradually told co-workers (my family always knew). I don't feel that anyone has treated me differently, though many were surprised and don't quite understand stage IV. If someone does treat me differently or shuns me, that's their problem and I don't need people like that in my personal or professional circle. I do know others have felt discriminated against, but as a state employee and a union member (public school teacher) my rights are solidly protected as long as I continue to perform my job up TP standard. Sadly, not everyone has been spared discrimination in the work place.
My life will most certainly be shortened by this disease, so I choose to live it authentically and without barriers. However, you must do what is best and most comfortable for you. Whatever you choose, make joy a priority, whether you live for one more day or a million more days.
Caryn
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It is a big secret. I am not ashamed. On the contrary, I am proud that I deal with this courageously, and have sought out the support I need to do so. Yet even without revealing the stage iv, I did experience some cancer discrimination in an organization. They didn't give me opportunities because they were "worried about my health". I left that place. That experience made me wary of sharing about the cancer, let alone the stage iv part, in a situation where that could happen again. The main reason I have kept my stage iv status secret among family friends is to protect my kid. As long as I am doing well, I do not want to lay on that burden. I just want us to enjoy our life together. (This is what I determined is best for my family; I fully understand it will not be the best choice for everyone.) I really would like to share more with friends that I know would be supportive, and I wish I weren't hiding something, but that is a price I am willing to pay in order to spare my kid. I hope they will understand and forgive me. I think a couple friends may have figured it out.
Moreshoes, you started a good topic. The only thing I can think of for your work situation is to somehow let the people know what to do or say. I hope they are just uncomfortable, and not mean. Humor to lighten things up, if you feel up to that?
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