Forgive and Forget

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FEB
FEB Member Posts: 552
Forgive and Forget

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  • FEB
    FEB Member Posts: 552
    edited October 2008

    Once we conquer all the physical stuff that we have to go through with BC, we also need to take the time to cure our hearts and souls. We have all had people say asinine and hurtful things, that do not make going through this ordeal any easier. I thought it would be good for us to have a place to write down these things, and let them go so we can truly move on. So use this blog to vent, and get it all out! A healthy body needs a healthy soul.

    I will start by forgiving my mother in law for some of the hurtful things she said to me, while I was going through treatment, such as: "Well, you are lucky because it could have been worse." Who in the world should feel lucky to get breast cancer! Then to top it off, she said "How would you like to be poor Joe(my 14 year old nephew who just broke his leg playing football). The poor kid may never be able to play football again, and it means everything to him!" I love my nephew and feel terrible for him that he had a really bad break, but come on, his life was never in jeopardy. It still gets my heart racing when I think of how her words hurt me, but now I am letting them go and moving on. Join me in doing the same. 

  • roseg
    roseg Member Posts: 3,133
    edited February 2008

    All in all I think you're taking the right way.

    Sometimes we can harbor little resentments against people we don't have to see or will never see again, but not with family.

    Without actually knowing her I would guess that this isn't the first obnoxious thing she's ever said to you -- most likely totally clueless about how obnoxious it sounds to you.  So just chalk it up, forgive her, and move on!  

  • NoH8
    NoH8 Member Posts: 2,726
    edited February 2008

    It sounds like your MIL was trying to be helpful the way most people are when we're dealing with cancer. There's no manual for folks to know how to say what we need to hear when we need to hear it. I never internalized the things people said that struck me the wrong way, because I knew their hearts were in the right place. I tried to just laugh at the irony of the statements. I've never been one to hold on to resentments, life is just too short, cancer or not.

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited February 2008

    Linda, there have been many women on this board that have been hurt by words and/or actions of ignorant/stupid people.  I think you have started a good thread. 

    I don't believe anyone said anything bad that actually hurt me.  Or did anything really bad or stupid.  I'm lucky.  And I don't hold any grudge/s for anyone who never offered a hand.  I don't want anyone to do something for me that they don't want to do... from their heart.

    Where I would have been hurt is if my dh and daughters did something that was hurtful.  Well, dh could have done a few more things that were sensitive.  But, he was there for everything, took care of my drains, cooked meals, yada yada..LOL  My girls were my rock.  Their caring a love showed through in a time I needed it the most.  Not all Moms are so lucky.

    So, I just thank God for see me through this difficult journey.  And I'll pray they he'll get me through another journey if I should ever HAVE go  there.  (Frown) Wink

    Shirley

  • tawyna1
    tawyna1 Member Posts: 273
    edited February 2008

    hi linda,

    i think i need to try to forgive my sister and brother cause they did not help at all through mom havingg breast cancer.

    i juggled 3 kids one with celrebal palsey  trying to stay with mom at the hospital and alot more 

  • fire
    fire Member Posts: 153
    edited February 2008

    Hello to all.

    It is so right - to forgive.

    Also, it is very hard.

    Because I know now what to expect.

    Also I'm trying to be sensitive to people and think before I'm talking.

    "It sounds like your MIL was trying to be helpful the way most people are when we're dealing with cancer. There's no manual for folks to know how to say what we need to hear when we need to hear it."

    O, this is so trye! I can't say better.

  • djd
    djd Member Posts: 866
    edited February 2008

    Great topic, and one that is really on my mind lately. 

    I was angry with my oldest brother for many things over the years.   The last time I spoke to him, he was calling to ask my mom how I was doing with my BC treatment.  He had been following my journey closely, but through her, not me. 

    That particular day when he called, I happened to be closest to the phone when he called, so I answered.   He stuttered and stammered about how he didn't know what to say to me.   I was instantly annoyed and said, "Okay, here's Mom" and handed her the phone.

    I was stupified and annoyed that my "big brother" was so intimidated by the "BIG C" that he didn't know how to ask me how I was doing.  I bitched about his reaction on several occasions.  My mom would try and minimize or defend his reaction, and it annoyed me even more.

    One year ago today, my brother was killed with a single gunshot wound to the heart, fired by his wife.  It really sucks when we lose a loved one...but losing a loved one with whom you are angry at really is a twisted thing to deal with.  It's taken me quite a while to even grieve his death properly.

    I don't feel guilty about our relationship -- we were BOTH right.  But being RIGHT isn't everything.  Grace, humility, and forgiveness bring us peace and clarity.

    Forgiveness is such a difficult and rewarding effort.  Staying angry is easy, self-centered, and emotionally crippling.

    I forgave my brother, but it was too late for us to enjoy it together, and the loss is all mine.

  • iodine
    iodine Member Posts: 4,289
    edited February 2008

    I am so sorry for the loss of your brother and the time you could have had together.

  • djd
    djd Member Posts: 866
    edited February 2008

    Thanks, Dotti.

  • FEB
    FEB Member Posts: 552
    edited February 2008

    I am so glad you have joined me in this post. It helps so much, just to  wright it down. If we can come through this ordeal of dealing with cancer, happier because we have let go of some of the "stuff" that haunts us, then maybe that is the silver lining to this journey. I would not wish cancer on anyone, but those of us who have been through it know that it forces us to search our souls for the inner peace that our bodies need to truly heal. Good health to all of you! Linda

  • ginger2345
    ginger2345 Member Posts: 517
    edited February 2008

    Linda--thanks for starting the thread; we do need to reflect and forgive.

    Donna--I'm so sorry about your brother and your relationship. It's a good lesson for those of us who have people in our lives that we could forgive and reconnect with. Don't wait another day.

    In my case, my brother and I are very close, live in the same town, get together often, but for the longest time I carried a resentment that he never asked how I was doing. I let that go long ago thank goodness. I do think it's the embarrassment of knowing what to say. I wonder if colon or lung cancer is easier to discuss? Especially for the guys.

  • djd
    djd Member Posts: 866
    edited February 2008

    Thanks, Ginger.

    Sorry if I made this thread all about me - it's not!  The irony is that I was reading the thread and thinking about my brother, when I looked at the date and realized it was the one-year anniversary of his death.  I knew vaguely that it was this week sometime, but I had not planned on making special note of the day in my mind.

    Then this thread grabbed me and I realized I needed to take a moment and remember him and pray that he is at peace.

    Keep up the comments about forgiveness.  But I don't want this to turn into a thread about me.

    hugs,

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited February 2008

    Donna, you brought something to my mind.  My brother and SIL were on the "outs."  They left N. C. and went back to Ohio.  I tried to make "good" the night before they left.  All in vain.  However, when my brother heard I had bc (my other brother told him) he called me.  And since then he and my SIL have been here to visit.

    What they did that caused our relationship to go sour wasn't anything they did against me.  It was a family matter.  But being always right isn't always good.  Thanks for reminding me.

    I hope you get some peace for what happened to your brother.  I have followed your sad story.

    Shirley

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited February 2008

    I finally forgave my father for abandoning his family when we were children and not keeping in good contact. He wanted his family back when he was diagnosed with Cancer, but I was rigid. I regret that now many years later. I've forgiven him, now if I could just forgive me.

    Hazel

  • iodine
    iodine Member Posts: 4,289
    edited February 2008

    My dh did so many things that I felt were hurtful and unthinking after dx, I would go to bed angry even a year after and be unable to sleep cause I';d go over the in my mind and cry.

    I finally one night when he was gone, shouted "please, God, let me forgive and let GO of all this"  I just didn't want to be angry any more and it was wearing ME out.

    That's the problem with anger, it only hurts US.  The person we're angry AT, is off feeling fine and has no worries!!!  We're in the dark place with a 20 ton load we're carrying.

    It' so much easier to walk in the sun without that load.

  • Harsch
    Harsch Member Posts: 31
    edited February 2008

    I also want to thank you for starting this thread and yes, maybe just writing these things down will make a difference. I know that forgiveness is the correct thing to do and I am working really hard to forgive a very dear cousin, we were like best friends. We did everything together - cottages at the lake, traveled, etc. and when I had my surgery she stopped coming to visit and then after I started chemo she started sending me emails one right after another on how I had brought this BC on myself through my thinking and how trying to work on appearances, etc. etc. She even sent me a powerpoint presentation on how I had brought this on by the wrong way of thinking, wearing makeup, keeping a clean house, etc. etc. - honestly it just didn't stop for about a month.  She kept saying it was for my own good and I have truly tried to understand her way of thinking, but like my BC Buddy said - we don't bring this on ourselves, BC can find its own way to our bodies.  I know if I let this go and forgive, it would be so much easier to find peace and I can only change myself and no one else.  I can usually shake things off and I am angry at myself for holding on to this hurt.

    I am sorry for all of you who have had hurtful things said or done to you.  This journey is hard enough without others adding to the pain.

  • iodine
    iodine Member Posts: 4,289
    edited February 2008

    Harsch, OMG, I would have had to block her emails -- how awful!  Isn't is amazing how people can be so SURE of themselves and their opinions when it isn't Them going thru something?  Or, someone they deeply love, like a son or daughter?  I have never heard a mom tell her kid they brought on CP or MS themselves, let alone cancer.  And yet, they will tell US that we brought it on ourselves.

    How obscene.

  • Bren-2007
    Bren-2007 Member Posts: 6,241
    edited February 2008

    Harsch,

    I had the exact same experience from my best friend, although without the powerpoint presentations and emails.  I was even quoted which book the info came from and sent the book as a reference!  Well ... the first time she said this to me, I was so shocked, I retorted I didn't believe that for one second and said it was nonsense.  Forgiving is the easy part.  Easy to forgive ignorance. Forgetting is another story and something we will never do.  This is what I have done.  I remember it now in the same context that I forgave it. An ignorant comment by someone who has absolutely no knowledge of breast cancer.  (I didn't either when I got it.)  Actually, now, almost a year later, I have to chuckle about it.  Are we still best friends.  Not really, we drifted apart, but still talk once month.  But because of my comment to her, down the road, she did take the time to ask me exactly what my tx was like, etc.  She didn't change her views, they are personal FOR HER.  And I won't try to change her.  I pray to God she never has to experience this. 

    In the big picture, breast cancer is still perceived as the "curable" "no big deal" cancer.  Until you get it or are affected by it.  Incredibly sad, but true.

    We can forgive ignorance, but not forget it ... that's what leads to change ... in my opinion.

    Bren

  • FEB
    FEB Member Posts: 552
    edited October 2008

    Thanks to all of you for joining in. Don't you all think it really helps to get it out there and vent? We can all see that many of us have been hurt in the same way by the insensitive people whom we love. I was so angry at first,at everyone who had made my life miserable.  It took me a lot of long walks, to work through it. Even though it was really cold here,  I kept walking, taking in big gulps of fresh air. Everyday, was I was able to put one more little hurt aside. Don't get me wrong, I am no martyr! I still have my moments, but I have come to realize that I have no control over what others do and say, but  I can control whether or not I let it get to me. So when one of my friends tells me I am lucky, because I did not have cancer so bad, or my mother in law still hasn't called me since I was diagnosed(not even on my birthday, when she always called before), I just have to tell myself that they just don't understand. I also think the reason so many people want to blame us for getting cancer is that they want to compare themselves to us. They feel that they live life better, so they will not get it. They try to compare what we did "wrong" with what they are doing "right".By making us feel that this is all our own fault, maybe they think they will be immune. Does this make sense?

       However, I do believe that there are many things that I was doing that probably did cause my cancer. I feel no guilt over it, but I am mad that there is so little info about prevention. Where is the walk for the prevention of breast cancer? That's the one I want to take part in. I have changed my diet, exercise almost everyday, and I am letting go of the excess baggage that has weighed heavily on my heart. I do believe these things will bring me good health!

    Keep sharing everyone. The doctors can help to heal our bodies, we can help each other to heal our souls.

  • cmb35
    cmb35 Member Posts: 1,106
    edited February 2008

    Great thread! I only have one that stands out in my mind (I'm lucky in the friend dept I guess, and I'm a contractor, so I don't have to deal with idiot co-workers) and it is about the person I considered to be my best friend. She insisted on driving up from CT to take me to chemo. I really didn't need her to, but it was something SHE needed to do to make HER feel better about my bc, so I said fine. She sat there during chemo, with this stricken look on her face, at times literally covering her mouth with her hand in horror - um, not helpful to me or to the other women in my quad. (I was in the chairs at that point, it was only my 2nd chemo, hadn't lost my hair yet, which made it so much easier on her LOL) When my fabuolous chemo nurse Deidre came to inject the red devil, she added some audio to the look of horror, something along the lines of, "oh my God, oh jeez, look at that, look at the color of that, I don't know Col, that just not right, oh my God", um, again, not helpful, not comforting, and really made me want to punch her in the face. We get home and she proceeds to go on and on and on about how horrifying it was to my then fiance (let's not even discuss him, I am not at the forgive and forget stage with him yet Cry) When I was nauseaus and throwing up, even on the anti-nausea meds, the one thing I could eat was american chop suey, but it had to be the way my mom made it you know? I was still on my chemo high, and really just wanted to make the damn chop suey myself (you remember how feeling like a normal person was kind of critical to feeling better?) but she insisted. Again, she needed to "help me" so she could feel better. Despite telling her many times that there wasn't enough water in the pot (think thick, starchy, gunky pasta), that she needed to cook the onions and peppers first, until they were really soft, before adding the meat, that she needed to drain the meat and veggies really well, she refused to listen, saying, "I think I know how to cook chop suey!" The entire pot was disgusting, not only could I not eat it, it added to my nausea when I tried. I have never been so happy to see someone leave! We drifted apart, she stopped calling, because as she put it, "she didn't know what to say to me" and "didn't feel comfortable telling me about her petty problems when I had cancer", despite the fact that I told her, I'm still me, I'm not just cancer, and I want to hear about normal things. Long after my tx ended, and I was back to "normal" (ha!) with the rest of my friends, I still wasn't talking much to her. The person that I used to talk to literally every single day, now I would always get her voicemail, and she rarely called me back. Many times, I would call and it would be busy (yes, she lives in the stone age and doesn't have call waiting!) and then 5 minutes later I would call and it would go to voicemail. It broke my heart. But you know what? This summer I called her, and I was really honest with her, and I told her that I missed her and I missed our friendship. It was a hard conversation, and she didn't exactly react the way I would have liked, she downplayed her behavior a lot, and sort of threw it on me, and said I was the one that wasn't calling her. Whatever, we decided to try to get back what we once had. It's been slow going, but we are on the right track. And I'm glad I did it, because in my heart, as much as her behavior hurt me, I always knew that it was because it was so very painful for her to have this happen to me, and that she had a lot of guilt about it (she smokes, she drinks regularly, and probably too much, she's always been the "bad girl" to my "good girl")

    Whoa! I had no idea that was all inside me still to that extent. It was great to get it out, and you know what, I think I'm going to give her a call right now.

    Yes, forgiving, and moving on, is good for you!

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited February 2008

                  The computer caused mine. Laughing

  • DebbieB
    DebbieB Member Posts: 161
    edited February 2008

    Linda,

    This is a fantastic topic.   I think one of the things I come to realize going thru bc treatment was that we never know what tomorrow holds for us and holding grudges and letting hurts eat at us doesn't make us feel better.  I'm getting very selfish with my energy. 

    I'm still trying very hard to forgive my sister.  Right after I was dx'd she decided she didn't know what to say so she didn't say anything for 10 months!  I'm not sure I'll every understand how you do that.  Problem is I just can't forget it and it's been 6 years.  I'm not sure whether that is just as difficult as the forgiveness. 

    Debbie

  • KariLynn
    KariLynn Member Posts: 1,079
    edited February 2008

    Part of a song keeps going through my mind: forgive and forget, relive and regret.

    I think it's good to forgive because that is for you but if someone really hurts you, forgetting can open yourself up to having it happen again.

  • junie
    junie Member Posts: 1,216
    edited February 2008

    I was fortunate to have a wonderful, close, supportive network of family and friends during treatment.   The few "hurtful" instances, I wrote off to ignorance--like one day at work, a co-worker started commenting on my new hair cut--loudly, in front of many people.   She was sincere in her compliments but I just wanted her to shut up!  I was bald and wearing a wig.   I sent her an e-mail explaining my new hair cut and that shut her up.   And, I did receive a few comments along the lines of, well if you have to have cancer cancer breast cancer is the best one to have...grrrrrrrrrr

    But, what is now sticking in my craw is the fact that all my friends and some family have this pollyanna attitude--"ok--you've had cancer, you've been treated, you're finished, you're ok--why aren't you your old energetic hyper self??"

    Sorry guys--having cancer, having chemo, having radiation--it took a lot out of me and I am never going to be back to where I was.   I accept that.   They have no concept of the follow-up terror I go through, nor the constant fear of recurrence that is never far away.   And, they have no concept of the fatigue I had during treatment that continues to a lesser degree now.  Nor of the lingering mild depression I have because my life was totally ripped apart and changed.

    I hope that none of them ever have to walk in our shoes, but unless that happens, some of them will never "get it".

    I just try to educate them when I can and pray that they don't ever really "get it".

    junie 

  • FEB
    FEB Member Posts: 552
    edited October 2008

    Karilynn

    You're comment on forgive and regret is so right on. It's like the saying that if we forget the past we are doomed to repeat it. My favorite saying is "Don't look back, except to learn". Wow, have we ever learned a lot through all this!

    Junie, I agree with what you said about people who just pretend like nothing happened and we just need to get over it, as if we had the flu or something. They have no clue how much this effects us emotionally. It is something that we will have to worry about the rest of out lives.

    It would be great if those whose loved ones have cancer find this forum. Maybe by reading our comments, they will learn about what not to do or say.

    Keep writing everyone!

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