Cancer and the Holidays


Bob Riter
Bob Riter
The first few months of living with cancer are weird. What seems especially unsettling is that life goes on normally around you, but YOU HAVE CANCER. Your life is suddenly different but everyone else is carrying on like they always do.

This sensation is even more intense during the holiday season. There are traditions and visitors and parties. Normal activities can seem out of place when your life is less normal than it has ever been.

A cancer diagnosis makes you wonder if this will be your last holiday celebration. You might look back on the whole of your life and reflect on its meaning and the legacy that you leave behind.

Over time, most of us with cancer realize the importance of the normal rhythms of life. It’s comforting to know that life does go on.

Life can be especially challenging for individuals who live alone. They may feel isolated during the holidays, sensing (inaccurately, of course) that everyone else is filled with holiday cheer. A cancer diagnosis is unlikely to boost anyone’s spirits.

But cancer makes us appreciate what most take for granted. The giggle of a young child, the playfulness of a pet, the smell of popcorn.

And cancer lets many of us find community. In our support groups this month, we will treasure being together. We may not say it in words, but we love those who understand what we’ve been through.

We will also remember those who are no longer with us. We will toast their memories and keep them in our hearts.

We’ve learned that we can be realistic about the present and still maintain our hopefulness for the future.

We know that life doesn’t have to be perfect to be good.

Happy holidays to one and all.


Reprinted with permission of the Ithaca Journal.
Original publication date: December 20, 2014

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