Good eve and hello

Hi :)

I am in my 50's and a qualified Samaritan. A good friend of mine has been diagnosed with terminal cancer, she is in her mid 30's, has a husband and a 9 year old son. I feel so useless and want to be more of a support to her and her family, but am struggling - is anyone else in this situation?

Thanks in advance xx

  • Welcome to the forum Catte although I'm really sorry to hear your friend has been diagnosed with terminal cancer.

    It can be tough knowing what to do in situations like these but I'm glad you've joined as many members here have been in the same situation and hopefully some of them will reply soon to offer their advice. In the meantime why don't you sit down and have a heart to heart with your friend and take your lead from her? Sometimes just being with someone and giving them a sense of normality can be the best support of all.

    Kind regards, 

    Steph, Cancer Chat Moderator

  • Hi Catte,

    The best person to ask is your friend. Get her on her own and ask her how she is really feeling and whether you can help in any way. This could be something as simple and easy as taking her son to watch the latest Star Wars film, something hard and complicated like discussing her wishes for funeral arrangements or advanced directives (DNR), she may just need a friend with whom she can have a rant and a cry or she might want someone to talk about normal everyday things and enable her to forget the cancer for an hour or two.

    So many of us people who have cancer put on a good show as we are programmed by society to believe that no-one else with cancer feels lonely, frightened, angry, irritable, tired, depressed or lacks hope. Others are genuinely unfazed by it all and get really hacked off when people assume we're in the first category and come on all touchy-feely.

    The problem for our friends and families is that both groups look and sound the same from the outside - a lose-lose situation, if no-one takes the time and effort to actually ask us. 

    Good luck :-)

    Dave